GAZELLA LEPTOCEEOS. 
O ,4 
o4o 
Hemprich and Ehrenberg were under the impression that they saw the same 
Gazelle near Baalbec, in Syria, and Canon Tristram records it from “ desert-country 
east of the Jordan”; but both of these localities require confirmation, as the animals 
seen may possibly have belonged to G. dorcas. 
Fig. 3, 
Head of Arabian Gazelle {Gazella arahica), S • 
(Proc. Zool. Soc. 1874, p. 141.) 
The above woodcut was first published in illustration of a paper by the late 
Sir Victor Brooke, and has since appeared in the ‘Book of Antelopes.’ It is 
reproduced here by the kind permission of the Zoological Society.— W. E. de W. 
Gazella leptocesos, F. Cuv. (Plate LXI.) 
Antilope leptocerus, Geoffr. & Cuv. Hist. Nat. Mamra. (fol.) pis. 373, 374, livr. 72 (1812); Wagn. 
Schreb. Siiug., Suppl. iv. 1844, p. 422, v. 1855, p. 407; Sund. Pecora, K. Vet.-Akad. Handl. 
1845, p. 269; Heugl. lleise N.O.-Afr. ii. 1877, p. 100, tab. 
Gazella leptoceros, Brooke, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1873, p. 543; Lydekker, Horns and Hoofs, 1893, p. 234; 
Sclater & Thomas, Book of Antelopes, hi. 1898, p. 137, pi. Ixiii.; Johnston, in Great and Small 
Game of Africa, 1899, p. 319, pi. ix. hg. 8. 
Leptoceros abuharab et L. cuvieri, Fitz. SB. Ak. Wien, lix. pt. i. 1869, p. 160. 
Gazella lodtri, Thos. Ann. Mag. N. H. (6) xiii. 1894, p. 452 (Algeria) ; id. Proc. Zool. Soc. 1894, 
p. 470, pi. xxxii.; Loder, ibid. 1894, p. 473 (habits); Sclater, ibid. 1895, p. 522 (Egypt) * 
