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Caption: Course Catalog - 1888-1889 This is a reduced-resolution page image for fast online browsing.
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Museums and Collections. The Museum of Zoology and Geology occupies a hall 61 by 79 feet, with a gallery on three sides, and is completely furnished with wall, table, and alcove cases. It already contains interesting and important collections, equaled at few, if any, of the colleges of the West. They have been specially selected and prepared to illustrate the courses of study in the school of natural history, and to present a synoptical view of the zoology of the State. Zoology.—The mounted mammals comprise an unusually large and instructive collection of the ruminants of our country, including male and female moose, elk, bison, deer, antelope, etc. ; and, also, several quadrumana, large carnivora and fur-bearing animals, numerous rodents, and good representative marsupials, cetaceans, edentates, and monotremes. Fifty species of this cla3S are represented by eighty specimens. The collection of mounted birds (about five hundred and fifty specimens of three hundred species) includes representatives of all the orders and families of North America, together with a number of characteristic tropical forms. Many of these specimens are excellent examples of artistic taxidermy. A series of several hundred unmounted skins is available for the practical study of species. The set of skeletons contains examples of all the orders of mammals and birds except Proboscidea, together with typical representatives of the principal groups of reptiles, amphibians, and fishes. The cold-blooded vertebrates are also illustrated by a verv useful collection of alcoholic specimens, plaster casts, anil mounted skins of the larger species, both terrestrial and marine. Embryology is illustrated by a set of Zeigler wax models, and several series of slides, sections, and other preparations. Conchology is illustrated by several thousand shells belonging to seventeen hundred species; together with alco-
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