70 
BRITISH FOSSIL ELEPHANTS. 
I have availed myself largely of Professor Boyd Dawkins 5 List, 1 and he has kindly 
revised my notes on the Distribution, and has added some localities previously 
unknown to me. 
The foreign distribution might doubtless be very greatly extended if all the localities 
of specimens in European Museums were recorded. Indeed, the following is by no 
means advanced as a complete list, but I believe it will be found accurate as far as it 
extends. I have made distinctions between (1) remains from River, Valley, and 
Alluvial Deposits, (2) remains from Caverns, and (3) Dredged specimens. 
1. Remains from River , Valley, and Alluvial Deposits. 
Neither Cornwall nor Devon, as far as known to me, have produced any remains of 
the Mammoth from their river, gravel, and surface deposits. 
In Somersetshire, remains have been met with at Hinton (Mus. Roy. Coll. Surg. 
of England), Larkhall and Hartlip (Mus. Geol. Surv.), 2 Loxbrook, St. Audries, 
Weston-super-Mare, Chedzoy, Freshford (Dawkins). 
In Gloucester, at Gloucester (Dawkins), Barnwood (Dawkins), Beckford 
(Dawkins), Stroud (Dawkins), Tewkesbury (Owen). 
In Dorsetshire, at Bridport (Mus. Geol. Surv.), Portland Fissure (Busk, Mus. 
Geol. Soc. London). 
In Hants, in Gale Bay 3 (B. M.), Newton (Woodwardian Mus. and Mus. Geol. 
Surv.). 
In Wilts, at Christian Malford (Oxon. Mus.), Fisherton (Blackmore and 
Sanford), Milford Hill, near Salisbury (Blackmore). 
In Berks, at Maidenhead and Taplow (Wood. Mus.), Reading, Hurley Bottom 
(Oxon. Mus.). 
In Oxfordshire, at Yarnton, “ in gravel,” Bed of Cherwell, City of Oxford, “ in 
gravel,” Wytham and Culham, “in gravel 55 (Oxon. Mus.). 
In Essex, at Lexden (B. M., Wood. Mus., Mus. Geol. Surv.), Orford, ITedding- 
ham, Lamarsh, “railway cutting,” Isle of Dogs (B. M.), Walton-on-the-Naze 
(W ood. Mus.), Ilford (B. M., and Mus. Geol. Surv.), Wenden (Mus. Geol. Surv.), 
Harwich (B. M.), Colchester (Dawkins), Ballingdon (B. M.), Walthamstow 
(B. M.). 
In Herts, at Camp’s FIill (Dawkins). 
In Sussex, at Bracklesham Bay, “raised beach” (B. M.), Brighton, “gravel 
1 “ British Post-Glacial Mammals,” ‘ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.,’ vol. xxv, p. 196. 
2 The Museum of the Geological Survey being incorporated with that of Practical Geology the two 
terms when used here must be considered synonymous. 
0 I cannot find out whether this specimen was dredged or found on dry land. 
