150 
Coldingham, in Northumberland, the workmen disinterred 
two antlers embedded at the depth of five or six feet in a 
deposit of gravel, earth, large boulders, and water-worn 
stones. One of these was a nearly perfect antler of the Roebuck 
in its sixth year, and the second was the palmated expansion 
of the antler of the gigantic Irish deer (Megaceros Hibernicus) 
from whence we obtain evidence that they were contempo- 
raneous inhabitants of Berwickshire, and where it is probable 
the latter ruminant existed during the historic period, as in 
Maxwell's " Hill-side and Border Sketches," it is stated that 
near North Berwick "A medal of Trajan, a fibula, a patera, 
and a horn of a moose deer" were discovered. From the fore- 
going instances it would appear that the Roebuck was 
extensively distributed over this Island, probably before its 
insulation ; and perhaps Yorkshire can boast of having 
possessed more species of the Cervine family than any other 
portion of Britain ; as the megaceros, strongiloceros, red 
deer, fallow deer, and roebuck, have now been satisfactorily 
identified as former natives of this county. 
the rev. mr. m'enery's researches in the bone cave 
of kent's hole, Torquay, and their relation to 
the archeology and palaeontology of britain, by 
the rev. john kenrick, m.a., f.s.a., of york. 
Although the scene of Mr. M'Enery's researches is 
very remote from Yorkshire, the value of his discoveries is 
not confined to the locality in which they were made. 
No higher testimony to their importance can be needed 
than that of Professor Owen, who says, " The richest cave 
depository of bears hitherto found in England, is that called 
Kent's Hole, near Torquay. It is to the Rev. Mr. M'Enery 
that the discovery of the various and interesting fossils of 
this cave is principally due." Mr. M'Enery was the chaplain 
of the old Roman Catholic family of Carey, of Tor Abbey, 
