UNQDLATA ARTIODACTYLA. 
Mamm. 19 
Tragulidje. 
Tragulus. A. Kolliker describes the placenta, which is' intermediate 
in character between those of the Suina and Ruminants. Verh. Ges. 
Wiirzb. X. pp. 74-83, pis. iv. & v. 
Cervid.®. 
Alces malchis. Note on sub-fossil remains in Scotland; J. Young, 
P. N. H. Soc. Glasg. ii. pp. 176 & 177. 
Cervus mesopotamicus. Further notes on this species \_cf. Zool. Rec. 
xii. p. 18], with figures of antlers ; V. Brooke, P. Z. S. 1876, pp. 
298-303. 
Cervus scAomiwr^ 7a characterized, with figures of normal and abnormal 
antlers ; id. tom. cit. pp. 304-307. 
Cervus dyhowskii, sp. n., L. Taczanowski, tom. cit. p. 123, Ussuri 
(Eastern Siberia). 
Cervus capreolus. On its existence in Palestine ; H. B. Tristram, tom. 
cit. pp. 420-421 ; A. Newton, tom. cit. p. 701. 
Cervus macrotis. A ‘Wery pronounced variety” is named “ var. cali- 
fornicus^^ ; J. D. Caton, Am. Nat. x. pp. 464-469. 
Cervus whitneyi^ sp. ■ n. foss., J. A. Allen, Am. J. Sci. (3) xi. p. 49, 
superficial strata of the Upper Mississippi. 
Cervulus micrurus, Scl. \cf. Zool. Rec. xii. p. 18], = C. reevesi ; P. L. 
Sclater, P. Z. S. 1876, p. 696. 
Lopliotragus michianus, Swinhoe, = Elaphodus cepTialophus^ M.-Ed. ; 
A. H. Garrod ; its external characters and anatomy are described. 
Elaphodus is closely allied to Cervulus, and the two might be united in a 
subfamily Cervulinoe ; tom. cit. pp. 757-765, pi. Ixxvi. 
Moschus moschiferus. F. J. Bell describes the myology of the limbs, 
which tends to confirm Flower’s views [cf. Zool. Rec. xii. p. 18] as to the 
affinities of the genus ; tom. cit. pp. 182-188. 
SiVATHERIIDJE. 
Vishnutherium, g. n. (foss.), R. Lydekker, Rec. Geol. Surv. Ind. ix. p. 103. 
Allied to Sivatherium and Bramatherium, but differing in dentition. 
Type, V. iravadicum, sp. n., Burma. 
Hydaspidotherium, g. n. (foss.), R. Lydekker, tom. cit. p. 154. Allied 
to Bramatherium, but with one common horn-base on the vertex and no 
anterior horns. Type, H. megacephalum, sp. n.. River Jhelum (Siwaliks). 
BoVlDiE. 
R. Hensel has notes on the tame and feral cattle of Brazil and 
Europe ; he discusses the “ Thur ” of Heberstein, which has been iden- 
tified with Bos primigenius, and comes to the conclusion that there is no 
evidence of its having been a really wild species ; Zool. Gart. 1876, pp. 
37-45,97-130,139-145. 
