28 MAMMALIA OF INDIA. 
ing the powerful canine teeth. Blyth mentions a fine male with hair on 
the shoulders four to five inches long. 
No. 22. INuUS vel MACACUS ARCTOIDES, 
The Brown Stump-tailed Monkey. 
Hapitat.—Cachar, Kakhyen Hills, east of Bhamo. 
DESCRIPTION.—Upper surface of head and along the back dark 
brown, almost blackish; sides and limbs dark brown; the hair, which 
is very long, is ringed with light yellowish and dark brown, darker 
still at the tips; face red; tail short and stumpy, little over an inch long. 
This monkey is one over which many naturalists have argued; it is 
synonymous with J/acacus speciosus, M. maurus, M. melanotus, and was 
thought to be with AZ, drunneus till Dr. Anderson placed the latter in a 
separate species on account of the non-annulation of its hair. It is 
essentially a denizen of the hills; it has been obtained in Cachar and 
in Upper Assam. Dr. Anderson got it in the Kakhyen Hills on the 
frontier of Yunnan, beyond which, he says, it spreads to the south- 
east to Cochin-China. 
No. 23. INuUS vei Macacus THIBETANUS. 
The Thibetan Stump-tailed Monkey. 
DeEscriIpTion.—Head large and whiskered ; form robust ; tail stumpy 
and clad; general colour of the animal brown; whiskers greyish; face 
nude and flesh-coloured, with a deep crimson flush round the eyes. 
S1zE.—Two feet 9 inches ; tail about 3 inches. 
This large monkey, though not belonging to British India, inhabiting, 
it is said, ‘‘the coldest and least accessible forests of Eastern Thibet,” 
is mentioned here, as the exploration of that country by travellers from 
India is attracting attention. 
GENUS MACACUS. 
Tail longer than in /vwws, and face not so lengthened ; otherwise as 
in that genus.—/erdon. 
No. 24. MACACUS RADIATUS. 
The Madras Monkey ( Jerdon’s No. 9). 
NaTIvE Names.—Bandar, Hindi; Makadu or Wanur, Mahratti ; 
iterda mahr of the Ghats; /unga, Canarese; Koti, Telegu; Vella 
munthi, Malabar. 
