914 OLDFIELD THOMAS 
was compelled to relinquish his share in the work on account 
of an overwhelming pressure of other duties. The loss of so 
able a colleague, coupled with the lapse of time due to my 
visits to Genoa being necessarily few and far between, has 
interfered considerably with the preparation of the paper. More- 
over the work on the Kakhyen and Tenasserim specimens, nearly 
‘ completed in 1889 under the joint authorship of the Marquis 
Doria and myself, had to be wholly revised for the introduction 
_of the Carin specimens, which arrived later, and for the alte- 
ration in form necessary for publication under single instead of 
double authorship. 
Thanks however to Signor Fea’s skill and care as a collector 
the localities have all been most carefully recorded, and this 
fact alone, in the case of so large a collection, will render the 
paper of at least some value as a contribution to the geogra- 
phical distribution of the Burmese Mammalia. 
Maps and full notes of the localities at which Signor Fea 
collected having already been published in the Annali (’) it 
will not now be necessary for me to give more than the fol- 
lowing brief list of the places mentioned in the present paper: 
Cadu and Tapaing Rivers are tributaries of the Irrawaddy 
just north of Bhamo. 
Teinzò is a village about 10 miles N. N. E. of Bhamo, N. Burma. 
Bia-po, Ciaco, Chialla, Co-bapo, Leito, Meteleo, Taho (also 
spellt Thao), Yado: are in the Carin Hills, or “ Karennee, ” 
N. E. of Tounghoo, S. Burma. 
Palon, lower Burma. 
Kokareet, Meetan, Plapoo and Thagata: are in Northern 
Tenasserim, East of Moulmein, near Mount Mooleyit; the two 
first in the Valley of the Houngdaraw, the two latter on the 
chain of M.* Mooleyit. 
Malewoon: is in the extreme south of Tenasserim. 
The other localities mentioned are either too well known to 
need descriptions or are explained where they occur. 
(!) Ann. Mus. Civ. Genov. (2) IX, 1890, p. 129. 
