| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Male shot Dec 1801 - S Africa. Length of ears, 0 feet 9 inch |
|
| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Female of 30 Dec 1801 - S Africa. Ears, 0 feet 10 inch |
|
| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Male shot Dec 1801 - S Africa. Length of tail, 2 feet |
|
| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Female of 30 Dec 1801 - S Africa. height, 5 feet 10 inch |
|
| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Female of 30 Dec 1801 - S Africa
Circumference of knee, 1 foot 10 inch
Circumference of body, 10 feet 0 inch |
|
| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Male shot Dec 1801 - S Africa. Length of head, 2 feet 4 inch |
|
| Borcherds, P.B. 1861 An auto-biographical memoir, being a plain narrative of occurrences from early life to advanced age, chiefly intended for his children and descendants, countrymen and friends. Cape Town, A.S. Robertson, pp. i-xxv, 1-500 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Africa - Southern Africa - South Africa
Morphology - Size
Black Rhino
|
| Female of 30 Dec 1801 - S Africa. First horn on the nose, 1 foot 8 inch, Second horn, 1 foot 6 inch |
|
| Kaup, J.J. 1859 Uber den vierten Finger des Aceratherium incisivum . Neues Jahrbuch fur Mineralogie, Geognosie, Geologie und Petrefaktenkunde: 163-167, 1 plate |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
Europe
Morphology - Skeleton
Fossil
|
| No details available yet |
|
| Kneeland, S. 1854 On the horn of the rhinoceros. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History 4: 175 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology - Horn
All Rhino Species
|
| If we examine the structure of the horn of the Rhinoceros, we find that it is essentially made p of a collection of hairs, that is, a mass of long corneous cylinders, nearly parallel to each other. If then, we define a hair as a corneous cylinder of variable length, we may regard nails, claws, h... |
|
| Gray, J.E. 1854 On a new species of rhinoceros. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1854 November 28: 250-251, fig. 1 |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology - Horn
Sumatran Rhino
|
| The late Mr. Cross, of Exeter Change and the Surrey Zoological Gardens, much prized a specimen of the horn of a Rhinoceros, which for many years formed part of his collection, and which he considered as indicating the existence of a hitherto unrecorded species of that genus.
At the distribution ... |
|
|