2 BULLETIN" 1346, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 
State of Mexico. The plain on which this hunt occurred has been 
known from that day to the present as the Llano del Cazadero, 
in commemoration of this event. The station of Cazadero on the 
main line of the Mexican Central Eailroad marks this vicinity. 
Fig. 1. — Original and present distribution of the prongh.am.ed antelope. The black line 
marks the limits of the distribution before European settlements in America. The 
shaded portion indicates the area within which antelope are now found (1922-1924) 
in scattering bands. Details of present distribution within this area are shown on 
separate maps of States and Provinces (figs 3 to 21), and in Table 1, page 3 
. The hunt took the form of a great drive of game by the Indians, 
during which, the author states, 600 deer were killed, among which 
were large stags " and those which they call verrendos." He states 
that the verrendos did not occur in Spain, and that " they not only 
ran but flew," thus indicating that the remarkable speed of these 
