1238 
peculiarly formed tracks of the Gazelle, although it frequently abounded in 
the neighbourhood. The four-horned Antelope, on the other hand, drinks 
habitually.” 
Gazella christii, which we have alluded to above as synonymous with this 
species, was a MS. name of the late Dr. Gray, which appears to have been 
first published by Blyth in 1842, and applied to a pale form of the present 
animal from Kutch and Sind. But more recent researches have shown that 
it is not properly separable from the typical Gazella bennetti. 
Gazella fuscifrons, another synonym also mentioned above, was based 
by Dr. Blanford in 1873 on a doe with distinctly ringed horns and with 
portions of the face dark brown, obtained in Baluchistan. But the late 
Sir O. B. St. John subsequently procured what he justly concluded to be the 
male of this form, which, as acknowledged by Dr. Blanford himself, proved 
Head of Gazella fuscifrons, 2. 
(Wes Wa Ih LUSie} ja; Bill7i)) 
to be not distinct from Gazella bennetti. By the kindness of the Zoological 
Society we are enabled to reproduce Dr. Blanford’s figures of the head of 
Gazella fuscifrons, which, except for the slight differences above mentioned, 
give an equally good idea of the head of the typical G. bennetti. 
