g2 Records of the Indian Museum. [Vol. VIII, 



Darjiling, except that there appears to be a greater admixture of 

 white on the sides of the body possibly indicating an approach 

 to C. sumatraensis mihie-edwardsi (David) from Eastern Tibet, and 

 to the Nepalese and Sikkim form C. s. thar, Hodgs., {N emorhaedus 

 bubalinus, auct.) from which it is only doubtfully distinct. 



The horns in the skull before me, which would appear to be 

 that of an aged male, are much larger than in either of the speci- 

 mens mentioned by Pocock, which were 4 and 6 inches in length 

 against io*i5 in length and 6 inches in circumference in the 

 present specimen. 



25. Ccfvulus muntjac, Zimmerman. 



Blanford, op. cit., p. 532. 



A somewhat imperfect skull of an adult male Barking-deer 

 from the village Moshup at Komsing. Length of horn from the 

 burr, 5*45 ; from the base of the bony pedicel, 7'6; zygomatic 

 breadth, 373 ; maxillary tooth row, 2'24 inches. In a Malay skull 

 of similar age from the Bindings territory the two latter dimensions 

 are 3-44 and 2"56 inches. The species in the broad sense are 

 probably divisible into many local races, but large series from all 

 localities are required before this can be attempted. 



26. Sus cristatus, Wagner. 



Blanford, op. cit., p. 560; Miller, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 

 XXX, p. 745, pi. Iviii, fig. i and lix, figs, i, 2 (1906). 



An adult female skin and skull from Kobo, 400 ft. 



The Malayan form , to which probably specimens from Tenas- 

 serim and parts of Burma belong, has been separated by Miller 

 under the name Sus juhatus, on account of the smaller ear and the 

 less complicated enamel pattern of the posterior molar. 



