PACHYDERMATA. 
131 
The Wart-hogs (Phascochoeres, F. Cuv.), — 
The grinders of which are composed of cylinders, cemented together by a cortical substance, almost 
like the transverse laminae of the Elephant, and like them succeeding each other from behind. Their 
skull is singularly large, the tusks rounded, directed laterally upward, and of a frightful magnitude ; 
and on each of their cheeks hangs a thick fleshy lobe, which completes the hideousness of their 
aspect. They have but two incisors above and six below. 
Tlie individuals received from Cape Verd (S. africanns, Gm.) have generally the incisive teeth complete ; those 
which arrive from the Cape of Good Hope {S. <ethiopicus, Gm.) scarcely show any trace of them, although vestiges 
are sometimes found within the gum. This difference may perhaps arise from age, which has worn down the teeth 
of the latter, or it may indicate a specific diversity, the more especially as the heads of those from the Cape are 
rather larger and shorter. 
There is still better reason to separate from the genus of Pigs— 
The Peccaries {Dycoteles, Cuv.), — 
Which have certainly grinders and incisors very like those of the Pigs properly so called, but their 
canines, directed as in the generality of the class, do not project from the mouth, besides which they 
want the external toe to their hind-feet. They have no tail, and upon the loins is a glandular opening 
from which a fetid humour exudes. The metacarpal and metatarsal bones of their two great toes are 
soldered into a kind of cannon-bone, as in the Ruminants ; with which their stomach, also, divided into 
several sacs, presents a marked analogy. It is a singular fact, that the aorta of these animals is often 
found very much enlarged, but not always in the same part, as if they were subject to a kind of 
aneurism. 
There are two species known, both inhabitants of South America, which were first distinguished by Azzara. 
Linnaeus confounded them together under the name of Sus tajassu. 
The Collared Peccary (D. torquatus, Cuv.).— Hair annulated grey and brown; a whitish collar, stretching 
obliquely from the angle of the lower jaw over the shoulder. Size half that of the Wild Boar. 
The White-lipped Peccary (Z). labiatus, Cuv.).— Larger ; and brown, with white lips. 
Here may be placed a genus now unknown among existing animals, which we have discovered, and 
named 
Anoplotherium, Cuv., — 
And which presents the most singular relations with the different tribes of Pachydermata, ap- 
proximating, in some respects, to the order Ruminantia. Six incisors to each jaw, four canines 
almost similar to the incisors and of even length with them, and seven molars on each side above and 
below, form a continuous series without any intervening spaee, a disposition of the teeth seen elsewhere 
in Man only. The four posterior molars on each side resemble those of the Rhinoceroses, the Damans, 
and Palasotheriums ; that is to say, they are square above, and form double or triple crescents below. 
The feet, terminated by two great toes, as in the Ruminants, are yet different in the circumstance of 
the metacarpal and metatarsal bones remaining always separated, or being never united into a cannon- 
bone. The construction of their tarsus is the same as in the Camel. 
The bones of this genus have hitherto only been found in the gypsum quarries near Paris. We have already 
recognized five species : one the size of a small Ass, with the low form and long tail of an Otter (^. commune, Cuv.), 
the fore-feet of which have a small internal accessory toe ; another of the size and slender form of the Gazelle 
{A. medium)', a third no bigger and with nearly the same proportions as a Hare, with two accessory toes to the 
sides of its hind-feet, &c. (See my Ossemens fossiles, tom. iii.) 
The ordinary Pachydermata which have not cloven feet comprehend, in the first place, 
three genera, the molar teeth of which are very similar, there being seven on each side with 
square crowns, and various prominent lines, and seven in the lower jaw, the crowns of which 
form double crescents, and the last of all a triple one : their incisors, however, vary. 
The Rhinoceroses {Rhinoceros, Lin.) — 
In this respect differ from one another. They are large animals, with each foot divided into three toes, 
and the nasal bones of which, very thick and united into a kind of arch, support a solid horn, which 
adheres to the skin, and is composed of a fibrous and horny substance, resembling agglutinated hairs. 
