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Europe alive. By the kindness of the Zoological Society we are able to give 
a copy of Mr. Smit’s drawing of the head of this animal. 
Fig. 67. 
é 
Front view of head of a female Loder’s Gazelle. 
(P. Z.S. 1896, p. 781.) 
But the identity of the Egyptian Gazella leptoceros with the Algerian 
G. loderi is perhaps not yet exactly certain, although we have combined the 
English name of the latter with the scientific name of the former. 
On comparing specimens from Tunis and Algeria with others from Egypt, 
the size of the former is slightly greater, the markings are even less defined 
than in Egyptian examples, the horns are less closely ringed, the nasal bones 
are markedly longer, the nasal opening is both longer and broader, and the 
premaxille articulate less broadly with the sides of the nasal bones. 
