368 DR. p. L. scl.vter's exhibition of drawings. [Nov. 26, 



October. 



November 26, 1861. 

 Dr. J. E. Gray, V.P., in the Chair. 



Mr. B. Leadbeater exhibited the heads of three stags shot by 

 Lieut. -Col. Sarel, F.Z.S., iii the Gardens of the Imperial Summer 

 Palace at Pekin. The species to which they were referable seemed to be 

 a true Cervus, allied to, if not identical with, C elaphus of Europe, 

 and chiefly differing from that species in the shortness of the head. 



Dr. P. L. Sclater exhibited original drawings, by Mr. G. T. Vigne, 

 of the Koch or Wild Sheep of the Sulimani range {Ovis cycloceros) 

 and the Sha of Little Thibet (^Oins vignii), the distinctions between 

 which had been pointed out by Dr. Sclater in his article on this sub- 

 ject in the P.Z.S. for 1860 (p. 126). In reference to these animals, 

 Mr. Vigne observed that he had always supposed the Koch and the 



