FIG. PAGE
27. Skull and horn-cores of Falconer’s Tamaraii . . . . . 138
28. Head of male Greenland Musk-Ox . . . . . . . 142
29. Head of male European Muflon . . - . . . - . . 155
.30. Female Muflon with horns . . . . . . . . 1 5 6
31. Head of male Cyprian Muflon . . . . . . . 1 6 4
32. Head of male Ladak Sha . . . . . . . . . 166
33. Skull and horns of male Siberian Argali . . . . . . . 178
34. Head of male Tibetan Argali . . . . . . . 1 8 2
35. Head of young male Tibetan Argali . . . . . . . 184
36. Littledale’s Sheep . . . . . . . . . . 1 8 6
37. Head of Pamir race of Marco Polo’s Sheep . . . . . . 189
38. Another head of the same . . . . . . . . . 193
39. A dead male of Marco Polo’s Sheep . . . . . . . 201-
40. Head of Rocky Mountain Bighorn . . . . . . . . 204
41. Liard River Bighorn . . . . .. . . . . 2 1 6
42. Skull and horns of Kamschatkan Bighorn . . . . . - ' . . 2 2 2
43. Head of male Arui • ■. . . . . _. . » • . . 227
44. Head of male Bharal . . . . . . . . .. . 233
45. Head of male East Caucasian Tur . . . . . . 244
46. West Caucasian Tur . . . . . . . . 247
47. Skull and horns of male West-Caucasian Tur . . . . 250
48. Head of male West Caucasian Tur _ . . . . . . 252
49. Head of male Spanish Tur with long beard . . . _ . . 254
50. Head of male Spanish Tur with short beard . . . . . . . 256
51. Head of male Arabian Ibex . . . . . . . . 267
52. Head of male Himalayan Ibex . . . . . .. . . 276
. 53. Another view of same . . . . . . . . . 279
54. Head of male Astor Markhor . . . "• • . . / ' .* '.289
55. Oblique view of same . . . . . . . . 290
56. Horns of male Pir-Panjal Markhor . . . . . . .... 292
57. Horns of male Suleman Markhor . . . • . . . . . 295
58. Head of male Himalayan Tahr . . • . . . . . . . . 298
59. Skull and horns of male Arabian Tahr . . . . . . . 302
60. Head of male Nilgiri Tahr . . . . . . . . 3 04
61. Front view of another head of the same . . . . . . . 307
ADDENDA TO “ DEER OF ALL LANDS”
T he issue o f the present volume afforis a convenient opportunity for recording such
amendments and additions to the Deer o f a ll Lands as are necessary.
The hind figured |h Pag e » | as that of the Manchurian wapiti proves to
■ H N = to the Duke of Bedford’s deer. Consequently the redness and large size
attributed to the former animal are not warranted by the facts.
A muntjac from Borneo named Cervulus fleiharicus by Kohlbrugge1 in 18 9 5 was
:ftve*looked ; .but ij§| claims to specific distinction from the Indian muntjac are very
doubtful.
E R R A TUM
Fig. 30,'p. 156, represents a female bharal, and not, as stated, a muflon.
The same writer- also names.a, deerWiea~|jhnre mwe-TCef rrom cerros island,
California, O & tle u ^ rro s e n A s ,a second5 from Chiapas, Mexico, O. thomasi, stated
to differ from the common American deer by being red at all seasons; and a third8
from the same district, 0 . nelsoni.
The acquisition by the British Museum of a mounted specimen of the marsh-deer
(p. 2 8 3 ) shows that the hair on the withers is reversed, as in the pampas deer,
although to a smaller extent. The reversal o f the hair in this region becomes therefore
a characteristic o f the sub-genus Illasteceros.
1 .Vatuurk. Tijdschr. Nederl. lad. ser. 2, vol, iv. p. lS | ( lS q ^ ^H
j />,w' ^oshmgton, vol. xn. p. 99 (1898), published subsequently to Deer o f a ll Lands.
a t. pp. i iM n d i|S | , 1 m i. j | i o i . A ?’m i p. p. ^