67 
NINTH ROOM. 
This room is appropriated to petrifactions and 
other fossil organic remains, among which the 
following may be specified. 
Osseous remains of mammiferous animals 
(Cases 5 to 12). The more remarkable are:— 
A fossil human skeleton imbedded in limestone, 
from Gaudaloupe, described in the Philosophical 
Transactions of 1814. —The bones of several 
pachydermatous or thick-skinned animals, viz. 
those of the several species of Paljeotherium 
and Anoplotherium, from the plaster-quarries 
in the vicinity of Paris ;—those of the fossil Si¬ 
berian elephant(ELEPHASjpHw/^^72/W5 Bl.), which 
is the real mammoth ; and the gigantic North 
American animal (Mastodon ohioticus)^ which 
has likewise erroneously been called mammoth ; 
—those of the rhinoceros (R. antiquitatisj. 
Of carnivorous animals we have the cranium 
and other bones of the cavern bear (Ursus spe -‘ 
Iceus Bl.) from the Hartz and Franconia. 
Among the bones of the ruminant animals are: 
■—A very perfect specimen of the skull and horns 
of the large elk (Cervus giganteus or hibernicus)^ 
found fossil in Ireland and in the Isle of Man 
the skull of the Caledonian ox (Bos Taurus^ var. 
gigantea), nearly allied to the European domes¬ 
ticated ox:—bones in the osseous breccia of 
Gibraltar and the coast of Dalmatia. 
F 2 In 
ROOM IX. 
Nat. Hist. 
