ELEPHANTID2E. 



81 



14760. Portion of the palate showing the much-worn mm. 4 and the 

 {Fig.) first three ridges of the half-worn m. 1 9 provisionally- 

 referred to this species ;• from the Pliocene Siwaliks of 

 Upper Burma. This specimen evidently belongs to the 

 same species as the last. Figured by Falconer and Cautley 

 in the ' Fauna Antiqua Sivalensis,' pi. xxx. figs. 1, la. 

 A distinct trace of the median longitudinal cleft remains 

 in m. 1 , which agrees precisely in this respect, in the 

 grooving of the enamel, and the large number of cusps 

 with the preceding specimens. Both this and the last 

 specimen approximate very closely to certain molars of 

 Mastodon latidens (' Palseontologia Indica,' ser. 10, vol. i. 

 pi. xxxviii.). Presented by Col. Burney. Before 1846. 



7388. Cast of the first (?) left upper true molar in an early stage 

 of wear (woodcut, fig. 20). The original was obtained 



Fig. 20. 



v ■ ■ ■ , fl» 



:\' ; >V ,: ^ ! *''v'^ '■"-. | m 1 \f\ " . ::■ Hill ■■ i' 1 



5 ^ : «ftt|iillililll 



Elephas cltfti.— The first (?) left upper true molar ; from the Siwaliks of Burma. 

 £. The lower border of the figure is the inner border of the specimen. 

 (From Gaudry's ' Enchainements.') 



near Yenankhoung, on the left bank of the Irawadi in 

 Upper Burma, by Crawfurd in 1826, and is preserved in the 

 Museum of the Geological Society ; it is one of the types 

 of the species, and is figured by Clift in the Trans. Geol. 

 Soc. ser. 2, vol. ii. pt. 3, pi. xxxix. fig. 6, under the name 

 of M. elephantoides ; it is also figured by Falconer and 

 Cautley, op. cit. pi. xxx. figs. 2, 2 a. See also ' Falconer's 



TART IV. G 



