DINOSAURIA, EMYDOSAURIA. 
Rept. 29 
DINOSAURIA. 
H. F. OsBORN, Science (2) xix, pp. 255 & 256, remarks on the position of 
the bones of the form-arm in the Sauropoda. 
H. G. Seeley, Ann. Nat. Hist. (7) xiv, p. 341, remarks on the pneumatic 
foramina in Dinosaurian vertebrae. 
H. F. OsBORN, Bull. Amer. Mus. xx, pp. 181-190, figg., remarks on the 
structure of the manus, sacrum, and caudal vertebrae of Diplodocus 
and Brontosaurus. 
Monoclonius canadensis, sp. n., Lambe, Tr. K Soc. Canada x, iv, p. 7, pi. 11. 
On the skull : Lambe, Ottawa Natural, xviii, p. 33, pi. ii. 
Centrosaurus apertus, g. and sp. nn., allied to Monoclonius, Lambe, t. c. 
p. 33, pi. i, and Tr. R. Soc. Canada x, iv, p. 3, pi. i, Cretaceous of 
Alberta, Canada. 
Algoasauriis hauri, g. and sp. n., apparently related to Diplodocus, Broom, 
Geol. Mag. (v) i, p. 445, fig.. Cretaceous near Port Elizabeth. 
Ornithominius alius, Lambe. On the manus : Lambe, Ottawa Natural, 
xviii, p. 33, 2 pis. 
Dryptosaurus incrassatus, Cope. Skulls and other remains described and 
figured by Lambe, Contr. Canad. Pal. iii (4to), x^t. iii, 8 pis. 
Dystrophoius mcemalce. Cope. Various bones described and figured by 
F. V. HuENE, N. Jahrb. Min., Beil. xix, p. 319, pis. xiv-xvi. 
Otouphepus magnijicits, g. and sp. n., for a Dinosaurian footprint from the 
Trias of the Connecticut alley, Cushman, Amer. Geol. xxxiii, p. 154, 
pi. vi. 
Anthisaiiripus, g. n. for Euhrontes dananus, Hitchcock, the track of 
Anchisaurus colurus, Marsh, Lull, Mem. Boston Soc. v, p. 486 ; A. 
hitchcocki, sp. n., id. ibid. p. 488, fig., Massachusetts. 
Stenonyx, n. n. for Leptonyx, Hitchcock, preoccupied. Lull, t. c. p. 498. 
On footprints of a Dinosaur apparently related to Allosaurus, Marsh, 
KiGGS, Amer. J. Sci, (4) xvii, p. 423, fig. 
On Dinosaurian remains from the Trias of Bio Grande do Sul, Brazil, 
A. S. Woodward, Rep. Brit. Ass. 1903, p. 663. 
EMYDOSAURIA. 
J. Douglas Ogilby, P. Soc. Queensland, xviii, pp. 201-213, has remarks 
on the habits and distribution of Crocodiles, with special reference to 
the two Australian species. 
A. Pettit, C.R. Soc. Biol. Ivi, pp. 298-300, fig., and Bull. Mus. Paris 1904, 
pp. 66-68, fig., remarks on the structure of the liver of Alligator 
mississippiensis. 
A. Pettit & F. Geay, C.R. Soc. Biol. Ivi, pp. 1087-1089, remark on the 
structure of the cloacal gland of Caiman sclerops. 
Crocodilus prenasalis, sp. n. (foss.), LooMis, Amer. J. Sci. (4) xviii, p. 427, 
figg., Oligocene, White River, U.S.A. 
Thecachampsa, Cope (foss.). On various remains : Case, Maryland geol. 
Surv. 1904, p. 64, pi. xxvii. 
Teleorhinus, g. n., allied to Teleosaurus, for T. browni, sp. n. (foss.), 
OsBORN, Bull. Amer. Mus. xx, pp. 239, Cretaceous of Montana. 
Metriorhynchus jaeJceli, sp. n. (foss.), W. E. Schmidt, Zeitschr. Deutsch. 
geol. Ges. Ivi, Protok. p. 97, figg., pis. xi & xii, Oxford Clay of 
Huntingdonshire. 
Notochampsa, g. n., for Mesosuchian remains. Broom, Geol. Mag. (v) i, 
p. 582 ; N. istedana and longipes, spp. nn., id. ibid. p. 583, figg., 
Upper Stormberg beds (Lower Jurassic;, Barkly East, S. Africa. 
