animals at paviland. 
85 
Hyaena....Lower extremity of the left humerus. 
Fox.Lower extremity of the femur. 
Wolf..One lower jaw. 
One os calcis. 
Several metacarpal bones. 
Ox.Many teeth. 
Two lumbar vertebrae. 
One femur, and many entire bones of the foot, and 
fragments of larger bones. 
Deer.One skull, large as the red deer, but of a different species. 
Fragments of various horns, some small, others a little 
palmated, one approaching to that of the roe. 
Many teeth, and fragments of bones. 
Bat.One skeleton, nearly entire, of a small water-rat, or 
large field-mouse, probably postdiluvian. 
Birds.Single bones of small birds, all recent. 
Man.....Portion of a female skeleton, clearly postdiluvian. 
Fragments of many recent bones of ox and sheep, ap¬ 
parently the remains of human food. 
The entire mass through which the bones are dispersed appears 
to have been disturbed by ancient diggings, and its antediluvian re¬ 
mains thereby to have become mixed with recent bones and shells; 
the latter of which Mr. Dillwyn has examined, and refers to the fol¬ 
lowing species: buccinum undatum, turbo littoreus, patella vulgata, 
trochus crassus, nerita littoralis; these are all common on the adjacent 
shore, and the animals that inhabit them are all eatable. That portion 
of the diluvial mass which lies on the east side of the cave (see Plate 
