148 
MAMMALIAN ANATOMY 
One simple kidney (rabbit, or guinea pig) for each student. 
These may be removed from specimens used for other purposes 
and preserved until needed. 
One beef (veal), and one pig or sheep (lamb) kidney for each 
small group of students. 
Several gravid females of various species of mammals, for 
demonstration of the uterus and embryo, with the relation of 
extraembryonal parts. 
Occasional specimens of Necturus, small salamanders, frogs, 
rats, guinea pigs, rabbits, and cats for demonstrations, or for 
material for histological study; also occasional small supplies of 
fresh material for histological study from the market or abattoir. 
VIII. BOOKS. 
Among the numerous excellent, well-known text and reference 
books of human and comparative anatomy, histology, physiology, 
and embryology, with which every laboratory is presumably 
equipped, the following books may be mentioned as of particular 
value in connection with the course here outlined: 
Bass and Johns, Laboratory Diagnosis. Rebman, New York. 
Beddard, Edkins, Hill, Macleod, and Pembrey, Practical 
Physiology. Arnold, London. 
Brubaker, A Textbook of Human Physiology. Blakiston, 
Philadelphia. 
Chauveau (English translation by Fleming), The Comparative 
Anatomy of the Domesticated Animals. Appleton, New York. 
Dahlgren and Kepner, Principles of Animal Histology. Mac¬ 
millan, New York. 
Davison, Elements of Mammalian Anatomy, with especial 
reference to the Cat. Blakiston, Philadelphia. 
Ellenberger and Giinther, Histologie der Haussaugertiere. 
/ 
Parey, Berlin. 
Fiske, An Elementary Study of the Brain, based on the dissec¬ 
tion of the brain of the Sheep. Macmillan, New York. 
Flower, Osteology of Mammalia, Macmillan, New York. 
Guyer, Animal Micrology. University Press, Chicago. 
Hardesty, Neurological Technic. University Press, Chicago. 
His, Anatomie Menschlicher Embryonen. 
