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 2
... four little horns . ( Case 12. ) North America and Europe have each a single species , viz . , the Prong - buck of the United States , and the Chamois which frequents the Alps . None of these hollow - horned animals shed their horns ...
... four little horns . ( Case 12. ) North America and Europe have each a single species , viz . , the Prong - buck of the United States , and the Chamois which frequents the Alps . None of these hollow - horned animals shed their horns ...
Page 3
... four corners of the floor are occupied by specimens of the Wild Cattle and Buffaloes of Europe , Africa and Asia ; by the Eland , the largest kind of Antelopes acclimatized in England and Ireland ; by the Elk , the most bulky species of ...
... four corners of the floor are occupied by specimens of the Wild Cattle and Buffaloes of Europe , Africa and Asia ; by the Eland , the largest kind of Antelopes acclimatized in England and Ireland ; by the Elk , the most bulky species of ...
Page 5
... Four - handed Beasts , exclusively natives of the warmer parts of the globe , and particularly organized for a life among trees . They are often called Quadrumana , from their four extremities having , in most cases , a thumb opposed to ...
... Four - handed Beasts , exclusively natives of the warmer parts of the globe , and particularly organized for a life among trees . They are often called Quadrumana , from their four extremities having , in most cases , a thumb opposed to ...
Page 23
... four- or five - sided case . The Sun - fishes ( Orthagoriscus ) , well known to all fishermen on the English and Irish coasts , who find them frequently floating asleep on the surface of the sea ; they attain to an enormous size ...
... four- or five - sided case . The Sun - fishes ( Orthagoriscus ) , well known to all fishermen on the English and Irish coasts , who find them frequently floating asleep on the surface of the sea ; they attain to an enormous size ...
Page 24
... four long threadlike limbs ; in summer , before the water is dried up , it buries itself in the mud and forms a case in which it lies torpid until the rainy season begins ; the Barramunda ( Ceratodus ) , a fish hitherto known from ...
... four long threadlike limbs ; in summer , before the water is dried up , it buries itself in the mud and forms a case in which it lies torpid until the rainy season begins ; the Barramunda ( Ceratodus ) , a fish hitherto known from ...
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Africa ancient animals Antiquities arranged Assyrian Athens Australia base belonging Birds body branches British bronze building called casts chiefly collection colour Compartment consisting contain covered crystallised crystals Cyrene discovered division East Egyptian examples exhibited feed feet female figures fish Fossil four fragments frieze fruit Gallery Greek half head important India inscriptions insects iron Islands Italy kinds king known leaves lions living lower male marble metals Middle minerals monuments Museum natives North noticed objects obtained occupied opposite originally ornaments oxide period Persian placed plants portion Presented principal probably relief remains remarkable representing rocks Roman round sculptures seen Shelf shells shelves side skeleton slabs smaller South America species specimens statue stems stone structure Table tail teeth temple tomb trees tribe upper variety various vases Wall West Western wood
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.