CABASSOUS—CJELOPS. 149 
Cabassous (subgenus of Dasypus) McMvnrRIE, 1831. Edentata, Dasypodide. 
[‘Le cabassou’ G. Cuvier, Recherches Ossem. Foss., 3° éd., V, 1" part., 120, 1823. ] 
McMvnrRiE, Cuvier's Animal Kingdom, I, 164, 1831; abridged ed., 94, 183 
Paumer, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, 71-72, Sept. 28, 1899 (revived as full 
genus). 
Type: Dasypus unicinctus Linneeus, from South America. 
Cabassous; Cabassou, or Kabassou, South American name of an armadillo, ‘‘ peut- 
étre une corruption de Caaigouazou, qui, en guarani, signifie grand habitant 
des foréts. (Azana, Hist. Nat. Quad., Paraguay, II, 159, 1801.) 
Cacajao (subgenus of Pithecia) Lesson, 1840. Primates, Cebidee. 
Species Mamm., 181-182, 1840; Nouv. Tableau Régne Animal, Mamm., 1842, 8; 
ReIcHENBACH, Vollstiind. Naturgesch. Affen, 75 [1862] (raised to generic rank ). 
Type: Simia melanocephala Humboldt, from the Mission San Francisco Solano 
(lat. 2? north), on the Cassiquiare River, Venezuela. 
Cacajao; Native name of this species in certain parts of Brazil and Venezuela. 
Cachalot H. Smirn? 1839. Cete, Physeteridze. 
H. SurrH? in Jardine's Nat. Library, Mamm., IX, 203, 1839; 2d ed., Mamm., I, 
265, 1858; R. Hamiuron, ibid., Mamm. XII, 154-169, pls 8-10, 1861. 
In Vol. I the generic name is based on the spermaceti whale; in Vol. XII the 
only species described in detail is Physeter catodon Linnzeus, from the northern 
seas. 
Cachalot: Basque cachou, a tooth. ‘‘French etymologists, derive the French 
word from the English, and that from Catalan quichal, tooth, ‘because the 
animal is armed with teeth.'" (Century Dict.) 
Cachicamus (subgenus of Dasypus), McMvunrRIE, 1831. — Edentata, Dasypodide. 
[‘Les Cachicames’ G. Cuvrgn, Recherches Ossem. Foss., 3° éd., V, 1" part., 124, 
1823; Régne Anim., 2° éd., I, 227, 1829.] 
McMourtrig, Cuvier’s Animal Kingdom, I, 163, 1831; DEeGraANp, Cat. Mus. Hist. 
Nat., Lille, I, Mamm., 125, 1854 (raised to generic rank). 
Cachicama Y. GEoFFROY, I nus Lec. Mamm. (extrait Écho du Monde Savant, 
I, 1835), 53; Gervais, Expéd. du Comte de Castelnau dans l' Amérique du 
Sud, I, Mamm., 113, 1855. 
Species: Dasypus novemcinctus Linneeus, and D. septemcinctus Schreber, from South 
America. 
Cachicamus: French cachicame, from cachicamo, the Indian name of the 9-banded 
armadillo on the Orinoco, adopted by Buffon (Hist. Nat., X, 215, 1763). 
Cadurcotherium (subg.* of Rhinoceros), GERVAIS, 1873. Ungulata, Amynodontide. 
Comptes Rendus, Paris, LX XVII, No. 2, p. 106, July-Dec., 1873; Journ. de Zool., 
Paris, II, 361-368, pl. xiv, 1873. 
Carcarotherium GERVAIS, Journ. de Zool., II, 368, 1873 (misprint). 
Type: Rhinoceros (Cadurcotherium) cayluai Gervais, from the Phosphorites of 
Querey, France. 
Extinct. Based on quelques dents, la derniére molaire supérieure dans son 
état d'intégrité et notablement entamée par lusure à sa couronne ainsi que 
ce 
plusieurs molaires inférieures." 
Cadurcotherium: Lat. Cadurcus, pertaining to the Cadurci, a people of Gallia 
Narbonensis, whose capital is supposed to be represented by the modern town 
of Cahors, where the teeth were found; 67pzor, wild beast. ‘‘J’ai donné à ce 
genre le nom de Cadurcotherium, qui rappellera qu'il a été trouvé dans le 
Quercy." (GERVAIS. ) 
Celogenus, Celogonus (see Coelogenus). Glires, Dasyproctide. 
Czlops (see Coelops). Chiroptera, Rhinolophid:e. 

*In both papers Cadurcotherium is called a ‘new genus,’ but is treated as a sub- 
genus in naming the species. 
