Homes Without Hands: Being a Description of the Habitations of Animals, Classed According to Their Principle of ConstructionHarper & Brothers, 1866 - 651 páginas |
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Página ix
... wonderful Instincts . - The Egg , the Grub , and the Cocoon . - Co- coon in the British Museum . The MOLE - CRICKET , its Form and elaborate Dwelling . Its general Habits and wide Distribution . - The FIELD - CRICKET and its Tunnels ...
... wonderful Instincts . - The Egg , the Grub , and the Cocoon . - Co- coon in the British Museum . The MOLE - CRICKET , its Form and elaborate Dwelling . Its general Habits and wide Distribution . - The FIELD - CRICKET and its Tunnels ...
Página 21
... wonderful examples of work- manship ; but then they are nothing more or less than buildings placed below the level of the ground , and inhabited in the hot season by the luxurious . Even in such cases , however , the in- herent defects ...
... wonderful examples of work- manship ; but then they are nothing more or less than buildings placed below the level of the ground , and inhabited in the hot season by the luxurious . Even in such cases , however , the in- herent defects ...
Página 22
... wonderful completeness . It has regular roads leading to its feeding - grounds ; establishes a system of commu- nication as elaborate as that of a modern railway , or to be more correct , as that of the subterranean network of ...
... wonderful completeness . It has regular roads leading to its feeding - grounds ; establishes a system of commu- nication as elaborate as that of a modern railway , or to be more correct , as that of the subterranean network of ...
Página 25
... wonderful animal should be better studied . The only object that can at present be sur- mised is , that the rightful owner of such a stronghold may rest safely in his middle chamber , tasting the reward of repose which sweetens labor ...
... wonderful animal should be better studied . The only object that can at present be sur- mised is , that the rightful owner of such a stronghold may rest safely in his middle chamber , tasting the reward of repose which sweetens labor ...
Página 28
... feet in height and twenty feet in diameter , were a man to be the workman instead of the Mole . On looking over the list of burrowing mammalia , the observer can not but be struck with the wonderful manner in 28 HOMES WITHOUT HANDS .
... feet in height and twenty feet in diameter , were a man to be the workman instead of the Mole . On looking over the list of burrowing mammalia , the observer can not but be struck with the wonderful manner in 28 HOMES WITHOUT HANDS .
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Homes Without Hands: Being a Description of the Habitations of Animals ... John George Wood Visualização integral - 1866 |
Homes Without Hands: Being a Description of the Habitations of Animals ... John George Wood Visualização integral - 1866 |
Homes Without Hands: Being a Description of the Habitations of Animals ... John George Wood Visualização integral - 1866 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
abdomen animal antennæ ants attached beak beautiful beetles bird body branch British build burrow Caddis Fly called caterpillar cells cocoon color combs common constructed covered Crab creature crustacea curious earth Eciton eggs entomologists entrance example excavated Fairy Martin feathers feeding feet female fibres flies gall garden genus grass ground grub habits hair hatched head hole hollow humming-birds hymenoptera ichneumon illustration inhabitants insect labor larva larvæ leaf leaves lepidoptera look male manner materials mentioned Mole mollusks moth mouth native nearly nest operculum parasitic pass peculiar pensile nests placed plentiful pupa pupal reader remarkable resemblance rock Sand Martin scarcely seen shape shell side silken similar slender soft sometimes species specimens spider spot structure substance surface tail Tallegalla Termites thick threads tion Titmouse tree tube tunnel twigs walls wasps Weaver Weaver Bird wings wonderful wood yellow young
Passagens conhecidas
Página 345 - The prisoner generally becomes fat, and is esteemed a very dainty morsel by the natives, while the poor slave of a husband gets so lean that, on the sudden lowering of the temperature, which sometimes happens after a fall of rain, he is benumbed, falls down, and dies.
Página 309 - ... or rose-coloured silk, and is frequently seen in the narrow alleys of the forest, suspended from the extreme tip of an outstanding leaf by a strong silken thread five or six inches in length. It forms a very conspicuous object, hanging thus in midair. The glossy threads with which it is knitted are stout, and the structure is therefore not liable to be torn by the beaks of insectivorous birds...
Página 253 - I again sat down among the stones in front, where I could see the nest, not concealing myself, but remaining motionless, waiting for the bird's re-appearance. I had not to wait long : a loud whirr, and there she was suspended in the air before her nest. She soon espied me, and came within a foot of my eyes, hovering just in front of my face. I remained still, however, when I heard the whirring of another just above me, perhaps the mate ; but I durst not look towards him lest the turning of my head...
Página iii - HOMES WITHOUT HANDS; a Description of the Habitations of Animals, classed according to their Principle of Construction.
Página 540 - The rook, however, remains in society the year throughout. In flocks it builds its nest, in flocks it seeks for food, and in flocks it retires to roost. About two miles to the eastward of this place are the woods of Nostell Priory, where, from time immemorial, the rooks have retired to pass the night. I suspect, by the observations which I have been able to make on the morning and evening transit of these birds, that there is not another roosting-place for, at least, thirty miles to the westward...
Página 354 - ... at this moment the little widower, or bridegroom, seemed as if he would warble out his very life with eestasy of joy. After remaining about half a minute in, they both flew off, but returned in a few minutes, and instantly began to carry out the eggs, feathers, and some of the sticks, supplying the place of the two latter with materials of the same sort ; and ultimately succeeded in raising a brood of seven young, all of which escaped in safety.
Página 488 - The nest is usually fixed among the horizontal branches of an apple-tree; sometimes in a solitary thorn, crab or cedar, in some retired part of the woods. It is constructed with little art, and scarcely any concavity, of small sticks and twigs, intermixed with green weeds, and blossoms of the common maple.
Página 345 - Kolobeng, that the bird comes forth when the young are fully fledged, at the period when the corn is ripe ; indeed, her appearance abroad with her young, is one of the signs they have for knowing when it ought to be so. As that is about the end of April, the time is between two and three months. She is said sometimes to hatch two eggs, and when the young of these are full-fledged, other two are just out of the egg-shells : she then leaves the nest with the two elder, the orifice is again plastered...
Página 392 - I have at all times watched the same antcities during the last twelve years, and I know that what I stated in my former letter is true. I visited the same cities yesterday, and found the crop of ant-rice growing finely, and exhibiting also the signs of high cultivation, and not a blade of any other kind of grass or seed was to be seen within twelve inches of the circular row x>f ant-rice.
Página 475 - In the midst of this dreary drought, it was wonderful to see those tiny creatures, the ants, running about with their accustomed vivacity. I put the bulb of a thermometer three inches under the soil, in the sun, at midday, and found the mercury to stand at 132° to 134°; and if certain kinds of beetles were placed on the surface, they ran about a few seconds and expired. But this broiling heat only augmented the activity of the long-legged black ants...