OCR Text |
Show 1877.] MR. P. L. SCLATER ON A TWO-HORNED RHINOCEROS. 269 Fig. 25. Doris collatata, dorso-lateral view. 26 ventral view. 27. wellingtonensis, lateral view. 28- , anterior part of ventral surface. 29. raripilosa, lateral view. 30. , ventral view. PLATE XXX. Fig. 1. Acanthodoris mollicella, lateral view. 2- , ventral view. "• , spines of odontophore. 4. , mantle-spicules. 5- • globosa, lateral view. 6- • , ventral view. 7- , spines of odontophore. "• * J bundle of mantle-spines. 9- , spines, from border of mantle. 10. Doris prcetenera, latero-dorsal view. H- , ventral view. 12. , three lingual spines. 13. mollipustulata, dorsal aspect. 14. , ventral aspect. 15- peculiaris, dorsal aspect. 16. , ventral aspect. 17. , spicules of mantle. 18. Chromodoris mollita, lateral view. 19- , branchial apparatus, enlarged. 20. D. delicata, lateral aspect. 21. , dorsal aspect. 22. , ventral aspect. 23. Hexabranchus orbicularis, dorsal aspect. 24. , ventral aspect. 25. Doridopsis australiensis, lateral view. 26. r , ventral view. 27. parva, lateral view. 28. , ventral view. 29. obscura, dorsal aspect. 30. , ventral aspect. 31. fumea, dorsal aspect. 32. , ventral aspect. 33. inornata, lateral aspect. 34. , ventral aspect. 35. , mantle-spicules. 36. subpellucida, lateral view. March 20, 1877. Dr. E. Hamilton, V.P., in the Chair. Mr. Sclater called attention to an article published in the ' Oriental Sporting Magazine' for M a y 1876 (vol. ix. p. 176), by which it appeared that a two-horned Rhinoceros had been killed in February of that year about twenty miles south of the station of Comillah, in Tipperah, and expressed a hope that Mr. A. Manson, the author of the notice in question, would be induced to send home the skull of the animal (which he appeared to have preserved), in order to enable this part of Rhinoceros lasiotis (to which species the specimen |