246 MAMMALIA. 
Moschus chrysogaster, Hodgson, Journ. Asiat. Sec. Bengal, vii. 
203 (1839), x. 914, xi. 285; Gray, Cat. Mamm. B. M. 172; 
Cat. Hodgson Collection in B. M. 31; List Osteol. B. M. 63. 
Moschus moschiferus var., Sundevall, Pecora, 118. 
Hab. Nepal. 
Two specimens. Nepal. Presented by B. H. Hodgson, Esq. 
OsTEOLOGY, t. 25. f. 1. 
Skull. Nepal. Presented by B. H. Hodgson, Esq. 
Skull. Presented by B. H. Hodgson, Esq. 
Icon. 
Drawing of male and female.— Hodgson, Icon. ined. B. M.t.191. 
Drawing of female.-—Hodgson, Icon. ined. B. M. t. t92. f. 2. 
Il. Fur close-pressed. Throat and hinder edge of the tarsus more 
or less naked. Males without any peculiar odoriferous 
gland. Throat white streaked. Young coloured like the 
adult. Pigmy Musks. 
Pigmy Musks, Gray, Knowsley Menag. 
2. Meminna, Gray. 
Throat entirely covered with hair. Fur white, striped and 
spotted. The legs are short and rather stout. The himder edge 
of the metatarsus covered with hair, but on its outer side, a little 
below the hock, a rather large, smooth, naked prominence, red 
when alive. 
Meminna, Knox; Gray, Cat. Mamm. B. M. xxvii.; Lesson, Nov. 
Tab. R. A. 175. 
Moschus, sp., Eraleb. S. A. 322, 1777; Zimm.; Desm. 1804. 
Musk, sp., Penn. 
Moschiola, Hodgson, Calcutta J. N. H. iv. 292. 
Tragulus, sp., Brisson, R. A. 95, 1756. 
Tragulus, Sundevall, Pecora, 118, 119. 
The Pisora inhabit the forests of India, near to, but without 
the various ranges of hills.— Hodgson. 
The flesh is excellent; it lives in the dense woods of the 
Dukhun, not in the plains.—Sykes, P. Z. S. 1831. 
1. MemMINNA INDICA. The Meminna or PisoRA. ~ 
Moschus Meminna, Erzl. Syst. 322; Schreb. Saugth. 960. t. 243; 
Gatterer, Brev. Zool.i. 92; Tickell, Calcutta Journ. N. H. i. 
1840, 420. 
