Author | Corbet, G.B. |
Year | 1964 |
Title | The Identification of British Mammals |
Type | Book/Report |
How Complete | Covers the then known species, including bats, seals and whales, although the key to skulls covers only the commoner species and omits whales. |
Source | 46pp, British Museum (Natural History) |
Illustrations | Clear line drawings when needed |
Review (by Malcolm Storey) | Not a field guide. Dichotomous keys to animals which generally assume the animal is dead or at least can be closely examined and measured. The second dichotomous key, to skulls, is likely to be more useful to most field naturalists. It covers adult skulls of the more common spp including bats and the usual domestic animals, but if you’re hoping to name that old whale skull in the attic, you’ll be disappointed - Cetaceans are omitted. |
Examine | in the Hand |
Specimen Preparation | None, but handling and measuring required |
Identification difficulty | Mostly straightforward |
Notes & Purpose | Status | Taxon | English | Classification |
---|---|---|---|---|
For identification | Current | MAMMALIA | mammals | Animalia |
Unless otherwise expressly stated, all original material on the BioInfo website by Malcolm Storey is licensed under the above Creative Commons Licence.