HINTERLAND NOTES 465 



boys deliylit to tie strings to tlic waist and to race the kiiachis 

 against each other. These animals are to he found on the 

 low ground, to the west of the Mission, ahoiit Kwatata 

 Creek. 



The accouri, adouri and lahl)a, are to be found wherever 

 there is an extent of Husli. 1 have seen them in Uruata 

 Forest, and they have been shot in Thewarikuru Bush. The 

 holes of the accouri may often be seen — perchance a camudi 

 has taken possession of the hole, and the accouri family is 

 lodo'ino' within the camudi! 



Uruata Forest is the home of the armadillo and the por- 

 cupine and the sloth. I caught a glimpse of an armadillo 

 and was given some spines of the porcupine. In this big 

 forest, droves of peccary trample, making a varied diet of 

 yellow hog-plums, which may be found scattered over the 

 ground, in places, during the season, and of snakes which 

 come in their way. The Indians name five distinct kinds 

 of peccary, although only two appear to be known to science. 

 The Indian names are: 



Abuya ( Abouyah Dicoti/Jcs tajacu ) . 



Poingga (Kairuni Dicotijles peccari). 



Paraka. 



Karuata. 



Iwawtaw. 



Allusion is made to the karuata in the opening stanza 

 of a song which accompanies the Parishara Dance: 



"Karuata wai ke U jnpu i e." (With the call of the 

 karuata, I come.) 



I have not made records of the localities in which the 

 different species may be found; but I know that poingga 

 have been shot while skirting the Anai Savannah; j^araka 

 have been brought in by Indians from ]Mare-kupu Bush; 

 and abuva have been shot in Uruata Forest. The Karuata, 

 I am told, is found in the forests which clothe the 

 Pakaraimas. 



