Online Encyclopedia

SHEARWATER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 815 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SHEARWATER  , the name of a

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bird, first published in F . Willughby's Ornithologia (p . 252), as made known to him by
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Sir T.,Browne, who sent a picture of it with an account that is given more fully in J . Ray's
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translation of that
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work (p . 334), stating that it is " a Sea-fowl, which fishermen observe to resort to their vessels in some numbers, swimming 1 swiftly to and fro, backward, forward and about them, and doth as it were radere aquam, shear the
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water, from whence perhaps it had its name." 2 Ray's mistaking young birds of this kind obtained in the Isle of Man for the young of the coulterneb, now usually called "
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Puffin," has already been mentioned under that heading; and not only has his name Puffinus anglorum hence become attached to this
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species, commonly described in
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English books as the
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Manx puffin or Manx shearwater; but the barbarous word Puffinus has come into use for all birds thereto allied, forming a well-marked
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group of the
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family Procellariidae (see
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PETREL), distinguished chiefly by their elongated
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bill, and numbering some twenty species, if not more—the discrimination of which has taxed the ingenuity of ornithologists . Shear-waters are found in nearly all the seas and oceans of the
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world,' generally within no
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great distance from the
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land, though rarely resorting thereto, except in the breeding season . But they also penetrate to waters which may be termed inland, as the Bosporus, where they are known to the French-speaking
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part of the population as dmes damnees, it being held by the
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Turks that they are animated by condemned human souls . Four species of Puffinus are recorded as visiting the coasts of the
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United
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Kingdom; but the Manx shearwater is the only one that at all commonly breeds in the
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British Islands . It is a very plain-looking bird, black above and white beneath, and about the
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size of a
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pigeon . Some other species are larger, and almost whole coloured, being of a sooty or dark cinereous
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hue both above and below . All over the world shearwaters seem to have precisely the same habits, laying their single purely white egg in a hole under ground . The young are thickly clothed with long down, and are extremely fat .

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condition they are thought to be good eating, and enormous numbers are caught for this purpose in some localities, especially of a species, the P. brevicaudus of Gould, which frequents the islands off the coast of
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Australia, where it is commonly known as the " Mutton-bird." (A .

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