To my colleagues at Princeton I am under great obligations for much valuable counsel and assistance. Professor Gilbert van Ingen has prepared the maps and diagrams and Dr. W. J. Sinclair has devoted much labour and care to the illustrations and has also read the proofs. Both of these friends, as also Professors C. H. Smyth and E. G. Conklin and Drs. Farr and McComas, have read various parts of the manuscript and made many helpful suggestions in dealing with the problems of treatment and presentation.
For thirteen years past I have been engaged in the study of the great collections of fossil mammals, gathered in Patagonia by the lamented Mr. Hatcher and his colleague, Mr. Peterson, now of the Carnegie Museum. This work made it necessary for me to visit the museums of the Argentine Republic, which I did in 1901, and was there received with the greatest courtesy and kindness by Dr. F. Moreno, Director, and Dr. Santiago Roth, of the La Plata Museum, and Dr. F. Ameghino, subsequently Director of the National Museum at Buenos Aires. To all of these gentlemen the chapters on the ancient life of South America are much indebted, especially to Dr. Ameghino, whose untimely death was a great loss to science. It is earnestly to be hoped that the heroic story of his scientific career may soon be given to the world.
Finally, I desire to thank Mr. Horsfall for the infinite pains and care which he has expended upon the illustrations for the work, to which so very large a part of its value is due.
While the book is primarily intended for the lay reader, I cannot but hope that it may also be of service to many zoölogists, who have been unable to keep abreast of the flood of palæontological discovery and yet wish to learn something of its more significant results. How far I have succeeded in a most difficult task must be left to the judgment of such readers.
Princeton, N.J.,
June 1, 1913.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| CHAPTER I | |
| Methods of Investigation—Geological | [1] |
| CHAPTER II | |
| Methods of Investigation—Palæontological | [29] |
| CHAPTER III | |
| The Classification of the Mammalia | [50] |
| CHAPTER IV | |
| The Skeleton and Teeth of Mammals | [61] |
| CHAPTER V | |
| The Geographical Development of the Americas in Cenozoic Times | [99] |
| CHAPTER VI | |
| The Geographical Distribution of Mammals | [135] |
| CHAPTER VII | |
| The Successive Mammalian Faunas of North and South America | [192] |
| CHAPTER VIII | |
| History of the Perissodactyla | [288] |
| CHAPTER IX | |
| History of the Artiodactyla | [358] |
| CHAPTER X | |
| History of the Proboscidea | [422] |
| CHAPTER XI | |
| History of the †Amblypoda and †Condylarthra | [443] |
| CHAPTER XII | |
| History of the †Toxodontia (or †Notoungulata) | [461] |
| CHAPTER XIII | |
| History of the †Litopterna and †Astrapotheria | [489] |
| CHAPTER XIV | |
| History of the Carnivora | [516] |
| CHAPTER XV | |
| History of the Primates | [577] |
| CHAPTER XVI | |
| History of the Edentata | [589] |
| CHAPTER XVII | |
| History of the Marsupialia | [624] |
| CHAPTER XVIII | |
| Modes of Mammalian Evolution | [645] |
| GLOSSARY | [665] |
| INDEX | [675] |