190 The Rev. Mr. Buckland’s account of Fossil Teeth and 
engraved in M. Cuvier's Recherches sur les ossements fossiles, 
I find them to be absolutely identical. The two situations 
are caverns and diluvian gravel. 
1. In Franconia, a few bones of hyaena were found mixt 
with those of an enormous number of bears, in the cave 
of Gailenreuth. 
2. At Muggendorf, in a similar cave. 
3. At Bauman, in ditto. 
4. At Fouvent, near Gray, in the department of Doubes, 
bones of hyaena were found mixt with those of the ele- 
phant and horse in a fissure of lime-stone rock, which, 
like that at Kirkdale, was discovered by the accidental 
digging away of the rock in a garden. 
5. At Canstadt, in the valley of the Necker, A. D. 1700, 
hyaenas' bones were found mixt with those of the ele- 
phant, rhinoceros, and horse, and with rolled pebbles, in 
a mass of yellowish clay. 
6 . Between Hahldorf and Reiterbuck, on the surface of the 
hills that bound the valley of Eichstadt in Bavaria. 
These were buried in a bed of sand. 
The four first of these cases appear to have been dens, like 
the cave at Kirkdale ; the two latter are deposits of diluvian 
detritus, like the surface gravel beds of England, in which 
similar remains of all the other animals have been found, 
excepting hyaenas. 
It has been observed when speaking of the den, that the 
bones of the hyaenas are as much broken to pieces as those of 
the animals that formed their prey ; and hence we must infer, 
that the carcases even of the hyaenas themselves, were eaten 
up by their survivors. Whether it be the habit of modern 
