—— ’ ta 
\ ao , 
at, 
PAN 245 
and limbs grayish. There is no Chimpanzee known to me like this. 
Tyson states his specimen which he calls an Ourang Outang, was 
brought from Angola, but “taken up higher in the country.” That may 
mean from the Congo State or French Congo, and the example might 
belong to one of several different species or races. Schreber gives no 
description, in fact S. pygmea is not mentioned in the text, and it would 
seem quite useless to attempt to establish a species upon his faulty and 
unsatisfactory figure. Tyson says his Pigmy was black and his figure 
shows a black animal with white face, hands, feet and ears, and hair 
covering all the top of the head nearly to the eyebrows and parted in 
the middle. 
PAN CHIMPANSE (Meyer). 
Satyrus chimpanse Meyer, Archiv. Naturg., XXII, 1856, p. 282. 
Simia chimpanse Matschie, Sitzungsb. Ges. Naturf. Freund., Ber- 
lin, 1900, pp. 77-85 ; 1904, p. 67. 
Simia pygmeus chimpanse Rothsch., Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1904, 
pp. 429, 430, 433, fig. 114; Elliot, Cat. Mamm. Field Columb. 
Mus., F. C. M. Pub., VIII, 1906, p. 579, fig. X CII. 
Anthropopithecus troglodytes Flower and Lydekk., Anim. Liv. 
and Ext., 1891, p. 736, fig. 357. 
Type locality. Gambia. 
Geogr. Distr. Gambia, West Africa. 
Genl. Char. Region around eyes darker than face; hair on tea 
with a part in center; ears large; beard on sides of face only, long; 
chin covered with white hairs. Arms short; canines moderate; third 
upper molar the smallest. 
Color. Uniform black, except white hairs on chin. 
Measurements. 1 have not been able to find a skull of an adult of 
this species. 
PAN SCHWEINFURTHI (Giglioli). 
Troglodytes schweinfurthi Gigl., Ann. Mus. Civ. Genov., III, 1872, 
p. 135. 
?Anthropopithecus troglodytes Thos., Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 
1890, p. 444. 
Simia schweinfurthi Matschie, Sitzungsb. Ges. Naturf. Freund., 
Berlin, 1904, p. 63. 
Simia pygmeus Rothsch., Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1904, pp. 429, 
430, 432, fig. 113, (mec Schreb.). 
