. Animal Life and the World of Nature; A magazine of Natural History. he creiresemblances to the capricorns orwhich were the ancestors of theWe know very little about its litein Western or Central Africa whothis article are strongly urged toabout this rare cephalophine, remark-things as being the only large antelope of this group molar teeth have low crowns. The tail in a fewlong, but in others is shorter and tufted, though?J short. Throughout the Bovidce no trace has everexisting or extinct species of an upper caninecuts the gum, the tooth which so often in thedeer develops into a tusk. But i


. Animal Life and the World of Nature; A magazine of Natural History. he creiresemblances to the capricorns orwhich were the ancestors of theWe know very little about its litein Western or Central Africa whothis article are strongly urged toabout this rare cephalophine, remark-things as being the only large antelope of this group molar teeth have low crowns. The tail in a fewlong, but in others is shorter and tufted, though?J short. Throughout the Bovidce no trace has everexisting or extinct species of an upper caninecuts the gum, the tooth which so often in thedeer develops into a tusk. But it has beenoccasionally in the fretus or young of a cephalo-are found of an imperfectly developed upperThe shape of the head in these little antelopessomething pig-like about it, recalling very stronglyto the chevrotains and some of the lower typessemblance accentuated by the usually roundedshort legs. Their stomachs are somewhat simpler among other BovidcB, but curiously bladder. and in the four-horned antelope are hornless, but in most of thefemales carry


Size: 1546px × 1616px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1902