Genus VULTUR, Linn. 
Gen. Cuar. Beak strong, thick and deep, base covered with a cere ; upper mandible straight 
until it reaches the point, where it is hooked abruptly ; under mandible straight, rounded 
and becoming narrower towards the point. Head naked or covered with short down ; 
nostrils naked and pierced diagonally at the cere. Feet very strong, furnished with nails 
slightly hooked; the middle toe very long and united at the base to the external toe. 
Wings long ; first quill-feather short, the fourth the longest. 
GRIFFON VULTURE. 
Vultur fulvus, Lenn. 
Le Vautour Griffon. 
Pre-EMINENT for size and strength, the Vultures exceed all other birds whose powers of wing are adequate 
to sustain continued flight. They are a race peculiar to hot climates, and their food consists of putrid animal 
substances, for the removal of which (where indeed a quick removal is called for,) they seem expressly ap- 
pointed. Their flight is wonderfully rapid and graceful, and they are led by some faculty, not yet fully 
understood, (but most probably by the sense of smell,) from astonishing distances, and an elevation in the 
atmosphere beyond the reach of human sight, to their foetid repast. In a tribe of birds thus characterized the 
Griffon Vulture is\one of the most conspicuous, particularly among those individuals who inhabit. the older 
continent. 
The present species takes a wide range, inhabiting, in considerable abundance, Spain, Turkey, and the 
whole of the southern portion of Europe, as well as the northern portions of Africa; they also occur in the 
mountainous parts of the northern and central countries, but we are not aware of its having ever been seen in 
a wild state in the British Islands. 
Like the rest of its family, except when pressed by the utmost necessity it never preys on living animals, 
but prefers carrion and putrid substances, and when fed to repletion is easily made captive. There is nothing, 
however, of ferocity or wildness in the disposition of this bird, as in that of the Eagle ; hence in captivity 
it becomes gentle and domestic : its principal enjoyment consists in the gratification of its appetite, and that 
accomplished it seems perfectly contented. 
It breeds among the most inaccessible precipices ; its eggs are of a dull greyish-white slightly marked with 
spots of a pale reddish colour. 
In the adult bird the head and neck are covered with short white downy feathers ; the lower part of the 
neck is surrounded with a ruff of long slender feathers of the same colour or slightly tinged with red ; on the 
breast there is also a space covered with white down; the whole of the upper and under surfaces, except the 
quill- and tail-feathers, which are blackish-brown, are of a fulvous grey, the belly having a slight tinge of 
rufous ; beak bluish yellow; cere darker ; irides hazel; feet light brown: total length about four feet. The 
male is, as usual with other rapacious birds, smaller than the female. 
Young birds differ considerably from the adults; the downy feathers of the head and neck being dirty 
white varied with brown, and the rest of the plumage of a very light yellowish colour, interspersed with large 
markings of white or grey. 
Our Plate represents an adult in perfect plumage. 
