SPORT AND SCIENCE ON THE 
in Kansu on this expedition was not pub- 
lished in time to be embodied in the volume 
already mentioned. This roe-deer was described 
in the Proceedings of the Biological Society of 
Washington, Vol. XXIV, pp. 281-232, by Mr. 
Gerrit S. Miller, Jr., who says: ‘ Resembling 
Capreolus bedfordi in essential characters, including 
the hypsodent form of the teeth, but colour of 
summer pelage more reddish, and outer surface 
of ear mostly clear black, in striking contrast with 
surrounding parts.” The type specimen was an 
immature female collected thirty miles east of 
Ching-yang Fu, Kansu, China. 
After the Clark Expedition, my wife and I made 
collections in the T’ai-yitian Fu district, during 
the months of October and November, 1909. De- 
tails of these collections appear hereafter in this 
chapter. 
Subsequently in the course of the journey made 
by us up the Fén Ho, a most interesting collection 
was made. This journey intersected that made 
by Anderson and myself at Wu-tsai Hsien and 
Ning-wu Fu, but it so happened that while my 
wife and I made a large collection at Wu-tsai 
Hsien, and secured nothing at Ning-wu Fu, the 
very reverse was the case with Anderson and 
myself. On the Wu-tsai plain the species col- 
lected, with but few exceptions, were identical 
with many of those alcady secured in and round 
the Ordos. 
180 
