ai 
soil, renders it almost invisible at a distance, and it is only by its conspicuous white 
rump, and its snort, that you are able to discover its presence.” 
There are many specimens of this Antelope in the British Museum 
presented by Mr. Hodgson, amongst which is the type of the species. There 
are also in the National Collection skulls from Kumaon and other localities 
presented by Mr. A. O. Hume, C.B.; from the Changchenmo Valley, Ladak, 
presented by Mr. R. Lydekker; and from the confines of Tibet north of 
Sikim, collected by Mandelli and presented by Dr. W. T. Blanford, F.R.S. 
There is also a good series of specimens of this Gazelle in the Museum of 
the Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburg, obtained by the Russian explorers 
in Northern Tibet and in the mountains of Nan-shan. 
Our figure (Plate LII.), which has been put on the stone by Mr. Smit from 
a sketch prepared for Sir Victor Brooke by Mr. Wolf, represents a male and 
two females of this species, probably the specimens in the British Museum. 
January, 1898. 
