132 LIFE OF THE PLEISTOCENE 



or teeth, and rarely by a nearly perfect skeleton. In a few cases the strata in 

 which the bones were found are of uncertain age. Those records not included 

 in the previous pages are listed below: 



Cervus canadensis (pages 618-618). 



Rensselaer, Jasper County; Foresman, Newton County; North of Camden, Penn Town- 

 ship, Jay County, with mastodon; One or two miles southwest of Winchester, Randolph 

 County; Franklin City, on Nolans Fork, Wayne County; One mile northeast of Cambridge 

 City in Little Simond's Creek, in bed of gravel (may be of recent epoch). 



Symbos cavifrons (pages 638-639). 



Six miles east of Hebron, Porter County, seven feet deep beneath sand and clay; Randolph 

 County; From bank of White River, near Walesboro, Bartholomew County, near margin of 

 Wisconsin drift. 



Ovibos moschatus (pages 641-644). 

 Near Richmond, Wayne County. 



Mammut americanum (pages 700-715). 



The mastodon was evidently widely distributed in Indiana during post- 

 Wisconsin time, judging from the number and the wide dispersal of its remains. 

 Hay reports it from the following localities: 



Allen County; Fort Wayne. Dekalb County; Waterloo, in peat bog, 5 miles west of town. 

 Fountain County; in wet prairie; Newton, in bank of coal Creek, 3 feet beneath surface. 

 Franklin County; Brookville, in peat. Grant County; lake marsh in Fairmount Township. 

 Hendricks County; near Danville. Henry County; (no data). Jackson County; Sparksville, 

 in bank of White River. Jasper County; in peat. Lay County. LaGrange County; near 

 LaGrange. Madison County ; near Anderson, in swamp, under 3 feet of soil. Marion County; 

 Indianopolis, corner Pennsylvania and 30th Street, in sewer. Marshall County; south of 

 South Bend, in ditch near line between Marshall and St. Joseph counties. Miami County; 

 Denver, under 5-6 feet of muck. Montgomery County; on farm in section 12, T.20 N.R. 3. 

 W. Newton County; in Beaver Lake. Parke County; junction of Raccoon and Little Rac- 

 coon creeks. (The horizon to which this record should be assigned is doubtful.) Porter 

 County; on Valparaiso moraine, 8 feet below surface, five miles southwest of Valparaiso. Put- 

 nam County; near Greencastle (no record of geological strata). St. Joseph County; Kanka- 

 kee marsh, Olive Township, ten miles west of South Bend; also in Portage Township. Steuben 

 County; near Ashley, in swamp 5 feet below surface, in marl overlaid by muck. Tipton 

 County; near Lancaster, in black soil, underlaid by white marl. Wabash County; Township 

 29, R. 7, three miles east of North Manchester. Wayne County; two miles east of Richmond 

 in fish pond; Jacksonburg, eighteen miles west of Richmond; Dalton, on Nettle Creek. 



Elephas primigenius (page 733). 



Jefferson County; Randolph County, near Windsor, in bed of Stoney Creek; St. Joseph 

 County, Liberty Township, sixteen miles southwest of South Bend. 



Elaphas columbi (pages 742-746). 



Carroll County, Bringhurst; Monroe County, Gosport, in bank of White River, at depth 

 of 8-9 feet, in bed of sand overlaid by plastic bluish clay. Thot by Hay to be alluvium of 

 valley laid down during or after the Wisconsin invasion (page 744) ; Morgan County, 1 ^ miles 

 west of Monrovia, on gravel bar in Sycamore Creek; Tipton County, Windfall. 



Mammoth remains, species not indicated (pages 746-750). 



Allen County; Dubois County (age doubtful) ; Jasper County ?; Martin County, imbeded 

 in marsh clay resting on drift; Parke County; Putnam County; Vermilion County; Vigo 



