[717] An able Summary on British Fossil Reptiles is appended to Prof. Owen’s Report, Rep. Brit. Assoc. 1841, p. 191.
The fossil Teeth of Reptiles are commonly found in as perfect a state of preservation as those of fishes; and require but the usual care for their preservation. But the collector should assiduously search for vestiges of the jaw and cranium; and it is desirable to place in the same drawer any undetermined bones found associated with the teeth; as they may ultimately afford some clue to the nature of the original animal. The microscopical examination of the teeth is to be conducted in the manner previously directed (p. 639); but for valuable specimens the lapidary should be employed, and transverse sections made from near the apex, the middle, and base of the tooth; if due care be taken, several slices may be obtained from one specimen. I have ten slices from one tooth of the Labyrinthodon. The bones imbedded in limestone generally partake of the chemical character of the rock, and are often permeated with calcareous spar; mere fragments, when polished, frequently display the internal structure.
The suggestions for repairing fossil bones (p. 46) render further instructions on that head unnecessary; and the description of the development of the specimen of Hylæosaurus (p. 689) affords a practical lesson to the young collector.
When a vertebra is found in an imperfect state, it should be closely examined on the spot, and, if it present proofs of recent fracture, the detached processes should be sought for; even if the body of a vertebra be imbedded in stone, and the processes appear to have been broken off before it was enveloped in the rock, the corresponding parts will often be found in the same mass of stone. There is in the British Museum a very fine Saurian vertebra imbedded in a large slab of Tilgate stone, in which the spinous process is seen lying in the same block, several inches distant from the centrum or body; when observed in the quarry the latter only was exposed, and I was about to detach it from the slab, for the convenience of carriage, when I perceived indications of the spinous process. The vertebra was therefore allowed to remain, and the stone chiselled away, so as to expose the spine; and the specimen then displayed its present interesting character.
It may frequently happen that a fragment of a large bone,—as, for example, the thigh-bone of the Iguanodon,—may be obtained from a quarry; and after an interval of some weeks the corresponding portions be discovered. This was remarkably exemplified in the first specimen which revealed to me the peculiar characters of the femur of the Iguanodon. The lower part, or condyloid extremity, of a gigantic bone, firmly impacted in a block of Tilgate-grit, was found in a quarry near Cuckfield; it was evidently but a fragment of the fossil, for the fracture was recent; I therefore requested the quarry-men to make diligent search for the corresponding portion, but without success. Several months afterwards, upon a fresh explosion in the quarry, the head of a large bone was found loose among the fallen mass; but there were no indications that it belonged to the specimen previously found; and it was regarded as another relic of some one of the colossal animals whose bones were distributed in the Wealden deposits. Teeth, fragments of bones, and other fossils were from time to time obtained from the same quarry; and among these a huge quadrangular fragment of bone, similar to the enormous mass that had so long been in my possession, and had defied all attempts to ascertain its character.[718] It was some time before it occurred to me, that the three portions of unknown colossal bone might belong to the same specimen; but eventually they were found to correspond, and upon cementing them together, the femur of the Iguanodon was, for the first time, developed.
[718] The fragment alluded to is figured, Foss. Til. For. pl. xviii.
The figures in [Lign. 206] will assist the collector in recognising the different vertebral processes, even when occurring as detached fragments. When specimens are evidently rolled or water-worn, there is, of course, no probability that the corresponding portions will be met with. Every fragment of a bone the nature of which is not obvious should be carefully preserved; for sooner or later its characters may be ascertained. It is scarcely necessary again to remind the collector, that search should be made for indications of the soft parts around the bones; the specimen of the paddle of the Ichthyosaurus ([Lign. 215], p. 669), with its integument, must have impressed this fact too strongly on the mind to be soon forgotten. If the impression of the extremities of a bone, of which a fragment only remains, be observed, the block of stone should be preserved, as a cast may be taken, and the entire form of the original be ascertained.
BRITISH LOCALITIES OF FOSSIL REPTILES.
Aust Cliff, near Bristol. Lias. Plesiosaurus.