SEMNOPITHECTJS. 49 



i. A stuffed adult female and its skull, No. 86B of Blyth's 

 Catalogue : the same as the preceding. Presented by the 

 Rev. J. Baibe, 1845. 



c. A stuffed young male : paler than the adults. Purchased, 

 1866. 



d. The skin of an adult male : black with a wash of grey 

 chiefly on the shoulders and brachium. Mooleyit Range, 

 Tenasserim. Collected by Mr. Ossian Limboror, January 

 1877. Presented by Dr. J. Anderson, 11th December 1880. 



e. The skull of an adult male, killed in the 2nd defile of the 

 Irrawadi. Dr. J. Anderson. Presented by the Second Expe- 

 dition to "Western Yunnan, 1875. 



This species appears to be very closely allied to the next, 

 and a larger series of specimens than is at my disposal will 

 probably prove their identity, 



20. Semnopithecus phayrei, 



Semnopithecus pliayrei, Jonrn. As. Soc. Beng, vol. xvi, 1847, p. 733, 

 pi. xxxi, fig. 3, p. 1271 ; Anderson, Anat. &■ Zool. Resch. 1878, 

 p. 34. 



Presbytis phayrei, Blyth, Cat. Mam. As. Sue, Mus. 1863, p. 15. 



Had, Arakan. 



20a. A stuffed adult male. No. 3 8 A. of Blyth^s Catalogue, 

 and skull : uniform brown, slightly paler on the shoulders and 

 passing into dark blackish-brown on the antibrachium, and 

 hands and feet ; tail concolorous with the body ; white of the 

 under parts scarcely extending on to the inside of the limbs ; 

 hair of head rather long, not radiating on the crown, directed 

 outwards and backwards on the middle of the frontal region, 

 and forming a vertical crest; whiskers rather long j a broad 

 area around the eyes pure white ; nose black ; around lips fleshy 

 white. The skull has the interorbital space of moderate 

 length, the forehead rather full, but the supraorbital ridges 

 are not strongly developed, whilst the external orbital angle of 

 the frontal is rather prominent in adults. The greatest breadth 

 of the orbits is from the external frontal angle obliquely down- 

 wards and outwards across the orbit, whereas in S. dariei and 

 <S. obscurus the orbits are nearly round. The ridges marking 

 the attachments of the temporal muscles do not meet on the 

 middle line, but are separated by about an interval of an inch. 

 The brain-case is upwardly tilted, so that the occipital region 

 is nearly vertical, and associated with this there is a down- 

 ward slope of the facial region. Arakan, Presented by Sir 

 Arthur P. Phayre, 1844, 



