Summary[edit] Description: English: Peripatopsis capensis (in those days still called Peripatus) jaw claws. Copied from Cambridge Natural History 1922. Date: 19 July 2014, 17:52:00. Source: Cambridge Natural History 1922. Author: Sedgwick, Sinclair & Sharp.
Description: English: Peripatus. A widely distributed old-fashioned type of animal, somewhat like a permanent caterpillar. It has affinities both with worms and with insects. It has a velvety skin, minute diamond-like eyes, and short stump-like legs. A defenceless, weaponless animal, it comes out at night, and is said to capture small insects by squirting jets of slime from its mouth. Date: 1922. Source: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20417/20417-h/20417-h.htm. Author: J. Arthur Thomson (1861–1933).
Summary[edit] Description: English: Dissection of Peripatopsis capensis (in those days still called Peripatus) showing major internal organs. Copied from Cambridge Natural History 1922. Date: 19 July 2014, 17:48:46. Source: Cambridge Natural History 1922. Author: Sedgwick, Sinclair & Sharp.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Typhloperipatus, Onychophoran from northeastern India https://archive.org/stream/recordsofindianm08indi#page/n636/mode/1up. Date: 1914. Source: Kemp, Stanley (1914). "Onychophora. Zoological results of the Abor expedition, 1911-1912". Records of the Indian Museum 8: 471-492. Author: Stanley Kemp, D. Bagchi & A. Chowdary. Other versions: Derivative works of this file: Typhloperipatus diagram.png.
Summary[edit] Description: Velvet Worm (Onychophora) from the Amazon Rain Forest in Peru. Photograph taken by Thomas Stromberg, July 2002. Date: July 2002 ; 11 July 2002 (according to Exif data). Source: Own work. Author: Thomas Stromberg.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Peripatopsis capensis (in those days still called Peripatus) leg anatomy. Copied from Cambridge Natural History 1922. Date: 19 July 2014, 17:51:29. Source: Cambridge Natural History 1922. Author: Sedgwick, Sinclair & Sharp.