108 Prof. Huxley — Osteology of the genus Glyptodon. [Jan. 28, 



Table III. {continued). 



Desf. 



Note. 



Loar. 



Remarks. 



Deg. 



Note. 



Log. 



Remarks. 



38" 



Ja 



•21645 



T, P, t. 



45' 



tbi7 



•25527 



T,t. 



38f 





•22040 



P. 



451 





•26567 



P. 





A 





"P, T P + 

 ill, 1, r, I. 



47" 



tVi 



4-0 





T P t 





gx 









tfb 





t C! 











48' 





•27300 



E H T P t 



39| 



||a 



•22577 



et. 







48-7- 





•27594 



et. 



40' 



b717 



•22675 



t, s. 



!|b 



40 



ta 



•22724 



H, T, P, t. 



49 



L. 



c7 



•27791 



t. 



4r 



tta 



•23264 



t. 



49 



tb 



•27840 



E^, H^, P, t, se. 



42" 





•23908 



t. 



50' 



ttb 



•28380 



t. 



42'" 





•23958 



T; 



51" 



++ 



•29024 



t. 



m 





•24304 



P. 



51"' 



tbtf 



•29073 



T. 









if, X, S. 



PCI 4 



5c 





p 



Jr. 



43" 



ait 



•24497 



P, t. 



52' 





•29563 



T, P, t. 



44 



b5 



•24988 



T, P, t. 



52" 



btf 



•29612 



E^, H^, P, t, s. 



44' 



M 



•25037 



H^, P, t, s. 











441. 



\H 



•25086 



et. 











January 28, 1864. 

 Major-General SABINE, President, in the Chair. 



The following communications were read : — 



I. " On the Osteology of the genus Glyptodon.^' By Thomas Henry 

 Huxley, F.R.S. Received December 30, 1863. 



In 1862 the author communicated to the Royal Society an account of 

 the more remarkable features of the skeleton of a specimen of the extinct 

 genus Glyptodon which had been recently added to the Museum of the 

 Royal College of Surgeons ; and he then promised to give a full description 

 of the skeleton, illustrated by appropriate figures, in a memoir to be pre- 

 sented in due time to the Royal Society. The present communication con- 

 sists of Part I., and Sections 1 and 2 of Part II,, of the promised memoir. 

 P^rt I. contains the history of the discovery and determination of the 

 remains of the Hoplophoridae, or animals allied to, or identical with Glypto- 

 don clavipes. Part II. is destined to comprehend the description of the 

 skeleton of Glyptodon clavipes (Owen) — Kyplophorus Selloil (Lund); and 

 the Sections 1 and 2 now given contain descriptions of the skull and the 

 vertebral column. 



The preliminary notice already published in the Proceedings (Dec. 18, 

 1862, vol. xii. p. 316) will serve as an abstract. 



