Murray, Hubert "An Expedition to the Snow Mountains of New Guinea: Discussion," The Geographical Journal, Vol. 37, No. 5 (May 1911)
Prof. Edgeworth David: ... I have been told by one of the comrades of Sir William Macgregor, who has done so much to explore New Guinea, and whose work has been so gracefully acknowledged by Dr. Lorentz–that comrade was the Hon. Anthony Musgrave–that the spoor of some large herbivorous animal was observed some years ago in British New Guinea. These spoors were traced by him around the edge of a swamp at an altitude of about 9000 feet; they measured 4 inches in one direction and 4 1/2 in the other. The natives said they knew this animal, and called it the pig-devil, or devil-pig, but Mr. Musgrave was never able to get a sight of it. I should like to ask Dr. Lorentz if he could perhaps say whether any such trace of a large herbivorous animal had been noticed in Dutch New Guinea.
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Dr. Lorentz: ... No traces were met with of a large animal in the mountains.
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