cliffs bounding the rocky peninsula of Gower, in which Rhinoceros hemitœchus and tichorhinus were associated with Elephas antiquus and primigenius. In one of these, called Bosco's Den, there were no less than 750 shed antlers of reindeer. In another (Long Hole), the fossil remains included E. antiquus and primigenius, two species of rhinoceros (hemitœchus and tichorhinus], bear, lion, hyæna, reindeer, and bison, associated with well-formed flint flakes or knives found at various depths in the cave-earth. Sir Ch. Lyell (ibid., p. 173), after remarking that that was the first well-authenticated instance of the occurrence of R. hemitœchus in connection with human implements, comments as follows on these discoveries:—
Wookey Hole.
The famous Hyæna Den of Wookey Hole, situated on the south side of the Mendips, was discovered about the year 1849 while cutting a canal along the edge of the rock for the purpose of supplying a paper-mill with water from the Axe. In the course of this operation the cavern, choked up to the roof with ossiferous loam, was exposed. It consists of a chamber attached to a bifurcated passage, one of the ends of which runs into a vertical opening or chimney. The cave has been repeatedly investigated, and for the results we are chiefly indebted to Dr Boyd Dawkins, who writes as follows:—