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otland. The most distinct of the traces of chelonians are on the large slab lately obtained for me by President Hitchcock from Greenfield. (_Vide_ Plate.) This interesting slab contains the traces of quadrupeds, various birds, and two trails of chelonians: the largest of these is nearly five feet long, and four inches in diameter. The trail is composed of a number of parallel elevations, comparatively superficial. * * * * * GROUP NINTH. Of the ninth group, containing the marks of Annelidae, Crustacea, and Zoophytes, we have various specimens. The impressions of insects do not seem as yet to have been distinguished on the ancient rocks. There is reason to believe, however, that many of the marks we discover in the rocky beds might have been made by the feet and bodies of large insects; and small species of the same tribes have been found imbedded in, and actually constituting, immense masses of calcareous and siliceous rocks. The tracks of worms are numerous. No doubt these worms drew together a concourse of birds to the shores on which they rolled. On various slabs we find long cylindrical furrows, about the eighth of an inch in diameter, and of different lengths; one of them, in the slab from Dr. Deane, being eight or nine inches long. To these impressions the name of HERPYSTEZOUM, from _herpystes_, _crawling_, has been given. They vary, however, and some of them are very likely to be the tracks of the common earth-worm, or of some species of worm which existed when these rocks were formed. These impressions vary in length and in diameter; some of them are moderately regular, and others irregularly curved. Very interesting tracks have been found in the ancient Potsdam white sandstone of Beauharnais, on the St. Lawrence, by Mr. Logan, an excellent geologist of Canada, and determined by Professor Owen to belong to Crustacea, crabs. The number of impressions made by each foot is sometimes seven, sometimes eight, and even more. This track, showing the traces of Crustacea, goes to form another link in the chain of fossil footsteps. The Medusae, commonly called jelly-fish, dissolving as they do under the influence of the sun and air, would hardly be expected to leave their traces impressed on ancient rocks. Professor D'Orbigny, however, has watched the dissolution of these animals on the sea-shore, and found that, after wasting, they may leave the
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