The Voyage of the Beagle by Charles Darwin
page 91 of 731 (12%)
page 91 of 731 (12%)
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[5] In the stomach and duodenum of a capybara which I opened
I found a very large quantity of a thin yellowish fluid, in which scarcely a fibre could be distinguished. Mr. Owen informs me that a part of the oesophagus is so constructed that nothing much larger than a crowquill can be passed down. Certainly the broad teeth and strong jaws of this animal are well fitted to grind into pulp the aquatic plants on which it feeds. [6] At the R. Negro, in Northern Patagonia, there is an animal of the same habits, and probably a closely allied species, but which I never saw. Its noise is different from that of the Maldonado kind; it is repeated only twice instead of three or four times, and is more distinct and sonorous; when heard from a distance it so closely resembles the sound made in cutting down a small tree with an axe, that I have sometimes remained in doubt concerning it. [7] Philosoph. Zoolog., tom. i. p. 242. [8] Magazine of Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 217. [9] Read before the Academy of Sciences in Paris. L'Institut, 1834, p. 418. [10] Geolog. Transact. vol. ii. p. 528. In the Philosoph. Transact. (1790, p. 294) Dr. Priestly has described some imperfect siliceous tubes and a melted pebble of quartz, found in digging into the ground, under a tree, where a man had been killed by lightning. |
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