88 
given of this animal (pls. 388, 389) in both its summer and winter dress, and 
it is pointed out that in the latter it is the Antilope suturosa of Otto. — 
The Zoological Society of London appear to have first received living — 
examples of the Addax in 1849. In 1861 a fine male was presented to the 
Society by Sir John Gaspard Le Marchant, then Governor of Malta. In 
1864 one was obtained by purchase, and in 1876 another. At the present 
time there are no examples of the Addax in the London Gardens, but last 
summer there was, as already stated, a fine pair in the Jardin Zoologique of 
Antwerp. 
Our illustration of this animal (Plate LX X XVI.) was put upon the stone 
by Mr. Smit, some twenty years ago, from a water-colour sketch made for 
Sir Victor Brooke by Mr. Wolf. It represents an adult animal in summer 
pelage. 
The British Museum contains a fine adult mounted male of this Antelope, 
from the Tunisian Sahara, lately presented by Mr. J. I. S. Whitaker ; a front — 
and horns from the Algerian Sahara, presented by Mr. Rowland Ward, F.Z.S. ; 
a pair of horns brought home from Central Africa by Denham and Clapperton ; 
and the specimen, formerly in Bullock’s Museum, upon which de Blainville 
partly based his Antilope naso-maculata, and Hamilton Smith his A. myti- 
lopes ; besides other older specimens without exact localities. 
May, 1899. 
