INDIAN CYPRINID#. 281 
from the base of the ventrals to the dorsum. D.10: P.15: 
V9 :-Agz 7.@:19' 
Has. Bramaputra, in Assam. Length about a span. 
Spec. G. petrophilus, J. M. Jour. Asiat. Soc. iv. t. 1. 
Seales very minute, body and head long, eight rays in the 
dorsal.* 
Spec. G. rupiculus, J. M. t. 43. f. 4. 5. 
Snout thick and smooth, pectorals rounded ;} fins short, 
and the membrane in which their rays are enclosed thick and 
opaque; thirty-five scales along the lateral line, and nine in 
an oblique row across the body. D.8:P.10: V.9: A.6:C.20. 
Has. Mishmee mountains. Length about two inches. 
Griffith’s Coll. 
Spec. G. bimaculatus, J. M. 
Snout warty, porous, and divided by a fissure, without 
cirri; a black spot at the base of the caudal, lower lobe of the 
caudal longer than the upper, thirty-four scales along the lateral 
line and eight rows between the ventrals and dorsum ; pectorals 
and ventrals lanceolate. D.9: P.13: V.9: A.7: Cie 
Has. River Laeeh at the foot of the Mishmee mountains, 
where it was found by Mr. Griffith.t 
* The habits of this species are fully described, but we want to know more of its specific characters. 
+ The form of the pectorals is not accurately represented in the figure. 
+ Also at the foot of the Nipal mountains, where Mr. Hodgson appears to have found a specimen 
now in the Asiatic Society’s collection. In this, however, the lobes of the caudal are of equal 
length. It is so like the succeeding variety that I have thought it unnecessary to figure it separately. 
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