244 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



90. 12. 4. 3. Antlers, female. Spitsbergen. 



Presented by Dr. E. McCormick, 1890. 

 90. 12. 4. 8. Antlers. Spitsbergen. Same history. 



96. 9. 23. 1. Skull and antlers. Spitsbergen. Noticed 

 in Deer of All Lands, p. 41. 



Presented by Dr. J. W. Gregory, 1896. 



D. Rangifer tarandus sibirieus. 



Cervus sibirieus, Schreber, Saugthiere, pi. 248, C, 1784. 



[Eangifer arcticus] , var. sibirieus, Murray, Geogr. Distrib. Mamm. 



p. 153, 1866. 

 Rangifer tarandus sibirieus, LydekJcer, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1902, vol. ii, 



p. 361 ; Lonnberg, Arlciv Zool. vol. vi, no. 4, p. 17, 1909 ; Ward, 



Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 84, 1910, ed. 7, p. 84, 1914; 



Hollister, Smithson. Misc. Collect, vol. Ivi, no. 35. 



Typical locality Siberia. 



Antlers approximating to those of E. t. caribou {infra), 

 but with less palmation of the basal tines; much smaller 

 than R. t. phyllarchus. 



702, h. Frontlet and antlers. Probably Siberian. 



No history. 

 52. 12. 9. 4. Skull and antlers. Probably Siberian. 



Purchased (Brandt), 1852. 



78. 12. 21. 30. Antlers, in velvet. Salair, Altai; 



collected by Dr. 0. Finsch. By exchange with the 



Geographical Society of Bremen, 1878. 



E. Rangifer tarandus pearsoni. 



Rangifer tarandus pearsoni, Lydelcker, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1902, vol. ii, 

 p. 361 ; Ward, Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 84, 1910, ed. 7, 

 p. 84, 1914. 



Typical (and only) locality Novaya Zemlya. 



Type in possession of H. J. Pearson, Esq., Bramcote, 

 Nottinghamshire. 



Distinguished from other Old World races by the 

 symmetry of the antlers (fig. 40), and the excessive palmation 

 of the basal and second tines and summits ; the whole antler 

 approximating to the R. t. caribou type. 



No specimen in collection. 



