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Eaton, Jack D.
(detail)
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| |
|
1978 |
Archaeological survey of the Yucatan-Campeche coast.
Middle Amer. Res. Inst. Publ.
46(1).
|
x |
|
Eberhardt, L. Lee
(detail)
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| |
|
1982 |
Censusing manatees: a report on the feasibility of using aerial surveys and mark and recapture techniques to conduct a population survey of the West Indian manatee.
Manatee Population Research Rept.
(Gainesville, Fla., Florida Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research Unit)
No. 1: 1-18. 1 tab. 3 figs. Dec. 1982.
–Some copies have an early version of the cover & title page which incorrectly gives the author's name as Lee L. Eberhardt. See also Appendix 1.
Recommends development of peduncle and other sorts of tags, and more extensive and sophisticated analysis of abundance data from warm-water refugia, in order to provide indices of population trends. These would serve as the basis for a census method, but an immediate state-wide census is not recommended. The population in Florida is assumed to be well in excess of the currently accepted figure of 1,000. Fig. 1 shows trends in counts at 6 refugia, 1977-81.
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Eberhardt, L. Lee; O'Shea, Thomas J.
(detail)
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| |
|
1995 |
Integration of manatee life-history data and population modeling. In: T. J. O'Shea, B. B. Ackerman, & H. F. Percival (eds.), Population biology of the Florida manatee (q.v.).
Information & Technology Rept.
(U.S. Dept. Interior, Natl. Biological Service) (vi + 289)
1: 269-279. 3 tabs. 2 figs. Aug. 1995.
|
x |
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Eberhardt, L. Lee; Garrott, Robert A.; Becker, B. L.
(detail)
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| |
|
1999 |
Using trend indices for endangered species.
Mar. Mamm. Sci.
15(3): 766-785. 8 figs. "July 1999" (mailed June 8, 1999).
–Concludes in regard to Florida manatees that previously-used multiple regression models overestimated the rate of change of the East Coast population as determined from three other sources (a covariance model, a non-linear model, and the rate estimated from reproductive and survival data) (766-767, 770-774, 781-783).
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
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| |
|
1930 |
Von der Stellerschen Seekuh.
Ber. Senck. Naturf. Ges.
(Frankfurt a. M.)
60: 221-225. 3 figs.
|
|
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
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| |
|
1933a |
Die Foramina parietalia der Säugetiere.
Zs. Anat. Entwicklungsges.
102(2/3): 266-289. 28 figs. Dec. 27, 1933.
–Sirs., 273-275.
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
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| |
|
1933b |
Über Gehirne tertiärer Sirenia Ägyptens und Mitteleuropas sowie der rezenten Seekühe.
Abh. Bayer. Akad. Wiss., math.-natw. Abt.
(n.s.) 20: 5-36.
–Edinger (1975) says in part concerning this item: "'Brain and endocranial cast in sirenians' (pp. 6-14) details the safely interpretable features of the latter, and warning of likely errors, e.g., the lack of petrosal bones can simulate an enormously broad cerebellum on endocasts.... 'New fossil material' (pp. 14-25) consists of six Protosiren, figs. 4-5; one fragment of Eosiren, fig. 6; three Halitherium, figs. 7a-c, 8, 9; three Rhytina, not figured. 'Paleoneurological contributions to ecology and phylogeny of the Sirenians' (pp. 25-30) and 'Summarizing remarks' (pp. 30-32) stress the almost basically unchanged character Eocene-to-Recent, and that the Eocene brain represents a type common to early subungulates, being, except for olfactory reduction, similar to that of Arsinoitherium, and that of Moeritherium...." To this annotation the editors of Edinger (1975) (q.v.) append a discussion of an unpublished endocast of Desmostylus.
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
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| |
|
1939 |
Two notes on the central nervous system of fossil Sirenia.
Bull. Fac. Sci. Fouad I Univ.
(Cairo)
19: 43-58. 3 pls.
–Arabic summ. Edinger (1975) gives the following annotation: "I: A newly discovered "brain" of an old Protosiren, pp. 43-50, Pl. I (dorsal), Pl. II (frontal, reduced olfactory bulbs!), Pl. III; II: On the spinal cord of fossil Sirenia, pp. 51-57. As the lumen of the neural canal in the vertebral column of Recent, Pliocene, and Miocene Sirenia diminishes caudad from the brachial enlargement, its enlargement in the posterior dorsal vertebrae in Miocene, Oligocene, and Eocene forms indicates that a lumbar intumescence of the spinal cord was maintained during reduction of femur and pelvis."
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
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| |
|
1942 |
The pituitary body in giant animals, fossil and living: a survey and a suggestion.
Quart. Rev. Biol.
17: 31-45.
–Considers endocasts of Hydrodamalis and other mammals to be less satisfactory than those of large ratite birds for studies of gigantism and brain size (38-41?).
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
|
| |
|
1950 |
Die Paläoneurologie am Beginn einer neuen Phase.
Experientia
6: 250-258. 4 figs.
–Engl. summ. From Edinger (1975): "...The 'new phase' is systematic preparation of endocasts from established ancestries, such as ... Eotherium (fig. 3c) to dugong."
|
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D |
Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
|
| |
|
1955 |
Objet et résultats de la paléoneurologie. [Abstr.]
Colloq. Internatl., Centre Natl. Rech. Sci.
60: 35-38.
–From Edinger (1975): "... mentions Proboscidea, Sirenia, and that a partly exposed Desmostylus brain resembles the sirenian type."
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Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
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| |
|
1960 |
Behavioral specialization reflected in brain morphology. [Abstr.]
Anat. Rec.
138: 345-346.
–Gives examples from the Sirenia, Pterosauria, and Chiroptera.
|
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D |
Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
|
| |
|
1963 |
Neues aus der Paläoneurologie.
Paläont. Zs.
37: 8-9, 49-55.
–The brain of Desmostylus is said to be of sirenian type (51-52).
|
x |
D |
Edinger, Tilly
(detail)
|
| |
|
1975 |
Paleoneurology 1804-1966: an annotated bibliography.
Advances Anat. Embryol. Cell Biol.
49(1-6): 1-258.
–Published posthumously. The annotation accompanying the citation of Edinger (1933b) (q.v.) includes a discussion, written by the bibliography's editors, of an unpublished cranial endocast of Desmostylus (50).
|
x |
|
Edmonds, J. S.; Shibata, Y.; Prince, Robert I. T.; Preen, Anthony R.; Morita, M.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1997 |
Elemental composition of a tusk of a dugong, Dugong dugon, from Exmouth, Western Australia.
Mar. Biol.
129(2): 203-214. 5 tabs. 5 figs.
–X-ray fluorescence-imaging and analysis of acid-digested material from a tusk of a 55-year-old pregnant female dugong provided a record of fluctuations in barium, calcium, iron, lithium, magnesium, sodium, phosphorus, strontium, and zinc. These fluctuations are attributed to natural environmental changes and/or changes in the dugong's physiology with increasing age; elements usually regarded as pollutants or as affected by anthropogenic changes were not detected.
|
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Edwards
(detail)
|
| |
|
1875 |
Guide to Florida.
[Publ.?]
–Same as Rambler (1875)? Sirs., 69.
|
x |
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Edwards, Bryan
(detail)
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| |
|
1801 |
The history, civil and commercial, of the British colonies in the West Indies. Third edition, with considerable additions.
London, John Stockdale (3 vols.):
Vol. 1: xxiv + xxiii + 576. Frontisp. 6 pls. 9 maps.
–Ed. 1, 1793, 2 vols. (= vols. 1-2 of this ed.?). Ed. 5, 1818-19, 5 vols. Describes the manatee and states that Indians in the West Indies used to catch it (as they caught fish and turtles) with remoras fastened to lines (1: 127).
|
x |
|
Edwards, William Ellis
(detail)
|
| |
|
1967 |
The Late-Pleistocene extinction and diminution in size of many mammalian species. In: P. S. Martin & H. E. Wright, Jr. (eds.), Pleistocene extinctions: the search for a cause.
New Haven & London, Yale Univ. Press (453 pp.):
141-154.
–P. 148: {"Even some local forms of sea mammals, like the Florida seal (Rouse, 1951) and the California Steller's sea cow (which survived in a refuge in the Bering Sea), were eventually exterminated. Such examples are significant, for the only sea mammals to become extinct in prehistoric times were unusually vulnerable to human hunters because of occasional sojourns on land or at least littoral habits."}
|
x |
|
Edwards, William H.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1847 |
A voyage up the River Amazon.
New York, D. Appleton & Co.:
1-256. Illus.
–Describes the external appearance of an Amazonian manatee and the hunting and use of manatees by Indians (187-188, 1 fig.). The skull was given to a Dr. Morton, who recognized it as a species distinct from the West Indian manatee. Also mentions a manatee in captivity in Pará (= Belém), and two taken to New York by a Captain Appleton. A British ed. (London, John Murray: 1-210, 1847) has the identical material on pp. 149-150 but lacks the fig.
|
x |
|
Eggeling, H.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1904 |
Zur Morphologie des Manubrium sterni.
Denkschr. Med.-natw. Ges. Jena
11 (Festschr. 70sten. Geburtstag Ernst Haeckel): 59-114. 43 figs. Pl. 6.
–Brief and not very informative comment on the shape and ossification of the manubrium in Halicore and Manatus (99).
|
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Ehrenberg, Kurt
(detail)
|
| |
|
1927 |
Bestimmung der Knochenreste von Friedberg nebst einigen Bemerkungen über dieselben.
Verh. Geol. Bundesanst. Wien
1927(4): 103-106. Apr. 1927.
|
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Ehrlich, Franz Carl
(detail)
|
| |
|
1848 |
Über die fossilen Säugethierreste aus den Tertiär-Ablagerungen der Umgebung der Provinzial-Hauptstadt Linz in Oberösterreich. [or?] Fossile Säugethierreste des Museums Francisco-Carolinum in Linz.
Ber. Mitt. Freunde Natw. Wien
4(2): 197-200. 4 figs.
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Ehrlich, Franz Carl
(detail)
|
| |
|
1855 |
Beiträge zur Palaeontologie und Geognosie von Oberösterreich und Salzburg.... I. Die fossilen Cetaceen-Reste aus den Tertiär-Ablagerungen bei Linz, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung jener der Halianassa Collinii H. v. M., und des dazu gehörigen, im August des Jahres 1854 aufgefundenen Rumpfskelettes.
Ber. Mus. Francisco-Carolinum Linz
15 (Suppl.?): 3-21. 6 figs. 2 pls.
–Review: Jahrb. Geol. Reichsanst. Wien 7: 163, 1856?
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Eichwald, Carl Eduard Ivanovich von
(detail)
|
| |
|
1840 |
Die Urwelt Russlands, durch Abbildungen erläutert. Erstes Heft.
St. Petersburg, Journal de Saint-Pétersbourg (4 Hefte, 1840-48):
1-106. 4 pls.
–Reprinted from Schr. St. Petersburgischen Mineral. Ges. Sirs., 35, pl. 2.
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Eichwald, Carl Eduard Ivanovich von
(detail)
|
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|
1850 |
Paleontologiya Rossii. Opisanie molassovoi i namyvnoi formatsii Rossii, po obraztsam' khraniashchimsia v' Muze' Imperatorskoi Mediko-khirurgicheskoi Akademii.
St. Petersburg, Eduard Pratz.
With Atlas.
–Sirs., 170-175; includes Dinotherium proavus, n.sp., Rhytine (Manatus) borealis, and Manatus maeoticus, n.sp. (174).
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Eichwald, Carl Eduard Ivanovich von
(detail)
|
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|
1853 |
Lethaea rossica; ou, Paléontologie de la Russie, décrite et figurée.... Troisième volume. Dernière période.
Stuttgart, E. Schweizerbart:
xix + 533 (1853); atlas: 14 pls. (1852).
–Mentions Rhytina, 342.
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|
Eigeland, Karen A.; Lanyon, Janet M.; Trott, Darren J.; Ouwerkerk, Diane; Blanshard, Wendy; Milinovich, Gabriel J.; Gulino, Lisa-Maree; Martinez, Emilio; Merson, Samuel; Klieve, Athol V.
(detail)
|
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|
2012 |
Bacterial community structure in the hindgut of wild and captive dugongs (Dugong dugon).
Aquatic Mammals
38(4): 402. 3 tabs. 1 fig. DOI:10.1578/AM.38.4.2012.402.
–ABSTRACT: Dugongs (Dugong dugon) are marine mammals that obtain nutrients through hindgut fermentation of seagrass, however, the microbes responsible have not been identified. This study used denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and 454-pyrosequencing to profile hindgut bacterial communities in wild dugongs. Faecal samples obtained from 32 wild dugongs representing four size/maturity classes, and two captive dugongs fed on cos lettuce were screened using DGGE. Partial 16S rRNA gene profiles of hindgut bacteria from wild dugong calves and juveniles were grouped together and were different to those in subadults and adults. In captive dugongs, the absence of the dominant bacterial DNA bands identified in wild dugongs is probably dependent upon prevailing diet and other captive conditions such as the use of antibiotics. This study represents a first step in the characterisation of a novel microbial ecosystem -- the marine hindgut of Sirenia.
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Eimer, Gustav Heinrich Theodor
(detail)
|
| |
|
1901 |
Vergleichend-anatomisch-physiologische Untersuchungen über das Skelett der Wirbeltiere.
Leipzig, W. Engelmann:
xi + 263. 66 figs.
–Sirs., 259.
|
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Eisenberg, John F.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1989 |
Mammals of the Neotropics. The northern Neotropics. Vol. 1. Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana.
Chicago & London, Univ. Chicago Press:
x + 449. Illus.
|
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Eisentraut, Martin
(detail)
|
| |
|
1976 |
Das Gaumenfaltenmuster der Säugetiere und seine Bedeutung für stammesgeschichtliche und taxonomische Untersuchungen.
Bonner Zool. Monogr.
8: 5-214.
–Engl. summ. Sirs., 157-159, 210.
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Eisentraut, Martin
(detail)
|
| |
|
1984 |
Das Gaumenfaltenmuster bei Schliefern, Elefanten und Sirenen.
Bonner Zool. Beitr.
35(1-3): 29-37.
–Engl. summ.
|
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Eisvogl, Gerd
(detail)
|
| |
|
1973 |
Makrofossilien des Mainzer Beckens: eine Ergänzung.
Aufschluss
24(5): 194-195. May 1973.
|
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Ekman, Sven
(detail)
|
| |
|
1935 |
Indo-Westpazifik und Atlanto-Ostpazifik, eine tiergeographische Studie.
Zoogeogr.
2: 320-374. 11 figs.
|
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|
El-Khashab, Baher
(detail)
|
| |
|
1974 |
Review of the early Tertiary eutherian faunas of African mammals in Fayum Province, Egypt.
Ann. Geol. Surv. Egypt
4: 95-114.
|
|
|
Eldredge, L. G.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1991 |
Annotated checklist of the marine mammals of Micronesia.
Micronesica
24(2): 217-230.
–Reviews reports of dugongs from Yap, Guam, and Palau (224-225).
|
x |
|
Eldredge, L. G.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2003 |
The marine reptiles and mammals of Guam.
Micronesica
35-36: 653-660. June 2003.
–Records dugong sightings at Guam in 1975 and 1985 (657).
|
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|
Elera, Casto de
(detail)
|
| |
|
1895 |
Catalogo sistematico de toda la fauna de Filipinas.
Manila, Colegio de Santo Tomas.
–Dugong, 29-32.
|
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Elera, Casto de
(detail)
|
| |
|
1915 |
Contribucion a la fauna filipina.
Manila, Colegio de Santo Tomas.
–Dugong, 204-218.
|
x |
|
Elias, Peter M.; Menon, Gopinathan K.; Grayson, Stephen; Brown, Barbara E.; Rehfeld, S. Jerry
(detail)
|
| |
|
1987 |
Avian sebokeratocytes and marine mammal lipokeratinocytes: structural, lipid biochemical, and functional considerations.
Amer. Jour. Anat.
180(2): 161-177. 5 tabs. 15 figs.
–Birds, cetaceans, and manatees, in contrast to terrestrial mammals, were found to have abundant intracellular lipid droplets in the epidermis, but manatees (in contrast to cetaceans) lack these in the stratum corneum and resemble terrestrial mammals in replacing glycolipids with ceramides in the stratum corneum. The manatee studied is said to have been T. manatus, but since the sample was apparently obtained from the California Academy of Sciences, it may have been T. inunguis.
|
x |
|
Elliott, Daniel Giraud
(detail)
|
| |
|
1901 |
A synopsis of the mammals of North America and the adjacent seas.
Publ. Field Columbian Mus.
45, Zool. Ser. 2: xv + 471. 94 figs. 49 pls. Mar. 6, 1901.
–Gives diagnoses and photographs of skulls of Hydrodamalis gigas (5, pl. 1) and Manatus latirostris (5-6, pl. 2). The same material is repeated on p. 477 in "A list of the land and sea mammals of North America north of Mexico, Supplement to the Synopsis", which follows the above on pp. 473-522.
|
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Elliott, Daniel Giraud
(detail)
|
| |
|
1904 |
The land and sea mammals of Middle America and the West Indies.
Publ. Field Columbian Mus.
95, _Zool. Ser._ 4(1): xxi + 439 + xlix. 140 figs. 41 pls.
Aug. 2, 1904.
–Sirs., 35-37.
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Elliott, Daniel Giraud
(detail)
|
| |
|
1907 |
A catalogue of the collection of mammals in the Field Columbian Museum.
Publ. Field Columbian Mus.
115, Zool. Ser. 8: viii + 694. 92 figs.
–Lists (with synonymies) four T. manatus collected at Izabal, Guatemala, two from Florida, and one Dugong australis from Australia (29-30).
|
x |
|
Elliott, Heather; Thomas, Annette; Ladds, P. W.; Heinsohn, George Edwin
(detail)
|
| |
|
1981 |
A fatal case of salmonellosis in a dugong.
Jour. Wildl. Diseases
17(2): 203-208. 3 figs. Apr. 1981.
–Describes the captive conditions, illness, and histopathology of the small intestine and liver of a female dugong calf that died at the Cairns Oceanarium, Australia, in 1978. Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, and Salmonella lohbruegge were isolated, with death ascribed to the latter.
|
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|
Elliott, Henry Wood
(detail)
|
| |
|
1881 |
A monograph of the Pribylov Group, or the seal-islands of Alaska.
Washington, Govt. Printing Off.:
1-176. 29 pls. 14 maps.
–Quote from Nordenskiöld, 110-111.
|
x |
|
Elliott, Murray A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1981 |
Distribution and status of the dugong in Northern Territory waters. In: H. Marsh (ed.), The dugong. Proceedings of a seminar/workshop held at James Cook University of North Queensland 8-13 May 1979 (q.v.).
[Townsville (Australia)], James Cook Univ. (vii + 400):
57-66. 1 fig.
–Aerial surveys of the Northern Territory coast of Australia showed that dugongs are widely distributed but not particularly abundant. Aboriginal hunting and incidental netting seem to have only minor impacts. More detailed studies are needed.
|
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Ellis, Richard
(detail)
|
| |
|
2001 |
Aquagenesis: the origin and evolution of life in the sea.
New York, Viking Penguin:
xiv + 304. Illus.
|
|
|
Elsner, Robert
(detail)
|
| |
|
1969 |
Cardiovascular adjustments to diving. In: H. T. Andersen (ed.), The biology of marine mammals.
New York & London, Academic Press (475 pp.):
117-145. 25 figs.
–Sirs., 103?, 140-143.
|
|
|
Emmons, Ebenezer
(detail)
|
| |
|
1858 |
Agriculture of the eastern counties; together with descriptions of the fossils of the marl beds. In: Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey.
Raleigh, H. D. Turner:
xvi + 314. >256 figs.
–Repr. in part, 1969, Bulls. of Amer. Paleontology 56(249): 57-230, with new index. Describes and illustrates a fragment of an Eocene sir. rib from Craven County, North Carolina, misidentifying it as a sperm whale tooth (212, fig. 34). This entire report, including the illustration, are reproduced in Domning, Morgan & Ray (1982: 16-17).
|
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Emmons, Ebenezer
(detail)
|
| |
|
1860 |
Manual of geology, designed for the use of colleges and academies.
Philadelphia, Sower, Barnes & Co.:
xii + 13-290. 218 figs.
–Reproduces (213, fig. 181) the illustration of the sir. rib fragment from Emmons (1858).
|
x |
|
Engel, Stefan
(detail)
|
| |
|
1959a |
Rudimentary mammalian lungs.
Gegenbaurs Morph. Jahrb.
100: 95-114. 19 figs.
–The alveolar structure of the dugong lung is compared with those of crocodilians and monotremes; concludes that the dugong's structure is the most primitive among living mammals (102-104, 106, 111-114).
|
x |
|
Engel, Stefan
(detail)
|
| |
|
1959b |
The respiratory tissue of dugong (Halicore Dugong).
Anat. Anz.
106: 90-100. 14 figs.
–Reports that the lung tissue consists only of small, poorly differentiated vesicles, not of acini; these arise laterally from bronchioli. This is considered unique and perhaps primitive among mammals.
|
x |
|
Engel, Stefan
(detail)
|
| |
|
1962 |
The air-passages of the dugong lung.
Acta Anat.
48(1-2): 95-107. 17 figs.
–Describes the histology and microscopic anatomy of the air-conducting tubules, which differ in arrangement from the typical mammalian bronchial tree.
|
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|
Engle, Earl Theron
(detail)
|
| |
|
1926 |
The copulation plug and the accessory genital glands of mammals.
Jour. Mamm.
7(2): 119-126. 1 tab. May 1926.
–Quotes Riha (1911) regarding the dugong (122).
|
x |
|
Enlow, Donald H.; Brown, Sidney O.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1958 |
A comparative histological study of fossil and Recent bone tissues. Part III.
Texas Jour. Sci.
10(2): 187-230. Pls. 28-40. June 1958.
–Comments on the fine structure of sirenian bone, represented by "The rib of an unidentified Pleistocene manatee" and the "Femur" (!) of a Pliocene "Manatee" (198-199, pl. 34). The source, true age, and true identity of these specimens are unknown.
|
x |
|
Ennouchi, Emile
(detail)
|
| |
|
1954 |
Un sirénien, Felsinotherium cf. serresi, à Dar bel Hamri.
Serv. Géol. du Maroc, Notes et Mém.
No. 121 (Notes, vol. 9): 77-82. 3 figs.
–Describes a skullcap fragment and a lower second molar from the Pliocene of Morocco. Also gives a gen. acc. of sirs., emphasizing their pelvis reduction and their phylogeny according to Depéret & Roman (1920).
|
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|
Epstein, Robert
(detail)
|
| |
|
1993 |
Cruising with the manatees on Florida's Crystal River.
Trailer Boats
22: 56.
–Pop. acc. of Florida manatees and where to see them.
|
x |
|
Erdbrink, Dirk Peter Bosscha; Van Bree, Peter J. H.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1999 |
Fossil axial skeletal walrus material from the North Sea and the estuary of the Schelde, and a fossil sirenian rib (Mammalia, Carnivora; Sirenia).
Beaufortia
49(2): 11-20. 4 tabs. 5 figs. July 9, 1999.
–Describes and illustrates an indeterminate sir. rib fragment dredged from the western Schelde estuary, The Netherlands (17-20).
|
x |
|
Erdman, Donald S.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1970 |
Marine mammals from Puerto Rico to Antigua.
Jour. Mamm.
51(3): 636-639. Aug. 28, 1970.
–Reports two sighting records (1961, 1963) of T. manatus in Puerto Rican waters; the species is said to be absent from the Virgin Islands (638).
|
x |
|
Erftemeijer, Paul L. A.; Djunarlin; Moka, Willem
(detail)
|
| |
|
1993 |
Stomach content analysis of a dugong (Dugong dugon) from South Sulawesi, Indonesia.
Austral. Jour. Mar. Freshwater Res.
44(1): 229-233. 1 tab. 1 fig.
–Most of the stomach contents of a female dugong (71.5% of the total dry weight) consisted of roots and rhizomes of small seagrasses (Halophila, Halodule, Cymodocea), but the leaf fraction was dominated by Enhalus (50%). Rhizome material of large seagrasses (Enhalus, Thalassia) was absent; sediment was neglible.
|
|
|
Ernst, Adolfo
(detail)
|
| |
|
1877 |
Estudios sobre la flora y fauna de Venezuela.
Caracas, Imprenta Federal:
211-330.
|
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|
Ernst, Adolfo
(detail)
|
| |
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1884 |
La Exposición Nacional de Venezuela en 1883. Grupo III: Productos animales, Clase 2a. In: Adolfo Ernst, Obras completas, Vol. 3.
Caracas, Ediciones de la Presidencia de la República (706 pp.):
290.
–Mentions specimens of manatee hide from "Guayana" included in the exhibit.
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Ernst, Carl H.
(detail)
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1977 |
Skull key to adult mammals of Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. II. Marine mammals.
Chesapeake Science
18(1): 84-87. 3 figs. Mar. 1977.
–Includes T. manatus in the key (84, 86).
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Erxleben, Johann Christian Polycarp
(detail)
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1777 |
Systema regni animalis per classes, ordines, genera, species, varietates cvm synonymia et historia animalivm. Classis I Mammalia.
Lipsiae [= Leipzig], Impensis Weygandianis:
xlviii + 636.
–Allen 341. Recognizes Trichechus manatus (including all manatees plus Hydrodamalis), 596-599; T. Dugung, 599; and "The Sea Ape", 600. Gives extensive lists of pre-Linnaean and vernacular names for these forms.
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Espasandín, J. Otero
(detail)
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1945 |
Gigantes marinos. Ed. 2.
Buenos Aires, Editorial Atlantida, S.A. (Coleccion Oro de Cultura General No. 6):
1-162. Illus. July 20, 1945.
–Gen. acc. of the living sirs. (33-42).
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Espinoza Marín, Carlos; Jiménez Pérez, Ignacio
(detail)
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2000 |
Conociendo al manatí. Ed. 2.
San José (Costa Rica), Impresora Tica:
[1-16]. Illus. June 2000.
–Print run of this ed.: 2000 copies. Cartoon coloring book for children, describing the natural history of West Indian manatees and other sirs.
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Estacio da Silveira, Simão
(detail)
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1874 |
Relação summaria das cousas do Maranhão. In: Cândido Mendes de Almeida, Memorias para a historia do extincto Estado do Maranhão cujo territorio comprehende hoje as provincias do Maranhão, Piauhy, Grão-Pará e Amazonas.... Tomo Segundo.
Rio de Janeiro, Nova Typogr. de J. Paulo Hildebrandt (lxxii + 556 + viii):
1-31.
–Brief account of the use of manatees for food and the medicinal use of their bones (26-27). Acuña's account of the manatee is reprinted in the same volume (84-85; not indexed here).
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D |
Estes, James A.; Steinberg, Peter D.
(detail)
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1988 |
Predation, herbivory, and kelp evolution.
Paleobiology
14(1): 19-36. 1 tab. 1 fig. Winter 1988.
–Briefly reviews the history of North Pacific sirs. and desmostylians, arguing that the Late Miocene appearance of sirs. adapted to kelp-eating supports the hypothesis that kelps did not become abundant or diverse until that time (21-22). See also Domning (1989a).
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D |
Estes, James A.; Steinberg, Peter D.
(detail)
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1989 |
Response to Domning [1989a].
Paleobiology
15(1): 57-60. "Winter 1989" (mailed June 13, 1989).
–Defends a late Cenozoic date for the adaptive radiation of kelps, and points out limitations on the likely roles of sirs. and desmostylians as kelp herbivores.
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Estevens, Mário
(detail)
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1998 |
Mamíferos marinhos do Neogénico de Portugal. Distribuição geográfica e estratigráfica.
Comunicações. Actas do V Congresso Nacional de Geologia
(Lisbon, Inst. Geol. e Min. & Soc. Geol. de Portugal)
84(1): A161-A164. 1 fig.
–Engl. summ. Engl. abstr.: 6th Intl. Conf. on Paleoceanography, Lisbon: 105-106, 1998. Summarizes the geographic and stratigraphic distribution of sirs. in the Mioc. & Plioc. of Portugal, listing names of localities but not taxa. Notes that the sirs. occur in deposits representing shallower, warmer, and more protected waters than the cetaceans.
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Estevens, Mário
(detail)
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2000 |
Miocene marine mammals from Portugal: paleogeographical and paleoecological significance.
Ciências da Terra
(Lisbon)
No. 14: 323-334. 6 figs.
–Portuguese summ. An updated version of Estevens (1998). Presents geological maps and a correlation chart of marine mammal localities, and describes the dramatic shift in abundance from sirs. to cetaceans after the Langhian, due to a shift to deeper- and colder-water deposition.
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Estevens, Mário
(detail)
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2003a |
Mamíferos marinhos do Miocénico da península de Setúbal.
Ciências da Terra
(Lisbon)
No. esp. 5: A60-A63.
–Engl. summ.
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Estevens, Mário
(detail)
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2003b |
Mamíferos marinhos do Miocénico de Lisboa.
Ciências da Terra
(Lisbon)
No. esp. 5: A64-A67.
–Engl. summ.
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Estrada, Alberto R.; Ferrer, Lourdes T.
(detail)
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1987 |
Distribución del manatí antillano, Trichechus manatus (Mammalia: Sirenia), en Cuba. I. Región occidental.
Poeyana
(Inst. Zool. Acad. Cienc. Cuba)
No. 354: 1-12. 4 tabs. 2 figs. Apr. 24, 1987.
–Engl. summ. A questionnaire survey of fishermen identified several areas in western Cuba where manatees were abundant, having seemingly increased in numbers as a result of the prohibition of hunting. Their habits and habitats resemble those reported elsewhere in the Caribbean.
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Etheridge, Kay; Rathbun, Galen B.; Powell, James Arthur, Jr.; Kochman, Howard I.
(detail)
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1985 |
Consumption of aquatic plants by the West Indian manatee.
Jour. Aquatic Plant Manage.
23(1): 21-25. 6 tabs.
–Feeding experiments (using Hydrilla and Vallisneria) and measurements of chewing rates in wild and captive Florida manatees indicated that adults can eat about 7.1% of body weight per day in wet weight of Hydrilla in 5 hours of chewing time. At this rate the manatees wintering at Crystal River fall short of controlling the growth of Hydrilla there by at least an order of magnitude, and manatees in general appear inefficient and impractical as a means of aquatic weed control.
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Etheridge, R., Jr.
(detail)
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1900 |
Curator's report for 1899.
Australian Mus. (Rept. Trustees)
1899: 3-7 (Appendix 1).
–Records the donation of fossil vertebrae of Halicore dugong from "the Gold-bearing drift" on Woodlark Is., Papua New Guinea (7; also 24). Molnar (1982: 680) gives the catalog number of this material as AM F5795.
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Etheridge, R., Jr.
(detail)
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1905 |
The further discovery of dugong bones on the coast of New South Wales.
Rec. Austral. Mus.
6: 17-19. Pl. 4.
–Summarizes occurrences of dugongs in New South Wales, including finds in Aboriginal kitchen middens.
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Etheridge, R., Jr.; David, T. W. Edgeworth; Grimshaw, J. W.
(detail)
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1897 |
On the occurrence of a submerged forest, with remains of the dugong, at Shea's Creek, near Sydney.
Jour. Proc. Roy. Soc. New South Wales
30: 158-185. Pls. 8-11 + 10A & 11A. Read Aug. 5, 1896.
–Describes a partial dugong skeleton, showing marks of butchering, found in Quaternary deposits in a canal excavation at Botany Bay (170-174, 178-180, pls. 8-11A). Discusses the occurrence of dugongs in New South Wales and mentions one caught in Broken Bay ca. 1894 (172). The Botany Bay subfossil occurrence was restudied by Haworth et al. (2004).
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Evans, William E.
(detail)
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1967 |
Vocalization among marine mammals. In: W. N. Tavolga (ed.), Marine bio-acoustics. Vol. 2. Proceedings of the Second Symposium on Marine Bio-Acoustics held at the American Museum of Natural History, New York, April 13-15, 1966.
Oxford, Pergamon Press (xxi + 353):
159-186. 1 tab. 12 figs.
–Manatee vocalizations, 159, 161, 169 (based on Schevill & Watkins, 1965).
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Evans, William E.; Bastian, Jarvis
(detail)
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1969 |
Marine mammal communication: social and ecological factors. In: H. T. Andersen (ed.), The biology of marine mammals.
New York & London, Academic Press (475 pp.):
425-475. 18 figs.
–Sirs., 443-444, 465-466.
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Evans, William E.; Herald, Earl S.
(detail)
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1970 |
Underwater calls of a captive Amazon manatee, Trichechus inunguis.
Jour. Mamm.
51(4): 820-823. 3 figs. Nov. 1970.
–Compares sound spectrographs of the manatee at Steinhart Aquarium, San Francisco, with reports of Florida manatee vocalizations.
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Evermann, Barton Warren
(detail)
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1893 |
A skeleton of Steller's sea cow.
Science
21(522): 59. Feb. 3, 1893.
–Brief account of the collection of a skeleton for the U.S. National Museum on Bering Island in 1892. See also L. Stejneger (1893).
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Evermann, Barton Warren
(detail)
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1900 |
General report on the investigations in Porto Rico of the United States Fish Commission steamer Fish Hawk in 1899.
Bull. U.S. Fish Comm.
20: 1-26.
–P. 25: {"The only marine mammal known from Porto Rico is the manatee (probably Trichechus latirostris), and it is of very rare occurrence, owing no doubt, to the absence of broad sluggish rivers in which it finds its favorite environment."}
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Evermann, Barton Warren
(detail)
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1920 |
[Title?]
Bull. Scripps Inst. Biol. Res.
9: 30.
–Note on the discovery and extermination of Steller's sea cow.
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Evermann, Barton Warren
(detail)
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1922 |
Why not save the marine mammals of the Pacific?
Bull. Pan-Pacific Union
(n.s.) No. 34: 12-16. Aug. 1922.
–"An advance paper prepared for the First Pan-Pacific Commercial Conference." Briefly recounts and deplores the extermination of Steller's sea cow (15-16).
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Ewan, Joseph Andorfer; Ewan, Nesta Dunn
(detail)
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2007 |
Benjamin Smith Barton: naturalist and physician in Jeffersonian America. (V.C. Hollowell, E.P. Duggan, & M.R. Crosby, eds.)
St. Louis, Missouri Botanical Garden Press:
–Reproduces (fig. 65, p. 1038) watercolors of a dugong skull and mandible (lateral and anterior views), compared with those of a walrus, found in the Barton papers at the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia. They are exact copies (by Cornelius Tiebout?) of the two views of the skull in Buffon & Daubenton (1765: pl. 56), said to be "the earliest illustration of the dugong skull."
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Exner, R.; Routil, R.
(detail)
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1958 |
Die Kephalisation der Wirbeltiere.
Ann. Naturhist. Mus. Wien
62: 25-56.
–Describes a new endocast of Hydrodamalis having a volume of 1700 cc (54).
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Exquemelin, Alexandre Olivier
(detail)
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1744 |
Histoire des avanturiers flibustiers qui se sont signalez dans les Indes. Contenant ce qu'ils y ont fait de remarquable, avec la vie, les moeurs & les coutumes des boucaniers, & des habitans de S. Domingue & de la Tortue; une description exacte de ces lieux; et un etat des offices tant ecclésiastiques que séculieres, & ce que les plus grandes princes de l'Europe y possèdent. Le tout enrichi de cartes géographiques & de figures en taille-douce.... Nouvelle edition corrigée & augmentée de l'histoire des pirates anglois depuis leur etablissement dans l'Isle de la Providence jusqu'à présent.
Trevoux, par la Compagnie (4 vols.):
Vol. 1: 1-394. Pls. 1 map.
–Allen 227. The engraved title page is dated 1743. Anatomie du Lamentin, 372-376, 1 fig. Allen says "This is an original account (at least written in the first person and evidently from observation) of the external characters and internal structure of the Manatee, its habits, capture, etc., with an (apparently) original figure. The figure, like Labat's, represents an old Manatee with a young one in her arms; the figure is more artistic than Labat's, and has the head of the young one directed forward instead of backward." The plate facing p. 373 also gives a figure of a manatee, together with three forms of harpoon used in capturing turtles and manatees. The material not included in earlier eds. (see Exquemelin, 1678) was, in Allen's view, probably added by the translator from one or more of the sources mentioned by him in his preface. However, according to Durand (1983: 133-135, 168-169), who gives a Spanish transl. of the text and reproduces the fig., this expanded account of the manatee dates mostly from the 1686 French ed. (pt. I, cap. xi), which Allen did not see.
A later French ed. (Lyon, Benoit & Joseph Duplain, 1774 [4 vols.]; Allen 329) is textually the same as the above, and likewise has the manatee material in vol. 1: 372-376.
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Exquemelin, Alexandre Olivier (''John Esquemeling'')
(detail)
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1678 |
De Americaensche Zee Roovers. Behelsende een pertinente en waerachtige Beschrijving van alle de voornaemste Roveryen, en onmenschlijcke wreedheden, die de Engelse en Franse Rovers, tegens de Spanjaerden in America, gepleeght hebben. Verdeelt in drie deelen: Het Eerste Deel verhandelt hoe de Franse op Hispanjola gekomen zijn, de aerdt van 't Landt, Inwoonders, en hun manier van leven aldaer. Het Tweede Deel, de opkomst van de Rovers, hun regel en leven onder malkander, nevens verscheyde Roveryen aen de Spanjaerden gepleeght. Het Derde 't verbranden van der Stadt Panama, door d'Engelsche en Franse Rovers gedaen, nevens het geen de Schrijver op sijn Reys voorgevallen is. Hier achter is bygevoeght, een korte verhandeling van de Macht en Rijkdommen die de Koninck van Spanje, Karel de Tweede, in America heeft, nevens des selfs Inkomsten en Regering aldaer. Als mede een kort begrijp van alle de voornaemste Plaetsen in het selve Gewest, onder Christen Potentaten behoorende.
Amsterdam, Jan ten Hoorn:
1-186. 4 portraits. 6 pls. 2 maps.
–Allen 114; title and the following comment from J. Sabin, Bibliotheca Americana, no. 23468: "First edition, of extreme rarity. Perhaps no book in any language was ever the parent of so many imitations, and the source of so many fictions, as this, the original of the buccaneers of America.... 'There is certainly no other book of that time which experienced a popularity similar to that of the "Buccaniers of America," which was, in the ten years following its publication, translated into most of the European languages; and there is a fact most curious in the literary history of all times, that the original was certainly unknown to all translators but one. They were all inclined to take the Spanish edition for the original; nay, even the learned editors of Mr. Grenville's catalogue seem doubtful whether the Dutch edition existed in print, or in MS. only.'"
Later eds.: German, Nürnberg, 1679; Dutch, Amsterdam, 1700 ("very much altered"); Spanish, 1681 ("translated from the [first] Dutch") and later eds.; French, Paris, 1686 (2 vols., "of extreme rarity", "from the English") and (by the same publishers) 1688; three English versions (one said to be an abridgement), transl. from the Spanish, appeared in 1684; etc. See also those cited below. In the first and subsequent Engl. eds., the author's name appears as "John Esquemeling." An 1893 ed. (London, Swan Sonnenschein & Co.) was republished (New York, Dover) in 1967. The U.S. Naval Institute (Annapolis, Md.) brought out a new ed. in 1993.
Material on manatees is found on the following pages in these eds.: Spanish, 1681: 294-295 (reprinted in Durand, 1983: 132-133); Spanish, 1682: 438-440; Dutch, 1700: Deel 1, 131-132; Engl., 1704: 160-162; Engl., 1771: vol. 1, 209-210; Engl., 1893 & 1967: 243-244 (the reference to "manitas" on p. 250 should perhaps also read "manatis"). None of these eds. includes a figure of the animal. The accounts of the manatee in the 1744 and 1774 French eds. (see below), and apparently also the 1686 French ed. (see Durand, 1983: 133), are entirely different from those in the Spanish, Dutch, and Engl. eds. just cited; besides being twice as long, and containing much new matter, there is an (apparently) original figure.
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