202 Notice of some Mammalia and Birds from Upper India. 



Fig. 3. Group of pear-shaped nerve-globules with pedicles all lying in same 

 direction, the globules showing large nuclei and nucleoli from 

 cerebral ganglion oi E. papillosa. 



Fig. 4. Two isolated, pear-shaped, pedicled, nucleated nerve-corpuscles of 

 large size from the same. 



Fig. 5. Smallest cells, bright and transparent, probably nucleoli, from the 

 same. 



Fig. 6. Side view of dorsal tentacle of E. coronata : a, olfactory ganglion 

 and nerve. 



Ftg. 7. Dorsal tentacle with sheath, Doto fragilis. 



Fig. 8. Lateral view of ditto ditto, Dendronotus arborescens. 



Fig. 9. Front view of ditto ditto ditto. 



Fig. 10. Side view of dorsal tentacles and laminated crest of Antiopa splen- 

 dida : a a, tentacles ; h, laminated crest ; c, ganglionic swelling in 

 front of median cerebral ganglion ; d d, tractus olfactorius to lami- 

 nated crest ; e e, ditto ditto to tentacle. 



Fig. 11. Front view of dorsal tentacle of Doris coccinea, showing central 

 stem and laminae. 



Fig. 12. Olfactory lamiuEe of Burn Trout, showing its resemblance to those 

 of Doris coccinea : a, nostril ; b, central stem ; c, laminse. 



XX. — Brief Notice of several Mammalia and Birds discovered by 

 B. H. Hodgson, Esq., in Upper India, By Thomas Hors- 



FIELD, M.D. &C. 



Dear Sir, Library, East India House, Feb. 12, 1849. 



B. H. Hodgson, Esq., late British resident at Nepal, who is now 

 zealously pursuing his researches into the natural history of the 

 upper provinces of India, has lately presented to the museum of 

 the East India Company, a small collection of mammalia from 

 the neighbourhood of Sikim and Darjeling, and two birds from 

 Tibet ; and (Mr. Hodgson) being desirous that a concise notice 

 of them may be communicated to the public without delay, until 

 he shall have an opportunity of publishing a more detailed de- 

 scription of the new species, I request you, in his name, to insert 

 the following list, with a few remarks, into an early number of 

 the ' Annals and Magazine of Natural History.^ 



Yours faithfully, 

 Richard Taylor, Esq. Thomas Horsfield. 



List o/ Mammalia /rom Sikim and Darjeling, near Nepal, in 

 Upper India. 



Numbers 1 to 4 have already been described and published. 



1. Genus Porcula, Hodgson, Journal of the Asiatic Society 

 of Bengal, vol. xvii. p. 423, with a figure. 

 Type Porcula Salvania^, Hodgson. 



* Salvania, of or belonging to the Saul forest. 



