4 
** Hair close-pressed ; knees with tufts ; hack and rump hrown, vent white : females with slenderer horns. 
f Lower part of side with a dark oblique streak ; feet with a tuft of Hack hair beneath. 
The Gazelle. Gazella Dorcas. Tab. III. 
Fur rather elongate and liarsh, grey brown ; outside of fore legs, broad oblique streak along the side, 
edge of anal disc, front of face and face-streak dark brown ; face-streak, throat, chest, belly, 
inside of thigh and anal disc white ; tuft at underside of feet and end of tail black ; knee-tufts 
blackish ; young, back and side-streak rather paler. 
Var. Nose with a dark spot or streak. 
Var. Larger, legs thicker. Tab. III. 
Capra Dorcas, Linn. — Antilope Dorcas, Pallas. — Licht. 3. t. 6. — A. Gazella, Pallas. — Gazella Kevella, 
H. Smith, ? .— G. Corinna, H. Smith, ? .—Gazelle, BufFon, H. N. xii. t. 22—25. c? .—Kevel, BufFon, H. N. 
xii. t. 26. c?. not F. CnVier. —Corinne, BufFon, H. N. xii. t. 27. ? . t. 30 (not F. Cuvier) .— Cuvier, Menag. 
Mus. t, . — Kevel gris, F. Cuvier, Mam. Lithog. t. 3. — Antilope Cora, H. Smith.— J. Arabica, Hemprich 
and Ehrenb. Symb. Phys. t. 5. — Licht. Saugth. t. 6. — A. Cuvieri, Ogilby, Frazer, Zool. Typica, t. 
Inhabits N. Africa ; shore of Red Sea ; Mogador {Wihhire). 
The British Museum has five males, two females, and two kids. 
The Earl of Derby has specimens (here figured) which he calls Gazella vera ; they are rather larger, 
greyer, and the legs are much thicker and heavier than the specimens from the shore of the Red Sea. 
The fur is similar, but not quite so long on the underside of the neck. The Kevel gris (F. Cuvier, 
Mam. Lith.) well represents this variety. 
The A. Cuvieri of Ogilby, from Morocco, is a much larger animal than the common G. Dorcas, but agrees 
with it in other characters, except, it is said, in having longer ears. 
M. F. Cuvier (Mam. Lithog. vii. t. 8. ? .) has figured and described an Antelope from Sennaar under 
the name A. leptoceros, which he says is very like A. Dorcas, but has larger horns, those of the males being 
twice and of the females half as long again as the head. The horns vary greatly in length in our specimens. 
ff Upper part of sides with a pale streak. 
The Isabella Gazella. Gazella Isabella. 
Fur short, very soft ; pale yellowish-brown, with a broad, rather paler oblique streak on the upper 
part of the side ; knee-tufts, front of face and lower face-streak darker, yellow brown ; upper face- 
streak, chest, back edge of tarsus, underside of feet, inside of limbs, belly and vent white ; tail 
black. Female, horns very slender, longer than the head. Young paler, the lower part of the 
sides rather darker. 
Gazella Isabella, Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 1846. 
Inhabits N. Africa ; Egypt {J. Burton, Esq.'), Cordofan {Sundevall'). 
This species is easily known from the foregoing by the softness and fineness of the fur, and the lower 
side-streak being of the same colour as the back, and from it and the following by having no dark edge to 
the anal disc. 
The Jairon. Gazella subgutturosa. 
Pale brown ; upper part of sides with a broad, rather paler streak ; crown and knee-tufts greyer ; 
face-streak indistinct ; nose, lower part of sides, belly, hinder side of fore and front side of hinder 
limbs and anal disc white ; streak on haunches dark brown ; end of tail blackish. 
Antilope subgutturosa, Guldenst.— Pallas.— H. Smith, GrifF. A. K. t. 183. f. 5. horns. 
Inhabits Siberia. Cab. Brit. Mus. 
Larger than the Chikara. 
■\W Sides uniformly coloured. 
The Chikara. Gazella Bennettii. 
Bay brown ; knee-tufts, end of nose and tail black ; streak on haunches blackish ; face-streak, chest, 
belly and inside of limbs white. . ' 
Antilope Bennettii, Sykes. — A. Christii, Gray. — A. Bharatensis, Hodgson. — A. Hazenna, I. GeofF., Voy. Jacq. 
Mam. t. 6. had ? 
Inhabits India. Cab. Brit. Mus. 
The feet are generally blackish, but sometimes brown, like the back. 
