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04504 [sic] me from doing more at present than mention that flint hatchets closely resembling those from Amiens and Abbeville, were found at Hoxne in Suffolk, and described by Mr. Frere, in 1797. Some of the oval form were found in Kent-Hole, near Torquay. In the British Museum is a similar specimen which was found with the skeleton of an elephant in London many years ago, and more recently a few have been discovered near Reculvers by Mr. Leech, Mr. Evans, and Mr. Prestwich, at Biddenham in Bedfordshire by Mr. Wyatt, at Godalming in Surrey by Mr. Whitburn, and at Abbot's Langley by Mr. Evans. We may reasonably hope that the persevering researches of these gentlemen, and especially of Messrs. Evans and Prestwich, will be rewarded by similar discoveries in other places.

appears to be evidence of the present existence of at least four species of birds of the genus Apteryx in New Zealand, concerning which we beg to offer the following remarks, taking them one after the other in the order that they have become successively known.

The Apteryx australis was originally made known to science about the year 1813, from an example obtained in New Zealand by Captain Barclay of the ship "Providence." This bird, which was deposited in the collection of the late Lord Derby, was afterwards described at greater length in 1833, in the Transactions of the Zoological Society by Mr. Yarrell, and was still, at that date, the only specimen of this singular form known to exist. Examples of Apteryges subsequently obtained, though generally referred to the present species, have