62 MR. C. BODEN KLOS.S OX 



facial rib. Cliin and throat, inner side and posterior outer side 

 of ears, axillary region, lower abdomen, inner side of thighs, 

 under side of tail, back of lower fore limbs, and a small patch in 

 front of the digits of each foot, white. Head and body, 980 mm. ; 

 tail, 185; hind foot, 291; ear, 105; height at shoulder, 610. 

 (Skull, greatest length, 203; greatest breadth, 8L 



The horns, which are not yet differentiated from the pedicels, 

 are tipped with velvet, and the distance in a straight line from 

 the tips to the base of the pedicels on the inner side is 146 mm. 



The Barking Deer of Siam was described by CTray (P. Z. S. 

 1861, p. 139) from a skull with deformed antlers as Gervuhts 

 carvustylis. Recently Mr. R. Lydekker, whose death all 

 interested in game animals will much regret, has defined this 

 I'rtce in the ' British Museum Catalogue of Ungulates,' vol. iv., as 

 being of medium size (upper row of cheek-teeth 2^ inches), 

 general colour orange-tawny, fading to buflBsh on neck and 

 underpai'ts. 



The present specimen is so young (milk premolars still in place) 

 that, lacking other material from Indo-China for comparison, I 

 have not applied any subspecific name for the present. The skull 

 is remarkable for the reduced size and marked definition of the 

 lachrymal pit, which is far smaller than any other which I have 

 had the opportunity of inspecting, the upper edge being very 

 sharp and the pit immediately Avithin and above this notably 

 concave. The vertical portion of the lachrymal is, further, much 

 reduced in heieht. 



43-. Oervus unicolor, subsp, 



Rusa peronii Gray, P. Z. S-. 1861, p-. 138(?}. 



CerVillus cambojensis Gray, loc. cit. sUpra. 



'Cervus unicolor Flower, P-. Z. S. 1900, p. 372. 



Cervus aristotelis de Pousargues-, Mission Pavie, Indo-Chine, 

 Etudes Diverses, iii. p. 536 (1904). 



Cervus unicolor equimos Gyldenstolpe, Arkiv for Zoologi, 

 Band 8, No. 23, p. 30 (1914)-. 



A form of Sambhar is represented in my collection by an 

 immature female fi-om Klong Yai, S.E. Slam. Height at 

 shoulder, 760 mm. 



The hairy frontlet and antlers of a deer collected by Mouhot 

 in Cambodia was described by Gray (P.Z. S. 1861, p. 138), who 

 then considered it to be a Muntjac, as Cervulus cambojensis, but 

 was lateif identified by him as Mucermos schomburgki ■! (Brit. Mus. 

 Cat. Ruminants, p. 76 (1872); Brit. Mus. Hand-list Ruminants, 

 p. 145 (1873)). Lydekker, however, regards this specimen as 

 belonging to Cervus u7ucolof (Bi-it-. Mus^ Cat. Ungulates, vol. iv. 

 p. 79 (1915)), and if he is correct, and the Indo Chinese Sambhar 

 prove to be distinct., it will ha^'e to be known as C. u, cambojensis 

 Gray. 



