External Characters of the Felidse. 



133 



Fij?. 12 depicts the feet of a specimen of P. ti(/ris, three 

 months old. The feet of P. purdus I have already figured 

 (Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (8) xviii. p. 424, 1916). 



Similar, however, as are the feet of this uenus, they do 

 not differ in important points from those of F. nebulusa, a 



species -which lias a more Pantherine skull than any species 

 of Felis in the sense in which the latter term is used in this 

 paper. 



The facts above described show an interestinoc series of 



n 



