ELEPHANTS OF THE RED CRAG OF SUFFOLK. 
179 
Trimley, near Felixstow, Suffolk, were lately presented to the Museum of the Yorkshire 
Philosophical Society, by Mr. W. Reed, F.G.S., who has kindly forwarded the specimen 
for description and illustration in this Monograph. Fig. 2 represents three incomplete 
discs, showing the decidedly central expansions and angulations of the thick-plated 
crown of E- antiquus (p. 33, and PI. Y, fig. 1), but the enamel is free from crimping 
and all the elements are in excess, as in E. meridionalis, in which, as before observed, 
the two former conditions sometimes occur in individual plates, although rarely on 
successional discs, as shown in PL XXVI, fig. 2. 
As in the case of the majority of fragments of thick-plated molars, it is quite impos¬ 
sible to give a decided opinion. However, in consideration of the above characters, I 
am inclined to place this example with the thick-plated variety ( E . priscus) of E. antiquus 
rather than with E. meridionalis. Each plate is about an inch in thickness at the 
middle of the disc. 
2. The vertical sections of two plates from the same locality (PI. XXVI, fig. 4) are 
quite in keeping with the foregoing. 
