[Darwinism (1889) by Alfred Russel Wallace]@TWC D-Link bookDarwinism (1889) CHAPTER VI 15/40
But Sir James Hector states, that the wapiti, in North America, throws back its head, thus placing the horns along the sides of the back, and is then enabled to rush through the thickest forest with great rapidity.
The brow-antlers protect the face and eyes, while the widely spreading horns prevent injury to the neck or flanks.
Thus an organ which was certainly developed as a sexual weapon, has been so guided and modified during its increase in size as to be of use in other ways.
A similar use of the antlers of deer has been observed in India.[44] The various classes of facts now referred to serve to show us that, in the case of the two higher groups--mammalia and birds--almost all the characters by which species are distinguished from each other are, or may be, adaptive.
It is these two classes of animals which have been most studied and whose life-histories are supposed to be most fully known, yet even here the assertion of inutility, by an eminent naturalist, in the case of two important organs, has been sufficiently met by minute details either in the anatomy or in the habits of the groups referred to.
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