Hardwicke's Science-gossip: An Illustrated Medium of Interchange and Gossip for Students and Lovers of Nature, Volume 4Mordecai Cubitt Cooke, John Eller Taylor Robert Hardwicke, 1869 - Natural history |
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... our object or ambition to become what is called a " scientific journal . " Ours is a " GOSSIP , " and it is our aim to gossip freely , in as untechnical a manner as possible , on ! scientific subjects , so that even those of our.
... our object or ambition to become what is called a " scientific journal . " Ours is a " GOSSIP , " and it is our aim to gossip freely , in as untechnical a manner as possible , on ! scientific subjects , so that even those of our.
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... become too scientific , we always listen to with respect ; it is , we are well aware , the greatest of all our dangers , and needs constant effort to control . Literally we cannot be too scientific , if by that is meant the truth of ...
... become too scientific , we always listen to with respect ; it is , we are well aware , the greatest of all our dangers , and needs constant effort to control . Literally we cannot be too scientific , if by that is meant the truth of ...
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... becomes very hard and firm . That both forms of these pavements are the work of a well- planned design , there can be no doubt with the careful investigator . All the communities of this A species select their homes in the open sunshine ...
... becomes very hard and firm . That both forms of these pavements are the work of a well- planned design , there can be no doubt with the careful investigator . All the communities of this A species select their homes in the open sunshine ...
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... becomes thoroughly saturated , and dissolves the cement with which the granary cells are made tight . This is a great calamity , and if rain continues a few days it will drown out the entire community . In cases , however , where it has ...
... becomes thoroughly saturated , and dissolves the cement with which the granary cells are made tight . This is a great calamity , and if rain continues a few days it will drown out the entire community . In cases , however , where it has ...
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... become necessary to raise the mound two or three inches higher , and also to widen the base considerably . Forthwith are seen swarming out upon the pavement hosts of ants , who go rapidly to work , and bringing the little black balls ...
... become necessary to raise the mound two or three inches higher , and also to widen the base considerably . Forthwith are seen swarming out upon the pavement hosts of ants , who go rapidly to work , and bringing the little black balls ...
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Achromatic Algæ animal Apparatus appear Articles beautiful beetles birds Botany Britain Catalogue cells Cetacea cloth collection collector colour common CONCHOLOGY contains Crown 8vo deposits Easy Account Edition EDWIN LANKESTER eggs Exhibition Falconer Fcap FERNS flowers Fossil FRESH-WATER Fully Illustrated Fungi garden genus hairs Half an hour half-morocco HANDSOMELY BOUND Hawfinch HENRY LAWSON Hugh Falconer inches insects INSTRUMENTS J. E. SOWERBY LANKESTER larvæ leaves LENSES LONDON M. C. COOKE magnified organ Mastodon MICROSCOPE morocco MOTHS mounted Natural History naturalists Navicula nest Notes notice observed OPTICIAN Oxlips P. T. Cautley paper PICCADILLY Plain and Easy plants plates poison R. A. PROCTOR RALPH TATE readers remarkable ROBERT HARDWICKE SCIENCE-GOSSIP scientific seen Sewalik Hills shell Society species specimens spider Stamps Street Synapta Telescope tion tree tube variety volume whole morocco Wines winter wood Woodcuts young Zoology
Popular passages
Page 109 - COLLECTION CATALOGUE for NATURALISTS. A Ruled Book for keeping a permanent Record of Objects in any branch of Natural History, with Appendix for recording interesting particulars, and lettered pages for general Index. Strongly bound, 200 pages, Ts. 6d. ; 300 pages, 1or. ; and 2s. 6d. extra for every additional 100 pages. Working Catalogues, is. 6d. each. COMPANION TO THE WRITING DESK. See " How to Address Titled People.
Page 43 - Directions showing which are the best adapted for the Hothouse, Greenhouse, Open Air Fernery, or Wardian Case. With an Index of Genera, Species, and Synonyms.
Page 64 - THOMSON. Handy Book of the Flower-Garden : being Practical Directions for the Propagation, Culture, and Arrangement of Plants in FlowerGardens all the year round. Embracing all classes of Gardens, from the largest to the smallest. With Engraved Plans, illustrative of the various systems of Grouping in Beds and Borders. By DAVID THOMSON, Gardener to his Grace the Duke of Buccleuch, KT, at Drumlanrig.
Page 59 - O READER ! hast thou ever stood to see The holly tree? The eye that contemplates it well, perceives Its glossy leaves Ordered by an intelligence so wise As might confound the atheist's sophistries. Below, a circling fence, its leaves are seen Wrinkled and keen; No grazing cattle, through their prickly round, Can reach to wound ; But as they grow where nothing is to fear, Smooth and unarmed the pointless leaves appear.
Page 109 - MUSHROOMS AND TOADSTOOLS: How to Distinguish easily the Difference between Edible and Poisonous Fungi. Two large Sheets, containing Figures of 29 Edible and 31 Poisonous Species, drawn the natural size, and Coloured from Living Specimens. With descriptive letterpress, 6s. ; on canvas, in cloth case for pocket, los.
Page lxii - Calabria, covered with very recent breccia, the calcareous chain of the Apennines, the country of Pignerol, the coasts of Portugal and Greece, those of Peru and Terra Firma, afford striking proofs of this assertion.
Page vii - RESEARCHES INTO THE HISTORY OF THE BRITISH DOG. From Ancient Laws, Charters, and Historical Records. With Original Anecdotes and Illustrations of the Nature and Attributes of the Dog, from the Poets and Prose Writers of Ancient, Mediaeval, and Modern Times.
Page 64 - HALF-HOURS WITH THE TELESCOPE: a Popular Guide to the Use of the Telescope as a means of Amusement and Instruction.
Page 109 - RUST, SMUT, MILDEW, AND MOULD. An Introduction to the Study of Microscopic Fungi.
Page lx - Similar phenomena were observed in ancient times by the inhabitants of those parts of Greece and Asia Minor abounding with caverns, crevices, and subterraneous rivers. Nature, in her uniform progress, everywhere suggests the same ideas of the causes of earthquakes, and the means by which man, forgetting the measure of his strength, pretends to diminish the effect of the subterraneous explosions. What a great Roman naturalist has said of the utility of wells and caverns* is repeated in the New World...