NKOTI;AI;IN.I; 135 



77"), li. \ Skull and skin, female. Mashonaland. 



135, b. j EH c/xkange with the South African Museum. 



1. 0. 3. 86. Skull, with horns. Mashonaland. 



Presented by F. C. Selous, Esq., 1901. 



( .7. 8. 25. 4. Skull, with horns, immature. South-east 

 Africa. Presented ly J.ffolliott Darling, Esq., 1897. 



'.'7. 8. 25. 4. Head, mounted. Mount Fletcher, Griqua- 

 land East. Same history. 



8. 4. 15. 1. Head, mounted. Barotsiland. 



Presented ly S. F. Griffin, Esq., 1908. 



12. 1. 1. 1-3. Three frontlets, with horns. Mazabreka, 

 North-west Ehodesia. Presented ly R. C. Wood, Esq., 1912. 



12. 3. 27. 1, 2. Two skulls, male, with horns, and 

 immature female. Same locality. Same history. 



10. 2. 16. 5. Skull, with horns. Nsele, Awemba, North- 

 east Rhodesia. Presented ly F. H. Melland, Esq., 1910. 



12. 5. 10. 2. Skull, with horns, and skin. Luapula 

 Valley, Belgian Congo. Presented ly Col. C. F. Elaine, 1912. 



II. OUBEBIA HASTATA. 



Antilope hastata, Peters, Reise Mossambique, Sdugeth. p. 188, pi. xli, 



fig. 2 ; Gielel, Sdugetliiere, p. 817, 1855 ; Wagner, Schrebers 



Sdugthiere, Suppl. vol. v, p. 411, 1855 ; ~H.net, Bull. Soc. Acclim. 



1887, p. 46. 



Calotragus hastata, Temminck, Esquiss. Zool. Guine, p. 191, 1853. 

 Scopophorus hastatus, Fit zing er, Sitzber. k. A~k. Wiss. Wien, vol. lix, 



pt. 1, p. 165, 1869 ; Matschie, Sdugeth. Deutsch-Ostafrika, p. 121, 



1895. 

 Nanotragus hastatus, Brooke, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1874, p. 642 ; Flower 



and Lydekker, Study of Mammals, p. 339, 1892 ; LydeJcJcer, 



Horns and Hoofs, p. 219, 1893. 

 Oreotragus hastatus, Riitimeyer, Abh. schweiz. pal. Ges. vol. iv, p. 53, 



1877. 

 Ourebia hastata, Sclatcr and Thomas, Book, of Antelopes, vol. ii, 



p. 21, 1895 ; Thomas and Wroughton, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 



ser. 7, vol. xix, p. 387, 1907. 

 Oribia hastata, Lydekker, Great and Small Game of Africa, p. 239, 



1899, Game Animals of Africa, p. 171, 1908. 



Typical locality Senna, Zambesia. 



Nearly related to 0. ourebi, but with a larger and more 

 conspicuous ear-patch, a more slender and less heavily tufted 

 tail, with more or less white along the inferior lateral edges, 



