“…Space limitations prevent us from presenting more than a few of the hundreds of dogs depicted in Roman painting, pottery, sculpture, and mosaics (see Figures 13, 14). Survey of artwork (Schefold, 1972;Dunbain, 1978;Joyce, 1981;Ben-Abed Ben-Khader et al, 1987;Guillaud & Guillaud, 1990;Blanchard-Lemee & Ennaifer, 1996;Wilson, 2005;Witts, 2005;Yućel, 2010;Bardo National Museum, 2014;Pompeii and Herculaneum mosaics and paintings, 2014;Sullivan, 2014) corroborates our osteological and tile-track studies in finding a broad size range, from toys shown sitting in peoples' laps up through long-legged coursers standing as high as a man's hips or a horse's elbow. While a metric scale is obviously not provided in Roman artwork, there can be no question that the intention was to represent different sizes and phenotypes.…”