Essex Naturalist: Being the Journal of the Essex Field Club, 1–2 tomaiThe Club., 1887 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 40
69 psl.
... insects , etc. , could they be sure that , though otherwise evidently harmless , we would carefully abstain from damaging fences and leaving gates open or insecurely fastened . During many years ' experience on the Geological Survey in ...
... insects , etc. , could they be sure that , though otherwise evidently harmless , we would carefully abstain from damaging fences and leaving gates open or insecurely fastened . During many years ' experience on the Geological Survey in ...
71 psl.
... insects of Essex . Of these the one most worthy of note is the excellent and admirably illustrated paper on " The Galls of Essex , " by Mr. E. A. Fitch . " The Mollusca of the District around Colchester , " and " The Mammalia of Essex ...
... insects of Essex . Of these the one most worthy of note is the excellent and admirably illustrated paper on " The Galls of Essex , " by Mr. E. A. Fitch . " The Mollusca of the District around Colchester , " and " The Mammalia of Essex ...
109 psl.
... insect - hunters in Epping Forest and its neighbourhood forty - six years ago , and in other remarkable times . from 1838 to 1862 , may be of interest to some of our entomological members . I have therefore put together the following ...
... insect - hunters in Epping Forest and its neighbourhood forty - six years ago , and in other remarkable times . from 1838 to 1862 , may be of interest to some of our entomological members . I have therefore put together the following ...
110 psl.
... insect life , and species not before noticed put in an appearance in considerable numbers . The curious caterpillars of ... insects , all neatly clipped off by the bats the evening before . The handsome butterfly , Argynnis adippe , was ...
... insect life , and species not before noticed put in an appearance in considerable numbers . The curious caterpillars of ... insects , all neatly clipped off by the bats the evening before . The handsome butterfly , Argynnis adippe , was ...
111 psl.
... insect life and vegetation was one of continued progress : there were no cold evenings to kill the moths and keep the Entomologist at home . By the middle of March the blackthorn was in full blossom , and I visited it to find Anticlea ...
... insect life and vegetation was one of continued progress : there were no cold evenings to kill the moths and keep the Entomologist at home . By the middle of March the blackthorn was in full blossom , and I visited it to find Anticlea ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Essex Naturalist– Being the Journal of the Essex Field Club, 15–16 tomai Visos knygos peržiūra - 1910 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
alluvium ancient animals appears Archæological badgers beds bird bones Boulder Clay British Bruchus rufimanus Buckhurst Hill chalk chalk-wells chambers Chingford Christy Colchester collection colour common deer Denehole Exploration deneholes deposits district drift map E. A. Fitch England Epping Forest Essex Field Club ESSEX NATURALIST excavation feet flakes flint flower Forest Gate GEORGE REDWAY Glacial gravel Hall Hangman's Wood illustrated implements inches insect interesting Knighton Villas larvæ London Clay Loughton Maldon marsh Meldola miles Mollusca moth mounds Museum Natural History neighbourhood Norfolk Northey Island notes observations occur ORDINARY MEETING Orsett Paleolithic paper pits plants pottery present probably Prof published recorded remarks Report river River Chelmer road Roman Roxwell Secretary seen sent shaft side Society species specimens Spurrell stone Stratford Subscriptions Suffolk surface T. V. Holmes Thames Theydon Theydon Bois visited Walter Crouch WILLIAM COLE
Populiarios ištraukos
282 psl. - My son, fear thou the LORD and the king : and meddle not with them that are given to change...
105 psl. - HE clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ring'd with the azure world, he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls.
190 psl. - There is scarcely any wellinformed person, who, if he has but the will, has not also the power to add something essential to the general stock of knowledge, if he will only observe regularly and methodically some particular class of facts which may most excite his attention, or which his situation may best enable him to study with effect.
89 psl. - The world was all before them, where to choose Their place of rest, and providence their guide: They hand in hand with wandering steps and slow, Through eden took their solitary way.
182 psl. - ... knowledge of these features in indigenous German plants— why has this not been done for Britain? "Now, I venture to think that good results would follow if you would bring before the Delegates at the meeting to-day the importance of encouraging the members of their Societies to study the life-histories of indigenous plants in their entirety, ie from the stage of embryo in the seed up to the production of fruit and seed again. Anyone who will take up this line of study will assuredly derive...
280 psl. - It was, doubtless, this possession of all the elements necessary to form a perfect landscape that caused Morant, the county historian, to describe Laindon as commanding the finest views in Essex, if not in England. And we have more unbiassed testimony in a work entitled "A Six Week's Tour through the Southern Counties of England and Wales "(Lond.
96 psl. - That the gentlemen whose names are appended be requested to act as a Committee (with power to add to their number) for the purpose of carrying out the previous resolution and of reporting to an adjourned public meeting to be held during the second week in October next.
45 psl. - THE EAST ANGLIAN; Or, NOTES AND QUERIES on subjects connected with the Counties of SUFFOLK, CAMBRIDGE, ESSEX and NORFOLK.
190 psl. - Happy, truly, is the naturalist. He has no time for melancholy dreams. The earth becomes to him transparent; everywhere he sees significances, harmonies, laws, chains of cause and effect endlessly interlinked, which draw him out of the narrow sphere of self-interest and self-pleasing, into a pure and wholesome region of solemn joy and wonder.
271 psl. - Charles I., and that his son, Charles II., ordered this memorial of their loyalty to be erased.