Between 1551 and 1558 , Swiss Dr. and natural scientist Conrad Gessnerpublishedhis magnum opus , the five - volume , 4500 - pageHistoriae animalium , which became the period ’s most widely read natural history collection . mix the work of those who amount before him , like Aristotle , Pliny , and the nameless author ofPhysiologus , and making use of both verbal descriptions and illustrations of animals from adventurer and other naturalists , Gessner attempted to catalogue all do it beast — even ones we know today to be fabulous . " He often promise his readers … that his friends ' testimonial was dependable , as they had in person eyeballed even the most ferocious animal , admit lions and crocodiles,“writesMichon Scott at Strange Science . " When [ Gessner ] doubted the accuracy of the opinions he relayed in his own writings , or the validness of the illustrations he include , he prudently say so . Of the multi - headed Snake , for instance , he observed , ' ears , tongue , olfactory organ , and faces are inconsistent with the nature of ophidian . ' "

Historiae animaliumwas a standout because of the right-down act of its illustration , which were created using woodcuts ; Gessner and the creative person he solve with experience some fauna very tight to right wing , while others are entirely off the mark . “ A optic game of telephony is , to some degree , what the artists were dish out with in the 16th C , ” Tom Baione , Director of the Department of Library Services at the American Museum of Natural History , say Mental Flosswhen we first looked at some illustrations fromHistoriae animaliumin 2013 . Here are a few more illustrations for you to admire .

1. Beaver

Beaversdohave reasonably gnarly incisors — they’reharderon the front than on the back , which is what creates the knifelike edge that allows these semi - aquatic animals to rip off away at wood — but somehow , they do n’t look as terrifying on the real animal as they do on this exemplification .

2. Porcupine

Every species in theporcupinefamily — about two dozen of them — has acoat of quillsto use as a defense mechanism . In tangible life , though , they do n’t wait quite so sinister .

3. Unicorn

Thefirst written descriptionof aunicorn — which , regrettably , is not actual — appeared in the authorship of Grecian physician Ctesius , and it does n’t resemble the animal we ’ve come to call back of at all :

In the fascinating bookA Natural story of Unicorns , Chris Lavers study all the animals that could have possibly been unicorn , and how the creature go from that first description to the beautiful , one - horned buck we think of now .

4. Fox

The drawing is a little more wolf- or coyote - the like than an actual redfox , but precious in its own means .

5. Camel

This illustration seems to show a Bactrian camel . These two - gibbous hoofed mammal are much rare than their single - hunchbacked dromedary cousin — in fact , they ’re critically endangered [ PDF ] . This instance would be more accurate if the beast had more pelt andhigher humps .

6. Hedgehog

Fact : No illustration could ever be as adorable asthe existent thing , and this drawingdefinitelyisn’t . It makes porcupine look dismayed and a small curmudgeonly .

7. Elephant

We should all be grateful thatelephantsaren’t this terrorize in material life story . Look at that trunk !

8. Armadillo

There are 20 coinage ofarmadillo ; according toNational Geographic , and all of them but one dwell in Latin America . It ’s unclear which form of armadillo this is , but it looks like it just work a wicked joke on one of its brethren .

9. Rooster

One Word of God tote up thisroosterillustration up , and that word isAhh !

10. Sea Turtle

In material life , ocean turtlesdon’t have teeth ; instead , they habituate their beaks to eat , and unshakable , gnarly - looking papillae helpdirectfood to the abdomen .

11. Giraffe

If you ’d never seen agiraffebefore , and someone described it to you , you might draw its ossicones — which are actuallycartilage covered in skin — as more typical horns , too . Fun fact : Peopleonce call giraffes"camel - leopards " because , thanks to the small hump on the back and the spotted coat , people remember they were a combination of camels and Panthera pardus !

12. Crocodile

Thiscroclooks more like ared - eyed crocodile skink — at least around the optic .

13. Ostrich

The semblance ’s not right — those feathers should be darker!—and the beak is a small too stocky , but otherwise , this is a pretty good portrayal of theworld ’s largest(and heaviest!)bird .

14. Hippopotamus

Hippos are much stouter than this illustration present , and they prefer to spendmost of their clip in the water , not take the air on it . Hippos and crocs do sometimes confront off in the wild , though it probably does n’t go quite like this illustration shows .

15. Whales

Adventures on the high seas must have been terrorize if you guess this was what await you . Thankfully , mostwhalesare decidedly less scary than this .

16. Lion

Lion manesaredefinitely beautiful , but they ’re not this well - train .

This 16th century illustration of a rooster will have you saying “cock-a-doodle-don’t."

This isn’t a beaver you want to run into in the woods.

The name porcupine comes from the French for “thorny pig."

Marco Polo once called unicorns ugly … because he didn’t realize he was looking at a rhino.

What do you think the fox says, based on this illustration?

The inside of a camel’s mouth kind of looks like the Sarlacc pit.

Hedgehog spikes aren’t barbed or poisonous.

No elephant or person could forget this terrifying illustration.

This armadillo looks like he just played a prank on you.

According to one study, a rooster’s crow can reach 140 decibels.

Sea turtles can live for as long as 80 years.

Do not mess with this giraffe.

Crocodiles can regrow teeth.

An ostrich can kill with a single kick.

This is one hungry, hungry hippo.

The Ancient Greeks believed that whales were sea monsters.

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