CAPKINiE 119 



4. 9. 18. 3. Skull, female, with one horn and without 

 lower jaw, referable to this or one of the allied races. Alaska. 



Presented hy Capt. C. E. Rculcliffe, 1904:. 



J.— Ovis canadensis kenaiensis. 



Ovis dalli kenaiensis, Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist, xvi, pp. 145, 

 219, 1902, vol. xxxvii, p. 28, 1912. 



Typical locality Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. 



Distinguished from dalli by the shorter posterior nares 

 in the skull, and the consequent approximation of the 

 mastoid process to the last molar ; the interval between the 

 two being 94 mm. against 84 mm. in dalli. Correlated with 

 this is a difference in the angle made by the basioccipital 

 axis with the palatal axis. The cheek-teeth are stated to be 

 larger, and the tooth row more curved. 



The distributional area is stated to be completely isolated 

 from that of dalli. 



No specimen in the collection. 



K.— Ovis canadensis fannini. 



Ovis fannini, Homaday, 5th Rep. N. Yorlc Zool. Soc. 1900, p. 78, 



1901 ; Osgood, N. Amer. Fauna, no. 30, p. 51, 1909. 

 Ovis canadensis fannini, LydeVker, Great and Small Game of 



Europe, etc. p. 19, 1901, The Sheep and Its Cousins, p. 294, 1912 ; 



Ward, Records of Big Game, ed. 6, p. 394, 1912. 

 Ovis dalli fannini, Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. vol. xxxi, 



p. 28, 1912. 



Typical locality near Dawson City, Yukon. 



General characters those of dalli, but a large portion of 

 the upper-parts brownish grey, conveying " the appearance 

 of a white animal covered with a grey blanket." Tail darker 

 than back. 



The range is mainly comprised between 58° and 64° North 

 latitude, and between 129° and 135° West longitude; in 

 British Columbia and Yukon this race merges into dalli to 

 the north and into stonci to the south.* 



5. 10. 18. 1. Skin, mounted. Yukon Territory. 



Presented by H.H. Priuec Coloredo Mansfeld, 1905. 

 5. 10. 18. 2. Head, mounted, female. Yukon Territory. 



Same history. 

 * Sheldon, The Wilderness of the Upper YuTcon, New York, 1911. 



