MAMMALIA. 91 
Eleotragus Capreolus, Gray, List Osteol. B. M. 57. 
Tragelaphus Capreolus, Riippell, Verz. Senck. 181. 
Hab. South Africa. 
Male. S. Africa. Presented by W. Burchell, Esq., LL.D. 
Female. S. Africa. 
Young. S. Africa. 
OsTEOLOGY. 
Head and horns. South Africa. Presented by Dr. Burchell. 
18. ELEOTRAGUS. 
Horns conical, thick, diverging, bent back and then bent for- 
wards at the tip. Face broad. Nose not swollen. Mufile rather 
large. Crumen none. Fur harsh, of back more or less whorled. 
Hoofs and false hoofs rather large. Inguinal pores distinct. 
Teats four. Skull: ‘“‘ Nasal opening rather lengthened, the nasal 
processes of the intermaxillary bones long, yet not always reach- 
ing the nasal bones; a large infraorbital fissure, but no fossa ; 
the masseteric ridge ascending rather high; the auditory bulla 
large and swollen; the basioecipital bone with its median groove 
and tubercles well developed ; the median incisors expanded at 
their summits; a well-developed supplemental lobe in the first 
true molar of each jaw, and usually more or less appearance of 
it in those behind.” —Turner. 
Hab. Africa, in marshy places. 
Redunca, sp., H. Smith, Griffith A. K.v. ,1827; Fischer, Syn. 
624. 
Eleotragus § 1, Gray, Ann. & Mag. N. H.1846, 232; Knowsley 
Menag. 12. 
Eleotragus, sp., Turner, P. Z. S. 1850. 
_Cervicapra, sp., Blainville, Bull. Soc. Phil. 1816. 
Cervicapra, a and 8, Sundevall, Pecora, 60. 
Cervicapra 6. Redunca, sp.,. Gervais, Supp. D. S. N. i. 261, 
1840. 
Nagor, Laurillard. 
Sylvicapra, Ogilby, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1836. 
+ Fur grisled, harsh, straight, with a subterminal pale band, 
and often whorled. Head broad. Temple with a naked spot. 
Muffie large, flat, eatending behind the nostrils. S. Africa. 
1. ELEOTRAGUS ARUNDINACEUS. INGHALLA or RIETBOCK. 
Head broad. Temple-spot naked. Horns divergent, conical, 
tapering. Fur brown yellow, grisled. Hair pale brown, with a 
