HALITnERIID^. 



with those of the Italian Pliocene form figured in Blain- 

 ville's ' Osteographie,' Genus Manatus, pi. ix., under the 

 name of Chirotherium brocchii. Purchased, 1885. 



Fig- 3. 



Ilalitherium fossile. — The penultimate and last right lower molars; from the 

 Middle Miocene of Angers (Maine-et-Loire). {. (After De Blainville.) 



Halitherium canhami. Flower \ 



This imperfectly known species appears allied to //. schinzi, but 

 the cranium is larger and more massive, with differently shaped 

 nasals and proportionately larger teeth. 



Hah, England. 



46055. Cast of the imperfect and water-worn cranium. ' The original 



(which is the type) is from the bone-bed at the base of the 



' E-ed Crag at Foxhall, near Woodbridge, Suffolk, and is 



preserved in the Ipswich Museum ; it is described and 



figured by Plower, op. cit. p. 1, pi. i. 



Presented hy the Council of the Royal College of Surgeons, 1874. 



Halitherium schinzi, Kaup^ 



Syn. Pugmeodon schinzi, Kanp ^. 



? JIalitherimn cuvieri, Kaup ^. 

 Manatus guettardi, Blainville". 

 Halitherium guettardi, Gervais ". 



This species is about equal in size to Manatus australis ; distinct 

 nasals are present, and the number of the cheek-teeth is six. The 



^ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xxx. p. 1 (1874). ^ 



■■^ Neues Jahrb. 1838, p. 319. — Vugmcodon. ^ Loc. cit, 



^ Ibid. 1840, p. 675. 



" Osteographie, Genus Manatus^ p. 108 (1844). 



8 Zool. et Pal. Fran^. 1st ed. p. 144 (1848-52). 



