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![]() : Buffon's Natural History. Volume 07 (of 10) Containing a Theory of the Earth a General History of Man of the Brute Creation and of Vegetables Minerals &c. &c by Buffon Georges Louis Leclerc Comte De Barr James Smith Editor - Natural history@FreeBooksWed 07 Jun, 2023 OF THE SEVENTH VOLUME. Of Carnivorous Animals. Page 57 Fig. 101, 102. 68 Fig. 107, 108. 77 Fig. 103, 104. 85 Fig. 105, 106. 117 Fig. 109, 110. 118 Fig. 111, 112, 113. 133 Fig. 114, 115, 116. 150 Fig. 117, 118, 119. 165 Fig. 120, 121, 122, 123. 181 Fig. 124, 125, 126. 205 Fig. 127, 128. 222 Fig. 129, 130, 131, 132. 236 Fig. 133, 134. BUFFON'S NATURAL HISTORY. OF TIGERS. In the French language all those skins of which the hair is short, and are marked with round and distinct spots, are called tiger-skins, and travellers sharing in this error, have called all animals so marked by the general name of tigers; even the academy of sciences have been borne away by this torrent, and have adopted the appellation to all, although by dissection they found them materially different. The most general cause, as we intimated in the article of the lion, of these ambiguous terms in Natural History, arose from the necessity of giving names to the unknown productions of the New World, and thus the animals were called after such of the old continent to whom they had the smallest resemblance. From the general denomination of tiger to every animal whose skin was spotted, instead of one species of that name, we now have nine or ten, and consequently the history of these animals is exceedingly embarrassed, writers have applied to one species what ought to have been ascribed to another. To dispel the confusion which necessarily results from these erroneous denominations, particularly among those which have been commonly called tigers, I have resolved to give a comparative enumeration of quadrupeds, in which I shall distinguish, 1. Those which are peculiar to the old continent, and were not found in America when first discovered. 2. Those which are natives of the new continent, and were unknown in the old. 3. Those which existing alike in both continents, without having been carried from one to the other by man, may be considered as common to both. For which purpose it has been necessary to collect and arrange the scattered accounts given by the historians of America, and those who first visited this continent as travellers. ANIMALS OF THE OLD CONTINENT. As the largest animals are the best known, and about which there is the least uncertainty, in this enumeration they shall follow nearly according to their size. Elephants belong to the Old World; the largest are found in Asia, and the smallest in Africa. They are natives of the hottest climates, and, though they will live, they cannot multiply in temperate ones; they do not propagate even in their own countries after they are deprived of their liberty. Though confined to the southern parts of the old continent their species is numerous. It is unknown in America, nor is there any animal there that can be compared to it in size and figure. The same remark applies to the Rhinoceros, which is less numerous than the elephant; he is confined to the desarts of Africa, and the forests of southern Asia; nor has America any animal that resembles him. Free books android app tbrJar TBR JAR Read Free books online gutenberg More posts by @FreeBooks
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