Abstract
In a former paper, descriptive of the type remains of Polacanthvs Foxii , some account was given of its dermal armour, but the description was unavoidably very incomplete, owing to the extremely fragmentary state of the parts originally composing it. Broken up by its discoverer into pieces small enough for convenient stowage and transport in bags from the cliffs to the village of Brighstone, two-and a-half miles distant, and then uncared for during fifteen years, the great dorsal shield, when after Mr. Fox’s death his collection was acquired by the British Museum, was represented by several hundreds of disconnected pieces, many of these being of less size than one cubic inch. It was also evident that many had been lost. In this mutilated condition the reconstruction of the shield appeared hopeless, but at length, under the guidance of the heads of the Palæontological Department, this has been accomplished by Mr. Hall and Mr. Barlow (“Masons”), who brought to the task a painstaking perseverance and skill worthy of the highest praise. Although now, doubtless, much less complete than when laid bare in the cliff by Mr. Fox, the reconstruction (which has consisted strictly in a faithful reunion of the disconnected scattered fragments) renders very intelligible the discoverer’s first impression, viz., that “he had before him the carapace of a gigantic turtle,” and it confirms his opinion of the position of the shield, viz., that it covered the rump and loins. The dimensions of the shield, given by Mr. Fox in a MS. note, 3 feet 3 inches by 3 feet, were taken roughly in the cliff before the shield was broken up. In its restored condition its breadth is 108 centims. in front, 105 centims. at its middle, and 48 centims. posteriorly, and its length is 90 centims. The relation of the shield to the pelvic bones makes it evident that the carcass was lying on its belly when it sank into the ooze, and that the shield was later crushed down upon the endoskeleton and flattened out.

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