974 



PROF. A. CABRERA OX 



* MM. Chapman and Buck give merely " Pyrenees" as the locality of Sir Victor 

 Brooke's specimens, but according to a letter of the owner himself, published by 

 Count Russell (see Gourdoii, Bull. Soc. Sc. Nat. de I'Ouest de la Prance, viii. 1908, 

 pp. 6-8), they were obtained in Ordesa Valley, the Val d'Arras of the French. 



t The tip of a horn is slightly broken. 



X Cupra pyrenaica was based by Schinz on specimens in the Mainz Museum, 

 which are still there, as Dr. Reichenow kindly informs me. One of these specimens 

 being an adult, although not old, male in winter coat, and the winter pelage being 

 described fir.'^t by Schinz. 1 think it convenient to choose it as tlic type. 



