Online Encyclopedia

WOMBAT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 782 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WOMBAT  , the

title of the typical representatives of the marsupial
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family Phascolomyidae (see MARSUPIALIA) . They have the dental formula: i.-, c. g, p. m. i;=24 . All the teeth are Tasmanian Wombat (Phascolomys ursinus) . of continuous growth, having persistent pulps . The incisors are large and chisel-like, much as in rodents . The
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body is broad and depressed, the neck short, the head large and flat, the eyes small and the tail rudimentary and bidden in the fur . The limbs are equal, stout and short . The feet have broad, naked, tuberculated soles; the forefeet with five distinct toes, each furnished with a long, strong and slightly curved nail, the first and fifth considerably shorter than the other three . The
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hind-feet have a very short nailless first toe; the second, third and
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fourth toes partially
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united by integument, of nearly equal length; the fifth distinct and rather shorter; these four are provided with long and curved nails . In the typical
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group of the genus Phascolomys we find the following characters:--Fur rough and coarse; ears short and rounded; muzzle naked; postorbital
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process of the frontal bone obsolete; ribs fifteen pairs . Vertebrae: C . 7, D .

15, L . 4, S . 4, Ca . 10-12 . The wombat of

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Tasmania and the islands of Bass's Straits (P. ursinus), and the closely similar but larger P. platyrhinus of the
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southern portion of the mainland of
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Australia, belong to this group . On the other hand, in the hairy-nosed wombat (P. latifrons) of Southern Australia, the fur is smooth and silky; the ears are large and more pointed; the muzzle is hairy; the frontal region of the
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skull is broader than in the other section, with well-marked postorbital processes; and there are thirteen ribs . Vertebrae: C . 7, D . 13, L . 6, S . 4, Ca . 15-16 .

In

general form and
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action wombats resemble small bears, having a somewhat similar shuffling manner of walking, but they are still shorter in the legs, and have a broader and flatter back . They live entirely on the ground, or in burrows or holes among rocks, and feed on grass, roots and other
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vegetable substances . They sleep during the day, but wander forth at
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night in search of food, and are shy and gentle, though they can bite strongly when provoked . The only noise the Tasmanian wombat makes is a low hissing, but the hairy-nosed wombat is said to emit a short
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quick grunt when annoyed . The prevailing colour of the last-named
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species, as well as P. ursinus of Tasmania, is brownish grey . The large wombat of the mainland is variable in colour, some individuals being pale yellowish brown, others dark grey and some black . The length of the head and body is about 3 ft . Fossil remains of wombats, some of larger
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size than any now existing, have been found in caves and
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Pleistocene deposits in Australia . (R .

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