. Animate creation : popular edition of "Our living world" : a natural history. Zoology; Zoology. 116 THE CHERSYDRUS. in proportion to the wide tliifk body, bearing about the same proportion as the tip of the little finger does to the wrist. Tlie tail is also very wide, extremely blunt, and compressed. The markings of this reptile are rather curious. The ground color is black. There is a large yellow spot on each side of the head, a series of pale, gray-brown spots runs on each side of the neck, and a row of large rounded white murks is arranged along the back so as to form a richly


. Animate creation : popular edition of "Our living world" : a natural history. Zoology; Zoology. 116 THE CHERSYDRUS. in proportion to the wide tliifk body, bearing about the same proportion as the tip of the little finger does to the wrist. Tlie tail is also very wide, extremely blunt, and compressed. The markings of this reptile are rather curious. The ground color is black. There is a large yellow spot on each side of the head, a series of pale, gray-brown spots runs on each side of the neck, and a row of large rounded white murks is arranged along the back so as to form a richly variegated pattern of boldly contrasted colors. The Ciiittul {HydrojMs sublcevis) is another of these marine Snakes, and is found in India and Ceylon. It is rather a large species, sometimes t^xceeding live feet in length, and is handsomely colored. It is extremely venomous, a fowl that had been bitten by a Chittul dying within five minutes after receiving the injury. The ground color of this Snake is yellow, and the body is covered with an irregular row of black rings. Some black bands also cross the neck. In the AcKOCiiOKDK, sometimes called the Oular Carron, the tail, instead of being flattened, is rounded, conical, and very short, diminishing in diameter in a very sudden manner. It is a native of Java, and is said to be wholly vegetarian in its diet, the stomach. BLACK BACKED PELAMIS. -Pelaviis hicdor. having been found to contain nothing but half-digested fruit. The flesh of the Acrochorde is said to be excellent. Ujion the head are a number of little st^ales, each of which is divided into three ridges. The creature is in the habit of distending its body with air to a very great extent, and when it so acts the scales separate from each other and make the head and body look as if they were covei'ed with tubercles. The general color is bro^\^l in the adult, and brown banded and sti'eaked with a darker hue in the young. The Ciiersydrtts ('< r/) is a r


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbr, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectzoology