﻿On 
  an 
  extinct 
  Ilartehceste 
  from 
  Egypt. 
  335 
  

  

  Horns 
  : 
  length 
  16 
  ; 
  basal 
  girth 
  9. 
  

  

  Hab. 
  Western 
  Uganda. 
  

  

  Type. 
  Adult 
  male 
  (skin 
  and 
  skull). 
  B.M. 
  no. 
  5. 
  4. 
  3. 
  22. 
  

   From 
  S.W. 
  Ankole, 
  Uganda. 
  Collected 
  and 
  presented 
  by 
  

   Colonel 
  Delnie-Radelift'e. 
  

  

  This 
  is 
  the 
  largest 
  known 
  race 
  of 
  the 
  Korrigum. 
  There 
  

   is 
  a 
  series 
  of 
  eleven 
  specitnens 
  of 
  this 
  subspecies 
  in 
  the 
  B.M. 
  

   Collection, 
  chirflj 
  from 
  the 
  Nyonki 
  Nile 
  and 
  from 
  S.W. 
  

   Ankole, 
  and 
  all 
  are 
  remarkably 
  uniform 
  in 
  type. 
  

  

  Damaliscus 
  korrigum 
  eiirus, 
  subsp. 
  n. 
  

  

  Colour 
  maroon, 
  changing 
  to 
  bright 
  reddish 
  bay 
  in 
  posterior 
  

   dorsal 
  region. 
  Legs 
  and 
  body-markings 
  as 
  in 
  ugandce. 
  

   Facial 
  blaze 
  blue-black, 
  with 
  an 
  unbroken 
  band 
  of 
  similar 
  

   colour 
  extending 
  from 
  the 
  blaze 
  under 
  the 
  eyes 
  to 
  below 
  the 
  

   ears. 
  

  

  Skull 
  as 
  in 
  ugandie. 
  

  

  Measurements 
  in 
  inches 
  : 
  — 
  

  

  Condjdo-basal 
  length 
  15'13 
  ; 
  occiput 
  to 
  nasals 
  6'15 
  ; 
  orbit 
  

   to 
  gnathion 
  10"15 
  ; 
  nasals 
  7'13; 
  palatal 
  length 
  8*15; 
  supra- 
  

   orbital 
  width 
  6 
  ; 
  width 
  at 
  masseteric 
  knobs 
  3*8 
  ; 
  width 
  of 
  

   muzzle 
  above 
  first 
  premolars 
  2'9 
  ; 
  upper 
  dental 
  series 
  3'13. 
  

  

  Hah. 
  Ussangu, 
  German 
  East 
  Africa. 
  

  

  Type. 
  Adult 
  male 
  (skin 
  and 
  skull). 
  B.M. 
  no. 
  5. 
  2. 
  2. 
  18. 
  

   From 
  the 
  plains 
  of 
  the 
  Upper 
  Ruaha 
  River. 
  Collected 
  and 
  

   presented 
  by 
  fSir 
  Alfred 
  Sliarpe. 
  

  

  The 
  range 
  of 
  the 
  Korrigum 
  is 
  interrupted 
  by 
  the 
  barrier 
  

   of 
  the 
  Tanganyika 
  Plateau, 
  and 
  this 
  is 
  its 
  most 
  southern 
  race. 
  

   In 
  the 
  Zambesi 
  basin 
  it 
  is 
  replaced 
  by 
  the 
  Sassaby 
  {Dama- 
  

   liscus 
  lunatus), 
  a 
  species 
  to 
  which 
  it 
  is 
  closely 
  related. 
  

  

  XXXV. 
  — 
  An 
  extinct 
  Narfeheeste 
  from 
  Egypt. 
  

   By 
  Gilbert 
  Blaine. 
  

  

  Buhalis 
  bubastis, 
  sp. 
  n. 
  

  

  An 
  extinct 
  hartebeeste, 
  of 
  \Ahich 
  skulls 
  have 
  been 
  found 
  

   in 
  ancient 
  Egyptian 
  tomb-pits, 
  together 
  with 
  those 
  of 
  domestic 
  

   animals. 
  

  

  Skull 
  showing 
  affinities 
  both 
  to 
  lehvel 
  and 
  wajor, 
  but 
  

   differing 
  from 
  them 
  in 
  the 
  greater 
  prominence 
  of 
  the 
  suprr,- 
  

   orbital 
  ridges 
  and 
  in 
  the 
  peculiar 
  development 
  of 
  the 
  cranial 
  

  

  