210 APPENDIX. 



From the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London: — 



1710. Patrick Blair. Dissection of the Elephant. 



1714. Cotton Mather. Vol. xxix. p. 62. No. 339 for months April and June. 



1767. Collinson. Vol. lvii. pp. 464, 468. 



1768. William Hunter. Vol. lviii. p. 34. 



1769. Dissertatio Epistolaris de Ossibus et Dentibus Elephantum, aliarnmque Belluarum in 



America Septentrionali, aliisque Borealibus Regionibus obviis ; qua indigenarum 

 Belluarum esse ostenditur. R. E. Raspe. 



1799. Observations on the Manners, Habits, and Natural History of the Elephant. John Corse. 



1799. Observations on the Different Species of Asiatic Elephants, and their Mode of Dentition. 

 John Corse. 



1813. An Account of some Organic Remains found near Brentford, Middlesex. "William K. 

 Trimmer. 



1822. Account of an Assemblage of Fossil Teeth, and Bones of Elephant, Rhinoceros, Hippo- 

 potamus, Bear, Tiger, and Hyena, and Sixteen other Animals ; discovered in a Cave 

 at Kirkdale, Yorkshire, in the Year 1821, &c. By William Buckland. 



From the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society: — 



Vol. iv. 1799. Memoir on the Extraneous Fossils, denominated Mammoth Bones ; princi- 

 pally designed to show that they are the Remains of more than one 

 Species of non-descript Animals. George Turner. 



„ iv. New Ser. Descriptions of the Inferior Maxillary Bones of Mastodons in the Cabinet of 

 the American Philosophical Society, with Remarks on the Genus Tet- 

 racaulodon, &c. Isaac Hays, M. D. 



„ iv. Old Ser. Thomas Jefferson, Esq. pp. 246, 257. 



„ i. New Ser. Caspar Wistar, M. D. p. 375. No. xxxi. 



„ iii. „ „ Godman. Tetracaulodon. No. vi. 



„ iii. „ „ Dr. Hays. p. 471. No. xviii. 



„ iv. „ „ Dr. Hays. p. 317. No. ix. 



„ iv. „ „ Turner, p. 510. 



