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- Magdalenian Carved Ivory Dagger
- Grimaldi Man
- Hafting
- Long-headed Ofnet Man
- Machairodus, the Sabre-toothed Tiger
- Grazing Reindeer, engraved on a round bone
- Galley Hill Man
- Glaciers and Moraines
- Falling Spear
- Framework of kayak
- everydaylifeino00quen 0097 result
- everydaylifeino00quen 0127 result
- Eoanthropus Dawsoni, the Piltdown Man
- Eskimo Bladder Dart, Harpoon and Bird Dart
- Eskimo Game
- Eskimo Summer Tent
- Digging-stick
- Elephas primigenius, the Mammoth
- Deer crossing a stream, engraved on a round bone
- Chellean Boucher or Hand-axe
- Chellean Scraper
- Combe Capelle Man
- Cave Dwellers
- Cervus giganteus, the Irish Deer
- Chancelade Man
- Australian Spear-throwing
- Causes of the Ice Ages
- A Theory of Flint Flaking
- An Acheulean Boucher
- Aurignacian Drawing
- A Break-wind
- A Primitive Spindle
- A Bark Canoe
- A Bark Raft
- Type of Huts suggested by Magdalenian drawings
- Stone Age Man
- Mammoth
- Great Extinct Bul
Skull of the great extinct Bull, the Bos primigenius, or the Urus, or Aurochs. The measurement from one horn tip to the other taken round the curves, was in some cases eight feet. The Urus stood in rare instances as much as seven feet at the shoulder; a fair-sized elephant stands nine feet. - The Toxodon
The skeleton of a gigantic extinct rat-like animal - the Toxodon - from the Argentine, South America. Length from the snout to the tail, nine feet. - Prehistoric Men Attacking the Great Cave Bears
- Scene from the Prehistoric World - Early Ice Age
Early ice age, when mammoths roamed the earth and man was arising - The Saurian Age
- Carvings
Carvings in Ivory (1 and 3–7) and in Stone of Cavern Walls (2), made by the Hunters of the Middle Stone Age - Peripatus novæ zealandiæ
A, Peripatus novæ zealandiæ.—After Sedgwick, from Lang. B, Peripatus capensis, side view, enlarged about twice the natural size.—After Moseley, from Balfour. C, Anatomy of Peripatus capensis. The enteric canal behind the pharynx has been removed. g, brain; a, antenna; op, oral or slime papillæ; sd, slime gland; sr, slime reservoir, which at the same time acts as a duct to the gland; so4, so5, so6, so9, nephridia of the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 9th pairs of limbs; cd, elongated coxal gland of the last pair of feet; go, genital aperture; an, anus; ph, pharynx; n, longitudinal trunk of the nervous system.—After Balfour, from Lang. D, Portion of the body of Peripatus capensis opened to show the scattered tufts of tracheæ (tr); v, v, ventral nerve cords.—After Moseley. - Restoration of under side of a trilobite
Restoration of under side of a trilobite (Triarthrus becki), the trunk limbs bearing small triangular respiratory lobes or gills.—After Beecher. - Prehistoric carving of the Mammoth
Incised upon a piece of mammoth ivory, are outlines of the mammoth itself. The original, rather more than nine inches in length, is at Paris in the museum of the Jardin des plantes. - Group of reindeer drawn upon a piece of slate
Group of reindeer drawn upon a piece of slate - Prehistoric carving
In short, the prehistoric carvings are from the hands of men who were neither beginners nor blunderers in their art. The practised skill of a modern wood engraver would scarcely exceed in firmness and decision, nor in evident rapidity of execution, the outline of the animals in the example which is here engraved. - Palæolithic Men Attacking Cave Bear
- Skulls of Iguanodont and Trachodont Dinosaurs
Skulls of Iguanodont and Trachodont Dinosaurs - Skulls of Dinosaurs, illustrating the principal types
Skulls of Dinosaurs, illustrating the principal types - The Largest Known Dinosaur
The Largest Known Dinosaur. Sketch reconstruction of Brachiosaurus, from specimens in the Field Museum in Chicago, and the Natural History Museum in Berlin. - Hind Feet of Dinosaurs
Hind Feet of Dinosaurs, to show the three chief types (Theropoda, Orthopoda, Sauropoda) - Outline Restorations of Dinosaurs
Outline Restorations of Dinosaurs - Outline sketch restoration of Triceratops
Outline sketch restoration of Triceratops, from the mounted skeleton in the National Museum. - Skeleton of Tyrannosaurus in comparison with human skeleton
This animal probably reached the maximum of size and of development of teeth and claws of which its type of animal mechanism was capable. Its bulk precluded quickness and agility. It must have been designed to attack and prey upon the ponderous and slow moving Horned and Armored Dinosaurs with which its remains are found, and whose massive cuirass and weapons of defense are well matched with its teeth and claws. The momentum of its huge body involved a seemingly slow and lumbering action, an inertia of its movements, difficult to start and difficult to shift or to stop. - Skulls of Horned Dinosaurs
Skulls of Horned Dinosaurs. The lower row, Ceratops, Styracosaurus, Monoclonius, are from the Middle Cretacic (Belly River formation) of Alberta; Anchiceratops is from the Upper Cretacic (Edmonton formation) of Alberta; Triceratops and Torosaurus from the uppermost Cretacic (Lance formation) of Wyoming. - Pterodactyls
- Some Late Mesozoic Reptiles
- Some Mesozoic Reptiles
Some Mesozoic Reptiles