Page:The history of silk, cotton, linen, wool, and other fibrous substances 2.djvu/349

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  • bers of them in the North of Europe." "But as human population

extends," he observes, "beavers, like other animals, are dispersed, become solitary, fugitive, or conceal themselves in the ground: they cease to unite in bands, to engage in building or other undertakings."

"We have been unable to ascertain," says Cuvier[1], "after the most scrupulous comparisons, if the Castors or Beavers, which burrow along the Rhone, the Danube, and the Weser, are different in species from those of North America, or if they are prevented from building by the vicinity of man." The same distinguished author in his work on Fossil Bones says, "The greater part of our European rivers having formerly supported beavers, and some of them doing so still, viz. the Gardon and the Rhone in France, the Danube in Bavaria and Austria, and several small rivers in Westphalia and Saxony, we cannot be surprised to find their hones preserved in our mosses, or turbaries." He then mentions instances of the heads and teeth of beavers, in the valley of the Somme in Picardy, in the valley of Tonnis-stein near Andermach, and at Urdingen on the Rhine in Rhenish Prussia[2].

  1. Règne Animal, vol. iii. p. 65. of Griffith's Translation.
  2. Cuvier, Ossemens Fossiles, tome v. partie Ière, p. 55.; partie 2nde, p. 518. See also Annales du Museum d'Hist. Naturelle, tome xiv. p. 47.