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PAN 251 
and soft, and the whiskers are rather long and pass under the chin. 
Forehead is without hairs, but whether there never were any, or they 
have fallen off, cannot now be told, as the type is in poor condition. 
It has very protruding lips, but as no skull came with the specimen, 
this is probably thé result of taxidermic effort. 
The adult of this species, a fine specimen of which is in the 
Tring Museum, has forehead and top of head bald, surrounded by 
black hairs speckled with yellowish white, this color extending above 
hind neck; back and outer sides of legs and arms at elbows yellowish 
brown with a red tinge on legs below knee; shoulders and outer side 
of arms dark brown; forearms and hands blackish brown; feet dark 
brown; inner side of arms blackish, legs reddish brown; under parts 
of body blackish brown; short, dark brown beard on chin; ears flesh 
color. 
Pawn Fuscus (Meyer). 
Anthropopithecus fuscus Meyer, Abhandl. und Ber. Zoologisch. 
und Anthrop. Mus. Dresd., 1894-95, No. 14, p. 7; Matschie, 
Sitzungsb. Ges. Naturf. Freund., Berlin, 1904, p. 64. 
Simia pygmeus fuscus Rothsch., Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1904, 
p. 430. 
Simia troglodytes Jent., Notes Leyd. Mus., 1888, p. 2. (Ex Li- 
beria). 
Type locality. Unknown. 
Geogr. Distr. Gold Coast? West Africa. 
Genl. Char. Hair in young and adults mostly reddish; hair on 
chin whitish; hair on head springing from a central whorl; whiskers 
moderately long; face and ears flesh color. Similar to caLvus in color. 
Meyer (1. c.) gives a description and figure of a young brown 
female Chimpanzee living at the time in the Zoological Gardens, 
Dresden, and says in a footnote if an adult brown Chimpanzee exists, 
he would propose the name of fuscus for it. 
The specimen figured by Meyer, and which must be regarded as 
the type, is not in the Dresden Museum and nothing is known of it. 
Even the country from which the individual came was not given, if 
it was ascertained. 
The following specimens are those referred to on page 233. As 
they were all procured in Cameroon, one is somewhat doubtful about 
so many Chimpanzees existing within so comparatively a restricted 
range and yet maintaining a specific distinctness. The material in 
