The animal kingdom, with additional descriptions by E. Griffith and others |
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Sida ii
... appear , when it is considered that the " Regne Animal " of Cuvier itself is little else than a scientific , though partial , catalogue or synopsis of the living tribes , arranged according to the laws of their conformation . It was ...
... appear , when it is considered that the " Regne Animal " of Cuvier itself is little else than a scientific , though partial , catalogue or synopsis of the living tribes , arranged according to the laws of their conformation . It was ...
Sida 4
... appears that mineralogy , botany , and zoology form the principal divisions of natural his- tory , as ordinarily understood . Natural history should , in strictness , be cultivated by the same methods as are adopted in the various ...
... appears that mineralogy , botany , and zoology form the principal divisions of natural his- tory , as ordinarily understood . Natural history should , in strictness , be cultivated by the same methods as are adopted in the various ...
Sida 13
... appear by no means precise or consistent , viewing them as explanations of the nature of these phenomena . But , after an attentive consideration of the scope of his observations , and of the views to which they lead , we cannot ...
... appear by no means precise or consistent , viewing them as explanations of the nature of these phenomena . But , after an attentive consideration of the scope of his observations , and of the views to which they lead , we cannot ...
Sida 27
... appears to remain there * . The relations then of the animal and those of the plant with the surrounding atmosphere , are precisely in an inverse ratio to each other ; water and carbonic acid are rejected by the one and produced by the ...
... appears to remain there * . The relations then of the animal and those of the plant with the surrounding atmosphere , are precisely in an inverse ratio to each other ; water and carbonic acid are rejected by the one and produced by the ...
Sida 30
... appears naturally calculated to assume this filmy character , being soluble neither in boiling - water nor in alcohol . The nutrative fluid , or the blood , as it is found in the circulating vessels , may be resolved for the most part ...
... appears naturally calculated to assume this filmy character , being soluble neither in boiling - water nor in alcohol . The nutrative fluid , or the blood , as it is found in the circulating vessels , may be resolved for the most part ...
Vanliga ord och fraser
animals apes appears Audeb Baboon bats blackish body bones brain brown Buff Buffon callosities canine teeth Carnassiers Cercopithecus characters cheek teeth cheek-pouches colour considerable cranium Cuvier Daubenton Desm distinct distinguished du Mus ears external extremities eyes face facial angle fawn-colour feet fingers forehead Galago genera genus Geoff Geoffroy gray Guenons hair hands head Hist human Icon Illiger incisors Inhabits interfemoral membrane Lemur less limbs Linnæus lower Macaque Madagascar Magot mammæ mammalia Mandrill membrane molars monkey motion muzzle nails naturalists nature Negro nose nostrils observed Orang Outang organs papillæ peculiar Pennant phalanges points Pongo possess pouches prehensile proportion Pteropus Quad quadrumana quadrupeds race racter reddish remarkable resemblance roussettes Sapajous Schreb Shaw short Simia skin species Supp tail thumb tion toes tribes upper variety vespertilio yellow yellowish Zool
Populära avsnitt
Sida 175 - And did he not of old employ his means To drown it ? What is his creation less Than a capacious reservoir of means Form'd for his use, and ready at his will ? Go, dress thine eyes with eye-salve ; ask of him, Or ask of whomsoever he has taught ; And learn, though late, the genuine cause of all.
Sida 148 - Negroes, men, women, and children, born in very different climates, and found the lower arm longer than in Europeans, in proportion to the upper arm, and to the height of the body.
Sida 214 - Ihe biscuit of his benefactor, he learned to eat with a spoon; and might be often seen sitting at his cabin door, enjoying his coffee, quite unembarrassed by those who observed him, and with a grotesque and sober air, that seemed a burlesque on human nature. " Next to the boatswain, I was, perhaps, his most intimate acquaintance.
Sida 216 - London, he has preferred beer and milk to anything else, but drinks wine and other liquors. " In his attempts to obtain food, he afforded us many opportunities of judging of his sagacity and disposition. He was always very impatient to seize it when held out to him, and became passionate when it was not soon given up, and would chase a person all over the ship to obtain it. I seldom came on deck without sweetmeats or fruit in my pocket, and could never escape his vigilant eye. Sometimes I endeavoured...
Sida 56 - THE mammalia are placed at the head of the animal kingdom, not only because it is the class to which we ourselves belong, but...
Sida 213 - ... as he did with the boys of the ship. Yet the monkeys had evidently a great predilection for his company; for whenever they broke loose, they took. their way to his resting-place...
Sida 215 - In making his bed, he used the greatest pains to remove every thing out of his way that might render the surface on which he intended to lie uneven ; and having satisfied himself with this part of his arrangement, spread out the sail, and lying down upon it on his back, drew it over his body. Sometimes I preoccupied his bed, and teased him by refusing to give it up. On these occasions he would endeavour to pull the sail from under me, or to force me from it, and would not rest till I had resigned...
Sida 210 - The nose is confluent with the face, except at the nostrils, which are but little elevated : their openings are narrow and oblique. The mouth is very projecting, and of a roundish mammillary form. Its opening is large, but when closed is marked by little more than a narrow seam. The lips are very narrow, and scarcely perceptible when the mouth is shut. The chin projects less than the mouth : below it, a pendulous membrane gives the appearance of a double chin, and swells out when the animal is angry...
Sida 217 - ... time a sound which might be described as between the croaking of a frog and the grunting of a pig. After some time he ventured to descend, but with great caution, peeping continually at the turtle, but could not be induced to approach within many yards of them. He ran to the same height and uttered the same sounds on seeing some men bathing and splashing in the sea; and since his arrival in England, has shown nearly the same degree of fear at the sight of a live tortoise.
Sida 212 - England ; and whilst at large, made no attempt to escape : but became violent when put into a large • < railed bamboo cage, for the purpose of being conveyed from the island. As soon as he felt himself in confinement, he took the rails of the cage...