- Head of Royal Bengal Tiger
- Bears are dangerous
- Grizzly Bear
- Target Area
- Polar Bear
- Polar Bear
- Tiger
- Two wolf pups
- Wolf pack
- Wolves running
- Dog hunting
- Mother bear and cub
- Beaver 2
- Beaver
- Bear hunting
- Bear
- Bear
- Bear Text frame
- Frolicking Horses
- Shepherdess with a sheep
- The bear stops and looks at us
- Polar bear and flip-up cap
- Lion, supporting the pillar of the Pulpit, St. Mark’s
- Tea time interrupted
- Two calves
- Two cows
- Two children offering hay to cow
- Cows eating
- Herd of cows
- Horse and cow
- Sacred Bull of Burma
- Cow and little girl
- Cow
- Cows and a horse
- Cows and a rabbit
- Cows and horse
- Cow
- Cow
- Cow
- Cow and girl
- Bull calf and the poppy
- Calf and caravan
- Calf
- Bull calf chasing an old lady
- Two cows
- The Wolf among the Sheep. (John x. 12)
There is no doubt that the Hebrew word Zeëb, which occurs in a few passages of the Old Testament, is rightly translated as Wolf, and signifies the same animal as is frequently mentioned in the New Testament. - The Wanderoo
There is one species of monkey, which is extremely likely to have been brought to Palestine, and used for the adornment of a luxurious monarch's palace. This is the Wanderoo, or Nil-Bhunder (Silenus veter). The Wanderoo, or Ouanderoo, as the name is sometimes spelled, is a very conspicuous animal, 7on account of the curious mane that covers its neck and head, and the peculiarly formed tail, which is rather long and tufted, like that of a baboon, and has caused it to be ranked among those animals by several writers, under the name of the Lion-tailed Baboon. - Oxen bearing the Yoke. (Lam. iii. 27)
Oxen - Bears descending from the Hills. (Prov. xxviii. 15)
The Hebrew word is Dôb, and it is a remarkable fact that the name of this animal in the Arabic language is almost identical with the Hebrew term, namely, Dubh. The peculiar species of Bear which inhabits Palestine is the Syrian Bear (Ursus Isabellinu s), and, though it has been variously described by different eye-witnesses, there is no doubt that the same species was seen by them all. - Zerolene Ad
- Embryos of three mammals
(At three corresponding stages of development). B = Bat (Rhinolophus) G = Gibbon (Hylobates) M = Man (Homo) - Skeletons of five anthropoid apes
These skeletons of the five living genera of anthropomorpha are reduced to a common size, in order to show better the relative proportions of the various parts. The human skeleton is 1/20 th natural size, the gorilla 1/18 th, the chimpanzee 1/7 th, the orang 1/7 th, the gibbon 1/9 th. Young specimens of the chimpanzee and orang have been selected, because they approach nearer to man than the adult. No one of the living anthropoid apes is nearest to man in all respects; this cannot be said of either of the African (gorilla and chimpanzee) or the Asiatic (orang and gibbon). This anatomic fact is explained phylogenetically on the ground that none of them are direct ancestors of man; they represent divergent branches of the stem, of which man is the crown. However, the small gibbon is nearest related to the hypothetical common ancestor of all the anthropomorpha to which we give the name of Prothylobates. - Ewe with baby lambs
- Head and Antlers of the Arctic Reindeer
- Tiger Cub
- Tiger head
Tiger head - Cow
- Calf
Calf laying down - Cow
Cows head - Two Wolves
Two Wolves Black and White Ware. 11 by 5½ inches. Osborn Ruin.