Beaks and Bills 



225 



reaching about, or for ])rogression being understood. But 

 no one would think of alluding to a bird's lips or nose; both 

 are included in the terms beak, or bill, and nostrils. 



The finding and securing of food being the most im- 

 portant problem which birds have to solve for themselves, 

 it is for these purposes, and especially the last mentioned, 

 that we find bills most adapted. This is so universalh' 



Fir.. l(v). — Rill nt American Raven. 



the case that we may often judge accurately of the kind 

 of food of a certain bird from a glance at its beak. 



As is the case with so many other avian structures, 

 the horn}", toothless beak or bill is duplicated elsewhere 

 in Nature only in a group of reptiles, the turtles and tor- 

 toises, whose mandibles furnish a splendid example of 

 parallel evolution. 



In certain of those long-extinct Dinosaurs, such as 



