<h2 id="c21">THE INDIAN ELEPHANT. <br/><span class="small">(<i>Elephas indicus.</i>)</span></h2>
<p>The Indian Elephant (<i>Elephas indicus</i>)
inhabits the wooded parts of Southern
Asia from the Himalayas to the Indian
Ocean, and is found throughout
Burmah, Siam and the Malay Peninsula.
It differs from the African Elephant in
having much smaller ears, a concave instead
of convex forehead, smaller tusks,
and in the possession of a finger on the
end of the proboscis which, working
against a tubercle on the lower part of the
trunk, serves many of the purposes of
the human hand.</p>
<p>The proboscis, which is an extension
and enlargement of the nose and upper
lip, is composed of as many as forty
thousand interlacing muscles, and is
capable of the most delicate and varied
manipulation. At times it is used to strip
twigs and leaves from overhanging trees,
or again to uproot bamboo shoots or to
pluck grass and plants from the ground,
carrying all to the ever-grinding jaws behind.
By sucking it full of water the
Elephant may give himself a shower bath
or squirt water into his mouth or even
over people who offend him.</p>
<p>The presence of the trunk and tusks
has greatly modified the cranium of the
Elephant. Although a very intelligent
animal, his brain is relatively small in
proportion to his immense size. The
great, rounded humps which crown an
Elephant’s head are composed of bony
air cells, and their function is to provide
surface for the supporting muscles of the
trunk. So thick are these bony processes
that they will stop a rifle ball; and on the
other hand Elephants have been shot
through the skull without the least injury
to the brain.</p>
<p>The tusks, which are often lacking in
Asiatic Elephants, especially in the females,
are the incisors of the upper jaw,
grown straight out, and serve primarily
as weapons, although in domesticated
animals they are used to dig and lift and
to carry heavy burdens. Besides these
teeth the Elephant has four large molars,
two in each jaw, and he is able to chew
from four to eight hundred pounds of
green fodder a day with them. In a
wild state the Elephants wander about in
bands through the forests, following their
leader from feeding grounds to water,
and concern themselves largely with eating
and drinking and escaping from their
enemies. The young weigh about two
hundred pounds at birth, and attain to
over eight thousand pounds at thirty
years, when they have reached maturity.
At sixty an Elephant is counted in his
prime, and many live to be a hundred or
even a hundred and fifty years old. Eleven
feet is the extreme height of the
Asiatic Elephant. His specific gravity is
so great that in swimming rivers his
whole body disappears below the surface;
but this gives him no trouble, as he
breathes by thrusting the tip of his trunk
above the water and can surge up enough
to get one eye out when he wishes to see
where he is going.</p>
<p>The eyes are small and, probably on
account of living in the forest so much,
they are not very sharp-sighted. This
defect is counterbalanced by very acute
hearing and sense of smell. In browsing
the Elephant is probably guided altogether
by touch and his sense of smell;
and in a dark forest even very sharp eyes
are of little value either in selecting food
or detecting enemies, especially in an animal
with so short and heavy a neck.</p>
<p>The feet of an Elephant are great elastic
cushions with which he passes noiselessly
through the jungles. When he
chooses to stand still it is almost impossible
to distinguish his brown skin
from the foliage with which he is surrounded.
But an animal as large and
strong as the Elephant does not need to
conceal himself, except from man, his
great enemy, and when a troop of Elephants
wish to pass from one place to another
they often charge through the jungles
and forest, smashing down trees and
vines and leaving a broad trail behind
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
them. When disturbed or wounded by
hunters they rush furiously through the
thickets after their tormentors, and if
they fail to catch and crush them in the
first charge it has often happened that
Elephants have returned and smelled
them out as a dog scents a rabbit.</p>
<p>On account of the slow growth of
young Elephants it has been found more
satisfactory in India to catch wild Elephants
than to breed them in captivity
and wait fifteen years for the young to
reach maturity and usefulness. The plan
usually pursued is to build a huge corral
in a tract of forest where wild Elephants
roam, usually across an Elephant path.
Where the path enters the corral a heavy
gate is made and suspended over the way,
so that it can be instantly dropped and
fastened. Then, when a herd of wild
Elephants wanders near enough to the
trap on the gate side an army of native
beaters is hastily gathered and the troop
is surrounded on three sides. Each beater
is provided with a tom-tom or torch,
and in the confusion of shouting and
torch-waving the whole herd is driven
into the enclosure. At first they charge
the stockade wildly, and the natives rush
from side to side, resisting their attacks
with fire and uproar. When at last they
stand huddled together in the middle of
the enclosure tame Elephants are driven
in and allowed to mix freely with the
wild ones. Cautiously they single out an
Elephant, surround him and hold him in
place, while men called noosers slip quietly
down from the backs of the tame Elephants
and fasten strong, soft ropes
about his feet, after which he is marched
out of the corral between two Elephants
and tamed to work as they work, carrying
heavy loads, dragging and piling timber,
or perhaps marching in the splendid processions
of Eastern kings.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">Dane Coolidge.</span></span></p>
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