Land Animals of Gor

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"The animal was some twenty feet in length, some eleven hundred pounds in weight, a forest sleen, domesticated. It was double fanged and six-legged. It crouched down and inched forward. Its belly fur must have touched the tiles. It wore a leather sleen collar but there was no leash on the leash loop." Beasts of Gor, pg. 12, by John Norman.

Adder
"Another was slain when an adder forced into his mouth tore its way free through the side of his face" Marauders of Gor, pg. 26, by John Norman.

Anteater
"More than six varieties inhabit the rainforests of Schendi." Explorers of Gor, pg. 35, by John Norman.

"A great spined anteater, more than twenty feet in length, shuffled about the edges of the camp. We saw its long, thin tongue dart in and out of its mouth. The blond-haired barbarian crept closer to me. "It is harmless," I said, "unless you cross its path or disturb it." It lived on the white ants, or termites, of the vicinity, breaking apart their high, towering nests of toughened clay, some f them 35 feet in height, with its mighty claws, then darting its four-foot-long tongue, coated with adhesive saliva, among the nest's startled occupants, drawing thousands in a matter of moments into its narrow, tubelike mouth." Beasts of Gor, pg. 239, by John Norman.

Ant Marcher
"I watched the black, segmented bodies of some fifteen or twenty ants, some two hundred yards in advance of the column, approach the meat. Their antennae were lifted. They had seemed tense, excited. They were some two inches in length. Their bite, and that of their fellows, is vicious and extremely painful, but it is not poisonous." Explorers of Gor, pg. 401, by John Norman.

Armored Gatch
"On the floor itself are also found several varieties of animal life, in particular marsupials, such as the armored gatch, and rodents, such as slees and ground urts. Several varieties of tarsk, large and small, also inhabit this zone. More than six varieties of anteater are also found here, and more than twenty kinds of small, fleet, single-horned tabuk." Explorers of Gor, pg. 35, by John Norman.

Arthropod
"At that moment to my horror a large, perhaps eight feet long and a yard high, multilegged, segmented arthropod scuttled near, its eyes weaving on stalks. 'It's harmless,' said the Priest-King. The arthropod stopped and the eyes leaned toward us and then its pincers clicked twice." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 82, by John Norman.

Black squirrel
"In the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man." Explorers of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Bosk
A huge, shambling animal, with a thick, humped neck and long, shaggy hair. It has a wide head and tiny red eyes, a fearful temper, and two long, wicked, curved and pointed horns. The horns, from tip to tip may measure two spears in length. It is for good reason the bosk is called 'The Mother of the Wagon Peoples'. Nomads of Gor, pg. 4, by John Norman.

Cell spider
"I detected the odor of kort rinds, matted, drying, on the stones, where they had been scattered from my supper the evening before. Vints, insects, tiny, sand-colored, covered them: On the same rinds, taking and eating vints, were two small cell spiders." Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 115, by John Norman.

Centipedes
"Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys, gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines, lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes, scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on." Explorers of Gor, pg. 311, by John Norman.

Frevet
"The small animal skittered backward, with a sound of claws on the boards. Its eyes gleamed in the reflected light of the lamp. "Generally, too, they do not come this high," said the proprietor. "That is a frevet." The frevet is a small, quick, mammalian insectivore. "We have several in the house," he said. "They control the insects, the beetles and lice, and such." Mercenaries of Gor, pg. 276, by John Norman.

Giani
"In the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man." Explorers of Gor, pg. 31, by John Norman.

Glitch
"That is a roach," he said. "They are harmless, not like the gitches whose bites are rather painful. Some of them are big fellows, too. But there aren't many around. The frevets see to it. Achiates prides himself on a clean house." Mercenaries of Gor, pg. 277, by John Norman.

Golden beatle
"The Golden Beetle was not nearly as tall as a Priest-King, but it was probably considerably heavier. It was about the size of a rhinoceros and the first thing I noticed after the glowing eyes were two multiply hooked, tubular, hollow, pincerlike extensions that met at the tips perhaps a yard beyond its body. They seemed clearly some aberrant mutation of its jaws. Its antennae, unlike those of the priest kings, were very short. They curved and were tipped with a fluff of golden hair. Most strangely perhaps were several long, golden strands, almost a mane, which extended from the creature's head over its domed, golden back and fell almost to the floor behind it. The back itself seemed divided into two thick casings which might once, ages before, have been horny wings, but now the tissues had, at the points of touching together, fused in such a way as to form what was for all practical purposes a thick, immobile golden shell. The creature's head was even now withdrawn beneath the shell but its eyes were clearly visible and of course the extensions of its jaws." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 180, by John Norman.

Grasshopper, red
"A grasshopper, red, the size of a horned gim, a small, owllike bird, some four ounces in weight, common in the northern latitudes, had leaped near the fire, and disappeared into the brush." Explorers of Gor, pg. 293, by John Norman.

Guernon monkey
"I can go no further," said Ayari. This was the fourth portage of the day. "Let us rest," I said. Gently we lowered the canoe. While the others held it I, with rocks, braced it that it might not slip backwards down the grade. Trees surrounded us. Overhead bright jungle birds flew. We could hear the chattering of guernon monkeys about." Explorers of Gor, pg. 307, by John Norman.

Hinti
"'Hala' is Kaiila for the Gorean hinti, which are small active insects. They resemble fleas but are not parasitic." Blood Brothers of Gor, pg. 220, by John Norman.

Hith
"After dark, various serpents seek out the road for its warmth, its stones retaining the sun's heat longer than the surrounding countryside. One such serpent was the huge, many-banded Gorean python, the hith." Outlaw of Gor, pg. 26, by John Norman.

Hith, golden
"In another cage, somnolent and swollen, I saw a rare golden hith, a Gorean python whos body, even when unfed, it would be difficult for a full-grown man to encircle with his arms." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 191, by John Norman.

Hurt
"Cernus of Ar wore a coarse black robe, woven probably from the wool of the bounding, two-legged Hurt, a domesticated marsupail raised in large numbers in the environs of several of Gor's northern cities. The Hurt, raised on large, fenced ranches, herded by domesticated sleen and sheared by chained slaves, replaces its wool four times a year." Assassin of Gor, pg. 39, by John Norman.

Jit Monkey
"In the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man." Explorers of Gor, pg. 35, by John Norman.

Kaiila, caravan
"The caravan kaiila, incidentally, both those which are pack animals and those used as mounts for guards and warriors, are muchly belled. This helps to keep the animals together, makes it easier to move in darkness. kaiila of raiders, incidentally, are never belled." Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 22, by John Norman.

Kaiila, desert
"I conjecture, though I do not know, that the sand kaiila is a desert-adapted mutation of the subeauatorial stock; both animals are lofty, proud, silken creatures, long-necked and smooth-gaited; both are triply lidded, the third lid being a transparent membrance, of great utility in the blasts of the dry storms of the southern plains or the Tahari; both creatures are comparable in size, ranging from some twenty to twenty-two hands at the shoulder." Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 71, by John Norman.

Kaiila, south
It is a silken, carnivorous, lofty creature, graceful, long-necked, smooth-gaited. It is viviparous and undoubtedly mammalian, though there is no suckling of the young. The young are born vicious and by instinct, as soon as they can struggle to their feet, they hunt." Nomads of Gor, pg. 13, by John Norman.

Kaiila, war
"The war kaiila, rearing on its hind legs, its claws, however, sheathed, lunged at the other animal, its clawed back feet thrusting with an explosion of sand away from the ground; the long neck darted forward, the long, graceful head, its fanged jaws bound shut with leather, struck at the man astride the other beast. He thrust the jaws away with the buckler, and, rearing in the stirrups of his high saddle , slashed at me with the leather-sheathed, curved blade. The kaiila, both of them, with the swiftness, the agility of cats, spun, half crouching, squealing in frustration, and again lunged toward one another." Ttribesmen of Gor, pg. 59, by John Norman.

Kailiauk, barrens
It is a gigantic, dangerous beast, often standing from twenty to twenty-five hands at the shoulder and weighing as much as four thousand pounds. It is almost never hunted on foot except in deep snow, in which it is almost helpless. Savages of Gor, pg. 40, by John Norman.

Kailiauk, forest
Kailiauk are four-legged, wide-headed, lumbering stocky ruminants. Their herds are usually found in the savannahs and plains north and south of the rain forests, but some herds frequent the forests as well. Explorers of Gor, pg. 93, by John Norman.

Kailiuak, plains
"Even past me there thundered a lumbering herd of startled, short bunked kailiauk, a stocky, awkward ruminant of the plains, tawny, wild, heavy, their haunches marked in red and brown bars, their wide heads bristling with a trident of horns; they had not stood and formed their circle, she's and young within the circle of tridents; they, too, had fled; Nomads of Gor, pg. 138, by John Norman.

Kajira
"As a slave she would indeed be politically valueless. She could be exchanged, or bought and sold, for whatever masters might wish. The slave is not a person before Gorean law but a rightless animal." Slave Girl of Gor, pg. 151, by John Norman.

Kajirus
"For a male slave, or Kajirus, of the Wagon Peoples, and there are few, save for the work chains, to be clad Kajir means to wear the Kes, a short, sleeveless work tunic of black leather. Nomads of Gor, pg. 30, by John Norman.

Kur
"The beast stood there, blinking, bent over the body. Its fur was sable, mottled with white. Its ears, large, pointed and wide, were laid back flat against its head. It was perhaps seven feet tall and weighed four or five hundred pounds. Its snout was wide, leathery. There were two nostrils, slit-like. Its tongue was dark. It had two rows of fangs, four of which were particularly prominent, those in the first row of fangs, above and below, in the position of canines; of these, the upper two were particularly long, and curved. Its arms were longer and larger than its legs; it held the body it was devouring in clawed, paw-like hands, yet six-digited, extra-jointed, almost like tentacles. It hissed, and howled and, eyes blazing, fangs bared, threatened us. "This is a small Kur," said the Forkbeard." Marauders of Gor, pg. 109, by John Norman.

Larl
"..more dangerously, the larl, a tawny leopardlike beast indigenous to the Voltai and several of Gor's ranges, standing an incredible seven feet high at the shoulder and feared for its occasional hunger-driven visitations to the civilised plains below." Tarnsman of Gor, pg. 147, by John Norman.

Larl, black
"The black larl, which is predominantly nocturnal, is maned, both male and female." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 18, by John Norman.

Larl, jungle
"On the jungle floor, as well, are found jungle larls and jungle panthers, of diverse kinds, and many smaller catlike predators."Explorer of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Larl, red
"The red larl, which hunts whenever hungry, regardless of the hour, and is the more common variety, possesses no mane. Females of both varieties tend generally to be slightly smaller than the males, but are quite as aggressive and sometimes even more dangerous, particularly in the late fall and winter of the year when they are likely to be hunting for their cubs." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 18, by John Norman.

Larl, snow/white
"I was struck with wonder, though I was careful to keep beyond the range of their chains, for I had never seen white larls before. They were gigantic beasts, superb specimens, perhaps eight feet at the shoulder." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 22, by John Norman.

Leem
"...leem, a small arctic rodent, some five to ten ounces in weight, which hibernates during the winter." Beasts of Gor, pg. 74, by John Norman.

Lice
"I withdrew some of the lice, the size of marbles, which tend to infest wild tarns, and slapped them roughly into the mouth of the tarn, wiping them off on his tongue." Tarnsman of Gor, pg. 142, by John Norman.

Long-tailed porcupine
"Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys, gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines, lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes, scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on." Explorer of Gor, pg. 311, by John Norman.

Osts
"One to be feared even more perhaps was the tiny ost, a venemous, brilliantly orange reptile little more than a foot in length, whose bite spelled an excruciating death within seconds." Outlaw of Gor, pg. 26, by John Norman.

Ost, banded
"Banded ost is a variety of ost, a small customarily brillantly orange Gorean reptile. It is exceedingly poisonous. The banded ost is yellowish orange and banded with black rings Assassom of Gor, pg. 335, by John Norman.

Ost, Uschindi
"The ost is usually an orange snake, but these were Ushindi osts, which are red with black stripes. Anatomically, and with respect to toxin, I am told they are almost identical to the common ost." Beasts of Gor, pg. 239, by John Norman.

Panther, forest
"Panter girls are arrogent. They live by themselves in the Northern forests, by hunting, and slaving and outlawery. They have little respect for anyone, or anything, saving themselves, and, undeniably, the beasts they hunt, the tawny forest panthers, the swift, sinuous sleen." Hunters of Gor, pg. 28, by John Norman.

Panther, jungle
"On the jungle floor, as well, are found jungle larls and jungle panthers, of diverse kinds, and many smaller catlike predators." " Explorers of Gor, pg. 35, by John Norman.

Prairie simian
"In spite of the shortness of the legs the Kur can, when it wishes, by utilizing its upper appendages, in the manner of a prairie simian, like the baboon, move with great rapidity." Marauders of Gor, pg. 171, by John Norman.

Rennel
"I was told by Kamchak that once an army of a thousand wagons turned aside because a swarm of rennels, poisonous, crablike desert insects, did not defend its broken nest, crushed by the wheel of the lead wagon." Nomads of Gor, pg. 27, by John Norman.

Roach
"We watched a large, oblong, flat-bodied black object, about a half hort in length, with long feelers, hurry toward a crack at the base of the wall. "That is a roach," he said. "They are harmless, not like the gitches whose bites are rather painful." Mercenaries of Gor, pg. 276, by John Norman.

Rock spider
"They are called rock spiders because of their habit of holding their legs folded beneath them. This habit, and their size and coloration, usually brown and black, suggests a rock, and hence the name. It is a very nice piece of natural camouflage. A thing line runs from the web to the spider. When something strikes the web the tremor is transmitted by means of this line to the spider." Explorers of Gor, pg. 294, by John Norman.

Salamander
"Among the lelts, too, were, here and there, tiny salamanders, they, too, white and blind. Like the lelts, they were, for their size, long-bodied, were capable of long perious of dormancy and possessed a slow metabolism, useful in an environment in which food is not plentiful." Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 247, by John Norman.

Sand flies
"Following such rains great clouds of sand flies appear wakened from dormancy. These feast on kaiila and men. " Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 152, by John Norman.

Scorpion
"Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys, gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines, lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes, scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on." Explorers of Gor, pg. 311, by John Norman.

Sleen, forest
"The animal was some twenty feet in length, some eleven hundred pounds in weight, a forest sleen, domesticated. It was double fanged and six-legged. It crouched down and inched forward. Its belly fur must have touched the tiles. It wore a leather sleen collar but there was no leash on the leash loop." Beasts of Gor, pg. 12, by John Norman.

Sleen, gray
"The sleen," he said, "and especially the gray sleen, is Gor's finest tracker. It is a relentless, tenacious tracker. It can follow a scent that is weeks old, for a thousand pasangs. Dancer of Gor, pg. 161, by John Norman.

Sleen, hunting
"Commonly such a beast scouts prey, surreptitiously, and then, unless suspecting a trap, as with a tethered victim, perhaps a staked-out girl, used as a lure, .makes its swift, unexpected strike, its kill charge. Such a beast is a tireless and single-minded hunter. Domesticated, it is often used as a tracker. Once it sets out upon a scent it commonly pursues it unwaveringly." Slave Girl of Gor, pg. 40, by John Norman.

Sleen, prairie
"I saw a pair of prairie sleen, smaller than the forest sleen but quite as unpredictable and vicious, each about seven feet in length, furred, six-legged, mammalian, moving in their undulating gait with their viper's heads moving from side to side, continually testing the winds." Nomads of Gor, pg. 2, by John Norman.

Sleen, snow
"I thought a snow sleen, one of those long, vicious animals, would surely be puzzled to find itself attached to a sled where there was no snow. " Beasts of Gor, pg. 215, by John Norman.

Slees
"On the floor itself are also found several varieties of animal life, in particular marsupials, such as the armored gatch, and rodents, such as slees and ground urts. Several varieties of tarsk, large and small, also inhabit this zone. More than six varieties of anteater are also found here, and more than twenty kinds of small, fleet, single-horned tabuk." Explorer of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Slime worm
"We had not walked far when we passed a long, wormlike animal, eyeless, with a small red mouth, that inched its way along the corridor, hugging the angle between the wall and floor. 'What do you call it?' I asked. 'Oh,' said one of the slaves. 'It is a Slime Worm.' 'What does it do?' I asked. 'Long ago it functioned in the Nest,' said one of the slaves, 'as a sewerage device, but it has not served that purpose for 1000's of years. 'How does it live?' I asked. 'It scavenges on the kills of the Golden Beetle,' said the first slave. 'What does the Golden Beetle kill?' I asked. 'Priest-Kings,' said the second slave." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 105, by John Norman.

Sloths
"Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys, gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines, lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes, scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on." Explorer of Gor, pg. 311, by John Norman.

Snow lart
"a small 4-legged mammal, about 10 inches high, weighing between 8 and 5 pounds. The snow lart has two stomachs and hunts in summer, filling the second stomach in the fall to last the animal through winter. It's pelt is snowy white and thick. It is considered valuable, selling in Ar for half a silver tarsk. They are found in the Polar North." Beasts of Gor, pg. 74, by John Norman.

Tabuk
"The tabuk is the most common Gorean antelope, a small graceful animal, one-horned and yellow, that haunts the Ka-la-na thickets of the planet and occasionally vertures daintily into its meadows in search of berries and salt. It is also one of the favorite kills of a tarn." Outlaw of Gor, pg. 56, by John Norman.

Tabuk, northern
"They were northern tabuk, massive, tawny and swift, many of them ten hands at the shoulder, a quite different animal from the small, yellow-pelted, antelopelike quadruped of the south. On the other hand, they, too, were distinguished by the single horn of the tabuk. On these animals, however, that object, in swirl ing ivory, was often, at its base, some two and one-hall inches in diameter and better than a yard in length (12:9:152) Tarsiers
"In the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man. Explorers of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Tarsk
"The tarsk, a small one, no more than forty pounds, tasked, snorting, bits of leaf scattering behind it, charged. Such animals are best hunted from the back of kaiila with lances, in the open. They are cunning, persistent and swift. The giant tarsk, which can stand ten hands at the shoulder, is even hunted with lances from tarnb" Explorers of Gor, pg. 345, by John Norman.

Tarsk, giant
"The giant tarsk, which can stand ten hands at the shoulder, is even hunted with lances from tarnback." Explorers of Gor, pg. 346, by John Norman.

Thalarion, broad
"The high thalarions, unlike their draught brethren, the slow-moving, four-footed broad tharlarion, were carnivorous." Tarnsman of Gor, pg. 125, by John Norman.

Thalarion, high
"The high thalarions, unlike their draught brethren, the slow-moving, four-footed broad tharlarion, were carnivorous. However, their metabolism was slower than that of a tarn, whose mind never seemed far from food and, if it was available, could consume half its weight in a single day. Moreover, they needed far less water than tarns. To me, the most puzzling thing about the domesticated tharlarions, and the way in which they differed most obviously from wild tharlarions and the lizards of my native planet, was their stamina, their capacity for sustained movement. When moving slowly, its stride is best de- cribed as a proud, stalking movement, each great clawed foot striking the earth with a measured rhythm. When urged to speed, however, the high tharlarion bounds in great leaping movements that carry it twenty paces a time." Tarnnsman of Gor, pg. 125, by John Norman.

Thalarion, land
"Those approaching were drawn by land tharlarion, plodding on log roads along the edges of the river. The land tharlarion can swim barges across the river, but he is not as efficient as the vast river tharlarion." Captive of Gor, pg. 81, by John Norman.

Tharlarion, rock
"I looked at the tiny lamp on the shelf near the door. It smoked, and burned oil, probably from tiny rock tharlarions, abundant south of Tor in the spring. " Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 222, by John Norman.

Thalarion, wild
"To me, the most puzzling thing about the domesticated tharlarions, and the way in which they differed most obviously from wild tharlarions and the lizards of my native planet, was their stamina, their capacity for sustained movement." Tarnsman of Gor, pg. 83, by John Norman.

Toos
"I swung the transportation disk in a graceful arc to one side of the tunnel to avoid running into a crablike organ- ism covered with overlapping plating and then swung the disk back in another sweeping arc to avoid slicing into a stalking Priest-King who lifted his antennae quizzically as we shot past." Priest Kings of Gor, pg. 142, by John Norman.

Urt
"It was a giant urt, fat, sleek & white; it bared its three rows of needlelike white teeth at me and squealed in anger two horns, tusks like flat crescents curved from its jaw; another two horns, similar to the first, modifications of the bony tissue forming the uper ridge of the eye socket protruded over those gleaming eyes that seemed to feast themselves upon me." Outlaw of Gor, pg. 86, by John Norman.

Urt, four-toed leaf
"In the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man." Explorer of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Urt, gliding
"Here, too, may be found snakes and monkeys, gliding urts, leaf urts, squirrels, climbing, long-tailed porcupines, lizards, sloths, and the usual varieties of insects, ants, centipedes, scorpions, beetles and flies, and so on." Explorer of Gor, pg. 311, by John Norman.

Urts, ground
"On the floor itself are also found several varieties of animal life, in particular marsupials, such as the armored gatch, and rodents, such as slees and ground urts. Several varieties of tarsk, large and small, also inhabit this zone. More than six varieties of anteater are also found here, and more than twenty kinds of small, fleet, single-horned tabuk." Explorer of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Urt, tree
"In the level of the emergents there live primarily birds, in particular parrots, long-billed fleers, and needle-tailed lits. Monkeys and tree urts, and snakes and insects, however, can also be found in this highest level." Explorer of Gor, pg. 310, by John Norman.

Vart
"Perhaps most I dreaded those nights filled with the shrieks of the vart pack, a blind, batlike swarm of flying rodents, each the size of a small dog." Outlaw of Gor, pg. 26, by John Norman.

Vart, jungle
"In the lower branches of the "ground zone" may be found, also, small animals, such as tarsiers, nocturnal jit monkeys, black squirrels, four-toed leaf urts, jungle varts and the prowling, solitary giani, tiny, cat-sized panthers, not dangerous to man." Explorer of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

Verr
"The verr was a mountain goat indigenous to the Voltai. It was a wild, agile, ill-tempered beast, longhaired and spiral-horned. Among the Voltai crags it would be worth one's life to come within twenty yards of one." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 63, by John Norman.

Vints
"I detected the odor of kort rinds, matted, drying, on the stones, where they had been scattered from my supper the evening before. Vints, insects, tiny, sand-colored, covered them: On the same rinds, taking and eating vints, were two small cell spiders. " Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 115, by John Norman.

Vulo
"She was a peasant, barefoot, her garment little more than coarse sacking. She had been carrying a wicker basket containing vulos, domesticated pigeons raised for eggs and meat." Nomads of Gor, pg. 1, by John Norman.

Zeder
"There is, however, a sleenlike animal, though much smaller, about two feet in length and some eight to ten pounds in weight, the zeder, which requents the Ua and her tributaries. It knifes through the water by day and, at night, returns to its nest, built from sticks and mud in the branches of a tree overlooking the water." Explorers of Gor, pg. 312, by John Norman.

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