Whether an animal with a wound classified as "mortal" can still live for some time: Temurah 11b
Whether an animal with a wound classified as "mortal" is able to conceive and give birth: Temurah 31a Kohanim are also forbidden from eating these animals: Menachot 45a
Whether Slaughtering of a dying animal frees it from Corpse-Impurity: Shabbat 136a
The punishment for consuming such a creature: Makkot 13a
Attempting to sanctify a mortally wounded animal: Temurah 17a-b
Using the child of a mortally wounded animal as a Temple Offering: Temurah 30b, 31a
Using an egg hatched from a mortally wounded animal as a Temple Offering: Temurah 31a
Using an egg that might have been laid by a mortally wounded chicken: Beitzah 3b
Using an animal which nursed from a mortally wounded animal, as a Temple Offering: Temurah 30b, 31a Substituting a mortally wounded animal for an offering, or substituting an animal for a mortally wounded offering: Temurah 11a, 17a Redeeming a Temple Offering which has become mortally wounded: Temurah 17a-b, 30b, 31a
Using a mortally wounded animal as a Temple offering: Temurah 29a
What happens if a mortally wounded animal is mixed up with eligible offerings: Temurah 28a
Specific Wounds
Where the Majority of a segment of the Spinal Cord was Punctured: Ketuvot 7a
Where the intestines are punctured, and self-sealed by a fluid: Moed Katan 22a
Where a needle is found in the walls of one of the stomachs ["Beit HaKosot"] of a cow: Succah 34a
Where the layer of flesh inside the lungs has dissolved into fluid: Succah 36a
The whole thigh is removed, removing the hollow beneath it: Temurah 11b
How much of the skull must be removed: Eruvin 7a
How much of the spine must be removed: Eruvin 7a