40 
LONG-NOSED MONKEY. 
than hyenty inches long. The teeth were thirty- 
two in number; sixteen above and the same num- 
ber below: four cutting-teeth, two canine, and 
two grinders, on each side : the two superior ca^ 
nine teeth much longer than the inferior ones. 
It was of a mild and gentle disposition, and even 
timid. It eat bi'ead, fruits, and roots. The 
Count de Buffon repeats what he had before ob- 
served, that the Exquima of Marcgrave is a very 
different animal, being a native of America ; 
having a prehensile tail, and consequently be^ 
longing to a different division in the genus. 
With respect to the variety above-mentioned, it 
should seem to be the same with the Diana of 
Linnaeus, differing chiefly in the want of the white 
band along the outside of the thighs. 
LONG-NOSED MONKEY. 
Simla Nasuta. ^S". caudata nigro-ferruginea, suhtus albido-cinerea^ 
facie elongata nuda incarnata. 
Blackish-ferruginous long-tailed Monkey, pale ash-coloured 
beneath, with long naked flesh-coloured face. 
La Guenon a museau allonge. Buff, suppl. 7. 60. 15. 
Two remarkable Monkies are represented in Mr. 
Pennant's History of Quadrupeds, from drawings 
by a Mr. Paillou. The one is called the Long-nosed 
-Monkey ; it has a very long and slender nose, cor 
vered with a flesh-coloured skin; the hair on the 
forehead falls back : on the body and breast it is 
long : the colour of the head and upper parts i^ 
