Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Several nearly complete skeletons of the primitive teleostean fish Portheus molossus are now known from the Chalk of Kansas; but none is better preserved than a remarkable trunk, nearly 12 feet in total length, lately obtained for the British Museum by Mr. Charles H. Sternberg. The specimen is shown, of about of the natural size, in the accompanying Plate XVIII, where it is seen mounted with the head of another fish of the same proportions. All the bones remain embedded in the matrix exactly as they were found, and there is no restoration beyond slight repairs.
page 529 note 1 Crook, A. R., Palœontographica, vol. xxxix, p. 109, fig. 1, 1892Google Scholar; Osborn, H. F., Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. xx, pp. 377–81, pl. x, 1904Google Scholar; McClung, C. E., Kansas Univ. Science Bull., vol. iv, p. 243, pl. xii, 1908Google Scholar.
page 529 note 2 Hay, O. P., Zool. Bull., vol. ii, p. 47, fig. 12, 1898;Google Scholar corrected in Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. xix, p. 56, 1903Google Scholar.
page 530 note 1 Hay, O. P., Zool. Bull., vol. ii, p. 51, figs. 15, 16, 1898Google Scholar.
page 530 note 2 See figures by Hay, O. P., Zool. Bull., vol. ii, p. 48, figs. 13, 14, 1898Google Scholar (in which the hæmal arch is described as neural, and vice versa).
page 531 note 1 Cope, E. D., Vert. Cret. Form. (Rep. U.S. Geol. Surv. Territ., vol. ii, 1875), p. 192, fig. 9Google Scholar.
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