498 MAMMALIA OF INDIA. 
examples in the Indian Museum, and I possess a magnificent head 
which bears a large abnormal tine on one horn, and a faint inclination 
in the corresponding spot on the other horn to do likewise. I have no 
doubt, had the animal lived another year, the second extra tine would 
Stag with Horns matured. 
have been developed. Professor Garrod has three phases of the 
rucervine type, which he calls the normal, the intermediate, and the 
extreme. ‘The first has both branches of the beam, tres and royal of 
equal size (ex. Schomburgk’s deer) ; the second has the tres-tine larger 
than the royal (ev. our swamp deer); and the extreme type is that in 
