35) 
femme ELNCSITONES ANTELOPE. 
NESOTRAGUS LIVINGSTONIANUS, Kirk. 
Antilope moschata, Peters, Reise Mossamb., Siiug. p. 189 (1852) (nec v. Diiben) (Tette). 
Nesotragus moschatus, Jent. Cat. Ost. Leyd. Mus. (Mus. Pays-Bas, ix.) p. 134 (1887) ; 
id. Cat. Mamm. Leyd. Mus. (op. cit. xi.) p. 165 (1892). 
Nesotragus livingstonianus, Kirk, P. Z. S. 1864, p. 657 (Shupanga) ; Gray, Cat. Rum. 
B. M. p. 31 (1872) ; id. Hand-l. Rum. B. M. p. 100 (1873). 
Nanotragus livingstonianus, Thos. P. Z. S. 1893, p. 237 (fig. skull) (Umkozi R., 
Zululand). 
VernacuLar Namzs :—Rumpsa at Tette; Injasorro in Mozambique (Peters) ; Inhlen- 
gana of Zulus (A. H. Neumann). 
Size larger than NV. moschatus, and in other respects a finer and more 
richly coloured animal. General colour deep rufous, verging on chestnut ; 
flanks and limbs more fawn-coloured than in WV. moschatus. ‘Top of tail 
darker than back, approaching black ; its underside white. 
Skull with the posterior palate produced backwards about a quarter of an 
inch behind the level of the back of the last molar. 
Dimensions of a fine male example :—Basal length 4:4 inches, greatest 
breadth 2°45, muzzle to orbit 2°35. 
Horns thick and heavy, especially in southern specimens, strongly but 
closely ridged to within an inch of their tips. In Mr. Neumann’s fine 
Zululand specimen there are no less than 25 rings to a horn-length of 3°3 in., 
and in the same example the circumference of the horns is about 1-7 in. 
Hab. South-east Africa from Mozambique to Zululand. 
In the Portugese territory of Mozambique, and so on to Zululand, we find 
