SECOND FLOOR. 
45 
are incorporated with this series. The collection of antlers 
of the family of Deer is ranged along the top of the cases. 
The contents of this gallery and the next are described in 
considerable detail in a special guide, and therefore a very 
short notice here will suffice. 
The series commences on the left with the most highly organ- 
ised forms, viz., the apes and monkeys, of which the fine series 
of Gorillas, Chimpanzees and Orang-Outangs deserves special 
attention. Among the Carnivora which occupy the cases next in 
order will be noticed the series of Tigers (cases 13 and 14), includ- 
ing the small and long-haired Persian race, and the large short- 
haired form of the jungles of Bengal. Typical forms of the 
Bats (such as the Inlying Fox), of the small Insect-feeders and 
Gnawing Animals, and of the Edentata (Sloths, Anteaters and 
Armadilloes) follow. The remainder of the cases of this side of 
the gallery, of the pavilion, and nearly the whole of the right side 
are devoted to the Ungulata or Hoofed Animals ; very complete 
series of the wild Sheep, Goats and wild Cattle, of the Musk-ox, 
an inhabitant of the Arctic regions, of the large African Ante- 
lopes, and of the Elk and Eeindeer of both hemispheres are 
exhibited. Towards the end of the series, in cases 95-98, the 
Pouched Mammalia or Marsupialia (Kangaroos, Wombats, Tas- 
manian Wolf, Opossums, &c.), find their place ; they carry their 
young in a pouch, until able to shift for themselves. Finally 
the MoDotremes of Australia, the Duck-billed Platypus, and 
the Echidna, at the bottom of case 98, differ still more from the 
ordinary members of this class, inasmuch as they do not bring 
forth their young alive, but lay eggs. 
Second Floor. 
The Osteological Gallery is devoted to the skeletons and Skeletons and 
skulls of Mammalia, the arrangement of which corresponds, as ^^^^is 
far as practicable, with that of the stuffed specimens. The series 
commences (on the left hand on entering) with a male and female 
human skeleton, followed by a selection of skulls, showing the 
different modifications of the cranial and facial bones in the 
various races of Mankind. Among these is the skeleton of a full- 
