The rapacity of all these classes is proverbial, and an instance may be given of the conduct of the pandas or temple-priests of Benares.
"The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India Volume II"
R. V. Russell
The last molar is peculiar in shape, longer than broad, and is tuberculous, as in the bears, but it differs in this respect from the pandas, in which the last molar is almost a repetition of the preceding one, and its longitudinal diameter is less than its transverse.
"Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon"
Robert A. Sterndale
The first true molar is longer than broad, and wider in front; the crown, with five conical tubercles in two groups, separated by a transverse groove; the next molar is thicker and stouter than the preceding one, and the last is smaller, and both much resemble those of the bears, and differ notably from the pandas.
"Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon"
Robert A. Sterndale