CERATORHINUS. All 
“Tt is about a third smaller than 2. Zudicus, from which it is readily 
distinguished by having the tubercles of the hide uniformly of the same 
small size, and also by having a fold or plait of the skin crossing the 
nape in addition to that behind the shoulder-blades.” 
This rhinoceres seems to be found at all elevations, like the Sumatran 
one which was found by General Fytche at an altitude of 4000 feet ; it 
is much more of a forester than the last. Blyth and Jerdon suppose it 
to be the same as the species hunted by the Moghul Emperor Baber on 
the banks of the Indus. 
GENUS CERATORAINUS. 
“The skin divided into shields by deep folds ; the lumbar fold rudi- 
mentary, short, only occupying the middle of the space between the 
groin and the back; horns two, the front longer, curved backward, the 
hinder small; conical skull; forehead narrow, flat; the upper part-of 
the nose on each side of the horns narrow, rounded, sub-cylindrical ; the: 
occipital region erect, the part near the condyles rather concave; the 
occipital condyle short, broad, oblong, placed obliquely inferior, scarcely 
prominent; lachrymal bone very. large, irregular shaped.”—Dr. Gray, 
ee. Loos; pf. LOT: 
No. 431. RHINOCEROS ve/ CERATORHINUS (CROSSI?) LASIOTIS. 
The Ear-fringed Rhinoceros. 
Hapitat.—Arakan, Tenasserim provinces; one was caught near 
Chittagong in 1868. 
DescripTion.—A thinner hide than with the preceding, and not. 
tuberculated ; the folds also are fewer in number ; there is one great 
groove behind the shoulder-blades, and a less conspicuous one on the 
flank, and some slight folds about the neck and top of the limbs; the 
horns are two in number, the posterior one being the centre of the nose 
behind the anterior one, and almost over the anterior corner of the eye ; 
the body (of a young specimen) is covered with long, fine, reddish hair, 
and the posterior margins of the ears have very long fringes of the same ;. 
the tail is short and hairy. 
A young specimen of this animal (of which there is an excellent 
coloured plate in ‘P. Z. S.’ 1872, p. 494) was captured in 1868 in 
Chittagong. She had got into a quicksand, and had exhausted herself 
by floundering about. ‘The natives contrived to attach two ropes to her 
neck, and, hauling her out, managed to make her fast toa tree. Next 
morning they found her so refreshed and vigorous that they were afraid 
to do anything more to her, and so sent messengers to the magistrate: 
