48 MAMMALIA. 



female : yellow at the base of the tail beneath, and before and 

 external to the callosities. Presented by Wm. Rutledge, Esq., 

 18th January 1877. 



g. The skin, skull, and bones of the trunk of a young 

 male : no yellow at the tail or callosities. Presented by Wm. 

 Rutledge, Esq., 26th January 1877. 



h. The skin, skull, and bones of the trunk of a young 

 female. Presented by Wm. Rutledge, Esq., 1st October 

 1880. 



i. The skull of an adolescent female. No. 32C of Blyth's 

 Catalogue. No history. 



j. The skeleton of a male. No. 37H of BIyth's Catalogue. 

 Tenasserim. Presented by Dr. Heifer, 1838.^ 



h. The skeleton of an adult female. Purchased, 24th 

 November 1865. 



1. A stuffed adult female : rich ferruginous ; the S. pyrrhis 

 of Hoisfieldj Java. From the collection of the India Museum, 

 London. Presented through the Trustees of the British 

 Museum, 13th January 18S0. 



19. Semnopithecus barbei. 



Semnopitliecaa maurus, Heifer, Journ. As. Soa. Beng. vol. xvii, 1838, 



p. 858. 

 Presbjtis barbei, Blyth, Journ. As. Soe. Beng. vol. xvi, 1847, p. 734, 



Cat. Mamm. As. Soc. Mus. 1863, p. 14. 

 Semnopitbecus barbei, Anderson, Anat. ^ Zool. Resch. 1878, p. 12. 



Hah, Tipperah ; Irrawadi Valley ; Tenasserim. 



193. A stuffed adult male and its skull. No. 36A of Blyth's 

 Catalogue : blackish brown, except on the front of the 

 shoulders and fore limbs, lower part of hind legs, the back and 

 sides of the head, and the tail, which are greyish-brown. 

 Hands, feet, eyebrows, and whiskers black, and the under parts 

 nearly the same; dark greyish-brown on the lighter upper parts. 

 Tipperah Hills.2 Presented by the Rev. J. Barbe, 1845. 



1 This skeleton was first determined by Pearson as the skeleton of a 

 Negro monkey, S. maurms, Journ. As. Soc. Bengal, vol. vii (13), p. 669, but 

 Blyth regarded it as probably belonging to S'. olscurus. A comparison, 

 however, of its skull with that of 5. ohscurus (a skull of which Blyth had not) 

 pi'oves it to be most ne.irly allied to this species. 



'^ Blyth, in his description of this species, gives Tenasserim Province of 

 Te as the locality from whence he obtained his types, but in his Catalogue' of 

 Mammals (p. 14) Tipperah is given as the correct locality on the strength of 

 information subsequently communicated by Mr, Barbe. 



