512 



7"^!? Descent of Man. 



Part ir. 



hunted for the last twenty-one years in the Adirondacks, where 

 the Ctrvus virginianus abounds. About fourteen years ago he 

 fii'st heard of spike-horn bucks. These became from year to year 

 more common ; about fire years ago he sliot one, and afterwards 

 another, and now they are frequently killed. " The spike-horn 

 " differs greatly from the common antler of the C. virginianus. 



FlR. 64. Strepsiceros Kudu (from Sir Andrew Smith's ' Zoology of South Africa'). 



" It consists of a single spike, more slender than the antler, and 

 " scarcely half so long, projecting forward from the brow, and 

 ■■ terminating in a Tci'y sharp point. Tt pivcs a considerable 



