PROBOSCIDEA, UNGULATA. 
15 
Elephas indicm. On the hyoid bone ; A. H. Garrod, P. Z. S. 1875, 
pp. 365-367. Report on the death of a female from pulmonary tuber- 
culosis; id. tom. cit. pp. 542 & 543. 
Elephas primigenius : remains in bone-caves in Italy, H. Botti, Boll. 
Com. Geol. Ital. 1874, pp. 242-244 ; in diluvium in France, E. Chelloneix, 
Ann. Soc. Geol. Nord. 1870-1874, pp. 38-40 ; a molar tooth from Alaska, 
A. Gaudry, in A. L. Pinart’s Voyages ^ la C6te Nord-ouest de I’Am^rique, 
i. pp. 29-31, pi. A, figs. 1 & 1^1. 
Mastodon. The present evidence of the ‘‘ cotemporaneity of Man and 
the Mastodon in Missouri/’ i^<msidered doubtful. J. D. Dana, Am. J. 
Sci. (3) ix. pp. 335-346, 5^8"fE. Andrews, op. cit. x. pp. 32-34. 
UNGULATA PERISSODAOTYLA. 
Titanotheriid.®. 
Anisacodon^ g. n. (foss.), O. C. Marsh, Am. J. Sci. (3) ix. pp. 245 & 246, 
allied to Brontotherium, but with no upper and only two lower incisors. 
Type, A. montanus^ sp. n. (p. 246) ; Miocene of Nebraska. Three other 
genera of “ Brontotheridae ” are regarded as well established, viz.: — 
Titanotherium^ Megacerops., and Brontotheriumi ' 
'^Diplacodon^ g. n. (foss.), O. 0. Marsh, tom. cit. p. 246. Between the 
Brontotheriidce and Limnohyidce. Type, D. elatus, sp. n.. Eocene of Utah. 
RmNOCEROTIDiE; 
Dicer atherium, g. n. (foss.), O. 0. Marsh, tom. cit. p. 242. Allied to 
Aceratherium^ but with two nasal horns placed transversely. Types, D. 
armatum (p. 242) and D. nanum (p. 243), from Miocene of Oregon, and 
D. advenuml^na] (p. 244), from Eocene of Utah, spp. nn. 
'^Aphelops jemezanus, sp. n. (foss.), E. D. Cope, P. Ac. Philad. 1875, 
p. 260 ; Ann. Rep. Geog. Expl. 1875, p. 72 ; Miocene of New Mexico. 
Rhinoceros. Note on the existence, of a two-horned species, probably 
R. lasiotis, in Assam ; P, L. Sclater, P. Z. S. 1875, p. 566, 
Rhinoceros. Observations on remains of three species found in 
Russia ; J. F. Brandt, Bull. Petersb. xxi. pp. 81-84. 
Rhinoceros deccanensis^ sp. n. (foss.), R. B. Foote, Palasont. Ind. ser. x. 
art. i. pis. i.-iii. ; Pleistocene of India. 
Rhinoceros unicornis. On the minute anatomy of its intestinal canal, 
P. & H. Gervais, C. R. Ixxxi. pp. 488-491 ; J. Zool. iv. pp. 465-474, 
pis. xi. & xii. 
Rhinoceros sondaicus. The nasal septum is sometimes partially ossified. 
O. L. Fraser, J. A. S. B. (n. s.) xliv. pt. 2, pp. 10-12, pi. v. 
TAPIRIDiE. 
Tapirulus hyracinus. The mandible and dentition are figured ; its 
affinities appear doubtful. A. Gaudry, J. Zool. iv. p. 522, pi. xviii. 
Hyrachpus singularis, sp. n. (foss.), E. D. Cope, Vert. Eoc. New Mex., 
Geol. Ex. & Surv. W. of 100th M., 1875, p. 19 ; Eocene of New Mexico. 
