147 
On re-examining the specimens at the British Museum, Thomas discovered 
that a skin obtained many years ago by Sir John Kirk near Malindi, on the 
coast of British East Africa, and previously referred erroneously to C. natal- 
ensis (owing to its having lost the fur off its face), likewise belongs to this 
species, which, as Mr. Jackson has informed us, does occur in a patch of 
forest about one day south-west of Malindi. 
There can be little doubt also that the Black-fronted Antelope obtained by 
Dr. W. L. Abbott near Taveta during his expedition of 1888-89, of which we 
have already spoken, and now in the National Museum of the United States 
at Washington, should be referred to C. harveyi. Mr. True provisionally 
determined it as C. nigrifrons, not having specimens of that Antelope from 
the western coast to compare it with, and has given us an excellent descrip- 
tion of it in his memoir on Dr. Abbott’s mammals. 
More recently, again, this species has been obtained by Capt. Bottego in 
South Somaliland, as mentioned in Thomas’s report on the mammals pre- 
sented by that sportsman to the Museo Civico at Genoa. 
Our figure of Harvey’s Duiker (Plate XVII.) has been prepared by Mr. Smit 
from Sir John Kirk’s specimen in the British Museum, the head in the same 
collection obtained by Mr. Jackson having been used where Sir John Kirk’s 
specimen is imperfect. 
May, 1895. 
