[201] From “A Legend of a Stone Axe,” a clever and suggestive poem in the New Quarterly, April 1879. The text is slightly altered.
[202] Animal Intelligence, Romanes, p. 261.
INDEX.
References printed in Italics are to Figures in the Text.
- Aard-vark, or Cape ant-eater, [202];
- habits of, [203].
- Adjutant bird killing the cobra, [121];
- with its feet flat, [128].
- Æpyornis of Madagascar, [140].
- Affection in animals, [348–352].
- Africa, aard-vark and pangolin of, [202];
- darting birds of, [168];
- isolation of, in ancient times, [340];
- wild animals of, [275].
- Air-bladder, uses and hindrances of an, [53];
- of fish, use of, [26];
- of minnow, [25];
- of mud-fish, [55].
- Air-breathers, home of the early, [70].
- Air-breathing fish, [34].
- Air-sacs in bones of birds, [135].
- Alaska, sea-otters of, [301].
- Albatross, habits of the, [146];
- home of the, [147].
- Aldabra, tortoises of, [101].
- Aleutian Isles, sea-lions of the, [306], [310].
- Alligators acting as scavengers, [109].
- Alytes, a frog-father carrying strings of eggs, [87].
- Amazons, manatees in the, [316];
- monkeys of the, [246];
- mud-fish of the, [33].
- Amblystoma, air-breathing form of axolotl, [81].
- America, absence of wild hogs in North, [263];
- beaver communities of, [229];
- earliest forms of horse come from, [265];
- jaguar and puma of, [292];
- passenger pigeons of, [162];
- ant-bear of, [200];
- characters of monkeys of, [245];
- sturgeon in rivers of, [32];
- songless perching-birds of, [169];
- stags with single antlers in, [273].
- American and Australian colonists, argument drawn from, [131].
- Ammocœtes, history of, [18];
- larva of lamprey, [16].
- Amphibia, ancestors of the mammalia, [191];
- large ancient, [82–84];
- wonderful metamorphosis of, [335].
- Amphibian, true meaning of the term, [77], [81].
- Amphioxus lanceolatus, [11].
- Ancestors of the higher milk-givers, [213].
- Angling-fish, Lophius piscatorius, [59].
- Animals, affection and devotion in, [348–352];
- combination for defence among, [350];
- narrow range of lower, [2];
- which have taken to the water, [300];
- living with early man in England, [343].
- Anoplotherium, [209];
- one of the ancestors of hogs and rhinoceroses, [213], [261].
- Ant, limit of powers of the, [6].
- Ant-bear of South America, [200];
- habits and strength of, [204].
- Antelopes, range of, [274];
- setting sentinels, [269].
- Antlers, gradual development of, [273].
- Apteryx, or Kiwi, [140];
- structure and habits of, [139].
- Aquatic mammalia, [300].
- Archæopteryx, or ancient winged bird, [129], [131];
- restoration of, [153].
- Arctocyon, [209];
- ancestor of carnivores, [213].
- Arm, modifications of the, [347].
- Armadilloes, with plates like a crocodile, [204];
- figured, [200].
- Ascidian, growth of an, [14].
- Ass, skeleton of a wild, [266].
- Australia, bats and mice in, [230];
- duck-billed platypus of, [187];
- isolation of, [340];
- mud-fish of, [33];
- why the home of marsupials, [185].
- Australian marsupials, [193].
- Australian and American colonists, argument drawn from, [131].
- Axolotl and amblystoma, [80].
- Axolotl, metamorphosis of, into amblystoma, [81].
- Aye-aye, habits of the, [245];
- figured, [244].
- Babirusa, a double-tusked hog, [262].
- Baboon, fetching a young one, [250];
- structure and habits of, [249].
- Backbone, first start of a, [12];
- of the minnow, [24].
- Backboned division, [3];
- advantage of skeleton in the, [7];
- lowest form of the, [10–15].
- Badgers, small carnivores, [281].
- Bandicoots, marsupial rabbit-rats, [195].
- Bangsrings, insect-eaters, [232].
- Barbets, climbing birds, [165].
- Basking shark, [28].
- Bat, flying, [220];
- long-eared, [236];
- skeleton of a, [233];
- walking, [235].
- Bats, structure and habits of, [233–237];
- affection for young, [238];
- enemies of, [236];
- fruit-, in Mauritius, [238];
- the only true flying milk-givers, [232–237];
- self-guiding power of, [234];
- vast masses in caves, [236].
- Bear, hug of the, [295];
- grizzly, an animal feeder, [295];
- Polar, [294];
- food of, [293];
- habits of, [296].
- Bears, largely vegetarian, [293];
- walk flat-footed, [294].
- Beaver, [227];
- structure and habits of the, [228].
- Beaver-meadows, [229].
- Beckles cited, [212].
- Bee-eaters of Africa, [168].
- Beryx, a deep-sea fish, [43], [47], [50].
- Bichir of the Nile, [33].
- Bird, the structure of a, [124–129].
- Bird-life as a whole, [179].
- Birds, ancient, [123], [153];
- with jointed tails, [130];
- with teeth, [130];
- arose not direct from reptiles but from a common ancient stock, [131];
- avoiding winter by migration, [348];
- climbing, [162];
- dangers of land, [154–156];
- darting, [167];
- feet of perching, [155];
- ground, [156];
- a group of wading, [149];
- growth of feathers of, [133];
- habits of scratching, [156];
- linked in structure to reptiles, [129];
- love-time of the, [124];
- lungs of, [135];
- migrations of, [142], [151], [155], [177];
- mound-building, [158];
- nest-building, [170];
- origin of, [337];
- perching, [168];
- of prey, [174];
- range of, [136];
- rise from ground to perching, [159];
- running, [136–140];
- sea, [142];
- singing, [168];
- songless, [169];
- structure of water-, [141];
- third eyelid of, [136];
- throat of singing, [169];
- wading, [148];
- warmer-blooded than man, [135];
- wingless, [139].
- Bisons, protecting a young one, [269];
- the only ruminants of America, [274].
- Blennies, walking-fish, [57].
- Blue shark, Carcharias glaucus, [29].
- Boa constrictor of America, [115];
- manner of seizing and devouring prey, [117].
- Boar, defences of the wild, [260].
- “Bombay Duck” a phosphorescent fish, [48];
- figured, see [frontispiece].
- Bone at tip of mole’s nose, [224].
- Bonito, a fish without air-bladder, [53].
- Bony fish, agility of, [44];
- or modern fish, [27];
- early forms of, [43];
- origin of, [45];
- rise and spread of, [43];
- structure of, [45].
- Bony pike of North America, [33].
- Box-tortoises closing their shell, [101].
- Brazil, monkeys of, [246].
- Breast-bone, flat in running birds, [136];
- keeled of flying birds, [124].
- Breathing apparatus of birds, [135];
- of bony fish, [45];
- of frog, [75], [76];
- of lamprey, [17];
- of lancelet, [12];
- of marsupials, [192];
- of minnow, [23];
- of mud-fish, [34];
- of seals, [308];
- of shark, [30];
- of the snake, [113];
- of sturgeon, [32];
- of tadpole, [73], [74];
- of tortoise, [95];
- of whales, [321].
- British Museums, specimens in, [32], [34].
- Brush-turkeys and their mounds, [158].
- Buffalo cow defending her calf, [274].
- Buzzard killing a viper, [120].
- Cæcilians, nearest type to Labyrinthodonts, [84];
- worm-like amphibians, [82].
- Calf-fish or amia, [33].
- California, sea-otters of, [301].
- Californian gray whale in ice, [330];
- killed by a shoal of grampuses, [325].
- Camel, [270];
- the only ruminant with upper front teeth, [270].
- Capybaras of South America, [215].
- Carapace of tortoise, [98].
- Carnivora, or flesh-feeders, [257], [259];
- ancestors of the, [213];
- the smaller, [280].
- Carnivorous marsupials, [196].
- Carp family, [65].
- Cartilaginous fish, [31–42].
- Cassowary of New Guinea, [139].
- Cat-fish, [65].
- Cat less tamable than dog, [287].
- Cave-lion in England, [343].
- Celebes, double-tusked hog of, [262].
- Ceratodus or “Barramunda,” [34];
- a descendant of ancient fish, [39].
- Chalk Period, extinction of reptiles in the, [211].
- Chamæleon, [105];
- structure and habits of, [106], [107].
- Chauliodus, a deep-sea fish, [47];
- figured, see [frontispiece].
- Chauvin, Marie von, cited, [81].
- Chimæra between sharks and sturgeons, [41].
- Chimpanzee, home of the, [253].
- Chinchillas of South America, [225].
- Circulation of blood in frog, [76].
- Clavelina, larval form of, [14].
- Claws, retractile of felines, [289].
- Climbing birds, paired toes of the, [163];
- build in tree-holes, [164].
- Clinging fish, [51], [57], [58].
- Coal-forests, amphibians of the, [82].
- Coast fish, [57].
- Cobra, enemies of the, [121].
- Cobra di Capello, [118].
- Cold blood, the cause of, in the frog, [76].
- Cold-blooded life in reptiles, [90];
- cold-blooded vertebrates, [24].
- Colours, protective, [347].
- Colugo, a flying insect-eater, [231].
- Conger eels, [49].
- Conodonts, probably lamprey’s teeth, [19].
- Cope, Prof., cited, [212], [190].
- Cormorant, figured, [144].
- Coryphæna or dorado, [53].
- Cow chewing the cud, [259].
- Cranes, migrations of, [152].
- Creation a gradual change, [336].
- Creepers, [172].
- Creative power, ever silent working of the, [336];
- high conception of the, [345].
- Crocodile, [108];
- care for her young, [110];
- habits and structure of the, [108].
- Crop of pigeons, [161].
- Crustaceans, huge, in time of early fish, [37].
- Cuckoo, sometimes builds a nest, [166].
- Cud, chewing the, [259].
- Cumberland, Mr., on vitality of ant-bear, [205].
- Curlews, wading birds, [148].
- Cyclostomata, round-mouthed fishes, [16].
- Dace, [65].
- Dactylopterus, or flying gurnards, [55].
- Darwin, on blood-sucking bats, [237];
- on Galapagos tortoises, [101];
- on evolution, [345].
- D’Azara on ant-bear, [205].
- Deep-sea fish, [47–50];
- rising at night, [50].
- Deer, growth of antlers of, [271];
- range of, [273].
- Depth at which fish live, [49].
- Desman, [226].
- Devotion in animals, [348–352].
- Dingo dog, probably brought to Australia, [194].
- Dinichthys, a huge Devonian fish, [40].
- Dinocerata, ancestors of elephants and hoofed animals, [260].
- Dinornis, extinct wingless bird, [140].
- Dipper, or water-ouzel, [172].
- Dipterus, a large ancient fish, [39].
- Disk of the Remora, [52].
- Dodo, flat-breasted pigeon, [161].
- Dog, descended from wolves and jackals, [286].
- Dogfish, [28].
- Dolphins travel in shoals, [323].
- Dorado pursuing flying-fish, [54].
- Doras, a land-travelling fish, [66].
- Dromatherium, jaw of, [183].
- Duck, structure of the, [141].
- Duck-billed platypus and its home, [188];
- the lowest type of milk-giver, [188].
- Dugong, a tusked sea-cow, [314].
- Dunlins, wading-birds, [148].
- Eagle bringing food to its young, [175].
- Eared-seals, history of the, [310].
- Echidna, [188];
- a low milk-giver, [190].
- Edentata, low and antiquated forms, [201];
- former history of, [201].
- Eels and eel-fares, [66].
- Efts, huge, of olden times, [82];
- or newts of our ponds, [78].
- Egg-birth, dangers of, [184].
- Eggs, of the crocodile, [110];
- of fish carried in the father’s mouth, [65];
- of frogs, [71];
- of ostriches cracked by the father, [139];
- of fish, modes of transport of, [66];
- of shark, [28], [42];
- of snake, [116].
- Eider-duck, range of the, [142].
- Elastic band in front of snake’s jaw, [111].
- Elephant, affinity to rodents, [276];
- the Indian, [277];
- intelligence of the, [278];
- structure of the, [276–279];
- tooth and tusk of, found in Australia, [194];
- -seal, [314].
- Emus, pairing birds, [139].
- Enamel-scaled fish, [33].
- Eohippus, [209];
- ancestor of the horse, [213], [261].
- Europe in the age of ice, [299].
- Evolution, of sympathy and self-sacrifice, [352];
- taught by Darwin, [345].
- Exocœtus, the flying-fish, [54].
- Eyelid, third, in reptiles and birds, [109], [136].
- Eyelids, absence of, distinguishes snakes from legless lizards, [110].
- Falcon, swooping of the, [176].
- Fangs of poisonous snakes, [119].
- Feather, number of threads in an eagle’s, [133].
- Feathers of birds, their growth and importance, [133], [134].
- Feet, grasping of perching birds, [155].
- Felines, highest type of flesh-feeder, [290];
- kill by a blow, [288];
- retractile claws of, [289].
- Fins of the minnow, [24].
- Fish, affection shown by, [69];
- age of the gristly, [333];
- air-bladder of, [25];
- ancient forms of, [33], [37–42];
- blind, of Kentucky caves, [68];
- come to the coast to spawn, [57];
- deep-sea, [47–50];
- lowest type of, [11];
- limbs of, [25];
- mammals which imitate, [318];
- muscular power of, [24];
- ocean home of the, [21];
- of the old or gristly type, [27];
- parental care in, [349];
- skeletons of deep-sea, [49];
- small ancient, [20], [34–42];
- varieties of modern, [46];
- weapons of, [29], [40], [42], [48], [52], [58], [59], [64], [68].
- Fishing frog, Lophius, [59].
- Fish-life, general sketch of, [67].
- Fish-lizards of olden times, [92].
- Flamingo, half-way between waders and swimmers, [150].
- Flat-fish, structure of, [61].
- Flint tools of early man, [343].
- Flying-fish, [53–55].
- Flying-gurnards, [55].
- Food of land-birds, [155].
- Fowls and their relations, [157].
- Fox, a solitary hunter, [285];
- range of the, [286].
- France, tree-frogs of, [87].
- Freshwater fish, [65].
- Frigate-bird, perches on trees, [148].
- Frog, a recent form of amphibian, [84];
- carrying young in a pouch, [87];
- carrying eggs and tadpoles, [87];
- metamorphosis of the, [72–76];
- lungs of, [76];
- more nearly allied to fish than reptiles, [129];
- mouth and tongue of, [77];
- respiring skin of, [77];
- spawn described, [71];
- tree-, of New Guinea, [86].
- Fruit-bats, [238].
- Fur-seals, history of, [310].
- Gadow, Dr., on number of threads in an eagle’s feather, [133].
- Galagos or lemurs of Africa, [243].
- Galapagos, tortoises of, [101].
- Galeopithecus or Colugo, [231].
- Gaudry cited, [212].
- Gautier, M., on snake poison, [119].
- Gecko or wall lizard, [105].
- Geese, range of wild, [142].
- Geography, changes in physical, [340].
- Germany, beaver communities in, [229].
- Gibbons, or long-armed apes, [251].
- Gibraltar, monkeys on the rock of, [241].
- Gills of Axolotl, [80];
- of bony fish, [45];
- of embryo shark, [73];
- of the minnow, [22];
- of proteus, [79];
- of sea-horse, [63];
- of shark, [30];
- of sturgeon, [32];
- of tadpole, [73].
- Giraffes, structure of, [271].
- Glacial Period, [342].
- Glass-snake of America, [107].
- Globe-fish, [55].
- Glyptodons, ancient armadilloes, [202], [208].
- Goats and sheep, range of, [274].
- Gobies, clinging by the throat, [58].
- Golden age of amphibia, [83];
- of ancient fish, [40];
- of reptiles, [92].
- Gorilla, at home, [254];
- driving out elephant, [251];
- structure and habits of, [253].
- Grampus, a flesh-feeding whale, [325].
- Gray, Capt., on whalebone, [329].
- Greek tortoise, [96];
- killed by birds, [101].
- Greenland whale, traces of hind limbs in the, [318].
- Gristly skeleton of shark, [31].
- Ground-birds, [156–161];
- generally polygamous, [161].
- Ground-pigeons of New Guinea, [161].
- Grouse are ground-nesters, [156].
- Gudgeon, [65].
- Guillemots, homes of the, [144];
- silvery bubbles on, [143].
- Gulls and their homes, [144].
- Günther, Dr., on deep-sea fish, [49].
- Gurnards walking, [57].
- Haddock, destroyed by hags, [18].
- Haddon, Prof., A.C., drawings by, [11], [14], [23].
- Hadrosaurus, [93].
- Hags or borers, [16], [18].
- Hang-nests of America, [173].
- Harpodon, a deep-sea fish, [47];
- figured, see [frontispiece].
- Harvest-mouse and shrew compared, [218].
- Hawksbill turtle, tortoise-shell of, [97].
- Hearing apparatus of herrings, [56].
- Heart, of amphibia and reptiles, [74], [76], [96];
- of birds, [135];
- of fishes, [23];
- of frog, three-chambered, [76];
- of tadpole, two-chambered, [74];
- three-chambered, of tortoise, [96].
- Hedgehog, [220];
- structure and habits of, [220].
- Herbivora, ancestors of the, [213];
- advantage of struggle for existence to the, [282];
- defences of the, [259];
- large stomachs of, [258];
- structure of the, [258];
- uniting for defence, [350];
- wide range of, [257].
- Heron, strokes of wing of, [134];
- a tree-building wader, [152];
- grasping foot of the, [152].
- Herrings probably call to each other, [56];
- their habits and structure, [56].
- Hesperornis, [130];
- figured, [123].
- Heterocercal tails, [30].
- Hippocampus or sea-horse, [63].
- Hippopotamus, defences of the, [263];
- former range of the, [263];
- in glacial beds, [342].
- Hissing of a snake, how caused, [113].
- Hogs, early types without tusks, [260];
- various kinds of, [263].
- Homocercal tails, [30].
- Hoofs as defences, [260].
- Horns, absence of, in early forms, [260];
- as defences, [260];
- permanent, of buffaloes, [273].
- Horse, ancestors of the, [213], [261];
- genealogy of the, [267];
- mouth of the, [259];
- no true wild living, [265];
- structure of the, [259], [266].
- Horses unite for protection, [268].
- Howler-monkeys, [246].
- Humming-birds, lovely nests of, [167].
- Humpback whale suckling her young, [319].
- Huxley on Ichthyopsida and Sauropsida, [129].
- Hyæna, in glacial times of England, [342];
- teeth and claws of the, [290].
- Ice, covering Northern Europe, [342].
- Ichneumon, killing the cobra, [121];
- the Egyptian, [281].
- Ichthyodorulites of the Silurian, [38].
- Ichthyopsida, fish and amphibia, [129].
- Ichthyornis, [130];
- figured, [123].
- Ichthyosaurus, [89], [92].
- Iguanas or tree-lizards, [106].
- Iguanodon, [89], [93].
- Imperfect-toothed animals, or Edentata, early history of, [201].
- Insect-eater, skull and teeth of, [217].
- Insect-eaters, a group of, [220];
- small-sized animals, [215];
- and rodents compared, [239];
- absent from South America, [230].
- Instincts, interest of in theory of development, [347].
- Invertebrata and their limits, [4–6], [9].
- Isinglass from sturgeon, [32].
- Jacamars of America, [168].
- Jackals, hunting in packs, [285];
- ancestors of the dog, [286].
- Jaguar, feeding on tortoise, [100];
- habits and range of the, [292];
- and ant-bear, [205].
- Japan, gigantic salamander of, [78];
- monkeys in, [241].
- Jaw, movement of, in flesh-feeders, [289];
- in vegetable-feeders, [259];
- of snake, [119];
- distensible, [114].
- Jerboas of Africa, [225].
- Jumping shrews, [225].
- Kangaroo-rats, [195].
- Kangaroos, [193];
- strength of, [194].
- Kentucky caves, blind fish of, [68].
- Kaola, or native bear of Australia, [193], [195].
- Killer-whale, voracity of the, [325].
- Kingfisher, [166];
- a darting bird, [167].
- “King of the Herrings,” [41].
- Knob, on bird’s beak for shell-breaking, [143];
- on nose of baby platypus, [190].
- Labyrinthodonts, age of, [337];
- of the coal-forests, [84].
- Lakes, fish-eggs carried to, [66].
- Lamprey, and young, [16];
- breathing organ of, [17];
- teeth of, [17], [19], [37];
- metamorphosis of the, [19].
- Lampris luna, sun-fish, [53].
- Lancelet, structure of the, [11].
- Land-birds, their enemies and difficulties, [154–156].
- Lark, nest of the, [170].
- Legs, of a bird, construction of, [127];
- vestiges of, in snakes, [110].
- Leidy cited, [212].
- Lemming, strange migrations of, [225].
- Lemurs, [244];
- position and habits of, [243].
- Lepidosteus or bony pike, [33].
- Life, gradual development of, [4].
- Light-giving deep-sea fishes, [47].
- Lion fighting with a buffalo, [274];
- formerly in England, [291];
- habits and range of the, [291].
- Lizard, skeleton of a, [103];
- structure and habits of, [104];
- can live in unhealthy places, [104];
- flying, [106];
- legless and snake-like, [107].
- London, hippopotamus bones under, [263].
- Lories, the lemurs of India, [243].
- Love, gradual development of parental, [348–350];
- a reigning law of life, [353].
- Lumpsucker clinging to rock, [58].
- Lungs, of frog, [76];
- of the snake, [113].
- Machairodus or sabre-toothed tiger, [291];
- figured, [333].
- Mackerel going in to spawn, [55].
- Madagascar, true lemurs of, [243].
- Magpie’s nest, [170].
- Mammalia or milk-givers, divisions of the, [182];
- distribution of, [340];
- aquatic, [300];
- extinction of large, [341];
- sudden appearance of higher, [211].
- Mammoth, the hairy, [279].
- Man, after Glacial Period, [343];
- among animals now extinct, [333];
- exterminating wild animals, [344].
- Manatee or sea-cow grazing, [315];
- relationship of, [303].
- Mandrill, the lowest baboon, [250].
- Manis or pangolin, [202];
- structure and habits of, [203].
- Marmosets, monkeys of South America, [245].
- Marmot, a burrowing rodent, [225].
- Marsh, Prof., his collection of reptile remains, [339];
- cited, [212];
- on Dinocerata, [260].
- Marsupials, jaws of earliest known, [183];
- breathing of infant, [192];
- of Australia, past history of the, [185];
- early appearance of, [337];
- playing the part of higher animals, [196];
- structure and habits of, [192–199].
- Mastodon, a four-tusked elephant, [279];
- figured, [256].
- Megalosaurus, [93];
- figured, [89].
- Megapodes, mound-building birds, [159].
- Megatheria, huge ancient ground-sloths, [202], [206], [208].
- Metamorphosis of the frog, [73–76].
- Mexico, iguanas of, [106].
- Microlestes, tooth of, [183].
- Migration, of birds, [142], [151], [155], [177], [348];
- of lemmings, [225].
- Milk-givers are viviparous, [185];
- earliest origin of, [191];
- extinction of large, [341];
- home of the early, [181];
- sudden appearance of higher, [211];
- taking to the water, [300].
- Miller’s thumbs, [65].
- Minnow, breathing apparatus of the, [22];
- inner and outer structure of the, [23–26];
- intelligence of, [26];
- spinal cord of, [23], [26].
- Moa of New Zealand, [140].
- Mole, [220];
- enemies of the, [224];
- structure and habits of, [223].
- Mole-rats, burrowing rodents, [226].
- Monitors of Africa, [105].
- Monkeys, [247];
- advantage of tree-life to, [251];
- almost confined to hot countries, [241];
- grasping hands and feet of, [241];
- intelligence of, [248];
- origin of, [240];
- of America, [245];
- of the Old World, characters of, [248].
- Monk-fish, [41].
- Moor-hen, intelligence of the, [151].
- Mosasaurus, [92];
- figured, [89].
- Motmots of America, [168].
- Mound-building birds, [158].
- Mucous scales of fish, [23], [27].
- Mud-fish and their breathing, [33].
- Mud-tortoises, [102].
- Mullets, feeding, [57].
- Musquash, a swimming rodent, [227].
- Myrmecobius, an insect-eating marsupial, [195];
- like the ancient marsupials, [198].
- “Native Devil” or Dasyurus, [197].
- Nervous system of vertebrata, [8].
- Nest of the common wren, [171];
- of duck-billed platypus, [188].
- Nest-building birds, [168–173];
- gradual progress of, [156], [160], [165], [167], [170], [173].
- Nests, edible, of China swiftlet, [167];
- inland, of wading birds, [151].
- Newts, [78].
- New Zealand, wingless birds of, [140].
- Nightjar hunting for prey, [167].
- Nile, crocodile of the, [108];
- mud-fish of the, [33].
- Norway, lemmings of, [225].
- Nostrils of fish, [27].
- Notochord of the lancelet, [12].
- Nototrema frog, with a pouch for young, [87].
- Nuthatch, a climber among perchers, [172].
- Opossums, [200];
- habits of, [198];
- why surviving in South America, [197–199]:
- their relation to Australian marsupials, [198].
- Orangutan or mias, [252].
- Orca or grampus, a flesh-feeding whale, [325].
- Ornithorhynchus, and its home, [188];
- bill and feet of, [189];
- structure of the, [190];
- the lowest milk-giver, [191].
- Osprey, the sea-eagle, [177].
- Ostrich at full speed, [137];
- structure and habits of, [138].
- Otter, common, [301];
- sea-, [302].
- Owen, Prof., on a reptile like platypus, [190];
- on advantage of pouch to marsupials, [193].
- Owl, adapted for night-hunting, [176].
- Owl-monkeys, [246].
- Oystercatchers, wading birds, [148].
- Paddle-fins of mud-fish, [35], [38].
- Paleotherium, [209];
- one of the ancestors of tapirs and rhinoceroses, [213], [261].
- Pallas cited, [11].
- Pangolins, structure and habits of, [203].
- Paraguay, rheas of, [139].
- Parker, Prof. Kitchen, on evolution, [191];
- on origin of mammalia, [191].
- Parkyn, Mr., on baboons, [249].
- Parrots, using beak in climbing, [165].
- Partridges, ground-nesters, [156].
- Peccaries of South America, [263].
- Peewit or lapwing, [148].
- Pelican, perches on trees, [148].
- Penguin, home of the, [147];
- swimming wings of the, [146].
- Perch, climbing, [66].
- Perching birds, [168–173];
- aquatic bird among, [172];
- bird of prey among, [172];
- climbers among, [172];
- darters among, [172];
- ground-feeders among, [170].
- Petrel, home of the stormy, [145].
- Phalanger, a flying, [193], [195].
- Pheasants, ground-nesters, [156].
- Phosphorescent, fish, [47], [48];
- fluid, [50].
- Pigeons, beginners in nest-building, [160];
- crop of, [161];
- passenger, [162].
- Pike, [65].
- Pilot-fish accompanying shark, [52].
- Pipistrelle the common bat, [236].
- Plates, horny, in duck’s bill, [142];
- in bill of Ornithorhynchus, [188];
- in mouth of whale, [328];
- under the snake’s body, used in walking, [112].
- Platypus, [188];
- knob on nose of baby, [190].
- Plesiosaurus, [92];
- figured, [89].
- Plovers, wading birds, [148];
- dragging the wing, [151].
- Pocket-mice of North America, [215].
- Poison of snakes a concentration of a substance found in ordinary saliva, [119].
- Poisonous snakes, [117–121].
- Polar bear, walrus fighting the, [309].
- Polypterus or bichir, [33].
- Porcupine, [221];
- structure and habits of, [222];
- tree, [222].
- Porpoise, [323];
- good type of whales, [324].
- Pouch-bearers, see [Marsupials].
- Pouched-rats, burrowing rodents, [226].
- Prairie-dogs, burrowing rodents, [225].
- Protective, colours, [347];
- smells in animals, [347].
- Proteus of Carniola caverns, [79].
- Protopterus of the Nile, [33].
- Protorosaurus earliest known reptile, [91].
- Ptarmigan, white plumage of, [157].
- Pterodactyls or flying reptiles, [93];
- figured, [89].
- Pterygotus and early fish, [37];
- figured, [20].
- Puff-birds of America, [168].
- Puffin Island, sea-birds of, [142].
- Puffins, [144];
- laying eggs in cliff-holes, [142].
- Puma, range and habits of the, [292].
- Pythons crushing their prey, [117].
- Quadrate bone, absent in milk-givers, [191];
- giving a wide gape to the snake, [114];
- in bird, [126];
- in lizard, [103];
- in snake, [111].
- Quadrumana, use of term, [242].
- Quails, scratching birds, [157].
- Queensland, Ceratodus of, [34].
- Rats, intelligence of, [230].
- Rattlesnake feeding on “Prairie dogs,” [225];
- horny plates of the, [118];
- jaw of the, [119].
- Rays, manner of feeding of, [42].
- Red deer with branching antlers, [272].
- Remora carried by shark, [51].
- Reptiles, abound in warm countries, [90];
- age of the great, [339];
- care for their young, [122];
- disappearance of ancient, [94], [211];
- flying, of olden times, [93];
- huge, of ancient times, [91], [94];
- in their palmy days, [89];
- lay their eggs on land, [90];
- linked in structure with birds, [129];
- modern, [94–122].
- Rheas, three-toed ostriches, [139].
- Rhinoceros, absence of upper teeth in, [265];
- horn made of matted hair, [264];
- embedded in ice, [265].
- Rhytinas in Behring’s Straits, [316].
- Ribbon fish, [49].
- Ribs of lizard, [97], [103];
- of snake, used in walking, [112];
- of tortoise, forming the shell, [99].
- River-fish, [46], [64].
- River-tortoises, [101].
- Roach, [65].
- Rodent, skull of, [217];
- teeth of, [216].
- Rodents or gnawers, [215];
- affinity of elephants to, [276];
- generally small and weak, [215];
- a group of, [221];
- and insect-eaters compared, [239].
- Rollers, darting birds of the East, [168].
- Rooks, nests of, [170].
- Rorqual, short whalebones of, [326].
- Rough hound, [28].
- Round-mouthed fishes, [16].
- Ruminants, characters of the, [259];
- wide spread of, [269].
- Running birds, [136–140].
- Russia, sturgeon in, [32].
- Salamander, gigantic, of Japan, [78];
- black, viviparous, [81].
- Salamandra atra, viviparous, [81].
- Salmon going up river to spawn, [64].
- Sandpipers, wading birds, [148].
- Sauropsida, birds and lizards, [129].
- Scales of bony fish and mud-fish, [45];
- of fish, [27];
- of snakes embedded in the skin, [111].
- Scaly lizard is viviparous, [105].
- Scoresby, on walrus killing narwhal, [309];
- on whale-mothers defending their young, [330];
- on whale spouting, [321].
- Sea, chief home of fish, [46].
- Sea-birds, [142–150];
- a group of, [144].
- Sea-cows, relationship of, [303];
- their structure and habits, [315].
- Sea-horse, a fish, [63].
- Sea-lion, and common seal, [306];
- skeleton of a, [304];
- structure of, [305];
- range of, [306].
- Sea-lions on the Aleutian Isles, [310];
- fighting for wives, [311].
- Seals, breathing apparatus of, [308];
- how adapted for a sea-life, [307];
- on English coasts, [303];
- origin of, [303];
- structure and range of, [313], [314].
- Seal-skin, how prepared, [308].
- Sea-otter, structure of the, [301].
- Sea-squirt, growth of a, [14].
- Sea-squirts, anomalous position of, [15].
- Sea-tortoises coming on land to lay eggs, [102].
- Secretary bird killing poisonous snakes, [121].
- Self-sacrifice, a law of life, [352].
- Sentinels placed by animals, [269].
- Shark carrying remora, [51];
- accompanied by pilot-fish, [52];
- eggs, [28], [42];
- external gills of embryo, [73].
- Sharks, history of the, [41];
- their structure, [28–30].
- Sheat-fish, fathers carrying eggs in the mouth, [65].
- Sheep and goats, range of, [274].
- Shell of tortoise, how formed, [98].
- Shields of the crocodile, [108].
- Shrike, a perching bird of prey, [172].
- Shrew and harvest-mouse compared, [218].
- Silver Pit, soles living in the, [63].
- Siren, a gill-breather, [80].
- Sirenia, name for sea-cows, [315].
- Skates, flat bodies of, [41];
- purse-eggs of, [42].
- Skeleton, of bat, [233];
- bird, [126];
- wild ass, [266];
- lizard, [103];
- sea-lion, [304];
- snake, [111];
- tortoise, [98];
- whale, [318].
- Skeletons of deep-sea fish, [49].
- Skulls of rodent and insectivore, [217].
- Skye, walrus seen off, [310].
- Slime on fish causing phosphorescence, [50].
- Sloths hanging from a tree, [200];
- structure and habits of, [206].
- Slowworm, a legless lizard, [107].
- Smooth hound, [28].
- Snake, affection in a, [349];
- casting its skin, [116];
- common ringed, [113];
- cup and ball joints of the, [112], [114];
- eggs, [116];
- enemies of the, [117];
- food of the common, [116];
- mode of swallowing prey, [114];
- skeleton of a, [111];
- coiling round prey, [117];
- nature of poison of, [119];
- poisonous sea-, [121].
- Snapping turtle, [101].
- Sole, history of its growth, [62];
- young and old, [61].
- Song of birds, how caused, [169].
- Sparrow, [125];
- skeleton of, [126].
- Spawning of lampreys, [18].
- Spermaceti in head of whale, [326].
- Sperm whale, [327];
- its structure and habits, [325];
- taking breath, [322].
- Spider monkeys, [246].
- Spinal cord, of lamprey, [17];
- of the lancelet, [12];
- of shark, [30];
- of vertebrata, [9].
- Spines, of hedgehog and porcupine, [222];
- of sharks, [29], [38].
- Spinous processes, of lizard, [103];
- of snake, [111];
- of tortoise, [98].
- Squirrels, enemies of the, [231];
- flying, [231];
- tree-loving rodents, [230].
- Stickleback father defending the young, [65].
- Sticklebacks and their nest, [65].
- Sting-rays, [42].
- Stomias, a deep-sea fish, [48].
- Storks, migrations of, [151].
- Struggle for existence, developing sympathy, [351];
- improving the herbivora, [282].
- Sturgeon entering a river, [31];
- first appearance of the, [41];
- head and mouth of, [32];
- structure of, [32].
- Sucking-fish or remora, [51].
- Sun-fish with large air-bladder, [53].
- Surinam toad, carrying young in hollows of the skin, [87].
- Swallow, a darter among the perchers, [172].
- Swans, range of wild, [142].
- Swifts, darting birds, [167];
- in East build nests with saliva, [167].
- Sword-fish, Xiphias, [55].
- Tadpole, life and changes of, [72–76];
- of salamandra atra, [81];
- summary of changes in the, [335].
- Taguan or flying squirrel, [231].
- Tail, jointed, of ancient land-bird, [130];
- of minnow, [24];
- homocercal and heterocercal, [30];
- of bony fish, [45];
- of sharks and sturgeon, [30].
- Tailor bird’s nest, [173].
- Tallegallus, mound-building birds, [158].
- Tapirs, past and present range of, [264].
- Tasmanian marsupials, [197].
- Teeth as defences, [260];
- in jaws of ancient birds, [130];
- of American monkeys, [246];
- of Old World monkeys, [248];
- of ancient type of fish, [35], [38], [39];
- of lamprey, [17], [19], [37];
- of rodents and insect-eaters, [217];
- of snake used in holding, [115];
- of snake are its poison fangs, [119].
- Tenrecs of Madagascar, [216].
- Termites, ant-bear feeding on, [205].
- Tern, black-winged, [144].
- Terrapins or box-tortoises, [101].
- Testudo Græca, [96].
- Thresher-shark, [28].
- Thrush, nest of the song-, [170].
- Thuringian lizard, earliest reptile, [91].
- Tiger, [287];
- claws of the, [289];
- man fighting the sabre-toothed, [333], [343];
- range and habits of the, [292];
- sabre-toothed, [290];
- structure of the, [288].
- Tiger wolf or Thylacinus, [197].
- Tinamous, a group between running birds and ground birds, [156].
- Toad, habits of the, [85].
- Todies of America, [168].
- Toe-thumbs in opossums, dormouse and monkey, [242].
- Tongue of frog, [77];
- of snake a harmless organ of touch, [112], [118], [119];
- of the woodpecker, [164].
- Torpedo-fish, [42].
- Tortoise, back of a young, [99];
- Greek, [96];
- structure and habits of, [95–100].
- Tortoises, gigantic land, [101];
- mud and sea, [102].
- Tortoise-shell, [97].
- Toucans, climbing-birds, [165].
- Tree-frogs, [86], [87].
- Trilobites with the early fish, [37].
- Trunk of the elephant, [277].
- Tunny, a fish without air-bladder, [53].
- Turkeys, scratching birds, [157].
- Turnstones, wading birds, [148].
- Turtles, [101], [102].
- Tusks, as weapons, [260], [263];
- of the elephant, [276];
- wanting in early forms, [260].
- Uneven-toed animals, origin of, [265].
- Ungulata, or hoofed animals, [257].
- Vampires in South America, [237].
- Vegetable-feeders, see [Herbivora].
- Vertebrata, advantages of the, [7];
- spinal cord of the, [9].
- Viper, common English, [121];
- killed by the buzzard, [120].
- Viscacha of South America, [225].
- Vultures, scavengers of the earth, [174].
- Wading birds, a group of, [149].
- Walking fish, [57].
- Wallace, Mr. A. R., bitten by bats, [237];
- on colugo, [232];
- on mound-building birds, [159];
- on orangutan, [252];
- on separation of Australasia, [186].
- Walrus, [294];
- structure, home, and habits of the, [309].
- Wart-hogs of Africa, [263].
- Water-birds, the earliest known, [123];
- structure of, [141].
- Water-mole, [188].
- Water-ouzel or dipper, [172].
- Water-rat and water-shrew, [219].
- Weasel, a small flesh-feeder, [280].
- Weevers, spined fish, [58].
- Whale, breathing apparatus of, [321];
- skeleton of whalebone, [318];
- suckling her young, [319];
- ancient origin of, [303];
- a warm-blooded mammal, [317];
- kept warm by blubber, [320];
- long life of, [331];
- parasites on, [331].
- Whalebone, nature of, [328].
- Whiskers of tiger are feelers, [289].
- White animal tints in winter, [347].
- Wild duck, strokes of wing of, [134].
- Wing, rapid strokes of a bird’s, [134];
- structure of a bird’s, [127].
- Wing-feathers, hooklets on, [133].
- Wings of a bat, how formed, [233].
- Wolf, affection of a, [286];
- ancestor of the dog, [286];
- dog-like form and teeth of, [283];
- structure of, [284];
- the only social tribe of carnivora, [286].
- Wombat, [197];
- a marsupial, [195].
- Woodpecker, the great green, [163];
- tongue of, [164].
- Wood-pigeon on her nest, [160].
- Woolly monkey and child, [247].
- Worm, compared to the lancelet, [13].
- Wren, common, nest of, [171].
- Wryneck, [172].
- Xiphodon, [210];
- ancestor of the antlered animals, [213];
- ancestor of ruminants, [261].
- Yapock, [300].
THE END.
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