8G8 



THE RHINOCEROS HORNBILL. 



On cutting asunder the beak and helmet of a Hornbill, we shall find that the outer 

 shell of horny substance is very thin indeed, scarcely thicker than the paper on which this 

 description is printed, and that the whole interior is composed of numerous honey-combed 

 cells, with very thin walls and very wide spaces, the walls of the cells being so arranged as 

 to give very great strength when the bill is used for biting, and with a very slight expenditure 

 of material. The whole structure, indeed, reminds us greatly of that beautiful bony network 

 which gives to the skull of the elephant its enormous size and lightness, and which is fully 

 described in the volume on Mammalia, page 598. The general appearance of the dried head 

 of a Hornbill, with its delicate cellular arrangements, and its thin, polished, bony shell, 

 is not unlike the well-known shell of the paper nautilus, and crumbles in the grasp almost as 

 easUy. 



The most common is the Rhinoceros Hornbill {Biiceros rhinoceros) : one of the hand- 

 somest is the White-crested Hornbill {Buceros aJbocristdius) ; other interesting species are 

 the Crested Hornbill {Biiceros cristdtus), the Two-iiokned Hornbill {Biiceros bicornis), and 

 the Woodpecker Hornbill {Buceros pica.). 



TWO-HOENED HORNBILL.— iiuccro* tiiconils. 



Perhaps the greatest development of beak and helmet is found in the Rhinoceros Horn- 

 bill, although there are many otliers which have these appendages o-f great size. 



As is the case with all the Hornbills, the beak varies greatly in proportion to the age of 

 the individual, the helmet being almost imperceptible when it is first hatched, and the bill not 

 very striking in its dimensions. But as the bird gains in strength, so does the beak gain in 



