CHAPTER XXIY. 
Ungulates, — continued. 
Chevrotains and Camels. 
Families Tragxjlidae and Camelidae. 
With the Deer family we took leave of the last of the two Ruminants—the Pecora 
of the scientific zoologist—and we now come to two smaller groups of Ungulates, 
which, although Ruminants in the general sense of that term, yet differ so widely 
from the Pecora, and also from one another, that they are each regarded as consti¬ 
tuting sections of equal value with the latter. These two groups are, firstly, the 
small deer-like animals commonly known as chevrotains, and, secondly, the camels ; 
the latter term including not only the true camels of the Old World, but likewise 
the South American llamas. 
Both these groups agree with the true Ruminants in having crescent-like 
(selenodont) molar teeth; but whereas the chevrotains are probably descended 
from the same ancestral stock as that which gave rise to the deer, it appears that 
the camels have originated from a totally different stock, and have thus acquired 
their crescent-like teeth quite independently of the true Ruminants. In addition 
to forming two distinct families, these two groups have also received names of a 
superior grade, thus bringing them on to a platform equivalent to that occupied by 
the Pecora. For the chevrotains the term Tragulina is adopted, while that of 
Tylopoda is taken for the camels. 
The Chevrotains. 
Family Tragulidce. 
The elegant little creatures known as chevrotains, or mouse-deer, are so like 
small antlerless deer in general outward appearance, that they are commonly 
regarded as nearly allied to the musk-deer, near which they were indeed long 
placed by zoologists. In zoology, as in many other things, outward appearance is, 
however, very often deceptive; and when the chevrotains are examined anatom¬ 
ically they are found to depart very widely from the deer family. 
Chevrotains agree with the true Ruminants in the absence of any incisor teeth 
in the upper jaw; and they resemble the musk-deer in the presence of upper tusks, 
or canine teeth, which in the males attain a considerable length, and project below 
the mouth. They likewise agree with the true Ruminants in that the canine teeth 
of the lower jaw resemble the incisors, to the outermost pair of which they are 
