iA 
(O27 tri aNDED GAZELLE. 
GAZELLA NOTATA, Tuos. 
Gazella grantii notata, Thos. Ann. Mag. N. H. (6) xx. p. 479 (1897) ; A. Neumann, 
Elephant-Hunting in E. Africa, p. 238 (1898). 
Only known from a single flat skin, without the head. Fur unusually long 
and shaggy. Size about as in G. granti, and general body-markings as in 
that species, but all much intensified. Dark and light lateral bands much 
longer and broader, the former nearly black and reaching forwards on to the 
shoulder, and backwards nearly to the white rump-mark ; the latter pale 
buff, and succeeded above by a second dark band, lighter than the main 
lateral band, but distinctly darker than the centre of the back. This second 
dark band united with the other behind the posterior end of the light band. 
Pygal band black and very strongly defined. 
Horns said by the discoverer to have been like those of G. grantzi. 
Hab. Western slope of the Loroghi Mountains, British East Africa. 
In Mr. Arthur H. Neumann’s recently published volume on ‘ Elephant- 
Hunting in East Equatorial Africa’ there will be found an account of his 
adventurous journey to Lake Rudolph, during which, on more than one 
occasion, he made his camp for some months at El Bogoi, a place situated 
east of the Loroghi Mountains, in rather higher than 1° N. lat., which was a 
favourite station for elephants. While at this place in October 1895 
Mr. Neumann, accompanied by his native attendants, made an excursion over 
the Loroghi range, and encamped close to the edge of the open country on 
their western slope, at an elevation reckoned to be about 5500 feet above 
the sea-level, at a place called in the map attached to his narrative Kisima. 
Here, on taking a stroll into the open, he “shot a brace” of what he at first 
