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S. W. Williston—North American Plesiosaurs.

The scapula, save the tip of the dorsal process, and the paddle are in excellent preservation. The vertebræ have suffered much from compression, as is usually the case with the soft-boned plesiosaurs in the Kansas chalk.

The scapula is figured in outline herewith (text-figure 4). Its inner part is greatly expanded and produced to meet its mate broadly in the middle line. At their symphysis the two bones are extended backward in a narrow, elongated process, which did not, however, unite with the coracoid, as was the case with E. platyurus. In front, the two bones leave a broad, angular interval for the clavicle or interclavicle. Neither of these bones has ever been certainly defined in this genus, though Cope figured the pectoral girdle of E. platyurus

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Figure 4. Scapulæ of Elasmosaurus marshii Williston. No. 2062, Yale Museum.

as meeting broadly in front, as though the clavicle were fused with the scapulæ. I believe that the missing bone is the interclavicle, and that the clavicles will be found to be as in Cryptoclidus.

The structure of the paddle is clearly shown in Plate II, figure 2, as arranged under the supervision of Professor Marsh. I do not know under what conditions the bones were collected, but doubtless they were sent in from the field with the different parts dissociated. A careful study of the mounted specimen, however, assures me of the essential correctness of the restoration. The peculiar form of the humerus, quite unlike that of any other species of plesiosaur known to me, will enable this species to be readily recognized, though the characters of the scapulæ and vertebræ may possibly be insufficient. The bone is short, as is seen,—an elasmo-