84 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



Eudorcas baringoensis, p. 109, Baringo district, nakuroensis, p. 110, 

 Nahuro district, biedermanni, p. Ill, Shirati district, langheldi, 

 p. Ill, Usukuma, schillingsi, p. 113, Lal-e Natron district, 

 ndjiriensis, p. 115, Njiri Sivamp, sabakiensis, p. 115, east bank 

 of same, bergeri, p. 116, Nairobi, mundorosica, p. 117, Mundo- 

 rosi plains, wembaerensis, p. 119, Wembare plains, manyarae, 

 p. 120, Lake Afaiiyara, ruwanae, p. 121, Euwana, Knottnerus- 

 Meyer, Sitzber. Oes. nat. Freunde, 1910. 



Eudorcas thomsoni behni, south of Thoma, p. 61, t. dieseneri, 

 E. Usuhuma, p. 63, t. macrocejihala, Wembare Valley, p. 68, 

 t. marivitzi, Wembare plateau, p. 71, t. dongilanensis, Dongila 

 plateau, p. 74, t. arushce, Arusha, p. 77, t. bergerinui, S. of 

 Kilimanjaro, p. 80, Zuhowshy, Arch. Naturgesch. \ol. Ixxx, 1914. 



Typical locality Kilimanjaro district. 

 Size medium ; shoulder-heiglit about 25 inches. Horns 

 long, nearly double the length of the head, in form not 

 unlike those of G. hennctti on an enlarged scale, but little 

 divergent — in some cases almost parallel — slightly curving 

 backwards for seven-eighths of their length, with the tips 

 bending a little forwards and upwards. General colour d€ep 

 sandy rufous, with the dark and light markings sharply 

 defined and conspicuous ; forehead and median face-stripe 

 blackish rufous, with a black nose-spot ; lateral dark face- 

 stripes blackish, light ones, which start from a ring round 

 the eyes and continue to muzzle, white, as are also lips and 

 chin ; flank-band black, deep, and extending far forwards, 

 in contact below with white of under-parts ; pygal band 

 blackish, narrow ; ears rather short ; tail sandy at base, 

 elsewhere black. Skull with shoit, broad, quadrangular nasals, 

 which articulate extensively with the straight, and superiorly 

 but little convex premaxillre ; basal length about 7f inches, 

 maximum breadth 3|, length from muzzle to orl)it 4j inches. 

 Fine horns measure from 15 to 16^ inches in length, with a 

 basal girth of from 4^ to 5, and a tip-to-tip interval of from 

 -2 to llf inches. 



The range includes the interior of British and German 

 East Africa, from Lake Eudolf at least as far south as Irangi. 



84. 12. 6. 1. Frontlet and horns. Kilimanjaro district. 

 Co-type. Presented hy J. Thomson, Esq., 1884. 



84. 12. 6. 2. Frontlet and horns. Same locality. Co- 

 type. Same history. 



88. 12. 15. 1. Skin, mounted, and skull. Masailand, 

 S. W. Kilimanjaro. Presented by IT. C. V. Hunter, Esq., 1888. 



