The Natural History Review, Volume 9Hodges & Smith, 1862 |
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Página 15
... plant , droop more or less . In the African , the cone is generally smaller , the leaves shorter and more glaucous ... plants the differences are very marked , though it is always possible to pick out deceptive specimens . C. Deodara ...
... plant , droop more or less . In the African , the cone is generally smaller , the leaves shorter and more glaucous ... plants the differences are very marked , though it is always possible to pick out deceptive specimens . C. Deodara ...
Página 16
... plants , that it may reasonably be assumed that all originally sprang from one . should be added , that there are no other distinctions whatever between them of bark , wood , leaves , male - cones , anthers , or the structure of these ...
... plants , that it may reasonably be assumed that all originally sprang from one . should be added , that there are no other distinctions whatever between them of bark , wood , leaves , male - cones , anthers , or the structure of these ...
Página 17
... plant of most rigid and otherwise opposite habit , corresponds with the climate of the country under the influence of ... plants , that though all sprang from one parent , none of them will ever assume all the characters either of that ...
... plant of most rigid and otherwise opposite habit , corresponds with the climate of the country under the influence of ... plants , that though all sprang from one parent , none of them will ever assume all the characters either of that ...
Página 18
... plants which I obtained on the very isolated summit of that mountain . Lastly , it is an established fact , that all plants of wide diffusion vary much , and that the extreme forms occur towards the limits of the area they occupy ...
... plants which I obtained on the very isolated summit of that mountain . Lastly , it is an established fact , that all plants of wide diffusion vary much , and that the extreme forms occur towards the limits of the area they occupy ...
Página 20
... plants . These are the leaves commonly called the cotyledons of the branches . In these elongated cones there is generally no passage from the woody ( seed - bearing ) scales of the cone to the leaf - buds . Although I have examined ...
... plants . These are the leaves commonly called the cotyledons of the branches . In these elongated cones there is generally no passage from the woody ( seed - bearing ) scales of the cone to the leaf - buds . Although I have examined ...
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Termos e frases comuns
Anatomy ancient animals appear Aristotle Atlas Aurignac Beiträge belonging Berlin bones Bonpl Botany Bull bundles carpels cells characters Cloth coloured plates columns commissure cord Covent Garden Craniometry cranium described dorsal Edinburgh Edition einige Fasc fibres figures Flexor Flora flowers Folio foramen magnum Fort Simpson Fossil fungi genera genus Geological German gravel grey substance Henrietta Street Ibid insect Journ Kenntniss larvæ latter layer Leipz Leipzig Linn London longitudinal medullary rays muscles NATURAL HISTORY REVIEW nerve neue North Notes nouvelles observations original ovules P. L. Sclater Paris plants pollen pollinia portion posterior roots present Proc Prof Professor referred remarks Science Sclerotium skull South Frederick Street species specimens spinal spores stamens stem structure surface tendon tion tissue Trans translation transverse Ueber vascular vertebræ vessels viii Wien WILLIAMS & NORGATE wood Zeit Zool zoospores
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 12 - Corrys in many Highland mountains. The floor of that in which the cedars grow presents almost a dead level to the eye, crossed abruptly and transversely by a confused range of ancient moraines which have been deposited by glaciers, that, under very different conditions of climate, once filled the basin above them, and communicated with the perpetual snow with which the whole summit of Lebanon was, at that time, deeply covered.
Página 118 - Gavest thou the goodly wings unto the peacocks? Or wings and feathers unto the ostrich? Which leaveth her eggs in the earth, And warmeth them in the dust, And forgetteth that the foot may crush them, Or that the wild beast may break them.
Página 130 - ... and the sitaris, therefore, at its first meal, relieves itself from its only rival. After eight days the egg is consumed, and on the empty shell the sitaris undergoes its first transformation, and makes its appearance in a very different form.
Página 31 - ... from one to five feet, and must also have projected from four to six feet above the water level, which cannot have been very different from what it is at present. They must, therefore, have had a length of from fifteen to thirty feet, and they were from three to nine inches in diameter. The pointed extremity which entered into the mud still bears the marks of the fire and the rude cuts made by the stone hatchets. The piles belonging to the Bronze period being prepared with metal axes, were much...
Página 164 - Flora affords no substantial evidence of a former direct communication with the mainland of the New World. . . . The consideration of these facts leads me to the opinion that botanical evidence does not favour the hypothesis of an Atlantis. On the other hand, it strongly favours the view that at some period of the Tertiary epoch North-Eastern Asia was united to North-western America, perhaps by the line where the Aleutian chain of islands now extends.
Página 30 - Roscommon. upon is in sartin freshwater loghes in his country, which from the sea there come neither ship nor boat to approach them : it is thought that there in the said fortified islands lyeth all his plate, which is much, and money, prisoners, and gages : which islands, hath in wars to fore been attempted, and now of late again by the Lord Deputy there, Sir Harry Sydney, which for want of means for safe conducts upon the water it hath not prevailed.
Página 41 - And they shall not lie with the mighty that are fallen of the uncircumcised, which are gone down to hell with their weapons of war: and they have laid their swords under their heads...
Página 471 - GARDEN FERNS ; or, Coloured Figures and Descriptions, with the needful Analyses of the Fructification and Venation, of a Selection of Exotic Ferns, adapted for Cultivation in the Garden, Hothouse, and Conservatory. By Sir WJ HOOKER, FRS Royal 8vo, 64 Plates, £2.
Página 33 - After having chosen a stone, the first step was to reduce it by blows with a hammer to a suitable size. Then grooves were made artificially, which must have been a very tedious and difficult operation, when flint knives, sand, and water were the only available instruments. Having carried the grooves to the required...