MR. F. LENEY ON ADDITION’S TO NORWICH CASTLE-Ml'SEUM. IO7 
“English ” in place of “British,” since the only authentic 
records appear to be Mr. Champion’s two captures of this 
species in the pine forests at Aviemore in 1876 and 1892. 
Thy amis rutilus has been taken on Scrophularia at Halstow, 
which is near Chatham by Walker, at Southsea by Moncreaff, 
and at Swanage by Champion, who says, “It is probably 
confined to the neighbourhood of the South Coast.” 
I may perhaps be permitted to add the following species to 
the “List of Norfolk Coleoptera”: — Dyschirius salinus at 
Wells and Sherringham, Tachys scutellaris with Bleciius 
arenarius and B. bicornis at Wells, Scymnus ater at Holt, 
Hcterocerus femoralis and H. britannicm at Cley, and 
Dorcatoma flavicornis at Barton Broad. These were all 
captured in August, 1904, and kindly communicated to me 
by Dr. Norman H. Joy, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. 
XI. 
SOME ADDITIONS TO 
THE NORWICH CASTLE-MUSEUM IN 1904. 
By Frank Leney, 
Read 2SU1 March, 1905. 
Of the additions to the Castle-Museum collections of Natural 
History which may be deemed of special interest is a well- 
mounted specimen of the rare Addra Gazelle ( Gazella ruficollis) 
shot in Western Kordofan by the donor, Mr. Edward North 
Buxton, and heads of Beisa Antelope (Oryx beisa), and the 
Sabre-horned Antelope ( Oryx leucoryx ), a species remarkable 
for the exceedingly line point to which the horns taper. 
Another notable addition is that of a head of the almost 
