CATALOG OF TYPE SPECIMENS OF MAMMALS 555 



No numbers are referred to in the original description, but in the 

 Mammals of North America it is seen that there were two specimens, 

 an adult female and a young. Measurements of a skull are given in the 



first description, which apply to the adult female, No. — --. Hence it is 

 regarded as the type. ■^■^^^ 



fSciurus chiricahuae Goldman. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington 46 : 71, Apr. 27, 1933. 



244124. Skin and skull. Adult female. Cave Creek, altitude 5,200 

 feet, Chiricahua Mountains, Cochise County, Ariz. August 16, 

 1923. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Original number 23527. 

 Well-made skin in good condition ; skull Grade B. 



Proc. Washington Acad. Sci. 1 : 59, May 9, 1899. 

 32657 



fSciurus colliaei nuchalis Nelson 

 e. Washington Acad. Sci. 1 : 59, B 



^^^^^ Skin and skull. Adult male. Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico, 

 44580 ' ' 



February 2, 1892. Collected by E. W. Nelson. Original num- 

 ber 1828. 



Well-made skin in good condition ; skull Grade A. 



fSciurus deppei vivax Nelson. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington 14 : 131, Aug. 9, 1901. 

 107932. Skin and skull. Adult female. Apazote, Campeche, 

 Mexico. January 8, 1901. Collected by E. A. Goldman. Origi- 

 nal number 14429. 



Well-made skin in good condition ; skull Grade A. 



*Sciurus dorsalis Woodhouse. 



Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 6: 110, reported favorably for publica- 

 tion June 29, 1852. (Name preoccupied by* Sciunis dorsalis Gray, Proc. 

 Zool. Soc. London, 1848, p. 138 =(Sf. adolphei dorsalis.) 

 =8ciurus abcrti Woodhouse. See Woodhouse, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadel- 

 phia : 220, requested to be published Dec. 28, 1852. 



2430. Skin, no skull. San Francisco Mountain, Coconino County, 

 Ariz., on the routes of Sitgreaves and Whipple, about lat. 35° 

 N. and long. 111°30' W. October 1851. Collected by S. W. 

 Woodhouse. 



The specimen was formerly mounted, but it has since been taken down 

 and made into a fairly good study skin. The first description reads: 

 "This beautiful squirrel I procured whilst attached to the expedition under 

 the command of Capt. L. Sitgreaves, Topographical Engineer, U. S. Army, 

 exploring the Zuni and the Great and Little Colorado rivers of the West 

 in the month of October 1851, in the San Francisco Mountain, N. Mex." 

 This statement makes it practically certain that the above specimen is 

 the one on which Woodhouse based his description. 



