TALPIDyE. — CLXXXIX. 329 



1085. B. parva (Say). Body stout ; iron gray, with brown 

 gloss. L. 3J. T. |. Penn. to Neb. and Tex., not rare. 



Family CLXXXIX. TALPIDM- (The Moles.) 

 Body stout, thick, and clumsy, without distinct neck. Eyes rudi- 

 mentary, sometimes concealed. No external ears. Limbs very 

 short ; feet greatly expanded and provided with strong claws, 

 adapted for digging ; anterior limbs much larger than posterior. 

 Scapula as long as humerus and radius together. Canines usually 

 distinct. Fur compact, soft, and velvety. Genera H ; found through- 

 out the Northern hemisphere ; some of them digging elaborate bur- 

 rows. (Lat., talpa, mole.) 



a. Snout elongated, not star-shaped at tip; tail shorter than head. 

 b. Teeth ^g^36j nostrils partly superior ; tail nearly naked. 



S GALOPS, 561. 



ib. Teeth §1 = 44; nostrils lateral; tail densely hairy. Pakascalops, 562. 

 aa. Snout elongated, fringed at tip with a circle o£ long fleshy projections ; 

 nostrils terminal; tail much longer than head; teeth f| = 44. 



COHDYLURA, 5G3. 



561. SCALOPS Cuvier. (o-koKo'^, mole, from oKoKKa, to dig.) 



1086. S. aquaticus (L.). Common Mole. Dark plumbeous, 

 paler below ; feet full webbed ; palms broader than long ; eye not 

 wholly covered by skin. L. 5^. T. 1. Mass. to Ind., and S., 

 very abundant. Subsp. machrinns (Rafinesque). Praikie Mole. 

 Silvery plumbeous ; palms scarcely broader than long ; larger and 

 more silvery than the preceding. L. 6^. T. 1^. Mich, to Minn. 

 and S., chiefly in the prairie region. 



562. PARASCALOPS True, (yrapa, near; Scalops.) 



1087. P. bre^weri (Bachman). Hairy tailed Mole. Dark 

 plumbeous, with brown gloss ; palms narrow ; tail densely hairy. 

 L. 5. T. 1. N. B. to Ohio and mts. of N. C. 



563. CONDYLTJRA lUiger. (k<5i/SuXos, node ; ovpa, tail.) 



1088. C. cristata (L.). Star-nosed Mole. Blackish ; skull 

 long and slender. L. 6|. T. 2f . Nova Scotia to. Ind., and N. 

 in Alleghanies, S. to N. C. (Lat., crested.) 



Order L. CHIROPTBRA. (The Bats.) 

 Mammals with the anterior limbs modified for flight by the elonga- 

 tion of the fore arm, and especially of four of the fingers, all of 

 which are connected by a thin leathery membrane, which includes 

 the hind feet and usually the tail ; humerus and femur not included 

 in the common integument of the body ; teeth with enamel, the 

 three sorts differentiated; mammae pectoral. The Bats are chiefly 

 nocturnal in their habits, going into retirement in 'daytime, and 



