The American Naturalist, 4. köideEssex Institute, 1871 |
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Results 1-5 of 76
Page iv
CLIMBING PLANTS . Illustrated . By Professor W. J. Beal , RECENT ADVANCES IN GEOLOGY . By J. W. Foster , LL . D. , VARIATIONS IN TRILLIUM AND WISTERIA . By Thomas Meehan , THE PRIMITIVE VEGETATION OF THE EARTH . By J. W. Dawson , LL . D ...
CLIMBING PLANTS . Illustrated . By Professor W. J. Beal , RECENT ADVANCES IN GEOLOGY . By J. W. Foster , LL . D. , VARIATIONS IN TRILLIUM AND WISTERIA . By Thomas Meehan , THE PRIMITIVE VEGETATION OF THE EARTH . By J. W. Dawson , LL . D ...
Page v
... Plants from the West , p . 237. Relations of the Rocks in the Vicinity of Boston , p . 238. Sponges , p . 304. The Extinct Mammalian Fauna of Dakota and Nebraska , p . 307. The Earliest Evidences of Plant Life , p . 310. Fossil Birds ...
... Plants from the West , p . 237. Relations of the Rocks in the Vicinity of Boston , p . 238. Sponges , p . 304. The Extinct Mammalian Fauna of Dakota and Nebraska , p . 307. The Earliest Evidences of Plant Life , p . 310. Fossil Birds ...
Page vi
... Plant , p . 495. On the Laws of Fascia- tion and its Relation to Sex in Plants , p . 511. On Objections to Darwin's Theory of Fertilization through Insect Agency , p . 512. Nutrition and Sex in Plants , p . 562. Richardsonia scabra , p ...
... Plant , p . 495. On the Laws of Fascia- tion and its Relation to Sex in Plants , p . 511. On Objections to Darwin's Theory of Fertilization through Insect Agency , p . 512. Nutrition and Sex in Plants , p . 562. Richardsonia scabra , p ...
Page 24
... plants and conceal itself , until accustomed to its new gar- ment it can venture forth once more into its little world . Cray - fishes eat small pieces of raw beef eagerly . We shall have to be careful that they do not crawl out of the ...
... plants and conceal itself , until accustomed to its new gar- ment it can venture forth once more into its little world . Cray - fishes eat small pieces of raw beef eagerly . We shall have to be careful that they do not crawl out of the ...
Page 25
... plants than the large tank will accommodate at the time , when later in the winter the plants die off , then we shall wish to replace them from specimens in the reserve stock . The instruments used for aquarial purposes are few in ...
... plants than the large tank will accommodate at the time , when later in the winter the plants die off , then we shall wish to replace them from specimens in the reserve stock . The instruments used for aquarial purposes are few in ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen abundant Academy alg¿ AMER American animals appear basin birds bones bottom called cephalothorax character coast color common continent Cretaceous crustacea deposits described Devonian drift eggs embryo evidence existence fact fauna feet female fish flora flowers fossil genera genus geological glacial glaciers guttatus habits head hundred inches Indian insects known Kogia Lake large number larva larv¿ latter leaves length less lichens Limulus male mass mastodon maxill¿ membrane Michx microscope miocene mollusks moraines Mountains mouth Museum Natural History NATURALIST nearly North northern O. C. Marsh object observed peculiar petioles plants pliocene portion present primitive streak probably Professor region remains remarkable river rocks sand Science seen shell shore side skin southern species specimens spores stone streams surface tendrils Tertiary tion trees trilobites valley vegetable W. H. Dall winter young
Popular passages
Page 441 - These are the gardens of the desert, these The unshorn fields, boundless and beautiful, For which the speech of England has no name — The prairies. I behold them for the first, And my heart swells, while the dilated sight Takes in the encircling vastness. Lo ! they stretch In airy undulations far away, As if the ocean, in his gentlest swell, Stood still, with all his rounded billows fixed, And motionless forever.
Page 355 - Every species has come into existence coincident both in time and space with a pre-existing closely allied species" connects together and renders intelligible a vast number of independent and hitherto unexplained facts.
Page 75 - In those days it was thought sufficient for noblemen's sons to wind the horn, and to carry their hawk fair, and leave study and learning to the children of meaner people.
Page 48 - ... Admitting to the full as highly probable, though not completely demonstrated, the applicability to living beings of the laws which have been ascertained with reference to dead matter, I feel constrained at the same time to admit the existence of a mysterious something lying beyond, a something sui generis, which I regard, not as balancing and. suspending the ordinary physical laws, but as working with them and through them to the attainment of a designed end. What this something which we call...
Page 323 - SKETCHES OF CREATION. Sketches of Creation: a Popular View of some of the Grand Conclusions of the Sciences in reference to the History of Matter and of Life. Together with a Statement of the Intimations of Science respecting the Primordial Condition and the Ultimate Destiny of the Earth and the Solar System. By ALEXANDER WINCHELL, LL.D., Professor of Geology, Zoology, and Botany in the University of Michigan, and Director of the State Geological Survey.
Page 82 - ... have hawks and greyhounds ; the former carried in the usual manner, on the hand of the huntsman ; the latter led in a leash by a horseman, generally the same who carries the hawk. When the antelope is seen, they endeavour to get as near as possible ; but the animal, the moment it observes them, goes off at a rate that seems swifter than the wind ; the horsemen are instantly at full speed, having slipped the dogs.
Page 82 - The hawks, skimming along near the ground, soon reach the deer, at whose head they pounce in succession, and sometimes with a violence that knocks it over. At all events, they confuse the animal so much as to stop its speed in such a degree that the dogs can come up ; and in an instant men, horses, dogs, and hawks, surround the unfortunate deer, against which their united efforts have been combined. The part of the...
Page 355 - ... thin branches were tossed to and fro by the wind, the tendrils, had they not been excessively elastic, would instantly have been torn off and the plant thrown prostrate. But as it was, the Bryony safely rode out the gale, like a ship with two anchors down, and with a long range of cable ahead to serve as a spring as she surges to the storm.
Page 151 - The head was covered with a dry skin ; one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hairs.
Page 80 - The first hare seized by the falcon was very strong, and the ground rough. While the bird kept the claws of one foot fastened in the back of its prey, the other was dragged along the ground till it had an opportunity to lay hold of a tuft of grass, by which it was enabled to stop the course of the hare, whose efforts to escape, I do think, would have torn the hawk asunder, if it had not been provided with the leathern defences which have been mentioned.