1893. THE MAMMALS OF KILIMA-N7ARO. 259 
some stew. The most remarkable monkey in all this region is probably 
the Colobus, which apparently offers a new variety or sub-species in the 
country round Kilima-njaro. remarkable for having an entirely white, 
heavily-plumed tail. The common species, with a black tail tipped 
with white, I have shot in the forested plains near the coast. The 
Colobus monkey is almost the only one that quite avoids the neigh- 
bourhood of man; the other genera frequent the vicinity of native 
plantations, and doubtless profit by the abundance of cultivated food. 

Block lent by the] [Pres. Linn. Soc. 
Fig. 1.—GRANT’S GAZELLE (Gazella granti). 
I never observed any Galago (a lemuroid animal) in this district, nor 
do the natives speak of one, although it is a genus well represented in 
other parts of Africa.” 
The sporting trip of Sir Robert Harvey and his friends to 
Eastern Africa, in 1887, and the consequent publication of Sir 
John Willoughby’s “East Africa, and its Big Game” (5), resulted 
in another important contribution to our knowledge of the 
S2 
