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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ORC-PAI |
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OWOSSO , a city of Shiawassee county, Michigan, U.S.A., on Shiawassee river, about 79 M. N.W. of Detroit
Lansing
1 Through the dialectic forms Fresaie and Presaie, the origin of the word is easily traced to the Latin praesagaa bird of bad omen; but it has also been confounded with Orfraie, a name of the Osprey (q.v.).point of the last. It is situated in the coal area of Michigan, and has various manufactures, including beet-sugar, for which Owosso is an important centre. The value of the city's factory products increased from $2,055,052 in 1900 to $3,109,232 in 1905, or 51.3%. The municipality owns and operates its water-works. Owosso was settled about 1834 and chartered as a city in 1859. OR, strictly speaking, the Saxon name for the males of domesticated cattle (Bos taurus), but in a zoological sense employed so as to include not only the extinct wild ox of Europe but likewise bovine animals of every description, that is to say true oxen, bison and buffaloes. The characteristics of the sub-family Bovinae, or typical section of the family Bovidae, are given in the article BOVIDAE (q.v.); for the systematic position of that family see PECORA. In the typical oxen, as represented by the existing domesticated breeds (see CATTLE) and the extinct aurochs (q.v.), the horns are cylindrical and placed on an elevated crest at the very vertex of the skull, which has the frontal region of great
interest
great
Hungary
On the other hand, the great tawny draught cattle of Spain seem to indicate mixture with a different stock, the horns having a double
A third type is apparently indicated by the ancient Egyptian cattle, which were not humped, and for which the name Bos aegyptiacus has been suggested. The cattle of Ankole, on the Uganda frontier, which have immense horns, conform,_to this type. A second group of the genus Bos is represented by the Indo-Malay cattle included in the sub-genus Bibos (see BANTIN, GAUR and GAYAL); they are characterized by the more or less marked flattening of the horns, the presence of a well-marked ridge
y' L Fia. z. Strix flammea. More distinct are the bisons, forming the sub-genus Bison, represented by the European and the American species (see Btsox), the forehead of the skull being much shorter and wider, and the horns not arising from a crest on the extreme vertex, w ti*le the number of ribs is different (14 pairs in bisons, only 13 in oxen), and the hair on the head and neck is long and shaggy. Very lose to this group, if indeed really separable, is the Tibetan yak (q.v.), forming by itself the sub-genus Poephagus.The most widely different from the true oxen are, however, the buffaloes (see BUFFALO
As regards the origin of the ox-tribe we are still in the dark. The structure of their molar teeth affiliates them to the antelopes of the Oryx and Hippotragus groups; but the early bovines lack horns in the female, whereas both sexes of these antelopes are horned. Remains of the wild ox or aurochs are abundant in the superficial deposits of Europe, Western Asia, and Northern Africa; those from the brick-earths of the Thames valley indicating animals of immense proportions. Side by side with these are found remains of a huge bison, generally regarded as specifically distinct from the living European animal and termed Bos (Bison) prisms. In the Pleistocene of India occurs a large ox (Bos namadicus), possibly showing some affinity with the Bibos group, and in the same formation are found remains of a buffalo
Texas
See R. Lydekker, Wild Oxen, Sheep and Goats (London, 1898). (R. L.*) End of Article: OWOSSO If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/ORC_PAI/OWOSSO.html"> OWOSSO </a> |
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