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- History_of_Taxidermy abstract "Taxidermy, or the process of preserving animal skin together with its feathers, fur, or scales, is an art whose existence has been short compared to forms such as painting, sculpture, and music. The word derives from two Greek words: taxis, meaning order, preparation, and arrangement and derma, meaning skin. Directly translated, taxidermy means “skin art.” According to John W. Moyer, a staff member at the Chicago Field Museum of Natural History famous for his comprehensive studies on the development of this process, in his book Practical Taxidermy, the modern form of taxidermy greatly differs from the taxidermy of antiquity. In ancient times, although considered some form of “art,” it was a process of animal preservation; in contrast, modern taxidermy methods seek to produce lifelike mounts of wildlife by accurately modeling the anatomy of animal specimens as they might appear in their natural habitat. According to Albert B. Farnham, in his book Home Taxidermy for Pleasure and Profit, although its methods greatly differ over time, the art reveals that there existed then as now the desire to preserve the trophy of the hunter’s prowess and skill in natural objects".
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- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageRevisionID "708034417".
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Academy_of_Natural_Sciences_of_Drexel_University.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink American_Museum_of_Natural_History.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Austrian_Academy_of_Sciences.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Boy_Scouts_of_America.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink British_Museum.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Akeley.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Articles_created_via_the_Article_Wizard.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Willson_Peale.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Cherokee.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Cheyenne.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_Palace,_London.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Egyptians.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopedia_Americana.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Field_Museum_of_Natural_History.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink George_Armstrong_Custer.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Hanno_the_Navigator.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink International_Exposition_(1867).
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Jules_Verreaux.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Montagu_House,_Bloomsbury.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink P._T._Barnum.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Potawatomi.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink René_Antoine_Ferchault_de_Réaumur.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Rowland_Ward.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Scrub.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Sioux.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink St._Gallen.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink The_Great_Exhibition.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink The_Office.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink Titian_Peale.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Chicago.
- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageWikiLink William_Temple_Hornaday.
- History_of_Taxidermy group ""."".
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- History_of_Taxidermy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Uncategorized.
- History_of_Taxidermy subject Category:Articles_created_via_the_Article_Wizard.
- History_of_Taxidermy hypernym Art.
- History_of_Taxidermy type Person.
- History_of_Taxidermy comment "Taxidermy, or the process of preserving animal skin together with its feathers, fur, or scales, is an art whose existence has been short compared to forms such as painting, sculpture, and music. The word derives from two Greek words: taxis, meaning order, preparation, and arrangement and derma, meaning skin. Directly translated, taxidermy means “skin art.” According to John W.".
- History_of_Taxidermy label "History of Taxidermy".
- History_of_Taxidermy wasDerivedFrom History_of_Taxidermy?oldid=708034417.
- History_of_Taxidermy isPrimaryTopicOf History_of_Taxidermy.