887] Flornless Ruminants. 6 868 
‘ag 
ofthis coin show that it dates from this period, circ. B.c. 490-. 
480" The head of the so-called calf is distinctly polled (Fig. 13). 
oh the second compartment, relating to the Second Period, - 
Grea Bc. 480-400,—the period of -Transitional and Early Fine 
Art to the end of the Athenian supremacy,—in the first (geo- 
graphical) section, displaying the coins of Asia Minor, Pheenicia, 
Syria, etc., and Egypt, is No. 28 (Fig. 14), described in the cata- 
logue thus : 
Fic. 14. 
| rat, Mytilene R. Obvs. Two calves’ heads, face to face; 
een a ae 
re. It seems, therefore, to belong to the latter part 
The heads are distinctly polled (Fig. 14). 
In com i ; 
compartment seven, relating to the Seventh Period, circa 
» displaying coins of Northern and Central 
* the Peloponnesus, and the islands of the Ægean, is 
described in the catalogue: 
26. Roman 
Augustus, 
ust he mines these fac-simile coins in the British — 
oust be at once impressed, when cattle are represented, 
