MAMMALIA. 
135 
knees; horns black, round, annulated, with three flexures; fe¬ 
male without horns. About four feet long. Inhabits India. 
Sub-Genus 1. — Gazella. — Horns, with double flexures, 
lyre form, annulated, without ridges in either sex. 
Antilope Euchore. — The Springbok. 
Plate XXIX. fig. 4. 
Fur pale dun; horns brownish-black, lyrate; chest and belly 
divided by a longitudinal broad chestnut stripe; abdomen and 
inside of the legs white; face white, with a chestnut stripe 
running from the ear to the mouth, on each side. Four feet 
and a half long. Inhabits Southern Africa. 
Sub-Genus 2. — Cervicapra.— Horns simple, having no an- 
nulations, or ridges; some species, however, have a few. 
Sub-Division I.— With horns pointing forward. 
Antilope eleotragus. — The Rietbok. 
Plate XXIX. fig. 5. 
Fur ash-gray, tinged with ochre, white beneath ; hair on the 
throat and breast long, of a cream white; horns black, slightly 
bent forward, nine or ten inches long; tail about ten inches. 
Four feet and a half long. Inhabits Caffraria. 
Sub-Division II. — Horns erect. 
Antilope quadriscopa. — The Four-Tufted Antelope. 
Plate XXIV. fig. 6. 
Fur yellowish-gray, white beneath; legs slender, with tufts 
of hair on the knees and hind legs ; horns four inches long, re¬ 
clining, diverging, and pointed, with six or seven small annula- 
tions at their base. Size of the roebuck. Inhabits Africa. 
