

THE PERFECT SERIES OF THE BONES OF THE RIGHT FOOT OF THE MOA, OR EXTINCT COLOSSAL OSTRICH-LIKE BIRD OF NEW ZEALAND FOUNDIMBEDDED IN AN ERECT POSITION, WITH THE CORRESPONDING FOOT A YARD IN ADVANCE, IN A TURRARY DEPOSIT, AT WAIKOUAITI IN THE MIDDLE ISLAND, BYWALTER MANTELL ESQRE OF WELLINGTON.
FIGURES 1a 2a 3a THE PLANTAR OR UNDER SURFACE OF THE FIRST, SECOND & THIRD TOES. THE FIGURES ARE 1/3 NATURAL SIZE LINEAR.THE ORIGINAL BIRD WAS ABOUT 10 FEET HIGH.
A
PICTORIAL ATLAS
OF
FOSSIL REMAINS,
CONSISTING OF COLOURED
ILLUSTRATIONS
SELECTED FROM
PARKINSON'S "ORGANIC REMAINS OF A FORMER WORLD;"
AND
ARTIS'S "ANTEDILUVIAN PHYTOLOGY."
WITH DESCRIPTIONS
BY GIDEON ALGERNON MANTELL, ESQ. LL.D. F.K.S.
VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY,
FELLOW OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, ETC.
AUTHOR OF "THE WONDERS OF GEOLOGY," ETC. ETC.

"All things in nature are engaged in writing their own history. The planet and the pebble are attended by theirshadows—the rolling rock leaves its farrows on the mountain side—the river its channel in the soil—the animal itsbones in the stratum—the fern and the leaf inscribe their modest epitaphs on the coal—the falling drop sculpturesits story on the sand, or on the stone—not a footstep on the snow or on the ground but traces in charactersmore or less enduring the record of its progress."—Emerson.
With Seventy-four plates,
CONTAINING NEARLY NINE HUNDRED FIGURES.
LONDON:
H. G. BOHN, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
1850.
LONDON:
R. CLAY, PRINTER, BREAD STREET HILL.
TO
THE VERY REVEREND
WILLIAM BUCKLAND, D.D. F.R.S.
Dean of Westminster,
&c. &c. &c.
THIS WORK IS INSCRIBED
AS AN EXPRESSION OF THE HIGH RESPECT AND AFFECTIONATE REGARD
OF ONE WHO HAS FOR MORE THAN THIRTY YEARS
ENJOYED THE HONOUR AND PRIVILEGE OF HIS CORRESPONDENCE
AND FRIENDSHIP.
Chester Square, Pimlico,
January 1850.
...