The Camel: His Organization, Habits and UsesGould and Lincoln, 1856 - 224 Seiten |
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Abd-el-Kader Akaba Algeria animal appears Arabian camel Arabs army Bactrian camel beast Bedouins Bergmann Bessarabia Bokhara bred breeds Burckhardt burden camel Cairo callosities camp caravan Carbuccia cells CHAP CHAPTER climate Cloth corps countries Crimea cross Daumas day's journey Denham and Clapperton desert distance doubt draught drink drivers dromedary Egypt European feeds feet fifteen five foal fodder foot four furnish habits halt halter Hammer-Purgstall horse hump hundred pounds important inches kajawah Lake Baikal legs Libyan desert Lieut load mahari Major Wayne miles military mounted mule muscular band nature northern Nubia nutriment observes oesophagus one-humped camel ordinary orifice pack-saddle passes plants provinces pylorus quadrupeds require rider ruminants saddle Sahara says season second cavity seldom septa sheikh shrubs side soil sometimes species speed stomach Suez summer supply Syria Tartary Tavernier third cavity tion transportation transverse tribes vegetables winter
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Seite 203 - Above these cells, between them and the muscle which passes along the upper part of this cavity, is a smooth surface, extending from the orifice of this cavity to the termination in the third. " From this account, it is evident that the second...
Seite 203 - From this account it is evident that the second cavity neither receives the solid food in the first instance, as in the bullock, nor does the food afterwards pass into the cavity or cellular structure. " The food first passes into the first compartment of the first cavity, and that portion of it which lies in the recess, immediately below the entrance of the oesophagus, under which the cells are situated, is kept moist, and is readily returned into the mouth along the groove formed for that purpose,...
Seite 38 - ... curved or hooked. There is another difference between the camels and the other ruminants : the former have the scaphoid and cuboid bones of the tarsus separated. Instead of the great horny case or shoe, which envelopes all the lower part of each toe and determines the figure of the ordinary cloven hoof, the camels have only a small one, or rather the...
Seite 204 - It would appear that camels when accustomed to go journeys, in which they are kept for an unusual number of days without water, acquire the power of dilating the cells so as to make them contain a more than ordinary quantity as a supply for their journey ; at least, such is the account given by those who have been in Egypt.