418 MR. O. THOMAS ON THE ANTELOPES [May 17, 



orbit to gnathion 166 ; nasals, length 122, breadth 45 ; muzzle 91 ; 

 length of upper molar series 90. 



Hab. Liberia (F. X Stampfli). 



This fine species, discovered in Liberia by Dr. F. X. Stampfli, 

 from whom, through Dr. Blittikofer, the Museum obtained the 

 specimen above described, was referred^ by Dr. F. A. Jentink, of the 

 Ley den Museum, to Gray's C. longiceps. This reference, in my 

 opinion, was most wise and prudent under the circumstances, not 

 only on account of the extraordinarily close resemblance of its skull 

 to that of C. longiceps, the only part of the latter form known, but 

 also because there was at that time no evidence that C. sylvicultoi; 

 to which I refer C. longiceps, inhabited the Gaboon, whence came 

 the latter animal. Now, however, that the reference of G. melano- 

 prymnns to C. sylvicuUor shows that the latter form does inhabit 

 that district, the true owner of the typical skull of G. longiceps, 

 practically identical as it is with that of G. sylvicultor, becomes at 

 once evident. It is therefore clear that the Liberian species, so 

 different from C. sylvicultor externally, but so like cranially, requires 

 a new name, and I think no better name can be given it than that 

 of my friend Dr. Jentink himself, whose valuable papers on the 

 Liberian mammals are characterized by a carefulnetis above all 

 praise, and whose very carefulness, led astray by Dr. Gray's more 

 serious mistakes, caused him to make the venial error in the determi- 

 nation above referred to. In fact, it could scarcely be called an 

 error at all, for at that time it would have been quite unjustifiable 

 for him to have described the Liberian form as new, in face of the 

 extraordinary resemblance of its skull to that figured by Dr. Gray 

 as C longiceps. 



3. Cephalolophus spadix. True. 



Cephalophus spadix, True, P. U. S. Nat. Mus. xiii. p. 227 (1890). 



Size comparatively large. General colour " dusky chestnut- 

 brown without spots or bands, and not lighter on the belly. Face, 

 chin, and throat pale greyish brown. Hairs of crest bright chestnut 

 at the base, and tipped with black. Tail dusky, except at the tip, 

 where the hairs are nearly pure white throughout." 



Horns " directed backwards, and lying below the plane of the 

 upper surface of the skull " : — 



S . " 4| inches (114 ram.) long; slender, straight, not thickened 

 at the base in front." 



Dimensions. — S ■ "Head and body 965 mm., ear 107, hind foot 

 (hoofto hock) 241." 



Skull — basal length, from occipital condyle, 216; greatest breadth 

 104 ; nasals, length 95 ; length of molar series 67. 



Hah. Mount Kilima-njaro, at high elevations \_Abbott (U. S. Nat. 

 Mus.)]. 



The above is extracted from the original description of the species, 



^ N. L. M. vii. p. 272, pi. x. (animal) (1885) ; op. cif. x. p. 19, pi. 1. (horns) 

 (1887). 



