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appearance of an animal of this Order will naturally recal to the mind the mailed Armadillos among the Edentate Mammalia, as the Sauria will remind us of the Pangolins. The Tortoises are readily distinguished from other Reptiles by their body being inclosed in a double buckler, which admits only of a partial protrusion of the head, tail, and limbs. The bones of the skeleton, though essentially the same as those found in the preceding classes, are strangely modified. If we remove the convex shield, called the carapace, that covers the upper part of a Tortoise, and turn it up, we shall find on the inner surface the vertebral column imbedded into an immovable piece, and the ribs flattened and widened so as to touch each other at their edges. The vertebrae of the neck and of the tail alone are free. The lower plate or plastron, in like manner, is composed of pieces representing the breastbone or sternum, united by sutures.

The external surface of these shields is covered with a series of plates of a horny (or sometimes leathery) texture, of regular but varied forms, united at their edges, but sometimes overlapping posteriorly. The shoulder-blade and all the muscles of the arm and neck, instead of being attached to the exterior of the ribs and spine,