FOOTNOTES:

Species.Mammalia28Birds165Amphibia33Fishes90Annulides40Crustacea127Insects1400Arachnides28Cephalopodes20Gasteropodes162Acephali45Tunicati28Cirrhipedes21Echinodermates60Acalephi63Zoophytes90Fr. Eschscholtz.

Dorpat, 7th January, 1828.

THE END.

LONDON:PRINTED BY SAMUEL BENTLEY,Dorset Street, Fleet Street.

FOOTNOTES:[1]A kind of urn in use throughout all Russia, called a Samowar, or self-boiler. It generally stands in the middle of the tea-table, and is furnished with a large kettle for water, and a space filled with fire to keep it boiling.[2]The baidars, or canoes of the Aleutians, are generally twelve feet long and twenty inches deep, the same breadth in the middle, and pointed at each end. The smaller are suited only for one man, the larger for two or three. The skeleton and the keel are made of very thin deal planks, fastened together with the sinews of the whale, and covered with the skin of the sea-horse cleared of the hair. It has a kind of deck made of this skin, but leaving an aperture for each person the canoe is intended to carry. These sit in the bottom with their legs stretched out, and their bodies rising through the apertures, which are but just large enough to allow them to move and row conveniently. The space between their bodies and the deck being so well fitted with bladders, that no drop of water can enter.These baidars are moved very rapidly by oars, and the Aleutians put to sea with them in all weathers.[3]This applies only to the lower classes; the Yeris are nearly all as large as at Tahaiti.[4]This kind was known to Fabricius, forCopris Midasis a variety of the male, andGigasis the female. The former has erroneously been deemed a native of America.

[1]A kind of urn in use throughout all Russia, called a Samowar, or self-boiler. It generally stands in the middle of the tea-table, and is furnished with a large kettle for water, and a space filled with fire to keep it boiling.

[1]A kind of urn in use throughout all Russia, called a Samowar, or self-boiler. It generally stands in the middle of the tea-table, and is furnished with a large kettle for water, and a space filled with fire to keep it boiling.

[2]The baidars, or canoes of the Aleutians, are generally twelve feet long and twenty inches deep, the same breadth in the middle, and pointed at each end. The smaller are suited only for one man, the larger for two or three. The skeleton and the keel are made of very thin deal planks, fastened together with the sinews of the whale, and covered with the skin of the sea-horse cleared of the hair. It has a kind of deck made of this skin, but leaving an aperture for each person the canoe is intended to carry. These sit in the bottom with their legs stretched out, and their bodies rising through the apertures, which are but just large enough to allow them to move and row conveniently. The space between their bodies and the deck being so well fitted with bladders, that no drop of water can enter.These baidars are moved very rapidly by oars, and the Aleutians put to sea with them in all weathers.

[2]The baidars, or canoes of the Aleutians, are generally twelve feet long and twenty inches deep, the same breadth in the middle, and pointed at each end. The smaller are suited only for one man, the larger for two or three. The skeleton and the keel are made of very thin deal planks, fastened together with the sinews of the whale, and covered with the skin of the sea-horse cleared of the hair. It has a kind of deck made of this skin, but leaving an aperture for each person the canoe is intended to carry. These sit in the bottom with their legs stretched out, and their bodies rising through the apertures, which are but just large enough to allow them to move and row conveniently. The space between their bodies and the deck being so well fitted with bladders, that no drop of water can enter.

These baidars are moved very rapidly by oars, and the Aleutians put to sea with them in all weathers.

[3]This applies only to the lower classes; the Yeris are nearly all as large as at Tahaiti.

[3]This applies only to the lower classes; the Yeris are nearly all as large as at Tahaiti.

[4]This kind was known to Fabricius, forCopris Midasis a variety of the male, andGigasis the female. The former has erroneously been deemed a native of America.

[4]This kind was known to Fabricius, forCopris Midasis a variety of the male, andGigasis the female. The former has erroneously been deemed a native of America.


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