AVES—VULTURE. 427 
quency, but never in great abundance, in the Pyrenees, the Aljs from Pied- 
mont to Dalmatia, the mountains of Ghilan and Siberia, and those of Egypt 
and Abyssinia; occupying every where the loftiest and most inaccessible 
cliffs, and frequently committing dreadful ravages in the neighboring plains. 
In size it is the largest of European birds of prey, measuring, when fully 
grown, upwards of four feet from beak to tail, and in the expanse of its wings 
no less than nine or ten. M. Fortis indeed asserts that he had seen an 
individual in Dalmatia, the expanded wings of which measured twelve feet. 
The general color of the upper part of this remarkable bird isa dull brown 
with a mixture of gray; its wings and tail are of a grayish ash color; the 
upper part of its head is a dirty white ; a black band extends back wards 
from the base of the beak across the eye, and joins a narrower stripe of tne 
same that passes upwards to unite with its fellow on the back of the head ; 
and the neck, breast, and under parts.are white with a shade of reddish 
brown or orange, which is deeper on the breast and throat, and gradually 
becomes less distinct on the abdomen and legs. For the first two years, the 
young birds are distinguished by the dusky brown of the head and neck; the 
mottled gray ef their under surfaces, the large white spots, or spots of a 
lighter shade, scattered over their back and wings; and the dusky black of 
their quill feathers. Their iris is at first brown, and their toes of a livid 
color ; but as they advance in age the former becomes of a bright red, and 
the latter assume a leaden hue. At all times the beak, which attains a 
length of four inches, is of an ashy gray with a flesh colored tinge; and t' e 
_ bristles at its base are deep black, as are also the talons. 
In its habits this bird combines the audacity and cruelty of the eagles, 
with the appetite for carrion which distinguishes the vultures. It seizes by 
preference living victims, chiefly quadrupecs, and especially those which are 
incapable of making an effectual resistance, such as rabbits, hares, sheep 
and lambs, or even young goats and calves; and thus proves an extremely 
dangerous neighbor to the peaceful flocks which graze on the declivities of 
the mountains inhabited by it, or in the intervening valleys. Sometimes, 
when rendered desperate by a long fast, it is said to attack the chamois, or 
even man himself, choosing for the scene of its exploits the brink of a preri- 
pice, and descending upon its victim with such an irresistible impetus as 13 
precipitate him headlong into the abyss below. But such bold attempts as 
this, although spoken of by many writers, are foreign to its usual habits, 
and may ratlier be regarded as traditions handed down from generation to 
generation, than as common or every day occurrences. Inthesame manner 
it is probable that the stories current in the Alps, of children carried off by 
vultures to be devoured, are rather the expression of a natural dread of what 
might happen, than a relation of actual events. We are not aware of any 
authentic testimony in proof of the fact, which may therefore be classed 
with the narratives of the same description with reference to the condor. 
