[The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon by Samuel White Baker]@TWC D-Link book
The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon

PREFACE
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At that time the energetic Tamby's or Moormen were possessed of guns, and had commenced a deadly warfare in the jungles, killing the wild animals as a matter of business, and making a livelihood by the sale of dried flesh, hides, and buffalo-horns.

This unremitting slaughter of the game during all seasons has been most disastrous, and at length necessitated the establishment of laws for its protection.
As the elephants have decreased in Ceylon, so in like manner their number must be reduced in Africa by the continual demand for ivory.
Since the 'Rifle and Hound' was written, I have had considerable experience with the African elephant.
This is a distinct species, as may be seen by a comparison with the Indian elephant in the Zoological Gardens of the Regent's Park.
In Africa, all elephants are provided with tusks; those of the females are small, averaging about twenty pounds the pair.

The bull's are sometimes enormous.

I have seen a pair of tusks that weighed 300 lbs., and I have met with single tusks of 160 lbs.

During this year (1874) a tusk was sold in London that weighed 188 lbs.


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