126 PAP 10 



former color predominating. Callosities large, color lost in skin. Ex 

 type British Museum. 



Measurements. Size equal to P. porc.xrius or P. doguera. Skull: 

 occipito-nasal length, 181; Hensel, 153; zygomatic width, 133; inter- 

 temporal width, 60.9 ; palatal length, 97.5 ; width of braincase, 86.4 ; 

 median length of nasals, 81.1 ; length of upper molar series, 53.9 ; length 

 of mandible, 168; length of lower molar series, 71.1. Ex type British 

 Museum. 



This is a very large, dark baboon, the pelage exhibiting a mixture 

 of cream color and black with purple under color showing, and grading 

 into the tawny hue of lower back and legs. Tlie skull shows the most 

 trenchant characters and is markedly different from its probably 

 nearest ally, in its smaller teeth and shorter tooth row. Two speci- 

 mens are in the British Museum Collection. 



Papio dogueea (Pucheran et Schimpfer). 



Cynocephalus doguera Puch. et Schimp., Rev. Mag. Zool., 1856, 



p. 96; 1857, p. 250; Schleg., Mas. Pays-Bas, Simiae, 1876, 



p. 262; Anders., Cat. Mamm. Ind. Mus. Calc, Pt. I, 1881, p. 



81; Id. Zool. Egypt., Mamm., 1902, p. 41, pi. VII, (skull). 

 Cynocephalus babouin Rupp., Neue Wirbelth. Saugth., I, 1835, 



p. 7, (Part.). 

 Papio doguera Reichenb., Vollstand. Naturg. Affen, 1862, p. 150; 



Schleg., Mus. Pays-Bas, Simix, 1876, p. 126; Forbes, Handb. 



Primates, I, 1894, p. 262 ; Pousarg., Ann. Scien. Nat., II, 7me 



Ser., 1896, p. 236; Elliot, Cat. Mamm. Field Columb. Mus.. 



F. C. M. Pub., VIII, 1906, p. 566, Zool. Ser. 

 Cynocephalus porcarius Fitz. und Heugl., Syst. Uebers., 1866, p. 6 ; 



Gray, Cat. Monkeys, Lemurs and Fruit-eating Bats, Brit. 



Mus., 1870, p. 64, (nee Bodd.). 



DOGUERA BABOON. 



Type locality. Abyssinia. Type in Paris Museum. 



Geogr. Distr. Interior of Abyssinia, Kavirondo, Lakes Natron 

 and Mangara, (Neumann) ; Takale and Schillouek, (Heuglin). 



Color. Face black ; hairs of upper parts and limbs black banded 

 with ochraceous buff, the general appearance however is ochraceous 

 buff with broad bands of black, just the opposite to the real coloring 

 of the hairs, but they overlap each other in such a manner as to pro- 

 duce the effect described ; wrists and hands black ; feet mixed black 

 and tawny ochraceous ; under parts black, hairs ringed with buff on the 

 chest, and inner side of limbs and arms above elbows ; ochraceous on 



