LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 
Mainm. 35 
551. Sterndale, R. A. Note on ;i probable New Species of Ibex. .T. 
Bombay N. H. Soc. i, pp. 24-26, 1 pi. 
3 52. — — . On a Hybrid, Ovis hodgsoni , cum vignei, discovered and shot 
by Mons. H. Dauvergne. T. c. pp. 35-37, 1 pi, 
353. . I. On Variation in Colour in Ursus labiatus , the Sloth Bear, 
&c. ii. On the Flying Squirrel of Western Asia. hi. Ou a Species 
of Pigmy Shrew. T. c. pp. 69, & 70. 
354. . On a Case of Hybridism between Ovis hodgsoni and 0. vignei. 
P. Z. S. 1886, pp. 205 & 206. 
The hybrids were between a ram of 0. hodgsoni and a flock of 0. vignei 
ewes, and occurred in a mountain range south of the Indus, near 
Lanskar. 
355. , & Aitken, E. H. Catalogue of the Mammalia in the Collec- 
tion of the .Bombay Natural History Society. J. Bombay N. H. 
Soc. i, pp. 8-14. 
The museum contains examples of 48 species of Mammals. 
Storey. [See Clarke (68).] 
356. Stowell, T. B. The Trigeminus Nerve in the Domestic Cat (Fefis 
domeslica). P. Am. Phil. Soc. xxiii, pp. 459-478. 
An anatomical .accouut of the trigeminal ; its origin, and distribution 
of its various branches. 
357. Straiil, H. Zur Bilduug der Cloake des Kaninchenembryo. Arch. 
Anat. Phys. 1886, pp. 156-168, taf. iv. 
358. Strutiiers, — . On the Tay Whale ( Megaptera longimana) and 
other Whales recently obtained in the district. Rep. Brit. Ass. 1885, 
pp. 1053 & 1054. 
\Cf. Megaptera and Balamoptera .] 
359. Styan, F. W. Letter from, relating to some Chinese animals. 
P. Z. S. 1886, pp. 267 & 268. 
Description and measurements of the skin of a <j> Cervulus crinifrons. 
360. Sutton, J. B. An Introduction to General Pathology. London : 
1886, 8vo, pp. 1-390. 
The examples of disease described in this volume are chiefly derived 
from the lower animals. The volume concludes with a chapter of 
generalization, and on the bearing of pathology on evolution. 
361. . On Atavism. A Critical and Analytical Study. P. Z. S. 
1886, pp. 551-558. 
The author wishes to prove that all cases of atavism are, as Gegenbaur 
calls it, Palseogenetic, i.e., that the abnormal part is always found as a 
germ in the embryo. 
362. -. On some Specimens of Disease from Mammals in the Society’s 
Gardens. T. c. pp. 206-217. 
The theory that the vertical attitude of Man has produced such diseases 
as prolapse of the uterus and crural and inguinal hernia is shown to be 
