70 HAND -LIST OP 



719 m. Skeleton ; " female." Upper tusks rather thick. 



P. aethiopicus, Oerrard, Cat. Bones, p. 280. 



Africa. Zool. Society. 

 719 n. Skeleton ; male. Upper tusks very large, thick and worn. One 

 cutting-tooth above. 



P. sethiopicus, Gerrard, Cat. Bones, p. 280. 



Africa. Zool. Society. 



765 c. Skeleton. 

 P. ^Hani, Gerrardj Cat. Bones, p. 280. Jesse, P. Z. S. 

 Abyssinia. Jesse. 



719 a. Skull. 



S. Africa. Presented by J. C. Taunton, Esq. 



719 b. Skull ; very large ; male. Tusks very thick. 



Cape de Verd. Presented by T. Tatum, Esq. 



719 c. Skull ; adult male. Back cut off. 



Africa. 51, 11, 22, 1. 

 719/, g, i,j, m. Skulls ; without lower jaws. 



S. Africa. Argent. 



719 r. Skull ; adult. Tusk very thick. 

 W. Africa. Baikie. 65, 5, 3, 5. 



719 d. Skull, without incisors in upper jaw, and only form indications 

 of them in the lower. 

 S. Africa. Argent. 50, 8, 24. 



719 e, h, Tc, I. Skulls, without lower jaws. 

 S. Africa. Argent. 50, 8, 24. 



719 q. Skull ; adult male. Tusks very large. 



Abyssinia, near Zaulla. Blandford. 69, 10, 24, 47. 



74 a. SkuU ; male, from skin in very bad state. 



S. Africa. Presented by W. Burchell, LL.D. 



719 0. Skull ; very young, with only three grinders above and below. 

 S. Africa. 71, 8, 3, 4. 



719 p. Skull ; very young, with only indications of the grinders. 

 P. aethiopicus, Gray, Ann. d Mag. Nat. Hist. 1871, p. 138. 

 S. Afiica. 71, 7, 3, 5. 



The young skulls are scarcely to be distinguished from those of the 

 genus Sus by their dentition, as the grinders are not worn and the 

 large permanent grinder is not developed, but are known by the dilata- 

 tion and spreading out of the hinder part of the base of the lower jaw. 

 The younger, which is 4^ in. long, has only the second deciduous 

 grinder developed in the upper jaw and the first and second in the lower 

 jaw. The canines are slender and conical, curved downwards and out- 

 wards. The pulp of the two upper cutting-teeth is visible, but they are 

 not cut. The canines of the lower jaw slender, and the outer cutting- 

 teeth are alone visible. 



The larger skull, which is 6i in. long, has the small conical first, and 

 the second and third larger deciduous molars well developed, as are 



