SPECIAL WORK. 
Mamm. 45 
' JEpyceros pelersi : head figured byP. L. Sclater; t. c. p. 460, woodcut. 
Cephalophus spac/ix , n sp., F. W. True, P. U. S. Nat. Mus. xiii, pp. 227 
& 228, Kilima-njaro, E. Africa. 
Tragelaphus spelcei : female figured by P. L. Sclater, P. Z. S. 1890, 
pi. xlvii. 
Gazella przewalskii, n. n., E. Buchner, Mel. biol. xiii, p. 161, = 
G. cuvieri , Przewal. [ non Ogilby]. 
iGazella capricornis , n. sp., A. Rodler A. Weithofer, Denk. 
Ak. Wien, lvii, p. 767, Pliocene, Persia. 
t Antidorcas (?) antropatenes , n. sp., Rodler & Weithofer, t. c., ibid. 
t Tragelaphus (P) houtum-schindleri , n. sp., Rodler & Weithofer, t. c. 
p. 768, ibid. 
\Palceoreas torticornis (Aymard). Palceoreas montiscaroli identified by 
Forsyth-Major (supra, p. 5) with this species, which is for the first 
time referred to Palceoreas. 
Jc. GlRAFFIDiE. 
t Alcicephalus neumayri , n. g. & sp., A. Rodler & K. A. Weithofer, 
Denk. Ak. Wien, lvii, pp. 754 & 758, Pliocene, Persia. 
t Alcicephalus ccelophrys , n. sp., Rodler & Weithofer, t. c. p. 761 ,ibid. 
1. Ceryidj]. 
For the American extinct genera Blastomeryx and Cosoryx , see Scott 
& Osborn, supra , p. 15. 
Roger, — . Ueber die Hi'rsche. CB. Yer. Regensb. 1887, pp. 50-93, 
pis. ii & iii. [Omitted from Zool. Rec. xxiv.] 
A review of the recent genera, and more important species, with notices 
of allied fossil forms. 
Cervus elaphus : abnormal antlers from Asia Minor referred to this 
species are described and' figured by R. Lydekker, P. Z. S. 1890, pp. 363- 
365, pi. xxx. 
t Cervus giganteus ( euryceros ) : W. Dames, Z. geol. Ges. p. 171, records 
a skull from interglacial beds near Berlin. See also Z. Naturw. lxiii, 
pi 435. 
iCervus curvicornis , n. sp., H. Filhol, Bibl. haut. etudes, xxxvi, 1, 
p. 280, Miocene, Sansail. 
+ Cervus dubius , n. sp., Filhol, t. c. p. 282, ibid. 
t Cervus nouleti, n. sp., Filiiol, t. c., ibid. 
f Cervus crassus , n. sp., Filiiol, t. c. p. 283, ibid. 
\Cervus larteti , n. sp., Filiiol, t. c., ibid. 
A Ices machlis and llangifer tarandus. The following paragraph is taken 
from ‘ The Times ’ of January 2, 1891 : — “ The total number of elk killed 
in Norway last year was 850, of which 515 were male and 335 female, and 
of the eleven provinces in which they were killed, northern Trondhjem 
