34 
natural history. (Animals.) [n. 200L. GAL. 
British Birds. Wall Cases 10—30. 
Cases 10—13. The Raptorial Birds. (Cases 10—12.) The 
-eagles, the hawks, the owls. 
Cases 14—16. The Perching Birds , the goatsuckers, swallows, 
rollers, kingfisher, bee-eater, warblers, wagtails, thrushes, flycatchers, 
chatterers, butcher-birds. 
Cases 17, 18. The Gallinaceous Birds , pigeons, peacock, phea¬ 
sant, fowls, turkey, guinea-fowls, partridge, quails. 
Cases 19—22. The Wading Birds , as the courser, heron, night- 
heron, storks, sandpipers, snipes, woodcock. 
Cases 23—30. The Web-Footed Birds. 
Case 24. The ducks. 
Case 25. The swans. Case 26. Sea-ducks. 
Case 27. Merganser, grebes, divers. 
Case 28. Auks, guillemots, petrels, skua gulls. 
Case 28. Gulls. Case 30. Terns, gannets, cormorants. 
British Reptiles. Wall Case 31. 
Case 31. Reptiles and amphibia in the upper division, as lizards, 
snakes, toads, frogs, efts. 
British Fish. Wall Cases 31—43. 
Case 31. The gurnards and perches. 
Case 32. The weavers, bullheads, and breams. 
Case 33. The magils, john dory, and wolf-fish. 
Case 34. The angler, rockfish, or labri. 
Case 35. The carps, barbels. 
Case 36. The pikes and salmons. 
Case 37. The salmons and trout. 
Case 38. The cod, haddock, ling. 
Case 39. The turbot, plaice, flounders, soles, and the lump-fish, 
and pipe-fish. 
Case 40. The sturgeon, and the sharks. 
Cases 41—43. The rays, thornbacks, and lampreys. 
Birds’ Eggs. Table Case 1. 
Table 1. The Eggs are arranged in the same order as the Birds in 
the Wall Cases. 
British Annulose Animals. Table Cases 2—4. 
Table 2. The Insects with Jaws, as the beetles ( Coleoptera ), 
earwigs, cockroaches, crickets and grasshoppers ( Orthoptera), dragon¬ 
flies, caddis-flies, &c. ( Neuroptera ), ichneumons, ants, bees, wasps 
( Hymenoptera ). 
Table 3. The Insect with a haustellum, or proboscis, as the Ho- 
moptera, bugs ( Herniptera ), the butterflies, hawkmoths and moths 
(Lepidoptera ), the flies with two wings ( Diptera ), as gnats, craneflies, 
&c. 
Table 4. A selection of British spiders, centipedes, and Crustacea, 
such as crabs, lobsters, shrimps, and woodlice. 
