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Bewick Collection (page 3)

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick / Stoat

Bewick / Stoat
(Mustels erminea) This mustelid is similar to and frequently mistaken for a weasel. It is found pretty well throughout the northern hemisphere

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick / Meerkat

Bewick / Meerkat
(Suricata suricatta) also named by Bewick the SURICATE or four-toed weasel, famed for its tendency to stand on its hind legs when looking out for enemies

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick / Tenrec

Bewick / Tenrec
(Tenrec ecaudatus) There are 25 species of tenrec, living in Africa and Madagascar : they are hedgehog-like insectivores and use their spiny hairs as a defence

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick / Tapir

Bewick / Tapir
(tapirus terrestris) This is the South American Tapir, classified by Linnaeus as a hippopotamus : it avoids its predators by diving into water

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick / Orang-Utan

Bewick / Orang-Utan
(Pongo pygmaeus) - 18th century naturalists - and the general public - were fascinated by this primate, so similar to us : Bewick names it the wild man of the woods

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick / Marmot

Bewick / Marmot
Bewick classified this rodent as a mouse and named it MONAX, but he accepted that it was probably the same as the Marmot described by Buffon and not really a mouse

Background imageBewick Collection: Flying Opossum (Bewick)

Flying Opossum (Bewick)
The FLYING OPOSSUM of New South Wales, Australia

Background imageBewick Collection: Mex. Opossum (Bewick)

Mex. Opossum (Bewick)
The MEXICAN OPOSSUM is found in the mountainous parts of New Spain

Background imageBewick Collection: Opossums (Bewick)

Opossums (Bewick)
Left, the SARAGOY, or MULUCCA OPOSSUM, from the East Indies. Right, the MURINE, from the warmer regions of South America

Background imageBewick Collection: Otter (Bewick)

Otter (Bewick)
mustela lutra : le loutre, according to Buffon. Loved by some, hunted by others, the otter lives a marginal existence in and out of water

Background imageBewick Collection: Chinese Pig (Bewick)

Chinese Pig (Bewick)
This breed was widely imported into England in the 18th century, and interbred with the native breeds to produce a breed combining the advantages of both

Background imageBewick Collection: Improved Sow (Bewick)

Improved Sow (Bewick)
A mixture of Chinese Black Swine with the larger British breed, this busy sow produced three litters (50 pigs) in ten months for Arthur Sherburn of county Durham

Background imageBewick Collection: Bewick Ichneumon

Bewick Ichneumon
viverra ichneumon : This animal, in Egypt, is domestic, like the Cat; and is retained by the natives for the same useful purpose of clearing their house of rats and mice

Background imageBewick Collection: Macauco (Bewick)

Macauco (Bewick)
lemur catta : the one in the tree is a YELLOW MACAUCO, and he is looking enviously at the RING-TAILED MACAUCO. Both are beautiful, but that tail certainly gives an edge

Background imageBewick Collection: Marmot (Bewick) - 3

Marmot (Bewick) - 3
mus lemmus - the LAPLAND MARMOT is better known as the LEMMING, a creature given to mass migrations of which Bewick gives a graphic account

Background imageBewick Collection: Marmot (Bewick) - 2

Marmot (Bewick) - 2
mus marmota (?) this is the tail-less marmot which, Bewick says, has hitherto been undescribed. He thinks it might be a variety of Zisel. He may be right

Background imageBewick Collection: Marmot (Bewick)

Marmot (Bewick)
mus marmota somewhat like a mouse, somewhat like a hare, it lives in the higher Alpa, Poland, Ukraine and Tartary

Background imageBewick Collection: Radiated Mole (Bewick)

Radiated Mole (Bewick)
sorex cristatus This is the RADIATED MOLE, smaller than the Common Mole, who lives in, or rather under, North America. Unfortunately its fur is used to make hats

Background imageBewick Collection: Mongoose (Bewick)

Mongoose (Bewick)
The lower creature is the lemur mongooz : the upper the TAILLESS MACAUCO - lemur tardigradus - who spends its life envying the mongoose its tail : both live in India

Background imageBewick Collection: Varied Monkey (Bewick)

Varied Monkey (Bewick)
Bewick gives no Latin name but says its the best known of all the Monkey-tribe, being more frequently brought into Europe than any other. It is a native of Barbary and Arabia

Background imageBewick Collection: Green Monkey (Bewick)

Green Monkey (Bewick)
simis sabaea : Buffon calls it the CALLITRICHE. The hair on the upper body is green, the underside silver. It lives on the Cape Verde islands and parts of North Africa

Background imageBewick Collection: Striated Monkey (Bewick)

Striated Monkey (Bewick)
simia iacchus : Buffon calls it the OUISTITI. It lives in Brazil where it feeds on fruits, vegetables, insects and snails, and is fond of fish

Background imageBewick Collection: Mico Monkey (Bewick)

Mico Monkey (Bewick)
Latin name unknown to Bewick who thinks this Amazon resid- ent the most beautiful of all monkeys - face and ears of so lively a vermilion colour as to appear the effect of art

Background imageBewick Collection: Red-Tailed Monkey Bewick

Red-Tailed Monkey Bewick
Simia oedipus (!) A lively, beautiful little animal who lives on the banks of the Amazon and is notable for its long silvery hair and its soft whistling voice

Background imageBewick Collection: Barbary Ape (Bewick)

Barbary Ape (Bewick)
Simia inuus...is wilder and more intractable than the others. It lives in most parts of Africa, from Barbary to the Cape of Good Hope

Background imageBewick Collection: Capybara (Bewick)

Capybara (Bewick)
(or capibara) mus hydrochaerus The largest of the rodents, dwelling in Brazil and related to the guinea-pig

Background imageBewick Collection: Caracal (Bewick)

Caracal (Bewick)
felis caracal Found in Asia and Africa : this may be the creature named the lynx by classical writers

Background imageBewick Collection: Cavy (Bewick)

Cavy (Bewick)
mus paca This is the SPOTTED CAVY, a relatived of the guine-pig. It lives in America but has no tail

Background imageBewick Collection: Cougar (Bewick)

Cougar (Bewick)
felis concolar COUGAR or COUGUAR

Background imageBewick Collection: Beagle (Bewick)

Beagle (Bewick)
The Beagle is used only in hunting the Hare... Although far inferior in point of speed, it follows by the exquisiteness of its scent and traces her footsteps

Background imageBewick Collection: Arctic Fox (Bewick)

Arctic Fox (Bewick)
canis lopogus

Background imageBewick Collection: Angora Goat (Bewick)

Angora Goat (Bewick)
The coat of the goat of ANGORA (named from a town in Asia) is prized for the warm, silky clothes made from it

Background imageBewick Collection: Chamois (Bewick)

Chamois (Bewick)
capra rupicapra - though Linnaeus classified this as a goat, it is actually a capriform antelope found only in rocky and mountainous places

Background imageBewick Collection: Syrian Goat (Bewick)

Syrian Goat (Bewick)
This is the SYRIAN GOAT so- called because that is where it lives

Background imageBewick Collection: Goat (Bewick)

Goat (Bewick)
capra hircus COMMON GOAT A lively, playful, and capricious creature (did Bewick intend the pun ?) and a very useful one

Background imageBewick Collection: Wood-Goat (Bewick)

Wood-Goat (Bewick)
THE WOOD-GOAT This is the label Bewick assigns to this resident of South Africa : but it could well be an antelope or a kind of deer

Background imageBewick Collection: Guinea Pig (Bewick)

Guinea Pig (Bewick)
mus porcellus also known as the restless cavy : a childrens favourite

Background imageBewick Collection: Hamster (Bewick)

Hamster (Bewick)
mus cricetus This is not the golden hamster of Syria, which we love to keep in cages : but Bewick says it well deserves our highest admiration

Background imageBewick Collection: Jerboa (Bewick)

Jerboa (Bewick)
mus jaculus A rodent remarkable for the singular construction of its legs

Background imageBewick Collection: Hippopotamus (Bewick)

Hippopotamus (Bewick)
Hippopotamus amphibius

Background imageBewick Collection: Kangaroo (Bewick)

Kangaroo (Bewick)
This native of New Holland was a relatively new discovery when Bewick drew it, having been recently identified by Sir Joseph Banks

Background imageBewick Collection: Kudu (Bewick)

Kudu (Bewick)
Bewick termed this the Elk- Antelope, one of the larger kinds of gazelles : not so, say todays naturalists, who consider it a kind of deer

Background imageBewick Collection: Chevrotain (Bewick)

Chevrotain (Bewick)
Bewick thought the Chevrotain, or little Guinea Deer, was an antelope, but it is today recognised as a small version of the musk-deer. The Meminna beside it is from Sri Lanka

Background imageBewick Collection: Springbok (Bewick)

Springbok (Bewick)
Moschus moschiferus Bewick was puzzled as to what species this creature is, but it is now recognised as a kind of deer. It is famed for the perfume it produces

Background imageBewick Collection: Musk-Deer (Bewick)

Musk-Deer (Bewick)
Moschus moschiferus Bewick was puzzled as to what species this creature is, but it is now recognised as a kind of deer. It is famed for the perfume it produces

Background imageBewick Collection: Hartbeest (Bewick)

Hartbeest (Bewick)
Bewick says this is the most common of all the larger Gazelles, known in any part of Africa. This one comes from the region of the Cape

Background imageBewick Collection: Anteater (Bewick)

Anteater (Bewick)
Ant-eaters come in many shapes and sizes. This one is the GREAT ANT-EATER, myrmecophaga jubata, more than a metre long, not counting its tail which is most of 1m more



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