48 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



]X. BOS (BUBALUS) DEPEESSICOENIS. 



Antilope (Anoa) depressicornis, H. Smith, Griffith's Animal Kingdom, 



vol. iv, p. 293, v, p. 355, 1827. 

 Antilope depressicornis, Quoy and Gaimard, Ann. Sci. Nat. vol. xvii, 



p. 623, 1829, Voyage de V Astrolabe Zool. vol. i, p. 136, 1830. 

 Bos (Anoa) depressicornis, Gray, Spicil. Zool. p. 12, 1828. 

 Antilope (Taurotragus) depressicornis, Wagner, Schreber's Sdugthiere, 



Suppl. vol. iv, p. 539, 1844. 

 Anoa depressicornis, Swainson, Classif. Quadrupeds, p. 286, 1835 ; 



Gray, List. Mamm. Brit. Mus. p. 153, 1843, Cat. Ungulata 



Brit. Mus. p. 29, 1852, Cat. Ruminants Brit. Mus. p. 13, 1872 ; 



Sundevall, K. Svenska Vet.- Ale. Handl. 1844, p. 148, 1846 ; 



Gerrard, Cat. Bones Mamm. Brit. Mus. p. 228, 1862 ; Heller, 



Abh. Mus. Dresden, 1890-91, No. 2, p. 5, 1890* ; Ward, Records 



of Big Game, p. 281, 1896; Lonnberg, Acta Soc. Upsal, vol. iii, 



p. 1, 1903 ; Hollister, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. xxiv, 



p. 191, 1911. 

 Bubalus depressicornis, Turner, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1850, p. 178 ; Flower 



and Garson, Cat. Osteol. Mus. R. Coll. Surg. pt. ii, p. 228, 1884. 

 Probubalus celebensis, Riitimeyer, Verhandl. Ges. Basel, ser. 2, vol. 



iv, p. 334, 1865, Denkschr. schweiz. Ges. vol. xxii, pt. 2, art. 3, 



p. 52, 1867. 

 Bubalus (Anoa) depressicornis, Riitimeyer, DenJcschr. schweiz. Ges. 



vol. xxii, pt. 2, art. 3, p. 26, 1867 ; Hoffmann, Abh. Mus. Dresden, 



1887, No. 3, p. 26. 

 Probubalus (Anoa) celebensis, Riitimeyer, Abh. schweiz. pal. Ges. 



vol. v, p. 189, 1878. 

 Bos depressicornis, Brehm, Tierleben ed. 3, Sdugethiere, vol. iii, 



p. 448, 1891 ; Flower and Lydekker, Study of Mammals, p. 361, 



1891 ; W. L. Sclater, Cat. Mamm. Ind. Mus. pt. ii, p. 130, 1891 ; 



Lydekker, The Ox and Its Kindred, p. 231, 1912. 

 Bos (Bubalus) depressicornis, Lydekker, Wild Oxen, Sheep, and Goats, 



p. 131, pi. x; Ward, Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 431, 1910. 



ANOA. 



Typical locality Celebes. 



Smallest of all buffaloes ; the height at the shoulder 

 being about 3 feet 3 inches, and that at the withers slightly 

 more. Horns of medium length, rising much below plane of 

 occiput, almost straight, and directed upwards and outwards 

 nearly in the plane of forehead, with sharply pointed tips. 

 Ears relatively small, nearly bare at tips. Tail about 

 reaching hocks. A woolly coat in the calves, which is shed 

 in large fleecy masses, leaving the skin of adults almost bare, 

 at least in males. Juvenile coat either blackish or bright 

 golden brown; adult males black or blackish, but females 



* Separate copies are dated 1889. 



