Published in 1844, the Atlas de Zoologie: ou collection de 100 planches contains illustrations of a number of creatures, some of which no longer walk this planet. Among those are thylacines — striped, carnivorous marsupials that went extinct when the last known specimen died in a Tasmanian zoo in 1936.

There’s also a glorious dodo bird, though it’s not immediately clear why, since these birds died out at least a century before the book’s publication.

Various artists produced the illustrations for this volume, which supplements a 60-part series describing a multitude of Earth’s inhabitants. Some of the critters are easily recognizable; others, not so much. For example, is that really a koala? The plates span the kingdoms of life on earth and include everything from aquatic corals to a freaky fish to an Old World monkey.

You can view and download the entire volume here, from the Biodiversity Heritage Library, which maintains a massive digital collection of tomes.