RUMINANTIA. 193 
telope of India.) Is also very like the Gazelle, but its horns 
have atriple flexure. They are used in India as weapons, formed 
by uniting them pair to pair, with the points facing in opposite 
directions. They are deficient in the female. 
2. addax, Lichtenst.(1) Acad. Berl. 1824, pl. xi, and Ruppel. 
pl. vii. (The Antelope of Nubia.) Also three curves in its 
horns, which are longer and more slender than those of the pre- 
ceding; it is whitish, tinged with grey on the back, and has a 
large brown spot on the forehead. 
c. Horns annulated, witha double curve, but winding in an opposite di- 
rection to those of the preceding ones, the points directed backwards.— 
The Damauis of Smith, in part. 
A. bubalis, L.; Bubalis of the ancients ; Buff. Supp. VI, xiv; 
vulg. the Barbary Cow. (The Bubalis.) More heavily formed 
than the others; the head long and thick ; as large as the Stag ; 
fawn coloured, except at the end of the tail which is terminated 
with a black tuft. Common in Barbary. 
A. caama, Cuv.; vulg. Cape Stag of the Hollanders; Buff. 
Supp. VI, pl. xv. (The Caama.) Similar to the preceding, 
but the curves of the horns more angular; the circumference 
of their base, a band on the bottom of the forehead, a line on 
the neck, a longitudinal stripe on each leg, and the tip of the 
tail black. Common at the Cape. 
d. Small, straight, or but slightly curved horns, less than the head—in 
the greater number of species found only on the male. 
A. lanata, Desmar.; Reebock or Roebuck of the Hollanders of 
the Cape. (The Woolly Antelope.) Somewhat smaller than the 
C. dama ; hair woolly; grey above, white beneath ; some black 
on the external face of the limbs, and at the extremity of the 
lower jaw. 
A. mergens, Blainv.; Duiker-Bock of the Hollanders. (The 
(1) M. Lichtenstein gave it this name, under the idea that it is the same as the 
Addax or iS hes of Pliny. It is seen on several of the ancient monuments of 
Egypt. 
To this sibdiviston also belong the Kevel gris, F. Cuy. Mammif.—The Purple 
Antelope or Bonte-Bock of the Hollanders, (4: pygarga) Schreb. CCLXXII.—The 
Black-footed Antelope ov Pallah, Sam. Daniels, Afric. Scen. pl. ix (4. melampus, 
Lich.); Schr. 274.—The Coba, (.2. sehegalensis) of which we have nothing but the 
horns, Buff. XI, pl. xxxii, 2, unless it be the same as the Pallah.—The A. suturo- 
~ sa.—The 4. mytilopes, H. Smith, and perhaps the Kob of Buff. which is probably 
the 4. adenota, Ham. Smith, . 
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