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PAGE LINE 
62 89 Palieinarchui. 
62 98 /. platyodon. 
63 1OI P. dolichodirus. 
64 105 Thaumatosaurus , Pliosaurus. 
63 Ho Pleurosternum, Siegochelys, etc. 
64 136 Ccedacarpum, Bambusium. 
64 142 Acrididee. Baseopis. Tenebrionida. 
64 143 Termites. Paleeomyrmex prodomus. 
64 145 Gry/lacris, Locus ta. 
64 146 Palaontina oolitica. 
64 147 Gryllus. 
64 148 Geocorisa. Nepa. 
64 149 Ephemerlda. Libellulidif. Phryganeidte. Sialidee. 
Panorpidae. 
65 159 Megalosaurus. 
66 177 Scelidosaurus. 
66 l8l Teleosaurus, Mystriosaurus, Pelagosaurus. 
66 187 Pterodactyls. 
67 214 Dimorphon macronyx, P. crassirostris, P. spectabilis. 
Ramphorynchus phyllurus. 
67 226 Phaseolotherium. 
67 227 AmphityluS) Amphllestes, Amphitherium. 
68 237 Kayser, " Text Book of Comparative Geology," translated 
by Lane, p. 238. The restoration of primeval geography 
must be largely a matter of conjecture. Neumayr 
(" Erdgeschichte " II. 263) has drawn a map of the 
world in Jurassic times, in which nearly the whole 
of the Atlantic Ocean is represented as dry land. 
68 252 The geography of Britain during the Jurassic Period is dealt 
with by Jukes-Browne, in ch. IX. of "The Building 
of the British Isles." 
69 269 Thecosmi/ia, etc. 
70 278 Megalosaurus. 
70 286 Camptosaurus ('family Iguanodontidce}. 
230 
