Takin (Budorcas taxicolor) {!--타킨(산양류)--> From: DEH
Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.animals
Subject: Re: Takins_george B Schaller
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 1999 18:08:39 GMT
The takin (Budorcas taxicolor), also called cattle chamois or gnu goat, is a goat-antelope found in the eastern Himalayas. The takin is the national animal of Bhutan.
DEH wrote:
> A while ago I believe on this newsgroup there was an inquiry about a
> Takin and what is was. We all learn something new that day especially me
> because I never knew what a Takin was and thanks to this group I now
> know. I've found a couple of pictures--4 to be exact in my old
> encyclopedia and I scanned them. Hope you enjoy them.
>
> They will be threaded from this message and oh ya I keep forgetting.
> They are to be use for personal use only.
>
> DEH
filename="dhTakin02_George B Schaller.JPG"
From: DEH
Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.animals
Subject: Re: Takins_george B Schaller
Date: Sun, 12 Dec 1999 21:05:14 GMT
I found this picture in an old encyclopedia that I am recycling and I will
type out the info that is written. This article was written by George B.
Schaller Here it goes
TAKINS
What creature has the bulky humped body of a brown bear, the sloping
hindquarters of a spotted hyena, the legs of a cow, the broad flat tail of a
goat, the knobby horns of a wildebeest, and the face of a moose with mumps?
The takin, of course. If, as has been said the camel resembles an animal
designed by a committee, then the takin looks like an animal assembled by the
same committee from spare parts.
In addition to its peculiar appearance, it comes in three basic color models.
In the western part of its range, from Bhutan eastward along the slopes of
the Himalaya Mountains to Burma and into China, the animal is dark brown.
farther east mainly along the edge of the Tibetan plateau in China's Sichuan
province, it is straw--colored with splotches of gray-black on its legs,
flanks, back and rump. and in the Qinling Mountains of China's Shanxi
province, it is golden.
These are not my words but the words of George B. Schaller. Hope this is the
info you were seeking.
DEH
rkvr wrote:
> Hello
>
> Could you put more informations about it? Like where it is found and to
> which family is attached. Frankly, it looks like it has more to do with
> a film of G. Lucas. ;-)
>
> TIA,
>
> RKVR
>
> > A while ago I believe on this newsgroup there was an inquiry about a
> > Takin and what is was. We all learn something new that day especially me
> > because I never knew what a Takin was and thanks to this group I now
> > know. I've found a couple of pictures--4 to be exact in my old
> > encyclopedia and I scanned them. Hope you enjoy them.
> >
> > They will be threaded from this message and oh ya I keep forgetting.
> > They are to be use for personal use only.
> >
> > DEH
> >