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on the sides which just invade the masticating area of the jaw. 

 In large individuals the lunate bone of the sternum is granular 

 like the other plates, a character noticed by neither Giinther or 

 Gray, but present in a greater or less degree in old animals. 

 Grows to probably 150 lbs. 



Inhabits Beng;al and the North-Western Provinces. 



Cantor says also ' Pinang,' but I have been unable to verify its 

 occurrence in Burmah, though from Cantors observing it to the 

 south, I included it in my catalogue of Burmese Reptiles, and if 

 Cantor was not mistaken, it no doubt must occur in the 

 intermediate Burmese Provinces. 



T. ocellatus. Gray. 111. Ind. Zool. 



T. Buchanani, Th. Pro. As. Soc, Bengal, March 1874, p. 78. 



T. hiLTum auct. in part. 



T. hurum B. H., apud Anderson, Annals, and Mag., N. H., 

 1872, Vol. IX., p. 882. 



Kdla kachim of the Bengali fishermen. 

 Skull more elongate or taper than in Gangeticus, with the 

 mandible almost spatulate in front, and traversed inside by a 

 median groove very strongly marked. Young handsomely ej'ed, 

 and the species at all ages is marked by the transverse yellow 

 bar across the nose in front of the eyes, and by conspicuous 

 yellow spots on the gape and temples. General colour "green, 

 darker on the occiput, where it is mottled with paler. Throat 

 and neck plumbeous white. Eyelids red." Cartilaginous 

 portion of carapace almost devoid of tubercles, save 3 or 4 

 indistinct ones behind. Osseous pittings of the sternal bones 

 coarser than in Gangeticus, and the lateral plates more bent 

 than is usually seen in other species. The above description 

 was furnished me from life by A. Anderson, Esq. of Futtehgarh ; 

 the shell being figured by me in Proc. As. Soc, Bengal, 1875. 



T. sewaare, Buch. Ham. (Young), Gray. P. Z. S., 1873, p. 50. 



T. chhhn, Buch. Ham. (adult ?). 

 Young animals closely resemble ocellatus, but have no yellow 

 band across the snout, and the face is shorter, and the profile 

 more like Gangeticus. 



