Page:Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, vol. 33.djvu/701

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 * | Red Sand, Robin-Hood cave.
 * | 447 a, College of Surgeons.
 * | 447, College of Surgeons.
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 * | 1⋅25
 * | 1⋅28
 * | 0⋅65
 * | 0⋅8
 * | 0⋅8
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 * | 1⋅0
 * | 1⋅1
 * | 3⋅28
 * | 3⋅42
 * | 3⋅4
 * | 1⋅55
 * | 1⋅8
 * | 1⋅7
 * | 3⋅0
 * | 4⋅0
 * | 2⋅56
 * | 3⋅32
 * | 3⋅2
 * | 3⋅65
 * | 3⋅65
 * | 3⋅5
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 * | 1⋅1
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 * | 1⋅1
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 * | 3⋅65
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Both these fossil skulls have been gnawed by Hyænas; and the smaller is so mutilated that it offers no measurements of value.

The large number of teeth and jaws from the caves of Creswell, amounting altogether to 1096 and 99 respectively (Robin-Hood 812 and 53; Church Hole 284 and 46), offers a wide basis of induction for the determination of the amount of variation in the teeth of the fossil Hyæna of the caves. So far as relates to their form, I have nothing to add to the essay on the dentition published in the 'Natural-History Review,' in 1865, which was founded mainly on the large stores of remains furnished by the cavern of Wookey Hole. The extremes of size, however, are greater, as may be seen from the comparison of the following measurements (in inches) with those of the above essay.