- Skin Canoes of the Mandan Indians
- Arnee from Indian Painting
- Heads of Quadrupeds
1. Rhinoceros. 10. Fallow deer. 2. Seal. 11. Chamois. 3. Cat. 12. Antelope. 4. Sable. 13. Goat. 5. Bear. 14. Sheep. 6. Badger. 15. Bison. 7. Camel. 16. Hog. 8. Elk. 17. Outline of the head of the Great Whale. 9. Stag, or red deer. - Heads of Mammiferous Animals
18. Manis. 25. Beaver. 19. Armadillo. 26. Hare. 20. Elephant. 27. Musk. 21. Spaniel. 28. Rein-deer. 22. Greyhound. 29. Ox. 23. Mastiff. 30. Horse. 24. Fox. - Gaur
- Arnee
- Brahmin Bull
- Zebu
- The human brain
If the reader has not fully mastered the intricacy of the brain structure, he will find his difficulties removed by studying two more skilful dissections. The following engraving presents the appearances when we cut through the middle of the brain horizontally and reveal the bottom of the ventricles, in which we see the great ganglion, or optic thalamus and corpus striatum, and the three localities at which the hemispheres are connected by fibres on the median line, called anterior, middle, and posterior commissures. These commissures are of no importance in our study; they assist the corpus callosum in maintaining a close connection between the right and left hemispheres. - The Human brain
The engraving represents not an actual dissection, but the plan of the fibres as understood by the anatomist. The intricacy of the cerebral structure is so great that it would require a vast number of skilful dissections and engravings to make a correct portrait. Fortunately, this is not necessary for the general reader, who requires only to understand the position of the organs in the head, and the direction of their growth, which is in all cases directly outward from the central region or ventricles, so as to cause a prominence of the cranium—not a “bump,” but a general fulness of contour. Bumps belong to the growth of bone—not that of the brain. - Free Martin
- Horns of Young Arnee
- Skull of Short-nosed Ox of the Pampas
- Pegasse
- Stomach of Manilla Buffalo
- Chillingham Bull
- Head of Musk Ox
- Kyloe, or Highland Ox
- Zamouse, or Bush Cow
- Zebu.—(Var. δ.)
- Young Cape Buffalo
- Mus decumanus
- Indian Hunting Bison
- Outlines of Manilla Buffalo
- Head of Mus decumanus
- Cape Buffalo
- Italian Buffalo
- Angora Buck
Early Importation - Angora Goat
The next importation of practical importance, although it was claimed that nine head were received about 1861, by one Stiles, was made by Israel S. Diehl, a former U.S. consul and C. S. Brown, of Newark, New Jersey, about 1868. Mr. Diehl was commissioned by the United States government to investigate the industry in Turkey, and he secured a lot of Angoras, variously estimated at from one hundred to one hundred and sixty head. Mr. C. P. Bailey furnished the money for the transportation of these goats to California. He says, "Some were fairly good and some were only ordinary. They were of medium size, and with the exception of the neck, tolerably well covered with fleece, which however had a scattering of kemp throughout. They were conceded to be the best brought to California up to that time." Some of these bucks had been tampered with and were sterile. - Pulo Condore Buffalo
- The field-mouse (Apodemus sylvaticus)
- Head of Cape Buffalo
- Head of Mus rattus
- Zebus (var. γ) and Car
- Short-horned Bull
- Head of Manilla Buffalo—female
- Mus rattus
- Head of young male Bison
- Head of Gaur
- Syrian Ox
- Head of Domestic Gayal
- Gayal, from Asiatic Transactions
- Alderney Cow
- Skull of Domestic Ox
- Aurochs, or European Bison
- Jungly Gau
- The Bison
- Young female Bison
- Herefordshire Cow
- Wounded Bison
- My Dog Frisky
- Banteng
- Gyall (Bos Frontalis)
- Yak, from Asiatic Transactions
- Manilla Buffalo
- Feeding the cow
- Head of Asseel Gayal
- Head of Gyall
- Bison Calf, about three weeks old
- Yak, from Oriental Annual