PREFACE. 
‘THE advantage of attention to any object of Natural History, however unattractive, if it 
be not a recognizable or previously known specimen, is exemplified in the fragment of 
bone (Plate, p. 73) which is the foundation of the present work. 
It was brought for sale to the College of Surgeons in 1839 by an individual who Me Kuk MR CS 
stated that he had obtained it in New Zealand from a native, who told him that it was for ae ptanwotear of 
the bone of a great Eagle; and for this specimen he asked the sum of ten guineas. SahiA.s Ba Ke, 
T assured him that he had been misinformed; that the specimen had not the structure . Be Orders 
of a bone of such a bird of flight; that it was a marrow-bone, like those brought to Cee! ft har 
table wrapped in a napkin. earl 
an 
To further questions as to its locality the vendor replied by showing, amongst other Remeas EDO. 
evidences, a jadestone weapon peculiar to the New-Zealanders, which he had also , 
brought from the island, and still seemed to attach so much value to the unpromising 
fragment, that I consented, being at the time specially engaged, to try to make out the : 
bone if he would leave it with me and call for it the next day, e 
As soon as I was at leisure I took the bone to the skeleton of the ox, expecting ta 
verify my first surmise; but, with some resemblance to the shaft of the thigh-bone, 
there were precluding differences. From the ox’s humerus, which also affords the tavern 
delicacy, the discrepancy of shape was more marked, Still, led by the thickness of the 
wall of the marrow-cavity, I proceeded to compare the bone with similar-sized portions 
of the skeletons of the various quadrupeds which might have been introduced and 
have left their remains in New Zealand; but it was clearly unconformable with any such . 
portions. 
In the course of these comparisons I noted certain obscure superficial markings on 
the bone, which recalled to mind similar ones which I had observed on the surface 
of the long bones in some large birds, Thereupon I proceeded with it to the skeleton 
of the Ostrich, “'The bone” tallied in point of size with the shaft of the thigh-bone 
in that bird, but was markedly different in shape. ‘There were, however, the same 
superficial reticulate impressions on the Ostrich’s femur which had caught my attention 
in the exhaustive comparison previously made with the mammalian bones. 
In short, stimulated to more minute and extended examinations, I arrived at the con- 
-yiction that the specimen had come from a bird, that it was the shaft of a thigh-bone, 
and that it must have formed part of the skeleton of a bird as large as, if not larger 2+ “rhe os 
than, the full-sized male Ostrich, with this more striking difference, that whereas 
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