OUR FLORIDA ALLIGATOR. 33 1 



into gavials, crocodiles, and alligators, they form a family by them- 

 selves which is widespread, extending into considerable areas of the 

 temperate regions. 



All crocodilians are great, ungainly reptiles, having broad, de- 

 pressed bodies, short legs, and long, powerful, and wonderfully flexi- 

 ble tails which are compressed — that is, flattened sideways. Upon 

 the upper surface of the tail lie two jagged or saw-toothed crests, 

 which unite near the middle of the appendage, continuing in a single 

 row to the extremity. 



All have thick necks and bodies protected by regular transverse 

 rows of long, horny plates or shields, which are elevated in the center 

 into keel-shaped ridges, forming an armor that is quite bullet-proof. 

 The throat, the under side of the neck, and belly are not thus pro- 

 tected, and it is at these places, as well as at the eyes, and also just 

 behind the ears, that the hunter directs his aim. 



The principal points of difference between a gavial and a croco- 

 dile are these: the former has very long, slender jaws, set with 

 twenty-seven teeth in each side of the upper jaw and with twenty- 

 five teeth in the under, while at the extremity of the snout there are 

 two holes, through which pass upward the lower large front teeth, 

 but all the remaining teeth are free, and slant well outward ; whereas 

 a crocodile has a head that is triangular, the snout being the apex; 

 a narrow muzzle, and canine teeth in the lower jaw, which pass freely 

 upward in the notches in the side of the upper jaw. 



An alligator has a broad, flat muzzle, and the canine teeth of 

 the lower jaw fit into sockets in the under surface of the upper jaw. 

 It is strictly an American form of the family. Its feet being much 

 less webbed, its habits are also less perfectly aquatic, and, preferring 

 still or stagnant fresh-water courses or swamps, it is rarely found in 

 tide-water streams. 



The crocodile, on the contrary, is commonly found in swift-run- 

 ning, fresh and salt water rivers. He is a sagacious brute, and 

 ferocious, often attacking human beings without provocation; but 

 the alligator, as a rule, is not disposed to fight, although in South 

 America, where it goes by the name of caiman or cayman, it grows 

 to an enormous size, and is said to be fully as dangerous as the croco- 

 dile. There is also a variety of the family — that is, a true crocodile — 

 found in Florida, but it is very rare, and smaller than its Asiatic 

 relative. 



The mouths of all these reptiles, which are large and extend be- 

 yond the ears, present a formidable array of sharp, conical teeth of 

 different sizes, set far apart in the crocodile and the alligator, some 

 being enlarged into tusks. All are implanted in separate sockets, and 

 form a single row upon each jaw. When a tooth is shed or broken, a 



