CERVUS SCHOMBURGKI. 7 
with Cervus schomburgki, though afterwards this specimen was re- 
cognized as belonging to Cervus wnicolor equinus and entered under 
same. 
I append measurements of some horns I have collected :— 
7 ie) an 1 Sagi BESeee fC cD LL Ol Te Se 
Length : i : 
Head belonging to on ontside Pa uh ihe Points 
curve tip 
1. British Museum bealens sero. 53" 177i"; — 9+11 
(Record Head) 
2. FE. G. Loder shi “SLE 54 = te 124-11 
3. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. ...|305 314} 65 64 | 24 274 | 10418 
4. IX. W. Trotter (Siam) £04 53 13} 254 7+ 7 
5. E. W. Trotter (Siam) 303 5 15} 214 8+ 9 
6. British Museum 1 3802 5 158 33 10+10 
7. British Museum rT 293 43 233 318 | 10+11 
8. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soe ...) 295 380 | BE 55] 15 281 7+ 8 
9. E. W. Trotter (Siam) ...| 28} 53 153 203 | 84+ 7 
10. Maleolm Smith (Siam) ...| 273 55 ats = 15+ 
All from Siam and, I believe, all procured by purchase, since, 
to the best of my knowledge, no European has ever shot one of these 
animals. 
Nos. 3 and 8 were presented in 1897 to the Bombay Natural 
History Society by, respectively, Messrs. A. J. A. Jardine and 
H. Slade. | No. 8 used at one time to hang in the Borneo Company’s 
bungalow at Raheng and would have been most probably procured at 
Paknam Po, or in that district. 
No. 10 is a single right-hand horn and is remarkable for the 
large number of points it carries. This horn is shewn in the illustra- 
tion accompanying this article, the lower head being also the property 
of Dr. Smith, having been selected, in spite of its somewhat smaller 
size, owing to its having the skull as well. 
In all the numerous heads examined by me I have never come 
across a single case of the forked brow tine of which Blyth and 
Lydekker make mention, nor can I learn of other observers in this 
country having ever met with this peculiarity. 
VOL, II, NO, I, 1918, 
