Book contents
- Frontmatter
- DIRECTIONS FOR PLACING THE PLATES
- THOMAS HOBSON
- THE WOODWARDIAN MUSEUM
- ANECDOTES. II
- PORTRAITURE OF WILLIAM HARVEY
- THE HALL OF TRINITY COLLEGE
- JESUS COLLEGE
- OLD HOUSES
- CROMWELLI
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. IV
- EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES
- A VIEW FROM THE GARDENS OF CHRIST'S COLLEGE
- SAMUEL PEPYS
- KING'S COLLEGE
- THE PUBLIC LIBRARY
- ST. MARY'S CHURCH
- THE EXAMINATIONS
- THE CAMBRIDGE PRESS
- CRANMER
- ST. PETER'S COLLEGE
- MEMOIR OF A PHYSICIAN
- MILTON'S MULBERRY-TREE, AND BUST, IN CHRIST'S COLLEGE
- REMARKS ON THE INFERIOR STYLES OF DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE
- THE POWTES COMPLAYNTE
- THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOLAR AND THE GHOST OF A SCRAG OF MUTTON
- INDEX
- ERRATA
- Plate section
THE WOODWARDIAN MUSEUM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- DIRECTIONS FOR PLACING THE PLATES
- THOMAS HOBSON
- THE WOODWARDIAN MUSEUM
- ANECDOTES. II
- PORTRAITURE OF WILLIAM HARVEY
- THE HALL OF TRINITY COLLEGE
- JESUS COLLEGE
- OLD HOUSES
- CROMWELLI
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. IV
- EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES
- A VIEW FROM THE GARDENS OF CHRIST'S COLLEGE
- SAMUEL PEPYS
- KING'S COLLEGE
- THE PUBLIC LIBRARY
- ST. MARY'S CHURCH
- THE EXAMINATIONS
- THE CAMBRIDGE PRESS
- CRANMER
- ST. PETER'S COLLEGE
- MEMOIR OF A PHYSICIAN
- MILTON'S MULBERRY-TREE, AND BUST, IN CHRIST'S COLLEGE
- REMARKS ON THE INFERIOR STYLES OF DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE
- THE POWTES COMPLAYNTE
- THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOLAR AND THE GHOST OF A SCRAG OF MUTTON
- INDEX
- ERRATA
- Plate section
Summary
II. THE CONTENTS OF THE MUSUEM
The original collection made by Dr. Woodward, is contained in five walnut-tree cabinets, of which the two marked A and B were the only ones bequeathed to the University, the rest having been purchased from the executors.
The contents of these cabinets formed the nucleus around which all the more modern additions have collected, and our survey of “the museum as it is”, must accordingly commence with an allusion to a few of the more remarkable and interesting specimens found among them.
As they are at present arranged, the first and part of the second of the cabinets are devoted to mineralogy, and the drawers contain a multifarious collection of sands and stones, specimens of polished marble, and odd shaped stalactites, the native ores of the various metals, and a few minerals of considerable value. On the whole, however, this must be looked upon as the least interesting of Dr. Woodward's collections, and omitting more particular description, we would rather direct attention to two drawers in cabinet B, filled with echini, fishes' teeth and palatal bones, a few shells, and some ingenious and very well executed metallic casts of the interior of shells. With regard to the latter, it is deserving of notice, that after an interval of more than a century, during which such internal casts have been quite neglected by Conchologists, Professor Agassiz has lately taken up the subject and succeeded, after overcoming some very considerable difficulties, in executing a set of models likely to be extremely useful in determining fossil species of shells.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Portfolio , pp. 320 - 335Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1840