NATURAL HISTORY. 
48 
[n. zool. gal. 
of them bear on the top of each of the flat pieces a solid tubercle, 
which often falls off when the animal is dead. 
Tables 10—23. The Lizard-tailed Star-fish, 
So called because they often throw off the end of their rays when they 
are handled or put into fresh water, as lizards do when they are caught 
and cannot escape. 
Table 23. The Gorgon’s Head, 
The arms of which are repeated branches, so as to end in in¬ 
numerable flexible filaments, by which the animal attaches itself to 
marine bodies, and strains its food from the surrounding water. 
Table 24. The Comatula or Sea Wigs, 
Which are the recent representatives of encrinites, found so abundantly 
in certain rocks. 
THIRD ROOM. 
The Wall Cases round this Room contain, until another Room is 
prepared for them, the Glirine Mammalia, and part of the collection 
of Fish; and the Table Cases the different kinds of Corals. 
The Wall Cases. Mammalia. 
Case 24. On the upper shelves, the leaf-nosed bat from Brazils, 
the vampire, or bloodsucking bat, from the same country; the Rhino- 
lophes and Megadermes, from India and Africa. On the lower shelves 
are placed the horseshoe bats of the Old World. 
Case 25. The Nycteres of Africa, and the Petalias of Java; the 
Nyctophiles of Australia; the Barbastelles and long-eared bats of 
Europe; and the true bat and Scotophiles, which are scattered over 
different parts of the world, and the Lasiures of America. 
Case 26. The Moormops and Chelonicteres of the West Indies; 
the Taphozous of Africa and India; the bull-dog bats of Tropical 
America; and the Molossi and Nyctinomes. 
Cases 27—29. The different kinds of fruit-eating bats, which from 
their large size are often called flying foxes; they are only found in 
the warm parts of the Old World and the Australian islands. 
Cases 1—28. The Glirtne Mammalia. 
Case 6. The various kinds of Rats on the upper shelves, and 
the different species of Mice on the lower ones. 
Case 7. The Hapalotes of Australia, and other genera allied 
to the rats, on the upper shelves; the voles and jerboa rats, and the 
spinous-pouched rat from Tropical America on the lower shelves. 
Case 8. The Beaver, young and old, of Europe and South America ; 
the coypus rat of Tropical America, much used, like the beavers, to 
make hats; the Ondatra of North America on the upper shelf; the 
Hydromys of Australia, and the spiny rats of America, are on the 
lower ones. 
