266 EQTTID-S;. 



The drawings of the following varieties are in the British 

 Museum : — 



Drawing of Chinese Tangliam, Hodgson, Icon, inecl. B. M. t. 212. f. 1. 

 Drawing of Lhassa Tangham, Hodgson, Icon. ined. B. M. t. 212. f. 2, 



and t. 213. 

 Drawing of Gyanche Tangham, Hodqson, Icon. ined. B. M. t. 212. 



f. 3. 

 Drawing of Hubstee of Deo Dharnia, Hodgson, Icon. ined. B. M. t. 214. 

 Tuttoo or Hack Pony of Calcutta, Hardw. Icon. ined. B. M. n. 10,975. 



t. 116, u. 10,974. t. 81. 



Var. 2. The Dun-coloured Horse. 



Dun-coloured, more or less like the Ass, with a black medial dorsal 

 stripe, and sometimes also a cross stripe on the withers and very- 

 distinct bars on the limbs. 



Dim Horses, Zoophilus {Blyth), Land and Water, 1866, Oct. 27, 

 p. 326. 

 Sometimes it has a faint longitudinal stripe on the cheek and jowl. 

 Tail and mane copious (" Burmese Ponies " at Calcutta). 



Hah. Western India, Gujerat. Bred in the Independent Shan 

 States, geldings only being brought down to the British provinces. 

 See also " Eelback dun " Horses. 



Horses were" introduced by the French in the Falkland Islands in 

 1764, since which time they have greatly increased. They have 

 never left the eastern end of the island, although there is no natural 

 boundary to prevent them from roaming, and that part of the island 

 is not more tempting than the rest. The stallions are said to be 

 constantly roaming from place to place, and compelling the mares 

 to accompany them, whether or not the young foals are able to 

 foUow, and they are left to die. The predominant colours are roau 

 and iron-grej'. 



All the horses bred here, both tame and wild, are rather small- 

 sized, though generally in goo4 condition, and they are not so strong 

 as the horses from the Plata. — Danvin, Journal, p. 192. 



The Horse was first landed at Buenos Ayres in 1537, and, the 

 colony being then for a time deserted, it ran wild : in 1-580, only 

 forty-three years afterwards, one hears of them at the Strait of Ma- 

 gellan. The natives of Terra del Fuego are weU stocked with horses, 

 each man having six or seven, and all the women and even children 

 their own horse. — Darwin, Journal, p. 233; liengger, Natar. 

 Sdugeth. Paragua, p. 334. 



The soldiers in Bahia Blanca eat mares' flesh for food. — Darwin, 

 Journal, p. 101. 



In Banda Oriental they think it ridicidous to break in or ride a 

 mare ; they are of no value except for breeding, and, rarely, to tread 

 out the wheat from the ear, for which purpose they are driven round 

 a circular enclosure where the wheat sheaves are strewn. Numbers 

 are slaughtered for the sake of their hides, although only worth about 

 half-a-crown apiece. — Danvin, Journ. p. 134. 



