Het Leven der Dieren. Derde Deel, Hoofdstuk 1 tot 4, De Kruipende Dieren

audiobook

Het Leven der Dieren. Derde Deel, Hoofdstuk 1 tot 4, De Kruipende Dieren

by Alfred Edmund Brehm

NL·~12 hours·7 chapters

Chapters

7 total
1

Het Leven der Dieren: Kruipende Dieren

0:13
2

Algemeene beschouwingen over den bouw en de levenswijze der Kruipende Dieren.

34:28
3

EERSTE ORDE. - DE GESCHUBDE REPTILIËN (Squamata).

9:12:21
4

TWEEDE ORDE. - DE KROKODILLEN (Emydosauria).

1:21:12
5

DERDE ORDE. - DE SCHILDPADDEN (Chelonia).

1:26:02
6

VIERDE ORDE. - DE SNAVELHAGEDISSEN (Rhynchocephalia).

7:58
7

Colofon - Beschikbaarheid

2:49

Description

This volume opens a detailed exploration of the reptiles, the cold‑blooded vertebrates that have fascinated naturalists for centuries. It places today’s classification in its historical context, recalling Linnaeus’s original “Amphibia” label and Cuvier’s later distinction between reptiles and amphibians. The author guides listeners through the evolution of scientific thinking, showing how modern taxonomy emerged from early attempts to group these creatures with worms and quadrupeds.

From the flattened shells of turtles to the sinuous bodies of snakes, the book surveys a remarkable range of forms. It explains how their lungs, hearts, and scaly skins adapt to an external temperature, and how skeletal structures vary—from the modest thirty vertebrae of a tortoise to the hundreds found in a serpent. Rich, period‑accurate illustrations accompany the narration, highlighting the diversity of jaws, teeth, and even specialized tongues that enable each species to capture and process its food.

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Details

Language

nl

Duration

~12 hours (734K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg.

Release date

2014-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Alfred Edmund Brehm

Alfred Edmund Brehm

1829–1884

Best remembered for bringing the animal world vividly to general readers, this German zoologist and writer turned close observation into lively, accessible natural history. His books helped make zoology feel exciting and familiar far beyond scientific circles.

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