A Guide to the Exhibition Rooms of the Departments of Natural History and Antiquitiesorder of the Trustees, 1874 - 153 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 35
Page v
... Animals Molluscous Animals and Shells Radiated Animals • British Animals . Minerals Donations , Additions , & c . Guide - books PHOTOGRAPHS • 143 143 • 143 143 • 143 , 144 • 144 144 145 • 145 147 148 · 148 · 148 149 149 149 151 vi THE ...
... Animals Molluscous Animals and Shells Radiated Animals • British Animals . Minerals Donations , Additions , & c . Guide - books PHOTOGRAPHS • 143 143 • 143 143 • 143 , 144 • 144 144 145 • 145 147 148 · 148 · 148 149 149 149 151 vi THE ...
Page 1
... Animals , is contained in three Galleries ; and , for the convenience of exhibition , is arranged in two series . The BEASTS , BIRDS , REPTILES , and FISHES , are exhi- bited in the Wall Cases . The hard parts of the Molluscous ...
... Animals , is contained in three Galleries ; and , for the convenience of exhibition , is arranged in two series . The BEASTS , BIRDS , REPTILES , and FISHES , are exhi- bited in the Wall Cases . The hard parts of the Molluscous ...
Page 2
... animals shed their horns , except the Prong - buck , in which , periodically , a new pair of horns , covered with hairs , are formed below and within the old one . The different kinds of Wild Sheep ( Cases 9 to 11 ) from the moun- tains ...
... animals shed their horns , except the Prong - buck , in which , periodically , a new pair of horns , covered with hairs , are formed below and within the old one . The different kinds of Wild Sheep ( Cases 9 to 11 ) from the moun- tains ...
Page 3
... animals and sometimes even men while sleeping , fanning the victims with their wings . They are of small size , but the wounds which they inflict often continue to bleed after the Bats are satiated , and all wounds are dangerous in a ...
... animals and sometimes even men while sleeping , fanning the victims with their wings . They are of small size , but the wounds which they inflict often continue to bleed after the Bats are satiated , and all wounds are dangerous in a ...
Page 4
... animals of the whale - tribe , distinguished by a long spirally - twisted tusk , which projects from the snout in the line of the animal's body . This tusk is developed on one side of the snout only ( the left ) , very rarely on both ...
... animals of the whale - tribe , distinguished by a long spirally - twisted tusk , which projects from the snout in the line of the animal's body . This tusk is developed on one side of the snout only ( the left ) , very rarely on both ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
19th dynasty Africa Amenophis III amongst ancient animals antiquities Apollo Archaic arranged Assur-bani-pal Assur-izir-pal Assyrian Athens Australia Babylonia bas-reliefs belong Birds British Museum bronze bust Camirus casts Catalogue chariot chiefly coffin collection colossal colours Compartment contain crystallised crystals Cyrene decorated discovered dynasty edifice Egypt Egyptian engraved Etruscan exhibited female fish fossil fragments frieze fruit Full Face Gallery glass Greek head India inscribed inscriptions Insects Islands Karnak king Kouyunjik Krater Layard lions Lower Shelf Lycian male figure marble Middle Shelf minerals monarch monuments mummies Nimroud North objects occupied Oolitic ornaments orthorhombic oxide painted Parthenon period placed Plates portion principal probably Rameses II relief remains remarkable representing Roman sarcophagus Satyrs sculptures Sennacherib sepulchral shells shelves side silicate skeleton slabs South America species specimens statue stems stone Table tablets temple terracotta tomb torso trees Upper Shelf various vases Wall
Popular passages
Page 142 - Inscriptions in the Phoenician Character, discovered on the site of Carthage, during Researches by Nathan Davis, Esq., 1856-58. 1863, fol. £1 5*.
Page 24 - Hudson, from an original by Richardson. Oliver Cromwell, by Walker (bequeathed, 1784, by Sir Robert Rich, Bart., to whose great-grandfather, Nathaniel Rich, Esq., then serving as a Colonel of Horse in the Parliament Army, it was presented by Cromwell himself). Mary Davis, an inhabitant of Great Saughall in Cheshire, taken 1668, "cetatis 74...
Page 82 - Mausolos was of the class called by the Greeks heroon, and so greatly excelled all other sepulchral monuments in size, beauty of design, and richness of decoration, that it was reckoned one of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world, and the name Mausoleum came to be applied to all similar monuments.
Page 94 - Part of a series of sculptures which originally lined the two walls of a long narrow gallery leading, by an inclined plane, from Kouyunjik towards the Tigris. On the one side, descending the slope, were fourteen horses, led by grooms ; on the other, ascending into the palace, were servitors bearing food for a hanquet.
Page 136 - Pelion, and Thetis consenting to be the bride of Peleus, in the presence of Poseidon and Eros. On the bottom of the vase, which is detached, is a bust of Atys.
Page 16 - ... nests of wasps and bees ; some are constructed of clay, or of sand, while others are of paper, made of an admixture of the scrapings of wood and vegetable fibre. Specimens of the various insect fabricators of these structures are, in many instances, attached to the nests. In another case we find the remains of the square lintel of a door of one of the government offices in St. Helena, showing the destruction caused by a species of white ant. Then there are a series of the different stages of...
Page 106 - Rosetta stone ; it is a tablet of black basalt, having three inscriptions, two of them in the Egyptian language, but in two different characters (Hieroglyphic and Enchorial), the third in Greek. The inscriptions are to the same purport in each, being a decree of the priesthood at Memphis in honour of Ptolemy Epiphanes about the year BC 196.