DISCOVERED AT KIRKDALE, IN YORKSHIRE. 25 
3. At Sundwick, in Westphalia, Mr. A. L. Sack, of Bonn, has 
within the last two years discovered remains of the hyaena 
in the same cave with the bones of the ursus spelaeus, ursus 
arctoideus, and glutton; and accompanied by the molar teeth, 
head, and foot bones of rhinoceros, and the horns, jaws, and 
other bones of two species of large deer; the bones of the 
deer and rhinoceros he describes as having their softer 
parts broken off, and bearing distinct marks of the teeth of 
the wild beasts by which they have been gnawed. 
4. In Franee, at Fouvent, near Gray, in the department of Doubes, 
bones of the hyaena were found mixed with the teeth and tusks 
of elephants, and the bones of the rhinoceros and horse, in 
a cavity of limestone rock, which, like that at Kirkdale, was 
discovered by the accidental digging away of the rock in a 
garden. 
5. In Saxony, on the S.W. of Leipsig, Baron Schlotheim has 
discovered at Ivostritz, in the valley of the Elster, the bones 
of hyaenae mixed with those of rhinoceros, horse, ox, stag, 
bear, and extinct tiger, in the fissures and cavities both of 
the limestone and gypsum rocks which occur in that district. 
The bones are buried in, and mixed up with a mass of dilu¬ 
vial loam or clay, containing also pebbles of limestone and 
granite. 
6. In Wirtemberg at Canstadt, in the valley of the Necker, 
A. D. 1700, hyamas’ bones were found mixed with those of 
the elephant, rhinoceros, horse, ox, stag, hare, and small 
carnivorous animals, and with rolled pebbles, in a mass of 
