UIHistories Project: A History of the University of Illinois by Kalev Leetaru
N A V I G A T I O N D I G I T A L L I B R A R Y
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Repository: UIHistories Project: Course Catalog - 1885-1886 [PAGE 77]

Caption: Course Catalog - 1885-1886
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74

University of Illinois.

representatives of all orders of mammals except Proboscidea; exhibiting iiity species by eighty mounted specimens, with numerous skeletons. In birds it represents all the families of North America, having two hundred and forty species, represented by over four hundred specimens. Its Articulates number more thau three thousand specimens; its fishes, four hundred;'its radiates, three hundred, and its reptiles nearly one hundred. Sea, land, and fluviatile shells are represented by seventeen hundred species. The Museum also contains nearly one hundred specimens, representing the osteology of vertebrates; a large collection of the nests and eggs of birds; a collection of Indian implements: and a manikin, a dissected eye, and a trachea, in papier-mache. Geology.—The Geological Cabinet contains Prof. Ward's celebrated college series of casts of famous fossils, including the gigantic Megatherium nearly eighteen feet in length; the Elephas Ganesa with tusks ten-and-a-half feet long; the Collossochelys Atlas.—a gigantic tortoise with a shell eight feet by six; and the Plesiosanrus Cramptoni, twenty-two and a half feet. It also contains a series of tracks in the sandstone of the Connecticut river; a large collection of carboniferous ferns from the celebrated locality at Morris, 111.; several thousand specimens of fossils from the State Geological Survey, and from purchase in Europe; and a large number of specimens illustrating building materials, dikes, veins, metamorphism, drift bowlders, etc.; about four thousand specimens, not yet arranged, have been added during the past year. Mineralogy.—The Cabinet of Minerals consists of a valuable and extensive collection of the leads of the State, and accompanying minerals; a collection of models, comprising the most important forms and combinations in the various systems of crystallization; and a very complete collection of minerals, both American and foreign.

COUBSE I N SCHOOL OF XATCKAL HISTOKY. Required for the Degree of B. S. in School of Natural

IXB8T TEAB.

History.

1. Chemistry; Free-Hand Drawing; Trigonometry; French. 2. Chemistry; Free-Hand Drawing; Conic Sections; French. 3. Chemistry or Free-Hand Drawing; Economic Entomology; French.