ANTILOPIN^ 65 



0. 8. 6. 10. Skull, with horns, and skin, female. White 

 Nile. Same history. 



0. 8. 6. 11. Skin, immature. Same locality. 



Same history. 



1. 8. 8. 4o. Skull, with horns, imperfect, and skin, 

 female. Kaka, White Nile. 



Presented hy R. Mc. D. Hawker, Esq., 1901. 



3. 2. 8. 33. Skull, with horns, and skin. Agageh, 



Sudan. Presented hy Major H. N. Dunn, 1903. 



3. 2. 8, 34. Skull, with horns, and skin, female. Same 



locality. Same history. 



7. 2. 23. 2. Skull, with horns. White Nile. 



Presented hy J. Rowland Ward, Esq., 1907. 

 9. 9. 14. 1. Head, mounted. White Nile. 



Presented hy Norman B. Smith, Esq., 1909. 



C— Gazella rufifrons hasleri. 



Gazella rufifrons hasleri, Pococh, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1912, p. 5, Abs. 

 P. Z. S. 1912, p. 47. 



Typical locality Kano, Northern Nigeria. 



Distinguished by the ochery fawn general colour, with a 

 paler zone above dark flank-band ; tail coloured like back 

 for its basal inch, elsewhere black above ; dark band 

 bordering white area on buttocks faint ; forehead darker 

 and deeper in colour than cheeks and neck, with a few white 

 hairs between horns. The white nose of the type specimen 

 is almost certainly either an individual peculiarity or a 

 feature induced by captivity. 



12. 12. 22. 1. Skull, with horns, and skin. Kano, 

 Northern Nigeria. Type. 



Presented hy the Zoological Society, 1912. 



D.— Gazella rufifrons kanuri. 



Gazella rufifrons kanuri, ScJuvarz, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, 

 vol. xiii, p. 40, 1914. 



Typical locality Lower Shari Valley, Lake Chad district. 

 Type in the Senckenberg Museum, Frankfort-am-Main. 

 Allied to hasleri, but the general colour tending to pale 

 III. F 



