102 LIST OF DONORS TO SOCIETY’S COLLECTION 
Leaving Marangule this subsidence is even more deter- 
mined. 
You can sit on the Marangule slopes and see almost to 
Abyssinia, a distance of fifteen to twenty days’ march. This 
is absolutely waterless, with the exception of a few places 
in ancient bondis, where by digging you may obtain water. 
Within the last thirty years this was thickly inhabited. 
These inhabitants have now fled to the country sloping 
to the Nile where water is still obtainable. 
East of Mogila and Zingole there is no water. Lake 
Rudolf is also rapidly drying up. 
I have only touched the question as a whole, but informa- 
tion from men in other parts will, I am sure, tell the same story. 
LIST OF DONOES OF SPECIMENS TO THE SOCIETY’S 
COLLECTION. January to December 
Agnew, Mrs. 
Banks, Eev. E. 
Barnes, A. C. 
Beaton, Master Kenneth 
Binks, H. K. 
Binns, Eev. H. K. 
Birkett, Dr. . 
Black, M. A. 
Five moths and one larva. 
Two praying mantis. 
Four moths and two beetles. 
Serval cat ( Felis serval). 
Smooth-clawed toad (Xenopus 
laevis). 
Scorpion, two beetles, and a mantis 
(. Har fades ocellatus). 
Two black-necked cobras (Naia 
nigricollis). 
A night adder ( Causus rhombeatus). 
Four naked sand rats. 
One skull of rodent. 
Ten snakes. 
Six lizards. 
One frog ( Phrynomantis bifasciata). 
Sixty -three fish. 
Two scorpions. 
One caterpillar. 
