<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN><small>CHAPTER I</small><br/><br/> FLYING REPTILES</h2>
<p>The history of life on the earth during the
epochs of geological time unfolds no more
wonderful discovery among types of animals which
have become extinct than the family of fossils known
as flying reptiles. Its coming into existence, its
structure, and passing away from the living world
are among the great mysteries of Nature.</p>
<p>The animals are astonishing in their plan of construction.
In aspect they are unlike birds and beasts
which, in this age, hover over land and sea. They
gather into themselves in the body of a single individual,
structures which, at the present day, are
among the most distinctive characters of certain
mammals, birds, and reptiles.</p>
<p>The name "flying reptile" expresses this anomaly.
Its invention is due to the genius of the great French
naturalist Cuvier, who was the first to realise that this
extinct animal, entombed in slabs of stone, is one of
the wonders of the world.</p>
<p>The word "reptile" has impressed the imagination
with unpleasant sound, even when the habits of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</SPAN></span>
animals it indicates are unknown. It is familiarly
associated with life which is reputed venomous, and
is creeping and cold. Its common type, the serpent,
in many parts of the world takes a yearly toll of
victims from man and beast, and has become the
representative of silent, active strength, dreaded craft,
and danger.</p>
<p>Science uses the word "reptile" in a more exact
way, to define the assemblage of cold-blooded animals
which in familiar description are separately named
serpents, lizards, turtles, hatteria, and crocodiles.</p>
<p>Turtles and the rest of them survive from great
geological antiquity. They present from age to age
diversity of aspect and habit, and in unexpected
differences of outward proportion of the body show
how the laws of life have preserved each animal type.
For the vital organs which constitute each animal
a reptile, and the distinctive bony structures with
which they are associated, remain unaffected, or but
little modified, by the animal's external change in
appearance.</p>
<p>The creeping reptile is commonly imagined as the
antithesis of the bird. For the bird overcomes the
forces that hold even man to the earth, and enjoys
exalted aerial conditions of life. Therefore the marvel
is shared equally by learned and unlearned, that the
power of flight should have been an endowment of
animals sprung from the breed of serpents, or crocodiles,
enabling them to move through the air as
though they too were of a heaven-born race. The
wonder would not be lessened if the animal were
a degraded representative of a nobler type, or if
it should be demonstrated that even beasts have
advanced in the battle of life. The winged reptile,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</SPAN></span>
when compared with a bird, is not less astounding
than the poetic conceptions in Milton's <i>Paradise
Lost</i> of degradation which overtakes life that once
was amongst the highest. And on the other hand,
from the point of view of the teaching of Darwin
in the theories of modern science, we are led to ask
whether a flying reptile may not be evidence of the
physical exaltation which raises animals in the scale
of organisation. The dominance upon the earth of
flying reptiles during the great middle period of
geological history will long engage the interest
of those who can realise the complexity of its
structure, or care to unravel the meaning of the
procession of animal forms in successive geological
ages which preceded the coming of man.</p>
<p>The outer vesture of an animal counts for little in
estimating the value of ties which bind orders of
animals together, which are included in the larger
classes of life. The kindred relationship which makes
the snake of the same class as the tortoise is determined
by the soft vital organs—brain, heart, lungs—which
are the essentials of an animal's existence and
control its way of life. The wonder which science
weaves into the meaning of the word "reptile," "bird,"
or "mammal," is partly in exhibiting minor changes
of character in those organs and other soft parts, but
far more in showing that while they endure unchanged,
the hard parts of the skeleton are modified
in many ways. For the bones of the reptile orders
stretch their affinities in one direction towards the
skeletons of salamanders and fishes; and extend
them also at the same time in other directions,
towards birds and mammals. This mystery we may
hope to partly unravel.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</SPAN></span></p>
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