LAMNIB^. 
407 
P. 1279. Seven teeth : Red Crag (derived fossils), Suffolk. 
Efjerton Coll. 
P. 5579. Four teeth ; Red Crag (derived fossils), Felixstowe, Suf- 
folk. Harford Coll. 
P. 5801. Imperfect abraded tooth, of the form named Otodm lan- 
ceolatug, Agassiz ; Upper Eocene (Ironstone), Kre.ssenberg, 
Bavaria. Ennishilhn Coll. 
9757. Ifarrow tootb, resembling Jfo. P. 55 b, but smaller in size 
and with a relatively larger root ; Ix>wer Miocene, Casscl. 
Mantell Coll. 
The following species have also been distinguished upon the 
evidence of detached teeth, but there are no examples in the 
Collection : — 
Lamna adunca : Otodus aduncus, R. Lawley, Jinovi Studi Pesci, 
etc. Colliue Toscane (1876), p. 26. — Pliocene ; Tuscany. 
Lamna basalis: Otodus basalis, Sir P. Egertou (non Giebel, 1847), 
Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. i. (1845), p. 168, woodcut; 
F. Stoliczka, Cret. Fauna S. India (Palaeont. Indica), 
vol. iv. (1873), pt. iv. p. 67, pi. xii. figs. 22, 2.3.— Upper 
Cretaceous ; Pondicherry, Madras. 
Lamna bouchardi, H. E. Sauvage, Catal. Poiss. Form. Second. 
Boulonnais (Mem. Soc Acad. Boulogne, vol. ii.), 1867, 
p. 69, pl.iii. fig. 15. — Gault; Boulogne. 
Lamna brandti : Otodus brandti, V. KiprijanofF, Bull. Soc. Imp. 
If at. Moscou, 1854, pt. ii. p. 382, pi. ii. fig. 3. — Ceno- 
manian ; Government of Orel, Eu.ssia. 
Lamna ealtica : Otodus cattieus, R. A. Philippi, Palaeontogr. vol. i. 
(1846), p. 24, pi. ii. figs. 5-7. — Lower Miocene ; WUhelms- 
bbhe, Cassel. (1 Lamna macrota.) 
Lamna elavata, L. Agassiz, Amer. Journ. Sci. [2] vol. xxi. (1856), 
p. 275. —Tertiary ; Ocoya Creek, California. 
Lamna debilis ; Otodus (Pscu^lotrialcis') debilis^ J, Probst, M iirtt. 
Jahresh. vol. xxxv. (1879), p. 1-55, pi. ii. figs. 78-81.— 
Molasse ; Baltringen, Wurtemberg. 
Lamna ensiculata, J. W. Davis, Trans. Roy. Dublin Soc. [2] vol. iv. 
(1888), p. 18, pi. iii. figs. 6, 7. — Oamaru S 3 ’stem; Xew 
Zealand. 
Lamna gracilis, C. G. Giebel, Fauna d. Vorwelt, Fische, 1847, 
p. 361.— ^Upper Eocene ; Siildorf, near Magdeburg. 
Lanuia haslalisi Otodus hasialis, R. Lawley, op. cit. p. 26. — 
Pliocene ; Tuscany. 
