54 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



12. 10. 31. 23. Skull, with horns. Gurgaon. No. 20 in 

 Ward's 1910 list. Length of horns 12f , girth 4J, tip-to-tip 

 5 inches. Bequeathed ly A. 0. Hume, Esq., C.B., 1912. 



12. 10. 31. 24. Skull, with horns. Delhi. Same history. 



12. 10. 31. 25. Skull, with horns. Gurgaon ; collected 

 by Mr. W. Chill. Same history. 



12. 10. 31. 72. Skull, with horns. Locality unknown. 



Same history. 



8. 16. 15. 1. Head, mounted (fig. 12). Hissar district, 

 Punjab. Presented ly H. J. Vaughan, Esq., 1908. 



IX. GAZELLA CUVIEEI. 



Antilope cuvieri, Ogilby, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1840, p. 34 ; Schinz, Synop. 



Mamm. vol. ii, p. 399, 1845, Mon. Antilop. pi. ii, a, 1848 ; Fraser, 



Zool. Typ. pi. xvii, 1849. 



Gazella dorcas, var. 3, Gray, Cat. Ungulata Brit. Mus. p. 57, 1852. 

 Gazella cineraceus, Temminck, Esquiss. Zool. Guine, p. 193, 1853, 



from the " Kevel Gris" of F. Cuvier, Hist. Nat. Mamm. vol. iii, 



livr. Ivii, 1827. 

 Gazella corinna, Loche, Cat. Mamm. Algerie, p. 13, 1850, Expli. 



Alger. Mamm. p. 68, 1867 ; nee Pallas. 

 Gazella kevella, Tristram, The Great Sahara, p. 387, 1860 ,' Lataste, 



Actes Soc. Linn. Bordeaux, vol. xxxix, p. 296, 1885 ; Buxton, 



Proc. Zool. Soc. 1890, p. 633 ; nee Pallas. 

 Gazella cuvieri, Gray, Hand-List Ruminants Brit. Mus. p. 107, 1873 ; 



Brooke, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1873, p. 542; Ward, Records of Big 



Game, p. 126, 1892, ed. 6, p. 248, 1910, ed. 7, p. 248, 1914 ; 



Lydekker, Horns and Hoofs, p. 233, 1893, Great and Small 



Game of Africa, p. 344, 1899, Game Animals of Africa, p. 251, 



1908; Thomas, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1894, p. 464, 1904, vol. ii, 



p. 347 ; Pease, ibid. 1896, p. 814 ; Whitaker, ibid. 1896, p. 815 ; 



Sclater and Thomas, Book of Antelopes, vol. iii, p. 109, pi. Iviii, 



1898; Pocock, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1910, p. 887; Hartert, Novit. 



Zool. vol. xx, p. 33, 1913. 



EDMI. 



Typical locality Mogador. 



Nearly related tofuscifrons and bennetti, of which it may 

 be regarded as the African representative, but larger than the 

 latter, with the coat rougher than in either (in accordance 

 with its mountain habitat), the nose-spot larger, more denned, 

 and black, the lateral face-stripes, flank-band, and pygal 

 band darker, and the tail more thickly haired. 



Size rather larger than in bennetti, shoulder- height about 



