TWO-HORNED RHINOCEROS. 
inward. The figure given by Dr. Sparman 
is a faithful resemblance of that I saw." 
Had Pennant, or Mr. Miller, been ac- 
quainted with Mr. BelFs account of the Su- 
matran Two-Horned Rhinoceros, the resem- 
blance would have struck them still more for- 
cibly. 
On the whole, it appears that both the One- 
Horned and the Two-Horned RhinoceroSj 
arc found in Asia, where the former seems 
most plentiful : and, perhaps, as Mr. Bruce is 
of opinion, the Single-Horned Rhinoceros, 
may be found in many parts of Africa ; where, 
however, it is considered as by no means so 
common. According to BulFon, however^ 
M. Allamand, a very able naturahst, wrote 
to M. Daubenton a Letter, dated at Leyden, 
October 31, 1766, in the following terms, 
which totally derjinges this idea — " I recollect 
a remark of M. Parsons, in a passage quoted 
*^ by M. De Buffon : he suspected that the 
Rhinoceroses of Asia have but one horn, 
and that those of the Cape of Good Hope 
'* have two. I suspect the very opposite : the 
'* heads of the Rhinoceroses which I received 
