The ORANG OUTANGS, or 

 thePONGO* and JOCKOf. 



E ihall give tlie hiftory of thefe two ani- 

 mals under one article j becaufe it is not 

 improbable they belong to the fame fpecies. Of 



all 



* In tlie Eafl Indies this animal is called Orang-outang ; ia 

 Lo-vvando, a province of Congo, Pongo ; and, in feme parts 

 of the Eaft Indies, according to Kjoep, chap. 86. quoted by- 

 Linnaeus, Kukurlucko. 



Homo fylveRris. Orang-outang ; Bontius, p. 84. 



Sutyri fylveflres. Orang-outang difli ; Icones arborum, ut el 

 j:i:inalium, Lugd. Bat. apud Vanderaa, tab. antepenult. 



Traglodytes. Homo noflurnus ; Linn. SyJ}. p. 33. 



Oran-outan ; Beakman's Travels. 



Oerangs-oetangs ; Voyages de Gauthier Schoutten aiix Indes 

 Orient ales. 



Drill ; Charlelon, Exercit. p. 1 6. 



Smitten ; Bofman, Voyage de Guinee, p. 528. 



Barris, according to feveral voyagers, Pongo ; Battel, Pur- 

 chafs, &c. 



\ Jocko, Eiijocko, the names of this animal in Congo ; Boris 

 in Guiney, according to Pyrard, p. 369. Niersmberg, p. 179. 



Chimpanzee; Scotin's print, 1738. 



Man of the wood ; Ediiiards, p. 213. 



Barry s ; Barbel's Guiney, p. loi. 



Qucjas marrou; ibid. p. 115. 



Satyrus Indicus ; Tulpii obferv. ?ned. lib. 3. c. ^6. 



Homo fylveftris, Ourang-outang ; Tyfon's anatomy a/ a pig- 

 my, p. 108. 

 . Simla fatyrus, ecaudata, ferruginea, lacertorum pills rever- 

 ' fis, natibus teiflis ; Linn. Syjl. Nat. p. 34. 



L'homme 



