The Natural History Review, Edições 17-20Hodges & Smith, 1865 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 67
Página 18
... posterior edge of the body of the seventh vertebra , as in the mammalia generally , proving without any doubt that this is the last cervical and not the first dorsal vertebra . Brandt's description is therefore perfectly correct , and ...
... posterior edge of the body of the seventh vertebra , as in the mammalia generally , proving without any doubt that this is the last cervical and not the first dorsal vertebra . Brandt's description is therefore perfectly correct , and ...
Página 32
... posterior wings , " and he cites , as a further proof of this relationship , " the branchiiform respiratory organs de- tected by Newport on the abdominal segments of the larvae of the Strepsiptera " ( p . 79 ) . It does not appear to us ...
... posterior wings , " and he cites , as a further proof of this relationship , " the branchiiform respiratory organs de- tected by Newport on the abdominal segments of the larvae of the Strepsiptera " ( p . 79 ) . It does not appear to us ...
Página 81
... posterior one ; Premolar 3 , by the presence of both these , which are absent or rudimentary in the other two ... posterior extent . On the inner side , and springing from the posterior of these , is a stout cusp or tubercle , the ...
... posterior one ; Premolar 3 , by the presence of both these , which are absent or rudimentary in the other two ... posterior extent . On the inner side , and springing from the posterior of these , is a stout cusp or tubercle , the ...
Página 82
... posterior base of the lower carnassial . The tubercular portion of the latter , reduced to a small talon , is divided by a slight ridge into two portions of which the exterior is the smaller . On the authority of M. De Blainville ...
... posterior base of the lower carnassial . The tubercular portion of the latter , reduced to a small talon , is divided by a slight ridge into two portions of which the exterior is the smaller . On the authority of M. De Blainville ...
Página 84
... posterior aspect of the crown , which , as in the Canidæ , is longer than the anterior , is a well defined notch marking off a small cusp . The cingulum is more strongly marked behind than before , and in the British Museum specimens is ...
... posterior aspect of the crown , which , as in the Canidæ , is longer than the anterior , is a well defined notch marking off a small cusp . The cingulum is more strongly marked behind than before , and in the British Museum specimens is ...
Índice
121 | |
151 | |
152 | |
152 | |
153 | |
170 | |
176 | |
189 | |
202 | |
226 | |
242 | |
242 | |
268 | |
297 | |
304 | |
304 | |
305 | |
319 | |
323 | |
351 | |
359 | |
367 | |
373 | |
385 | |
399 | |
415 | |
422 | |
452 | |
495 | |
498 | |
503 | |
506 | |
507 | |
516 | |
525 | |
529 | |
530 | |
534 | |
536 | |
541 | |
545 | |
552 | |
553 | |
558 | |
564 | |
566 | |
567 | |
574 | |
581 | |
594 | |
600 | |
602 | |
603 | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
Africa allied amongst animals Annelids appear belonging birds bones botanists Botany British Museum cartilage cartilaginous catalogue Cestoidea characters clavicle cloth collection common containing coral cultivation Cuvier described developed distinct Echinodermata Edition Entozoa episternal Esquimaux existence fact Fauna Flora fossil genera genus Günther habits Helminthology Helminths Illustrations India island Jerdon known latter less Linnean London lower Macrauchenia Mammals manubrium sterni memoir molar Montpellier NATURAL HISTORY REVIEW naturalists nearly notice obliteration observed occur organs ossification P. L. Sclater paper parasites parietal peculiar period plants plates portion posterior Premolar present probably Professor Owen races referred regard region remains remarkable Reptiles sagittal sagittal suture scientific Scolecida skull Society Society's South species specimens sternum structure surface sutures synostosis teeth tichorhine tion Trematoda tropical Turbellaria upper valley vegetation vertebræ volume worms Zoology
Passagens conhecidas
Página 456 - HOMES WITHOUT HANDS; a Description of the Habitations of Animals, classed according to their Principle of Construction.
Página 456 - Will be the most complete Flora of Great Britain ever brought out. This great work will find a place wherever botanical science is cultivated,' and the study of our native plants, with all their fascinating associations, held dear.
Página 456 - BOOK OF RUTH IN HEBREW TEXT. With a critically revised Text, various Readings, including a new Collation of Twenty-eight Hebrew MSS., and a Grammatical and Critical Commentary ; to which is appended the Chaldee Targum. Demy 8vo.
Página 348 - Not where he eats, but where he is eaten : a certain convocation of politic worms are e'en at him. Your worm is your only emperor for diet : we fat all creatures else to fat us, and we fat ourselves for maggots...
Página 522 - Europe; our nearest relatives in the animal kingdom are confined to hot, almost to tropical climates, and it is in such countries that we ai'e most likely to find the earliest traces of the human race.
Página 290 - It first places its tendrils ready for action, as a polypus places its tentacula. If the tendril be displaced, it is acted on by the force of gravity and rights itself. It is acted on by the light, and bends towards or from it, or disregards it, whichever may be most advantageous. During several days the tendrils or internodes, or both, spontaneously revolve with a steady motion.
Página 131 - Dawsoii carefully examined the laminated material, and he found it to consist of the remains of an organism which grew in large sessile patches, increasing at the surface by the addition of successive layers of chambers separated by calcareous laminae. Slices examined microscopically showed large irregular chambers with numerous rounded extensions, and bounded by walls of variable thickness, which are studded with septal orifices irregularly disposed ; the thicker parts of the walls revealed the...
Página 525 - But the true savage is neither free nor noble ; he is a slave to his own wants, his own passions ; imperfectly protected from the weather, he suffers from the cold by night and the heat of the sun by day ; ignorant of agriculture, living by the chase, and improvident in success, hunger always stares him in the face, and often drives him to the dreadful alternative of cannibalism or death.
Página 456 - ON THE POPULAR NAMES OF BRITISH PLANTS. Being an Explanation of the Origin and Meaning of the names of our indigenous and most commonly cultivated species.