File:Animate creation - popular edition of "Our living world" - a natural history (1898) (17576433404).jpg

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Title: Animate creation : popular edition of "Our living world" : a natural history
Identifier: animatecreationp213331898woodj (find matches)
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: Wood, J. G. (John George), 1827-1889; Holder, Joseph B. (Joseph Bassett), 1824-1888; Prang, Louis, 1824-1909, lithographer; Brehm, Alfred Edmund, 1829-1884; Wood, J. G. (John George), 1827-1889. Illustrated natural history; National Zoological Park (U. S. ), former owner. DSI
Subjects: Zoology; Zoology
Publisher: New York : Selmar Hess
Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Smithsonian Libraries

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THE SEA ELEPHANT. 4i; The Walrus is manifestly the most remarkable of all marine animals, in respect to its uncouth bulk. It is a puzzle, seemingly. The reader should look at the enormous specimen of this creature in the Museum at Central Park, to form anything approaching an adequate idea of its proportions. When we observe the immense bulk, almost unprovided with limbs (for the latter are so small they seem out of all proportion to the requirements), the wonder is, how can the creature climb from the water to the ice or cliffs. The stout tusks are very ser- viceable, doubtless, but they seem to our limited comprehension entirely in the way. It is
Text Appearing After Image:
SEA ELEPHANT.—Cystophora proboscidea. difficult to see how the creature can feed with those ivory canines directed straight downwards. Nature never fails of its purposes, but there are instances of organization and structure that surprise us and baffle our comprehension. The Walrus is seen in vast herds at times, frequenting both polar seas. Two well-marked species are known, that of the Pacific coast differing in some particulars from that of the Atlantic. Another powerful and grotesque Seal now engages our attention. This is the Elephant Seal, or Sea Elephant, so called not only on account of the strange prolongation of the nose, which bears some analogy to the proboscis of the elephant, but also on account of its elephantine size. Large specimens of this monstrous Seal measure as much as thirty feet in length, and fifteen or eighteen feet in circumference at the largest part of their bodies. The color of the Sea Elephant is rather variable, even in individuals of the same sex and age, but is generally as follows. The fur of the male is usually of a bluish-gray, which some- times deepens into dark brown, while that of the female is darker, and variegated with sundry dapplings of a yellow hue. This animal is an inhabitant of the southern hemisphere, and is

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current11:01, 3 October 2015Thumbnail for version as of 11:01, 3 October 20151,948 × 1,502 (1.24 MB)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{information |description={{en|1=<br> '''Title''': Animate creation : popular edition of "Our living world" : a natural history<br> '''Identifier''': animatecreationp213331898woodj ([https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/ind...
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