76 MAMMALIA. 



e. The skin and skeleton of a young female from Tipperab. 

 Presented by the Zoological Gardens, 17th October 1878. 



f. A young female, in alcohol. Purchased, 20th March 1879. 



46. Maeaeus maurus. 



M acaous maurus, JF, Cuv., Hist. Nat. des Mamm. 1823, Avril, livr". 



xl ; Anderson, Anat. and Zool. Resell. 1878, p. 80. 

 Magus maurus, Lesson, Man. de Mamm. 1827. p. 44. 

 Simla cuvieri, Fiseher, Syn. Mamm. 1829, p. 30. 

 Cynocephalus niger (?) Q,uoy <^ Gaimard, Voy. de V Astrolabe Zool. 



vol. i. 1830, p. 67. 

 MacacBS arctoides, Is. Geoff. St.Sil., Zool. du Voyage de Belanaer, 



1834, p. 61 (partim). 

 Macacus melanotus, Schinz {partim), Syn. Mamm. bd. i, 1844, p. 59, 

 Inuus maurus, Vrolik, Todd's Cyclop. Anat. <^ Phys. 1852, vol. iv, 



p. 197. 

 Macacus (Gynmopyga) inornatus, Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1866. p. 202, 



pi. xix. 



Eab. North-West Borneo. 



46a. A stuffed adolescent male, and its skull and bones of 

 the trunk : brown, darkest on the forehead and on the hands and 

 feet, which are darker than the body, but not black, and 

 palest on the sides, back of the head and neck, which are pale 

 yellowish-brown ; tail very short ; face and ears dusky black. 

 Presented by Wm. Rutledge, Esq., 5th June 1871. 



b. The skin, skull, and bones of the trunk of an adult 

 male : dark ashy brown, paler on the head and sides of the neck, 

 and palest on the back of the thighs, where the colour is ashy 

 grey ; face black ; the skull has continuous superciliary ridges, 

 and a very strong malo-temporal ridge; the upper canines 

 have been either extracted or shed, but the canine eminences 

 on the face remain ; the bones of the trunk are much dis- 

 eased, evidently affected by rickets, the pelic bones being 

 bent downwards to an extraordinary degree, also the lower 

 margin of the scapula. This specimen lived long in confine- 

 ment, notwithstanding these deformities. Presented by 

 O. L. Fraser, Esq., 28th October 1880. 



c. The skin, skull, and the bones of the trunk of an adult 

 male : like the last, but slightly darker on the head ; a ferine 

 individual, showing supraorbital ridges, well-defined canine 

 eminences, the muzzle being concave on each side from before 

 the malar. Presented by Wm. Rutledge, Esq., 8th June IS81. 



d. The skin, skull, and the bones of the trunk of an adult 

 ferine male: like the last specimen. Presented by Wm. 

 Rutledge, Esq., 20th August 1880. 



