336 UNGULATA 
smelling herbs.” Since the time this was written these Antelopes 
have been greatly reduced in number. 4. (Damalis) hunteri, from 
East Africa, appears to be allied to A. senegalensis, but in the more 
elongated facial portion of the skull approximates to the Harte-beest, 
and thus confirms the view that Damalis should not form a distinct 
genus. 
Fic. 138.—Head of Alcelaphus tora. From Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1873, p. 762. 
Connochetes.1—Head short and massive, with the mufile very 
broad and bristly. Nostrils widely separated, hairy within. Horns 
on the vertex of the skull, immediately over the occiput, approxi- 
mated at base, cylindrical, bent outwards, and recurving upwards 
at the tip. Extremities of premaxille much expanded laterally, 
and firmly ankylosed. Vertebre: C7, D 14, L 6, $4, C 16. 
Hoofs very narrow. Tail very long, covered throughout with long 
hairs. Four mamme. Two species, C. taurina and C. gnu (Fig. 139), 
1 Lichtenstein, Berlin Ges. Natuforsch. Freunde Magazin, vol. vi. pp. 152, 165 
(1814). 
