220 The Rev. Mr. Buckland’s account of Fossil Teeth and 
on the spot, may be taken as an example of the state of the 
other caves on the Continent, of which it is superfluous here 
to say any thing farther, than to subjoin a list given by 
M. Cuvier of the most important of them, and to refer to 
the fourth Volume of his Animaux fossiles , for farther de- 
tails taken from the authors by whom these caves have been 
described. 
The caves alluded to are as follows : 
1. That of Bauman, in the county of Blankenberg, in 
Brunswick, on the east border of the Hartz forest, and de- 
scribed by Leibnitz. 
2. That of Sharzfels, in Hanover, in the south border of 
the Hartz, described by Leibnitz, Deluc, and Bruckmann. 
Behrens, in his Hercynia Curiosa, speaks of several more 
in the neighbourhood of the Hartz ; from most of these the 
bones were collected during a long course of years, and sold 
for their imaginary medicinal virtues under the name of 
Licorne. 
3. The caves that next attracted attention were those of 
the Carpathians, and the bones found in them were at first 
known by the name of dragons’ bones, and have been de- 
scribed by Hayne and Bruckmann. 
4. But the most richly furnished are the caves of Fran- 
conia, described by Esper and Rosenmuller, near the sources 
of the Mayn, in the vicinity of Bamberg and Bayreuth, at 
the villages of Gailenreuth, Mockas, Rabenstein, Kirch-a- 
horn, Zahnloch, Zewig, and Hohen Mirchfeld. 
5. A fifth locality occurs at Gliicksbrun, near Meinungen, 
on the south border of the Thuringerwald. 
6 . And a sixth in Westphalia, at Kluterhoehle and Sund- 
