SNAPPING TURTLES
The family of snapping turtles, the Chelydridae, are of interest because of their peculiar geographical distribution at the present time. Only four species are known, three of them from North America, the fourth from New Guinea. The family is one of the most primitive of living turtles, though no members of it are known with certainty from earlier rocks than the Oligocene. In all probability, also, they have retained, more than have any other group of turtles, unless it be some of the fresh-water tortoises, the primitive habits of the earlier or earliest turtles, though of course there have been modifications, both in structure and in habits. The three species of the United States include two of the snapping turtles proper and the alligator turtles of the southern states, which sometimes reach a length of three feet. All the species are largely aquatic in habit, powerful and active swimmers, with webbed feet and strong claws, and both on the land and in the water they are bold and fierce. They have a relatively large head and very strong jaws. Agassiz saw one bite off a piece of a plank an inch in thickness, and they can usually be raised from the ground by any object which they seize. The carapace and plastron are much reduced, and are rather loosely united. The shell is not large enough for the complete withdrawal of the head and legs within it, and the tail is unusually large and strong. The common snapping turtle, Chelydra serpentina, is found from Canada to Ecuador, and its remains have been found with those of the mammoth and mastodon in Pleistocene deposits; and related species of the same genus have been reported from the Miocene of England.