266 
EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. 
27. Inside view of No. 26. 
28. Right coracoid process of the scapula of a small species of 
duck or widgeon. 
29. Inside view of No. 28. 
80. Tusk of the upper jaw of a large hog, polished obliquely near 
its apex, and having a molar tooth of hog adhering to it, near its 
base, by an ochreous crust, from Hutton cavern, in Mendip. 
31. View of the opposite side of No. 30. 
32. Large molar tooth of hog in a fragment of the lower jaw, 
slightly incrusted with ochre, from Hutton. 
33. Small molar tooth of hog, from Hutton. 
Nos. 80, 31, 32, 33 are in Mr. Catcott’s collection at Bristol. 
Plate XII. 
Lower jaw nearly entire of a very old hyaena, found with the 
bones of elephant, rhinoceros, horse, ox, &c. in diluvium, at Lawford, 
near Rugby, in Warwickshire. The coronary part of all the teeth is 
nearly worn off, and on the worn surface of the two hindmost there 
are deep furrows; all the surfaces are highly polished, and even 
have a brilliant lustre; seven teeth only remain, the animal having 
worn out nine from its lower jaw alone, viz. six incisors, the left 
canine or tusk, and two anterior molars. Traces of the root of the 
right anterior molar are still visible in their proper place: the sockets 
of all the other lost teeth have been either removed by absorption, or 
filled up with bone. 
It should be observed, that this specimen, and the humerus and 
ulna (Plate XIII. 1, 2.), are not in the least degree mangled or broken 
like those from the den at Kirkdale, being derived probably from one 
of the last hyagnas that were drowned by the diluvian waters, together 
with the other animals whose bones are found with them equally 
perfect, and free from such marks of violence as occur on all the bones 
of whatever kind discovered at Kirkdale. 
