128 



MAMMALIA. 



Measurements in inches of Sktills and Horns of adult Gaur, Cayal and 



Banteng. 



Across the forehead from 



the bases of the horns . 

 From frontoparietal ridge 



to tip of nasals 

 Across from orbit to orbit . 

 Horns, circumference at 



base , , • . 

 Horns, outside curve . 



„ inside curve • 



Gaur. 



19 

 II 



J7 

 22 



Gayal. 



II 



9* 



16I 



16 



'S 



Banteng. 



14* 

 Si 



Hi 



20 



16 



a. Skull and 



horns. 



b. Skull and 



horns. 



c. Skull and 



horns. 



d. Skull and 



horns. 



e. Skull and ^ 



horns, juv. 

 /. Skin, ske- ^ 



leton. juv. 

 g. Skin, ske- ^ 



leton. 

 h. Skull and g 



horns. 

 /. Skin, ske- $ 



leton. juv. 

 k. Skin, ske- ^ 



leton. juv. 



Java? 

 Java 



Upper Pegu 

 Upper Pegu 



Pegu 



Prince Henry of the Netherlands, 



1837, A.S.B. 

 Batavian Soc, 1844, A.S.B. 



Sir A. Phayre, 1849, A.S.B. 



Sir A. Phayre, 1849, A.S.B. 



Zoological Gardens, 1885, A.S.B. 



W. Rutledge, 1881, 



Zoological Gardens, 1885. 



Sir A. Phayre, A.S.B. 



W. Rutledge, 1881. 



W. Rutledge, 1881. 



Bos grunniens. 



Bos grunniens, Linnaeus Syst. Nat., 12th ed., p. gp (1766) ; Radde Ost Si- 



berien, p. 272 ; Severtzoff Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), xviii, p. 336 ; Kinloch 



Large Game Shooting, ii, p. 5, with plate. 

 Bos poephagus, H. Smith in Griffith An. Kingd., iv, p. 404 (1827) ; Pallas 



Zoog.Ross.As., p. 248, pi. xxii ; Hutton and Blyth J. A. S. B., xv, p. 143. 

 Bison poephagus, Hodgson J. A. S. B., x, pp. 449, 912 (1841); Gray, Cat. 



Hodgs. Coll., 1st ed., p. 25 ; Hodgson J. A. S. B., xvi, p. 708. 

 Poephagus grunniens, Gray List Mamm. B. M., p. 153 (1843); Blyth Cat., 



p. 158 I Horsfield Cat. E. I. Mus., p. 184; Gray P. Z. S., 1853, pi. xxxv, 



p. 191 ; id. Cat. Mamm. B. M., iii, p. 40 j Adams P. Z. S., 1858, p. 529 ; 



Sterndale Mamm. Ind., p. 489. 



The Yak ; Donkh, Tibetan ; Bunchowr, Hind. 



Distrihution. — The Mountains of Central Asia, seldom descend- 

 ing much below 6,000 ft. Hodgson describes it as being found 

 from the Altai to the Himalayas. 



