List of different types of korban asham: Zevachim 54b
Is one obligated to bring a korban asham if he never knew of the prohibition before he violated it: Shabbat 71b-72a
Ordinarily one does not bring an asham to atone for intentional sin, but there are exceptions: Keritot 9a
The Animal
The minimum value of various types of korbanot asham: Keritot 22b
May one use an animal for an asham if it was worth less than the minimum value at the time of purchase, but then its value increased: Keritot 27a
May one use an animal for an asham if, due to deflation, even the choicest animals are worth less than the minimum value: Keritot 27a
An edict requiring that one donate the difference between his animal's purchase price and the minimum value of an asham, even though its value increased to reach the minimum value at the time he brought it, lest people think that one could bring an asham of less than the minimum value: Keritot 27a
Gender of the offering: Temurah 14a, 18b, 19b, 19b-20b
What happens if one dedicates a female animal for an asham: Temurah 19b, 19b-20b, 20b
What happens if one dedicates a female animal for an asham, and it gives birth: Temurah 20b
What happens if one dedicates a female animal for an asham, and brings a different guilt offering before this one is redeemed: Temurah 19b
What happens if a female animal is dedicated for an asham, and then one tries to substitute an animal for it: Temurah 19b-20a
What happens if one purchased two animals with his asham-dedicated funds: Keritot 26b-27a
Sprinkling the blood of an asham with one's left hand, because it is done from an implement rather than one's fingers: Zevachim 25a
Linking the laws of the Asham Metzora with the laws of general sin offerings, because all of them are brought in the Beit haMikdash - even though the Asham Metzora is not actually brought for atonement, like the others: Keritot 25a
Who may eat the meat of the korban asham: Zevachim 54b
Location in which to eat the meat of the korban asham: Zevachim 54b
How long one may eat the meat from a korban asham: Zevachim 36a, 54b
"What If"s
What happens if the owner of an asham dies before the korban is brought: Temurah 20b; Zevachim 5a-b
Libations and leaning for an asham which is brought as a burnt offering if its master dies or uses a different animal as his guilt offering: Temurah 20b
Who gets the hide from an asham which is brought as a burnt offering if its master dies or uses a different animal as his guilt offering: Temurah 20b
What happens to an animal which is substituted for an asham: Bechorot 16a; Temurah 18b, 20b-21a
What happens to the child of an asham's substitute: Temurah 20b-21a
Substituting another animal for an asham owned by someone who brought a different guilt offering in its place: Temurah 9a-b, 13b
The exception to the rule that disqualifications which would cause a sin-offering to be ineligible also cause an asham to be left until it is blemished and then redeemed, is the case where it was processed with intent for the wrong type of korban: Menachot 48b
Does a chatat or asham atone if one brought it with intent for the wrong type of korban: Zevachim 6a, 7b, 12b-13a
What happens to the child of an asham: Temurah 17b-18a, 18b, 20b-21a
Whether an asham which is to be left to develop a blemish [meaning, one whose owner has died, or whose owner used a different animal for his asham] has the automatic status of a voluntary burnt offering: Zevachim 5b; Temurah 18a, 18b-19a
Converting an asham into a voluntary burnt offering, or as a communal offering, if the owner brings a different guilt offering instead: Temurah 9a-b, 13b, 20a, 20b
What happens if one discovers, during the process of bringing an asham, that he had not sinned: Keritot 23b, 24b
Whether one brings a chatat or asham sin offering if Yom Kippur occurred between the time of the sin and the time one would bring the offering: Keritot 7a, 18b, 25a, 25b-26a, 26a-b
What if the blood of a korban asham is brought into the heichal, the inner room in the Beit haMikdash: Zevachim 10b, 10b-11a