A RTIODACTYLA CETACEA. 
Mamm. 35 
NlTSCUE, H. Beitr/ige zur Naturgeschiclite des Reh-, Roth- und Dam- 
wildes. JB. Tharand. forstl. Ges. xxxiii. 
[Not seen by Recorder ; cf. Zool. Anz. vi. p. 2G4 .] 
Along: review of H. A. Pagensteciier’s paper “Die Entwickelung des 
Hirschgeschlechts,” is given in Kosmos, xi. p. 52. 
Rutimeyer. L. Studieu zu der Geschichte der Hirschfamilie. Verh. 
Ges. Basel, vii. p. 3. 
Contains remarks upon the cranial characters of tho gcuora of this 
family. A continuation of the paper noticod last year \cf. Zool. Rec. 
xviii. Mamm. p. 24]. 
Rangifer tarandus. On remains found near Paris ; A. Gaudry, La 
Nature, x. (1) p. 91. 
>4 Cervus frinianus , gracilis, lacrymosus , ignotus (perhaps = C. kopschi), 
andreanus , jorctianus, devilleanus , cyclorhinus , and hy emails , spp. nn., 
Ileude, l. c. 
Cervus {Axis') matheronis. On remains from Pikermi allied to this 
fossil species ; Dames, SB. nat. Fr. 1882, p. 71. 
Ilyelaphus porcinus. On an abnormality in the horu of a specimen of 
this species; J. Cockburn, J. A. S. B. li. pt. ii. p. 44. The horn is 
described, and the author forms a theory of the evolution of cervine 
antlers to account for it. 
Capreolus caprea. On its existence in England ; J. E. Harting, Pop. 
Sci. Rev. xx. p. 1 36. 
4 Uydropotes inermis. Supplementary notes on its anatomy ; W. A. 
Fcrbes, P. Z. S. 1882, p. 636. The brain, which is figured, and the gene- 
rative organs agree very closely with those of Capreolus. 
Dicroceros fallax, sp u. (foss.), R. Hoernes, JB. geol. Reichsanst. xxxii. 
p. 157, Turuau, Steiermark. 
Cariacus columbianus does not extend eastward of the Cascade Moun- 
tains ; C. Bendire, P. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1882, p. 348. 
SIRENIA. 
^Allen, J. A. Bibliography of the Sirenia. [See Cetacea .] 
J Roger, O. List of the known fossil species [see supra , p. 13.] 
Halitheriidj:. 
-a Ilalitherium veronense. On some lower incisors of this species found 
at Venice ; A. do Zigno, Mem. 1st. Venet. xxi. p. 775. 
CETACEA. 
^ Allen, J. A. Preliminary List of Works and Papers relating to the 
Mammalian Orders Cete and Sirenia. Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. vi. 
p. 399. 
This valuable list contains more than a thousand references to various 
