76 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



band ; a darker nose-patch may develop in the lower part of 

 the rufous median face-stripe in old individuals. 



412, a. Skull, with horns, and skin. Abyssinia. Type. 



No history. 



61. 2. 30. 13. Skull, with horns. Abyssinia. 



Presented hy W. C. Harris, Esq., 1861. 



69. 10. 24. 2. Skull, with horns, and skin, female. 

 Araba Yalley, Sambur, Abyssinia ; collected during the 

 Abyssinian Expedition of 1869 by Dr. W. T. Blanford, and 

 horns figured by him, op. cit. fig. 1 a. 



Presented hy the Viceroy and Council of India, 1869. 



69. 10. 24. 101. Skull, with horns. Komayli, near 

 Zulla, Abyssinia ; same collection. Horns figured, op. cit. 

 fig. 1. Same history. 



73. 8. 29. 9. Skull, with horns, and (?) skeleton. 

 Dembelas, Abyssinia. Purchased {Gcrrard), 1873. 



97. 1. 5. 14. Skull, with horns, and skin. Anseta 

 Yalley, Abyssinia ; collected by j\Ir. Essler. Sir Victor 

 Brooke's collection. 



Presented hy Sir Doyylas Brooke, Bart., 1897. 



Gazella, sp. non. det. 



10. 3. 12. 15. Imperfect skull, witli horns. East of 

 Katrane Bellia, Palestine. 



Presented, hy Douglas Carrv.tliers, Esq., 1910. 



XYIII. GAZELLA LITTOEALIS. 



Gazella littoralis, Blaine, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 8, vol. xi, p. 295, 

 1913 ; Ward's Becords of Big Game, ed. 7, p. 252, 1914. 



(?) Gazella Isabella, Miller, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. vol. xlii, p. 171, 

 1902.* 



Typical locality Khorasot, ISTubian Desert. 



Bather smaller than dorcas. Horns shorter than in 

 dorcas, regularly diverging from base slightly outwards and 

 then curving backwards, with their tips sharply hooked 

 inwards at right angles, or rather less ; general colour soft 

 reddish fawm, with a lighter flank-band, and the dark flank- 



* Miller's specimens came from the Nubian desert, the type 

 locality of littoralis. 



