| Art - 1808 - 674 pages
...extremities, were still held firmly together by the ligature of die joints and by strips of skin and flesh. The head was covered with a dry skin. One of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of bristle». These parts could not avoid receiving some injury, during their removal to Petersburgh,... | |
| William Nicholson - Science - 1808 - 846 pages
...extremities, were still held firmly together by the ligaments of the joints, and by strips of skin and flesh. The head was covered with a dry skin. One of the ears,...preserved, was furnished with a tuft of bristles. These parts could not avoid receiving some injury during their removal to Petersburg, a distance of... | |
| Enos Bronson - Literature, Modern - 1810 - 456 pages
...nerves of the joints, and by strips of skin on the extcriour side of the carcase. The head VOL. ni. 2 с was covered with a dry skin; one of the ears, well...parts must, necessarily have suffered by a carriage of 1 1 ,000 wersts. The eyes, however, are preserved, and we can still distinguish the ball of the left... | |
| John Redman Coxe, Thomas Cooper - Industrial arts - 1812 - 516 pages
...shoulder-blade, the pelvis, and the remains of the three extremities, were still tightly attached by Unnerves of the joints, and by strips of skin on the exterior...parts must necessarily have suffered by a carriage of eleven thousand wersts. The eyes, however, are preserved, and we can still distinguish the ball of... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of New-York (New York, N.Y.) - Science - 1815 - 616 pages
...attached by the ligaments of the joints, and by strips of skin on the exterior side of the carcass. The head was covered with a dry skin ; one of the...preserved, was furnished with a tuft of bristles. The eyes were also preserved, and the ball of the left eye could be distinguished. The tip of the under... | |
| Science - 1847 - 490 pages
...the three remaining extremities, were still held together by the ligaments and by parts of the skin. The head was covered with a dry skin ; one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hair. The point of the lower lip had been gnawed ; and the upper one, with the proboscis, having been... | |
| 1820 - 450 pages
...and the other three extremities, were still held together by the ligaments, and by parts of the skin. The head was covered with a dry skin ; one of the...ears, well preserved^, was furnished with a tuft of hairs. * This is the drawing before mentioned, page 100, note. t This has been restored in plaster... | |
| Alexander Jamieson - Natural history - 1821 - 448 pages
...and the other three extremities, were still held together by the ligaments, and by parts of the skin. The head was covered with a dry skin ; one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hairs. All these parts have necessarily been injured in transporting them a distance of 7,330 miles;... | |
| 1822 - 666 pages
...fathers say, that a sirailarmonster had been seen formerly in the same Peninsula. When Mr. Adams saw it, one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hairs. The point of the lower lip had been gnawed, and the upper one having been destroyed, the teeth... | |
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