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During the 18th century, Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist and zoologist,
devised a classification scheme for plants and animals and placed the elephant
in a division which he called the Bruta, along with sea-cows, sloth, anteaters,
and pangolins. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, scientists found this
classification to be unsatisfactory. The German physiologist and anthropologist
Johan Blumenbach replaced it, first putting elephants with walruses and then
with rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses. Later pigs were added to the group and the
French naturalists Cuvier and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire renamed it Pachydermatous, or
"thick skins." This classification was also abandoned, but the elephant,
hippopotamus, and rhinoceros have been referred to, informally, as pachyderms
ever since. |