3,5 i2 



M'lIlTE FACED ANTELOPE; 



Antilope Pygarga. A.j'usco-faruginca, subtits alba, fascia lateral! 



fmca, dunibas a/his, coinibm tt/ratis. 

 Ferruginous-brown Antelope, white beneath, with brown lateral 



band, white rump, and lyrated horns. 

 Antilope Pygarga. A. cornibus lyratis, collo tanguineo, tcrgore 



rufo-cancscente, fascia later all saturata, cliuiibus a/bis. Lin. 



Sysf. Nat. Chncl.p. 187. 



Antilope Pygargus. Pall. Spic. /ool. i. 10. and 12. 15. 

 White-faced Antelope. Pennant Quadr. i. p. 93. 



So great is the similitude between this species 

 and the Flat horned Antelope, that the chief dif- 

 ference appears to consist in size ; this being 

 larger than a fallow deer. The horns resemble 

 those of the animal before mentioned, and are 

 sixteen inches long, and about rive between tip 

 and tip : they are very strongly annnlated in the 

 male, but said to be nearly smooth in the female : 

 the face is white ; the cheeks and neck, in the 

 living animal, of a bright bay ; the back and up- 

 per parts of a ferruginous brown ; with a dark 

 stripe down the back : the belly and rump white, 

 as is also, in the Leverian specimen, the lower half 

 of the legs : the sides of the body are marked, as 

 in many others of this genus, with a dark or 

 blackish stripe : the tail is about seven inches 

 long, covered with black hairs, which extend 

 some inches beyond the end. The figure of the 

 Kevel, or Flat-horned Antelope, in the sixth vo- 

 lume of the Count de Buffbn's supplement, so 

 perfectly represents this species, that it might pass 



