PAPIO 121 



1848. /. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, in Annales du Museum d'Histoire 

 Naturelle, Paris. 

 Papio PAPIO redescribed as Cynocephalus olivaceus. 



1851. /. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Catalogue des Primates. 



In his Catalogue of the specimens of Primates in the Paris 

 Museum under the genus Cynocephalus, the following species 

 of Papio are recorded: (C) hamadryas; (C.) sphinx = P. 

 PAPIO (Desm.) ; (C.) olivaceus = P. papio; (C.) babuin — P. 

 cynocephalus; (C) porc.a.rius; (C.) leucoph^us; and (C.) 

 mormon = P. sphinx (Linn.). 



1852. IV. H. C. Peters, Naturwissenschaftliche Reise nach Mossam- 

 bique. 



A young baboon, probably P. cynocephalus described as 

 Cercopithecus ochraceus. 



1853. C. J. Teniminck, Esquisses Zoologiques sur la Cote de Guinee. 

 P. sphinx (Auct. nee Linn.), = P. papio (Desm.), redescribed 

 as Papio rubescens. 



1855. Wagner, Schreber, Die Saugthiere in Abbildungen nach der 

 Natur mit Beschreibungen. Supplementband. 

 In the genus Cynocephalus the following species of Papio are 

 included: (C.) hamadryas; (C) babuin = P. cynocephalus; 

 (C) anubis undeterminable, but is made var. B. of (C.) babuin 

 — P. cynocephalus; (C) sphinx = P. papio (Desm.) ; (C) 

 ursinus — P. porcarius; (C.) mormon = P. sphinx (Linn.) ; 

 (C.) LEucoPH-5;us ; and (C.) thoth Ogilby, is considered the 

 same as anubis, which is an error as this animal is a yellowish 

 baboon, not grown, and equals P. cynocephalus ; while P. 

 anubis is described as a dark green baboon, 'verdatre fonce,' 

 quite unlike P. thoth, or any other known species. 



1862. Reichenbach, Die Vollst'dndigste Naturgeschichte der Affen 



The genus Papio in this work contains the following : P. sphinx 

 (nee Linn.), ~ P. papio (Desm.) ; P. babuin = P. cynoceph- 

 alus ; P. anubis undeterminable ; P. doguera ; P. olivaceus 

 = P. papio; and subgenera A. Cheiropithecus, with P. por- 

 carius ; and B. Cynocephalus, with P. hamadryas , and P. 

 moco, undeterminable; and C. Theropithecus, recognized in 

 this Review as an independent genus with P. gelada and P. 

 senex = T. gelada; and P. obscurus. Mormon, with M. 

 maimon = P. sphinx (Linn.); and P. leucoph^us; and 

 Cynopithecus, a distinct genus of the Black Apes of Celebes. 



