A' I C U G N A . 
They yield Bczoars. AVafcr says, that he 
has taken thirteen out of the stomach of a 
single animal : they were ragged, and of seve- 
ral forms i some round, some oval, and others 
long. They were at first green, but changed 
to an ash-colour. 
In Pennant's account of the Pacos, he savs, 
*' these animals are found on the mountains 
of Peru in a state of nature, as well as the 
yicunna, but never mix together. This de- 
stroys the opinion M. De Bufton had, that the 
Pacos and Vicunna were the same animal, and 
that the first was only a Wild Vicunna. 
Father Molina satisfies us of that mistake: he, 
besides, adds three more of American Camels to 
the two we were before acquainted with. That 
gentleman was a Jesuit, resident in South Ame- 
rica, who had formed great colleclions in Na- 
tural Historv. ^^'hen the order was expelled 
out of the Xew World, the Spaniards de- 
prived him of every thing. By a strange ac- 
cident, on his r-jtarn — (1 tiiink, to Bologna, 
his native place) — he recovered cue of his 
Manuscripts, which was translated out of the 
Italian into Frcnc!), under the title of Essai 
5ur 
