EOSIRKN. 
107 
Order SI REN I A. 
Family HALICORID.E. 
The occurrence of Sirenians in the Eocene beds of Egypt was first made known by 
Owen, wlio described a natural cast of the brain-case of one of these animals under the 
name Eotherium cegyptiacum This specimen was from the white Mokattam Lime- 
stone of Cairo, and therefore from a rather lower horizon than the Qasr-el-Sagha beds. 
A few years afterwards Filhol described f some teeth from the same limestone under 
the name Manatus coidomhi, which may be synonymous with Eotherium (egyptiacum. 
Lately much more information concerning Eotherium has been given by Dr. O. Abel, 
wdio, in his important memoir entitled “Die Sirenen der mediterranen Tertiarbildungen 
Osterreichs ” J, gives an account of some recently collected remains of this animal. 
This writer also proposes to publish shortly an exhaustive account of the remains of 
Sirenians both from the neighbourhood of Cairo and from the Fayum, so that in the 
present Catalogue it will only be necessary to give a short description of such remains 
as are preserved in the British Museum and in Cairo. All the specimens from the 
Fayum appear to belong to the genus Eosiren. 
Genus EOSIREN, Andrews. 
[Geol. Mag. [-1] vol. ix, (1902) p. 293.] 
Sirenia in which the three incisors and the canine are present at least in the upper 
jaw. The first pair of incisors are enlarged downwardly-directed tusks ; the second 
and third are small and probably lost early ; their alveoli are situated somewhat on 
the outer side of the rostrum close to the maxillo-premaxillary suture. 
Eotheiium is distinguished from the present genus in several important particulars, 
some of the chief of which are : — (1) the anterior incisors are not greatly enlarged and 
tusk-like, and the two other incisors, though situated far back in the premaxilla, are 
still large and placed on the edge of the jaw ; (2) the natural cranial cast on which 
this genus is based dilfers so considerably from a cast of the brain-cavity in Eosiren 
* Owen, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xxxi, (1873) p. 100. The generic name Eotherium had been 
previously employed by Leidy in 1853 for a genus of Perissodactyls, and therefore strictly the name 
Eotheroides suggested by Palmer (‘Science,’ n. s, vol. x. 1899, p. 494) should be employed for this genus, 
t Bull. Soc. Philomathique de Paris, ser. vii. vol. ii. (1878) pp. 124-5, 
t Abhandl. k.-k. geol. Eeiclisanstalt, vol. xix. pt. 2 (Vienna, 1904). 
