( '574 ) 
turn out again, upon withdrawing my fingers. Whether 
th4;refore 'tis capable of being tormed into a Pouch or 
Marfkpium upon occafion, I fhall leave as a Quaery to be 
reiolv'ed by thofe that live where they breed, Whether' 
they ever obferve the Male to receive the Touttg ones as 
do the Fern dies ? 
However, m the Male there were thofe Bones I call 
MdrJfipialia^zVid I obferved Mufcles runnrng fiom them to 
the hinder Legs, which, no doubt, are very ferviceable 
to them in drawing up their Bodies, as I find Mr Cewper 
has like wife remarked. 
I (hall further add, to confirm what Oppian and others 
I have named (pag. 126.) write concerning iv/^ex receiv- 
ing their Young ones into their Bellies 5 that Mr Herbert 
in his Travels (L//^. i. Pag. 23.) faith, that in their Voyage, 
they took a 6*^^,9 foot and a half long 5 and found in her 
Paunch 55 young ones, each a Geometrical foot in 
length 5 all rvhich^ he adds, go out and in at pleajure, 
1 (hall conclude this Paper with fome few remarks I 
made upon the Bram, fince in the Female I had not an op- 
portunity of doing it, and I find Mr Cowper has omitted it 
in the Male:^ but for all the reft, fhall refer to his account. 
Wherein the Reader will find that the Organs of Genera* 
Hon in the Male are no lefs furprizing and remarkable 
than in the Fm/i/e 5 and in both they are different from 
any other Animal that I have met with. 
Now as to the Brain^ I obferved that being taken out 
of the Cranium it weighed two drams two fcruples. I did 
not find cither in the Cerebrum^ thofe AnfraUm 5 or in 
the Cerebellum thofe Circilli which we ufually meet with 
in other Brains. The whole was of an Oblong figure, 
and feemed to be divided into three Parts, e. The Ce- 
rebellum^ the Cerebrum^ and that part of the Cerebrum 
which was projefted into the Rojirum, For by the Pinch- 
ing in of the Cranium here, the fore part of the Cerebrum, 
from whence iflued the Procejfm Mamilhres and OlfaB§ry 
Nerves 
