Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories, 4. köideU.S. Government Printing Office, 1878 |
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Page 3
... half a mile of us , we yet went out to satisfy our selves , and found the cry to be that of a Mocker in excellent imitation of the chachalaca refrain . The Mockingbird commenced laying on the Rio Grande about April 1. Our first eggs ...
... half a mile of us , we yet went out to satisfy our selves , and found the cry to be that of a Mocker in excellent imitation of the chachalaca refrain . The Mockingbird commenced laying on the Rio Grande about April 1. Our first eggs ...
Page 4
... half inches . Of those taken , the lowest was four feet from the ground and the highest some eight feet , averaging , I think , five and one - half feet . I found their nests in a variety of places - prickly - pear cactus , Spanish ...
... half inches . Of those taken , the lowest was four feet from the ground and the highest some eight feet , averaging , I think , five and one - half feet . I found their nests in a variety of places - prickly - pear cactus , Spanish ...
Page 12
... half a mile from where the first three were obtained . Sev- eral more were seen ; in fact , they were more abundant than any other Warbler . It was a constant surprise to me while on the Rio Grande that so few Warblers were to be seen ...
... half a mile from where the first three were obtained . Sev- eral more were seen ; in fact , they were more abundant than any other Warbler . It was a constant surprise to me while on the Rio Grande that so few Warblers were to be seen ...
Page 14
... half an hour had elapsed since his first visit , the nest was empty . The nest was built on a very small tree in the heart of the woods , and was only five and one - half feet from the ground on a hori- zontal fork , on which several ...
... half an hour had elapsed since his first visit , the nest was empty . The nest was built on a very small tree in the heart of the woods , and was only five and one - half feet from the ground on a hori- zontal fork , on which several ...
Page 28
... half - way between Brownsville and the coast , we obtained many eggs . We found their nests about two feet above the water in the rushes , and from four to thirty feet above the ground when in trees . They are shaped like those of our ...
... half - way between Brownsville and the coast , we obtained many eggs . We found their nests about two feet above the water in the rushes , and from four to thirty feet above the ground when in trees . They are shaped like those of our ...
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Common terms and phrases
1873 Elliott Coues abdomen abundant Acad Amer American antennæ apex apical August basal base birds blackish border Bosque County breeding brown Brownsville Cham Cham.-Can Clem Clem.-Tin Coll Collector color Colorado convex Cope costal dark distinct dorsal dorsal fin eggs Elliott Coues elytra Esox extending fauna feet fore wings Frenchman's Creek fuscous Gelechia genera genus Girard gray head Hidalgo hind wings Hist inch joint Jordan July June Laramie Larva larvæ Length List of specimens Lithocolletis Locality margin median middle Milk River Missouri Mouse River narrow Nature of specimen nearly nest North oblique outer pale palpi Pembina Phila portion posterior prairie Proc prothorax punctured Rafinesque region Rocky Mountains rounded Sciurus side Skin slender slightly South species spot striæ surface Texas thorax tibiæ transverse tropical Turtle Mountain upper Valley
Popular passages
Page 314 - Istly, that the several regions are not of equal rank ; — :2ndly, that they are not equally applicable to all classes of animals. As to the first objection, it will be found impossible to form any three or more regions, each of which differs from the rest in an equal degree or in the same manner. One...
Page 443 - They consist of the greater part of a skeleton, embracing all of the bones of the anterior and posterior extremities, excepting the femora. Unfortunately, the bill and the anterior portion of the head are wanting, but the outlines of the remainder of the head and of the neck are distinctly traceable. The bones are all in situ, and indicate beyond question a high ornithic type, probably referable to the Oscine division of the Passeres. The specimen bears also remarkably distinct impressions of the...
Page 316 - If these considerations are well founded," he continues, " the objections of those who study insects or molluscs, — for example, that our regions are not true for their departments of nature, — cannot be maintained. For they will find, that a careful consideration of the exceptional means of dispersal and conditions of existence of each group, will explain most of the divergences from the normal distribution of higher animals.
Page 325 - ... part of its natural history. We require also to know its exact range at the present day and in prehistoric times, and to have some knowledge of its geological age, the place of its earliest appearance on the globe, and of the various extinct forms most nearly allied to it. To those who accept the theory of development as worked out by Mr. Darwin, and the views as to the general permanence and immense antiquity of the great continents and oceans so ably developed by. Sir Charles Lyell, it ceases...
Page 700 - The head is shining chestnut brown with black mandibles. The body is livid or blackish green, naked, with series of black dots, each dot giving rise to a single, rather stout, bristle, The prothoracic shield is blackish. The larva has three pair of thoracic or true jointed feet, and four abdominal or false feet, besides anal claspers. This larva, eating on the inner side of the bark, and making furrows in the wood, causes the bleeding which, when the depletion is excessive or continuous, and especially...
Page 266 - The snake prepares for action by throwing itself into a number of superimposed coils, upon the mass of which the neck and a few inches more lie loosely curved, the head elevated, the tail projecting and rapidly vibrating. At the approach of the intended victim, the serpent, by sudden contraction of the muscles upon the convexity of the curves, straightens out the anterior portion of the body, and thus darts forward the head. At this instant, the jaws are widely separated, and the back of the head...
Page 333 - ... this in a subdivision of the earth which is established for the very purpose of expressing such contrasts more clearly and concisely than by ordinary geographical terminology, would be both illogical and inconvenient. The one question then remains, whether the Nearctic region should be kept separate, or whether it should form part of the Palaearctic or of the Neotropical regions.
Page 777 - Report on the Collection of Fishes Made by Dr. Elliott Coues, USA , in Dakota and Montana, During the Seasons of 1873 and 1874.
Page 315 - One will surpass all others in the possession of peculiar families; another will have many characteristic genera; while a third will be mainly distinguished by negative characters. There will also be found many intermediate districts, which possess some of the characteristics of two well-marked regions...
Page 497 - ... be entirely destroyed. After they have passed, nothing remains but the large branches and the roots, which being under ground have escaped their voracity." And in a late work of travels in the same country we find the following passage : — " During our ride (from Cordova to Seville) we observed a number of men advancing in skirmishing order across the country, and thrashing the ground most savagely with long flails. Curious to know what could be the motives for this Xerxes-like treatment of...