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Title: |
Java, the pearl of the East |
Author(s): |
Higginson, S.J. |
Year published: |
1890 |
Publisher: |
Boston and New York, Houghton, Mifflin and Co |
Volume: |
- |
Pages: |
pp. i-viii, 9-204 |
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File: |
View PDF: 75,6 kb |
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Any PDF files provided by the RRC are for personal use only
and may not be reproduced. The files reflect the holdings of the RRC
library and only contain pages relevant to rhinoceros study, and may not be
complete. Users are obliged to follow all copyright restrictions.
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Location:
Subject:
Species:
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Asia - South East Asia - Indonesia - Java
Ecology - Habitat
Javan Rhino
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The rhinoceros roams through the forests and jungles on the highest mountains, often descending to the salt swamps and flats skirting the sea for salt water. |
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Location:
Subject:
Species:
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Asia - South East Asia - Indonesia - Java
Behaviour - Towards Man
Javan Rhino
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The rhinoceros is fierce, but flies from man. When wounded or a female with calf, the rhino is dangerous and hard to kill. |
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Location:
Subject:
Species:
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Asia - South East Asia - Indonesia - Java
Value - Related to Horn
Asian Rhino Species
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1890, Java, One horn sells for 40 to 150 florins |
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Location:
Subject:
Species:
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Asia - South East Asia - Indonesia - Java
Behaviour - Social Behaviour
Javan Rhino
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He is generally unaccompanied, is unsocial and fierce. Sometimes 7 or 8 assemble and visit a coffee or cinchona plantation where they commit serious depredations by eating the tender shoots and uprooting the younger trees. |
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Location:
Subject:
Species:
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Asia - South East Asia - Indonesia
Value - Related to Horn
Asian Rhino Species
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The carcass of a rhino is prized by the natives, especially by the Java Chinese, who even use the skin in preparations of food. The hide resembles that of a hippopotamus.
The horn is highly valued by natives, who belive it will extract the poison of applied to the bite of a serpent or scorpion.... |
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