5 
*** Hair adpressed ; knees with tufts ; rump mark and throat-spots white: females with slender horns; no dark side- 
streak ; tail slender, compressed, only hairy above (Dama, Bennett). 
The Abyssinian Mohr. Gazella Soemmeringii. 
Pale brown ; nose, forehead and lower edge of face-streak and end of tail blackish ; chest and belly, 
angular mark on rump above the tail, face-streak and spot on the throat white ; limbs pale. 
Female, forehead paler in the centre. 
Antilope Soemmeringii, Ruppell, Zool. Atlas, 1. 19 c?. 
Inhabits Abyssinia. Brit. Mus. 
The Mohr. Gazella Mohr. 
Bay ; chin, spot on throat, chest, belly, edge and inside of limbs and angular spot on rump above 
the tail white ; spot on side of face and end of tail black. 
Antilope Mohr, Bennett, Trans. Zool. See. i. t. 8. — Knight, M. A. N. f. . 
Inhabits Morocco. Mus. Zool. Soc. Portendic called Seni-ci (Mr. Whitfield). Mus. Brit. 
The specimen in the Frankfort Museum, which was received from the Zoological Society, is one-third 
smaller than the Andra. It is brown, rump mark, lower part of the sides, belly, inside and edge of legs 
white, face iron-grey with longer hair at the base of the horns ; horns large, thick, the face-streak 
indistinct from the pale colour of the head. 
There is a fine specimen of this species living at Knowsley, and a female which died on the passage in 
the British Museum. 
The Nangeur. Gazella Dama. 
Bay ; chin, spot on throat, belly, lower part of sides and hinder part of the back, inside of the limbs 
white ; no spot on side of the face. 
Antilope Dama, Pallas. — A. rubra, Afzelius. — Nangeur, BufFon, H. N. xii. t. 32. f. 3. t. 34. 
Inhabits W. Africa ; Senegal. 
Not seen since BufTon's time ; may be a bad figure of the former. 
The Andra. Gazella rujicollis. 
Wliitish ; neck and front part of the middle of the back reddish ; no face-streak. 
Antilope rujicollis, H. Smith, G. A. K. v. 205. — A. Andra, Bennett. — A. Dama, Licht. Saugth. t. 3, 4. — Ruppell, 
Zool. Atlas, 1. 14, 16.— Ehrenberg, Symb. Phys. t. 6. 
Var. Young ? with an indistinct narrow brown streak across the outside of the thighs, and the fore- 
head iron-grey, with longer hair at the base of the horns ; horns small. Mus. Frankfort. 
Inhabits North Africa ; Kordofan. Brit. Mus. ? . 
These species differ in size as well as markings. The Mohr and Andra differ from G. Soemmeringii in 
being of much larger size, and in wanting the black face and streaks. Bennett's Mohr has only an angular 
white spot on the rump, like G. Soemmeringii'.^ Buffon's Nangeur is smaller and has more white on the rump, 
thighs and sides ; and the Andra, which agrees with the figures cited, is almost all white, with a reddish 
neck and withers. 
**** Hair close-pressed ; knees without tufts (hut with rather longer hair, forming a linear keel in front) ; hack and rump 
brown : females with slender horns ; sides with dark streak. 
The KoRiN. Gazella ruffrons. Tab. IV. 
Bay brown ; sides above paler, with broad dark streak below ; tail black ; chest, belly, inside of legs, 
back edge of tarsus, and underside of feet and anal disc white ; face bright bay, side-streak 
broad white. 
Gazella rufifrons, Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. — Kevel, male, F. Cuvier, Mam. Lithog. t. 3. — Corine, 
F. Cuvier, Mam. Lithog. t. . young ? . — A. lavipes, Sundevall, in letter Oct. 1846. 
Var. Nose blackish above (adult $ ). 
Young; pale yellowish, side-streak brownish. 
Inhabits W. Africa ; Senegal ; Gambia (Mr. Whitfield), called Seni. Sennaar {SundemlV). Brit. Mus. 
Buffon mentions a Corine as coming from Senegal, but he says it is smaller than the Kevel, and Dauben- 
ton says that it has knee-tufts, so that it cannot be this species. Indeed the Gazelle, Corine and Kevcl of 
BufFon are clearly all A. Dorcas of this memoir. 
c 
