CORINE, AND CERVINE ANTELOPE. 251 
fial patch of yellowish white ; the ears are of a 
moderate size, marked internally with three obscure 
longitudinal bands of white,, as in some other 
antelopes ; the horns are six inches long, bending 
slightly backwards, sharp-pointed, black, and an- 
nul at ed near half their length with prominent rings ; 
the tail is about the length of the horns, and 
sharpish ; the hoofs rather small and black ; the 
hair on the whole animal is rather harsh, and not 
lighter coloured below or on the belly, than on the 
upper parts. 
Corine. 
This species have very slender horns, not mark- 
ed with rings, but with circular rugse. In size 
they are smaller than the roe buck. The neck, the 
body, and the flanks are tawny ; the belly and 
the inside of the thighs white, and separated from 
the sides by a dark line. The ears are large. 
A white, and, beneath it, a black line, marks each 
side of the face. The knees are furnished with 
tufts of hairs. 
Senegal, and some other parts of Africa, are the 
country of this animal. Its colour, its velocity in 
running, and agility in leaping, have induced some 
naturalists to suspect that it might be the female of 
the kevel, or flat-horned antelope.** But its horns 
are remarkably different from those of that species. 
Cervine antelope. 
The horns of this antelope rise almost from one 
base, and widening as they advance, bend, first 
forwards, and then, after rising for a considerable 
length, almost in an upright direction, turn their 
points backward. Measuring along the exterior 
curvature, they are from six to nine inches in 
