70 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



606, a. Frontlet and horns (fig. 20). Type ; locality 

 unknown, but probably from some part of Congo territory. 

 Described in 1686 by Grew, Rarities o/Gresham College; and 

 again described, with a figure, by Pennant in 1781. In 1785 

 Boddaert gave it the name Bos nanus, in 1792 it was 

 renamed B. pumilus by Kerr, and in 1863 it received from 

 Blyth the title B. redinis. In his Catalogue of 1852 Gray 

 figured it as the young of the Cape buffalo. The name 

 pumilus was revived by Sir V. Brooke in 1873, and again in 

 1875, with planiceros and Irachyceros as synonyms. 



Presented ly the Council of the Royal Society. 



T. Bos eaffer beddingtoni. 



Bos (Bubalus) eaffer beddingtoni, Lydekker, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1913, 

 p. 240. 



Typical locality Ashanti. 



Size apparently larger than in last ; horns less strongly 

 angulated ; less abundant ear-fringes ; no dark dorsal stripe. 

 In the type specimen the shoulder-height is 51^, the outside 

 length of horns 20J, palm-width 6J, tip-to-tip interval 13J, 

 and outside span 23J inches. 



99. 10. 23. 4. Mounted skin. Ashanti. Type. Although 

 the legs are darker than the body, there is no black mane on 

 the neck. Presented by C. Beddington, Esq., 1899. 



U. Bos eaffer simpsoni. 



Bos eaffer simpsoni, Lydekker, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1910, p. 993, The Ox 

 and Its Kindred, p. 240, 1912. 



Typical locality left bank of Kwilu Eiver, Belgian Congo. 



Size medium ; both sexes dark coloured ; horns relatively 

 small and regularly curved in a subcircular form. 



The horns approximate in general character to those of 

 nanus and exceed any recorded for the latter, the right horn in 

 a bull (fig. 21) measuring 25| inches along the outer curve 

 and the left one 24J inches ; the basal girth of the former 

 being 16^ inches, its maximum width 6| inches, and the 

 expanse from tip to tip 13J inches. In a cow the left horn 

 measured 15 inches in length, with a girth of 9J and an 



