Mole in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
            mol ((1) tinshemeth, the King James Version "mole," the 
Revised Version (British and American) "chameleon"; 
Septuagint aspalax = spalax, "mole," Vulgate (Jerome's Latin 
Bible, 390-405 A.D.) talpa, "mole" (Lev 11:30); (2) choledh, 
English Versions of the Bible "weasel"; Septuagint gale, 
"weasel" or "pole-cat"; compare Arabic khuld, "mole-rat" 
(Lev 11:29); (3) chaphar-peroth, English Versions of the 
Bible "moles"; from chaphar, "to dig"; compare Arabic 
chafar, "to dig," and perah, "mole" or "rat," for pe'erah, 
from the root pa'ar, "to dig"; compare Arabic fa'rat, or 
farat, "rat," "mouse," from the root fa'ar, "to dig"; 
Septuagint tois mataiois, "vain, idle, or profane persons" 
(Isa 2:20)): (1) Tinshemeth is the last of 8 unclean 
"creeping things" in Lev 11:29,30. The word occurs also in 
Lev 11:18 and Dt 14:16, translated the King James Version 
"swan," the Revised Version (British and American) "horned 
owl," Septuagint porphurion, "coot" or "heron." See 
CHAMELEON. (2) Choledh is the first in the same list. The 
word occurs nowhere else, and is translated "weasel" in 
English Versions of the Bible, but comparison with the 
Arabic khuld has led to the suggestion that "mole-rat" would 
be a better translation. See WEASEL. (3) In Isa 2:20, "In 
that day men shall cast away their idols .... to the moles 
and to the bats," chaphar-peroth, variously written as one 
word or two, is translated "moles" in English Versions of 
the Bible, but has given rise to much conjecture.
The European "mole," Talpa europea, is extensively 
distributed in the temperate parts of Europe and Asia, but 
is absent from Syria and Israel, its place being taken by 
the mole-rat, Spalax typhlus. The true mole belongs to the 
Insectivora, and feeds on earth-worms and insect larvae, but 
in making its tunnels and nests, it incidentally injures 
gardens and lawns. The mole-rat belongs to the Rodentia, and 
has teeth of the same general type as those of a rat or 
squirrel, large, chisel-shaped incisors behind which is a 
large vacant space, no canines, and praemolars and molars 
with grinding surfaces. It is larger than the mole, but of 
the same color, and, like the mole, is blind. It makes 
tunnels much like those of the mole. It is herbivorous and 
has been observed to seize growing plants and draw them down 
into its hole. In one of its burrows a central chamber has 
been found filled with entire plants of the chummuc or 
chick-pea, and two side chambers containing pods plucked 
from the plants in the central chamber. While the mole digs 
with its powerful and peculiarly shaped front feet, the 
mole-rat digs with its nose, its feet being normal in shape.
See LIZARD.
Alfred Ely Day
                          
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