70 THE EXISTING EQUIDAE [CH. 



(16) Grant's Zebra 1 (Equus burchelli var. granti) is a variety 

 (Figs. 30-5) of the Burchell Zebra, closely resembling Chapman's, 

 from which it only differs (1) by the dark bands on the legs 

 being more sharply defined, (2) by the white spaces on neck and 

 cheeks being broader, (3) by its having no 'shadow' stripes. 

 It is found in British East Africa and German East Africa. 



FIG. 36. 'Matopo,' Prof. Ewart's Chapman Zebra. 



(17) The Quagga or Quacha (Equus quag go), so-called 

 from its neigh, is now probably as extinct as the Moa and the 

 Dodo, although it is not very long since living specimens were 

 in European collections. Down to the middle of the last century 



1 Proc. Zool. Soc. 1883 ("Notes on the zebra met with by the Speke and 

 Grant Expedition in Eastern Africa," by Col. J. A. Grant, F.E.S.), p. 175, with 

 woodcut of head, p. 176. My illustration (Fig. 30) is from an electrotype of the 

 block just mentioned, which the Council of the Zoological Society has kindly 

 permitted me to have made. 



