In Prince George County, near Mitchellville, have been found two teeth of an extinct horse (p. [188]). These are as yet unidentified. They are in the U. S. National Museum, No. 8813.

Near Towson, in Baltimore County, a mastodon tooth has been found (p. [112]); but beyond proving that there is at that locality some Pleistocene deposit, it gives us little information.

In 1920 (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. LVIII, pp. 96–109), the writer described a collection of vertebrate fossils, collected in a cave or fissure in limestone at Cavetown, Washington County, by anthropologists from Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. The following is the list of species that were found in the collection:

Of the 22 species here recognized 12 are extinct. This large number of itself indicates that their time of existence was not recent. Similarly, the presence of 2 species of horses, several species of peccaries, and of a saber-tooth tiger points to a rather ancient period. The writer believes that the assemblage belongs to the Sangamon stage of the Pleistocene.

Fig. 17.—Generalized section across the Allegheny Valley at Parkers Landing, West Virginia, showing various stages of erosion and valley fill. U. S. Geol. Surv. Folio 178.

In Washington County, probably along Lane’s Creek, was found, in digging a mill-race, the skull of a mastodon (p. [112]). Further east, near Clear Spring, and about a mile above the entrance of Conococheague Creek into the Potomac, was discovered a tooth of a mastodon (p. [113]). This had been washed out of some deposit along this creek, probably not far away from where it was found. As Stose has shown (Hancock Folio, No. 179, U. S. Geol. Surv.), along the Potomac and its tributary streams there are extensive Pleistocene deposits of sand and gravel, laid down when the river was as much as 200 feet above its present level. It is probable that such deposits date from the early Pleistocene (fig. 17). A more important locality for Pleistocene vertebrates is that near Corriganville, about 3 miles west of north of Cumberland, Maryland. The cave is in Allegany County, west of Wills Creek and south of Jennings Run, about 0.5 mile south of the village of Corriganville. An account of this locality, with a list of the species determined up to that time, has been published by Gidley (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. XLVI, 1913, pp. 93–102). In cutting through a spur of limestone in making a railroad, at a depth of about 100 feet there was exposed a cave or fissure which contained many bones and teeth. Gidley secured some hundreds of specimens belonging to about 35 species. Unfortunately nothing has been published which shows the relation of this cave to the terraces which are found along Potomac River and its tributaries. Through the kind offices of Mr. F. S. Rowe, welfare agent of the Western Maryland Railway, the writer has received from the division engineer, Mr. P. Cain, of Cumberland, a topographic map of Allegany County and a profile of the road extending through the rock cut. From these it appears that the level of the track, at the fissure, is 837 feet above sea-level. This seems, therefore, to be considerably above the highest terrace along the Potomac in that region. It is to be supposed that the fissure was formed long before the animal remains accumulated in it.

In a paper published in 1920 (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. LVII, pp. 651–678, plates LIV, LV, text-figs. 1–10) Gidley added to his former list four species of peccaries, as follows: Platygonus cumberlandensis, P. intermedius, Mylohyus exortivus (all new), and M. pennsylvanicus. In another communication he reported also a deer, a wolverine, a beaver, a lynx, a badger, a marten, an eland, and a crocodile or an alligator (Rep. Smithson. Inst. for 1918, pp. 281–287). Many of the identifications are merely provisional.

Provisional list of fossils found near Corriganville.