“ap I, No. 5.] » Contributions to Oriental Herpetology IIT. 139° 
N. 8.) 
16. Contriputions To Ortentat Herprtotoay III.—Notes on the Ori- 
ental Lizards in the Indian Musewm, with a List of the Species 
recorded from British India and Ceylon. Part 2.—By Nuwson 
Axsanpate, B.A. (Ozon.), D.Sc. (Hdin.), Deputy Superinten- 
dent of the Indian Museum. 
e present is a continuation of my former paper with the 
same title, and deals with the remaining families of Oriental 
Lizards, wiz., the Lacertide, Scincide and Dibamidw. As before, 
I append a revised list of the species in the families dealt with 
which have been, or are here, recorded from British India and 
Ceylon, with their distribution within these limits. To the epithet 
Oriental’ I have given a liberal interpretation, including under 
the category of Oriental Lizards all those forms which occur on 
the mainland of Asia or in the western section of the Malay 
Archipelago, but excluding those only known from New Guinea or 
Australia. 
Dibamus is represented by two specimens, a male and a ria 
b r 
LACERTIDA. 
TACHYDROMUS SEPTENTRIONALIS, Gthr. 
T. haughtonianus, Jerd., P.A.S.B., 1870, p. 72; Stol., 
J.4.8.B., (2), 1872, p. 88. on a5 
T. tachydromoides ( part.), Blgr., Cat. Liz. iii., p. 5, and Faun. 
Ind., Tept., p. 169. 
T. septentrionalis, id., P.Z.S. 1899, p. 161. 
: pe nc ee nn ty Gree Chemie wanmmenr caren 
1 See Blanford, Eastern Persia, Vol. ii., Reptiles. 
= alas, Scientifie Results of the Second Yarkand Mission, Reptiles. 
