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KINGDOM Animalia

PHYLUM Vertebrata

CLASS Mammalatus

ORDER Harpyiaforme

FAMILY Harpyiadæ

GENUS Harpy

SPECIES Harpy erinyes

THE HARPY IS THE mother of all wonders. She was once beloved as a beautiful goddess

more recent portrayals depict her as a wretched beast. I suspect this confusion results from

observers viewing different species of the harpy family and ignorantly thinking them to be the

same. A likeness can readily be made with other similar species: the cherubim, the Boreads, and a

host of others. The species that is studied here is one of the ancient ones, quite unlike its larger and

more distasteful cousins.

The smaller harpies do not possess the additional limbs characterized in the likeness of human

arms; they are more fowl than human. They do maintain what is clearly a human head and neck; a

protrusion in the maxilla forms a hard beak-like ridge underneath the lips, both top and bottom. Only

the deep teeth remain: molars and wisdom teeth. The incisor and canine groups are replaced with the

beak. The surface of the face (capital and submalar tracks) is cloaked with a fine layering of

feathers, making it appear like an ordinary bird’s when viewed from a distance.

Like many other birds, the harpy has a sophisticated air circulatory system composed of sacs that

assist in cooling and allow uninterrupted flow of air through their lungs. This mechanism grants the

animal the ability to breathe continuously, even during exhalation. The sacs also contribute to

lowering body heat from the wing extremities and internal organs.

The harpy’s reproductive system is similar to that of a bird. She has one active ovary and lays

eggs. The size of the eggs would have been quite large, perhaps 17–20 centimeters in diameter, and

the time of gestation for the newborn would have been nearly five weeks. The young would exit the

shell with the help of an egg tooth (a small rigid spike on the forehead used for breaking the egg,

which goes away in its early life).

Possessing both the syrinx and the larynx allowed the dual functions of birdsong and the ability to

speak. Nevertheless, no evidence of a harpy language has yet been found. Its vascular system bears no

great riddles; there is the presence of a complex array of arterial and venous structures that are not

foreign to the practitioner of medicine and anatomy.

Additional notes regarding the physiology: lacking a gizzard but instead having a human stomach

and large pancreas, an intestinal tract shorter than a human’s and still of a greater length than that of a

bird’s, a four-chambered heart and particularly large kidneys would allow the harpy to have married

the physiological differences of fowl and human in the bosom. I presume its diet would be

carnivorous but certainly capable of digesting nearly anything, even if necrotic.

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