72 
LOWER MAMMAL GALLERY. 
Argali Sheep, Ovis ainmon, inhabiting the plateaus o£ Central 
Asia, such as Marco Polo’s Sheep, 0. a, j^oli ( 1061 ), the typical 
Siberian Argali, 0. ammori ( 1057 , fig. 45), and the Tibetan 
Argali, 0. a, Iwdcfsoni ( 1058 ). 0£ smaller size are the Wild 
Sheep o£ Cyprus and Asia Minor, 0. orientalis ( 1065 , 1066 ) ; 
the Urial, Oiis vignei ( 1062 , 1063 ), of the Himalaya and 
Punjab ; and the Muflon o£ Corsica and Sardinia, 0. mvslmon 
( 1067 ). Other species are the Bighorn, 0. canadensis ( 1051 ), 
with its numerous local races, o£ which two inhabit N.E. Asia. 
Fig. 45. 
5* - 
The Siberian Argali {Ovis ammon). 
[Cases 
48 to 51.1 
[Case 48.] More distinct are the Tibetan Bharal, Psevdo'is naJinra ( 1068 ), 
and the long-haired, long-bearded Barbary Sheep, Ammotragus 
Ur via ( 1069 ), of the Atlas, Biskra, and the Sudan. 
Wild Goats, Capixi hircus cegagrus ( 1082 ), are represented by 
specimens from the Taurus Mountains of Asia Minor and Mount 
Ararat. Other Goats include the Ture of the Caucasus, Capra 
caucasica and severtzoivi (1081 & 1081 A), the Pyrenean Ibex 
{C. pgrenaica)^ and the Ibexes of the Himalaya, Alps, Pyre- 
nees, and North Africa, which are exhibited in cases 48 and 49. 
Ture serve to connect the more typical Goats with Sheep 
