1128 On the Cat-toed Snbplantigrades. [Nov. 



Male. Female. 



Snout to fore angle of eye, 1 ^ 1 f 



Thence to base of ear, 3 i 3 



s 



Ear only, 2 f 



Ear and tuft, 3 \ 3 } 



Width of ear, 1 -J- 



Girth behind shoulder, 1 1 1 



Mean height, 1 9 | 1 9 i 



Length of arm, 5 5 



Length of fore arm, 4 £ 4 } 



Palma and nails, 4 f 4 ± 



Length of thigh,, 4 {$ 4 $ 



Length of leg (tibia,) 5 £ 5 T \ 



Planta and nails, 4 f 4 ± 



Weight, 8 ibs. 7|lfes. 



Length, 4 | 



Height, 3 i 



Width between Zygomse, 3 £ 



Width inter parietes, 2 



Base of incisors to fore angle of orbits, 1 f 



Thence to jut of occiput, 3 T ' F 



And now, the extent to which the above paper has insensibly run, 

 warns me to postpone my proposed remarks on the Paradoxures to a 

 future occasion, merely referring the reader who may desire in the 

 meanwhile to compare the organization and habits of those animals and 

 of the Wans as above given, to the 19th Vol. Asiatic Society's Trans- 

 actions, where he will find ample details relative to the hard and soft 

 anatomy, and to the manners of the sub-Himalayan Screwtails, of which 

 there are four species ; one, Nepalensis, which is the Grayii of Bennett, 

 but priorly named by me ; two, Hirsutus, the Bondar of Gray, of which 

 Pennantii is not a Synonyme ; three, Laniger, an entirely new and nivi- 

 colan species clad in wool, of an uniform isabelline brown colour, and 

 four, quadriscriptus noster (new ?) which [is probably the Penantii of 

 Gray, Bondar verus being unstriped, and this striped. 



