338 suiD^. 



Skull developing the last molar (713 u). Length 13, height 6^ 

 inches. Germany, from Mr. Gerrard. 



A skin and skeleton of a Wild Boar from Barbary {Sus scrofa har- 

 harus, Solater, P. Z. S. 1860, p. 443), received from the Zoological 

 Gardens. 8kull (712 j) does not differ from the skull of the Wild 

 Boar from Germany. 



713 k and 713 i. Two skulls of young animals from the Zoological 

 Society. 



713 g. Skull of a nearly adult animal ;' purchased of a dealer. 



9. Sus libycus. 

 Animal ? 



Sus libycus, &ray, P. Z. S. 1868, p. 31. 

 ?Sus scrofa, Tristram, P. Z. S. 1866, p. 84. 



Hab. Asia Minor {Xantus). Skull in the British Museum, pre- 

 sented by Sir Charles Fellows. 



SkuU of adult (713 a). Length 14^, height 8^ inches. The 

 concavity on the cheeks in front of the orbits very broad and very 

 shallow, with a broad concavity in the middle ; the hinder part 

 moderately deep, separated from the orbit by a rather narrow well- 

 marked prominent ridge. Nose narrow, and compressed over the 

 lateral foramen. The sheath of the canine with only a slight ridge 

 behind it. 



The skull is very distinct from all the skulls of the Wild Boars 

 from Germany in the British Museum. 



The Wild Boar of the Holy Land, described by Mr. Tristram, may 

 be the same. He observes : — 



" Abundant in the wooded hills and maritime plains alike. 

 Swarms in all the thickets by the Jordan and Dead Sea, and in the 

 forest-country east of Jordan. Extends even to the bare wilderness 

 of Judsea, and almost into the desert, where there is no cover, and 

 where its only food is the roots of the desert bulbs." — Tristram, 

 P.Z. S. 1866, p. 84. 



10. Sus sennaareusis. 



Fur dense, bristly, duU olive-black yellow- varied. Ears moderate, 

 densely pilose. Head without any warts. 



Sus sennaarensis, Fitz. Sitz. Akad. d. Wiss. xix. p. 366, 1864 ; Sati- 



gera, p. 388; Gray, P. Z. S. 1868, p 32. 

 Sus larvatus, Fitz. Sitz. Akad. d. Wiss. x. p. 362. 

 p Sus scrofa (Egypt), Shinv. Ost^offr. t. 5 (skull). 

 ? Cochon des Negres, Buffon, H. N. Quad. v. p. 123. 



Hab. North Africa : Sennaar ; Kordofan ; Sudan. Called " Qua- 

 druk" by the Arabs. 



Dr. Murie says he has often seen and eaten the true Wild Boar of 

 the genus JSm in Africa, as well as the Potamochoerus on the west 

 coast. I have never seen any, or the skull of one. 



