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Prehistoric animals

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
Scope Note: Created For = TD

Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:

Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Edwin Ray Lankester, 12 February 1907

 Item
Identifier: Coll-14/9/13/2
Scope and Contents

Lankester writes that he would like to have the Sarawak horse's skull for the British Museum, as well as some Roman horses. He asks Ewart if he would give the Swiney lectures on 'the history and palaeontology of horses' or 'horses of the past and present', as Scharff has postponed giving them until the following year. Lankester states that he believes the preorbital depression in the modern horse's skull once held a gland.

Dates: 12 February 1907

Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Richard Francis Scharff, 12 March 1909

 Item
Identifier: Coll-14/9/15/6
Scope and Contents

Scharff provides notes relating to the measurements of the metacarpals and metatarsels from the centre of the provincial articular surface to the dorsal ridge of various prehistoric horses that have been uncovered in excavations.

Dates: 12 March 1909

Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Richard Francis Scharff, 16 March 1909

 Item
Identifier: Coll-14/9/15/8
Scope and Contents

Scharff thanks Ewart for giving him his views on the metacarpals and provides some more measurements of various prehistoric horses that that have been uncovered in excavations.

Dates: 16 March 1909

Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Richard Francis Scharff, 02 December 1910

 Item
Identifier: Coll-14/9/16/44
Scope and Contents

Scharff writes that a great deal has been written about the domestication and place of origin of Bos taurus primigenius, but that Professor Keller has shown conclusively that its domestication took place in Greece around 1500BC and that it never existed in Northern Asia or North America. Scharff remarks that the Bison bonasus is undoubtedly a near relation to the American bison.

Dates: 02 December 1910