A Guide to the Exhibition Rooms of the Departments of Natural History and Antiquitiesorder of the Trustees, 1877 - 156 pages |
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Page 3
... feet . The largest pair of horns exhibited , measures 56 inches in a straight line from tip to tip . The various ... feet in length , and 13 feet in its greatest circumference B 2 FLOOR . ] SOUTHERN ZOOLOGICAL GALLERY .
... feet . The largest pair of horns exhibited , measures 56 inches in a straight line from tip to tip . The various ... feet in length , and 13 feet in its greatest circumference B 2 FLOOR . ] SOUTHERN ZOOLOGICAL GALLERY .
Page 4
... feet , it manages to find food even during the long winter of those regions ; the Yak of Thibet , the tail of which is used as a fly - flap by the Asiatics , and the curious Nepalese Budorcas . The continuation of the series of ...
... feet , it manages to find food even during the long winter of those regions ; the Yak of Thibet , the tail of which is used as a fly - flap by the Asiatics , and the curious Nepalese Budorcas . The continuation of the series of ...
Page 5
... feet , but is seldom developed in the female ; hence it is probable , that its use is the same as that of the antlers in the stag . The ivory of the tusk commands a high price in the market , and was still more valued in former times ...
... feet , but is seldom developed in the female ; hence it is probable , that its use is the same as that of the antlers in the stag . The ivory of the tusk commands a high price in the market , and was still more valued in former times ...
Page 6
... feet to the branches , back downwards , thus forming a kind of hammock in which they nurse their young . Cases 21-51 contain the Carnivorous Quadrupeds , distinguished by the sharpness and trenchant form of some of their molars , the ...
... feet to the branches , back downwards , thus forming a kind of hammock in which they nurse their young . Cases 21-51 contain the Carnivorous Quadrupeds , distinguished by the sharpness and trenchant form of some of their molars , the ...
Page 7
... feet and long bodies , inhabit rivers and lakes , and live on fish ; the skin of the American Sea Otter is greatly valued as a fur . Cases 45-50 . The Bears are named Plantigrade from walking on the soles of their feet , unlike the Dogs ...
... feet and long bodies , inhabit rivers and lakes , and live on fish ; the skin of the American Sea Otter is greatly valued as a fur . Cases 45-50 . The Bears are named Plantigrade from walking on the soles of their feet , unlike the Dogs ...
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Africa ancient animals Antiquities arranged Asia Assur-bani-pal Assyrian Athens Australia bas-reliefs belonging Birds Bony Pikes British Museum bronze bust called casts Chalybite chariot chiefly collection colossal colour Compartment contains specimens Corals crystallised crystals Cyrene Devonian Dicotyledonous discovered division edifice Egyptian Eningen exhibited extinct Farnese Palace feed feet female figures fish Fossil fragments frieze fruit Full Face Gallery gigantic Greek head Iguanodon India inscribed inscriptions insects iron Islands king Kouyunjik lions living lower Lycian male marble Mastodon metals minerals monuments natives nests Nimroud North occupied Oolitic ornaments orthorhombic oxide Parthenon placed plants portion probably quadrupeds relief remains remarkable representing reptile rhombohedral rocks Roman Saloon sculptures Sennacherib Shelf shells shelves side silicates skeleton slabs South America species statue stems stone sulphide Table tail teeth temple terracotta Tertiary tomb torso trees tribe tropical upper various vases Wall
Popular passages
Page 25 - 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 144 - Inscriptions in the Phoenician Character, discovered on the site of Carthage, during Researches by Nathan Davis, Esq., 1856-58. 1863, fol. £1 5*.
Page 95 - 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.
Page 96 - The next six (Nos. 51-56) formed originally part of a series illustrating the architectural works of that king, including, probably, the construction of the very edifice from which the slabs were obtained. On Nos. 51 and 52 is seen the conveyance of a colossal human-headed bull, lying sideways on a sledge, which is propelled, over wooden rollers, partly by ropes in front, partly by a lever behind. On one side...
Page 83 - 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 138 - 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.