1895.] Is Daemoneliz a Burrow? 525 
Without attempting to describe or discuss this point further 
the author has submitted certain figures which he believes will 
carry out the idea embodied in the foregoing much more 
tersely and emphatically than he could by verbal descriptions 
(See Figs. 2 and 5). 
cm. 
E TA E 
11 ----- 
11 
f3- - 
05- -=-= 
12--------- 
6 OR 
eee 
$e 
pe- 
Fig. 5.—Di ic figure of Daemonelix, giving measurements. (See Fig. 3.) 
agrammat 
Height 1.32 meters. 
I believe that such precision could emanate only from the’ 
blind instinct of plants and lower animals unguided by 
reason. 
In both papers (University Studies, Vol. I, No. 4, July, 1892, 
and Vol. II, No. 1, July, 1894) the author took pains to explain 
that he had found the skeleton of a rodent of exactly suitable 
size within the root-stalk at the base of a spiral. . But in the 
next sentence he urged the recognition of the fact that at the 
same time one of his party, Mr. F. C. Kenyon, found the bones 
of'a mammal as large as a deer, and altogether too large to 
have burrowed, yet it was likewise enclosed. ' The cork-screw 
