156 ACCOUNT OF EXPEDITIONS TO MT. KINABALU. 
gredients ” of a Dusun house have failed to do so. How¬ 
ever, the Dusuns are not the only tribe in Borneo w T ho 
can provide a similar “rest” for the traveller; nor, 
perhaps, is Borneo the only country where such are to be 
found. 
Not content with his prolonged exploration of Kinabalu, 
and in spite of ill-health, Whitehead spent another six 
weeks at Melangkap and neighbourhood, finding new birds 
up to the last; thus his entry on May 14th: “ Tungal 
brought me three specimens of a Whistling Thrush closely 
allied to one of the Himalayan species; this was new, and 
has been named Garrulax schistoclilamys .” Then, again, 
on May 21st: “ The Kadyans returned from Kapar with 
our last new bird—an interesting little Timeliine closely 
allied to a Himalayan species ; this bird has been named 
Turdinulus exsul 
On May 28rd he left Melangkap, and, following the 
Tampassuk, reached the coast on the 26th, and thence by 
boat to Gaya and Labuan, where he arrived on May 30th 
after an absence of nearly six months. 
Whitehead’s book contains some fine pictures of Kina¬ 
balu drawn by himself, as well as beautifully coloured plates 
of the finest of his new birds and insects. For altitudes 
he gives Kiau as 2800 ft., Kamborangah as 7350 ft., and 
Pakka as 10,300 ft. The results of his expeditions are 
described in the following papers :— 
(a) Mammals, by Oldfield Thomas, in Proc. Zool. Soc. 
Lond. 1889. Of the twenty-one species obtained 
eight * were new to science, five more new to 
Borneo. 
(b) Birds, by R. B. Sharpe, Ibis , 1887-1890. The author 
notes that Whitehead added sixty-nine species and 
twenty-five genera of birds to the Bornean list. 
Of these Dr. Sharpe’s list shows that forty-two 
species and four genera were also new to science. 
The total number of species collected by Whitehead 
in Borneo was two hundred and eighty-six, of 
which one hundred and sixty-one, representing 
one hundred and twenty-six genera, were found on 
Kinabalu. 
(c) Reptiles and Batrachians, by M. F. Mocquard, in 
Nouvelles Archives du Museum (Paris), 1890. Of 
* The author of this paper gives six, but Whitehead claims to have been 
the first to discover Sevmopithecus hosei and Tupaia montana. 
