Metropolitan duties shut out much of the field of nature ; but still she may be found and studied everywhere. I first learned to appreciate the true nature and relations of the nominally various and distinct metamorphoses of insects, by watching and pondering... Medical Times - Page 1661850Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Richard Owen - 1855 - 1196 pages
...its larval state. The moth, which destroys our clothes, does it not in its complete, but its larval, stage. The cockchafer, which makes the young wheat-blade...a crustacean. I saw that it passed through stages answering to those at which other insects were arrested: there was a period when its jointed legs were... | |
| 1856 - 948 pages
...passage on the same subject, and which I have pleasure in quoting for more reasons than one, he says, " Metropolitan duties shut out much of the field of...and pondering over the development of a cockroach (also an orthopterous insect), which quits the egg as a crustacean. I saw that it passed through stages... | |
| 1856 - 420 pages
...subject, and which I have pleasure in quoting for more reasons than one, he says, " Metro, politan duties shut out much of the field of nature ; but...and pondering over the development of a cockroach (also an orthopterous insect), which quits the egg as a crustacean. I saw that it passed through stages... | |
| Abel Stevens, James Floy - 1857 - 612 pages
...learned to appreciate the true natore and relations of the nominally various and distinct métamorphose! of insects, by watching and pondering over the development...a crustacean. I saw that it passed through stages answering to those at which other insects were arrested ; there was a period at which its jointed legs... | |
| Abel Stevens, James Floy - 1857 - 586 pages
...all essential respects to those which others experience after their emergence from it. He says : " I first learned to appreciate the true nature and relations of the nominally Tarions and distinct metamorphoses of insects, by watching and pondering over the development of a... | |
| Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh - 1858 - 598 pages
...after-passage on the same subject, and which I have pleasure in quoting for more reasons than one, he says, " Metropolitan duties shut out much of the field of...and pondering over the development of a cockroach (also an orthopterous insect), which quits the egg as a crustacean. I saw that it passed through stages... | |
| Linnean Society of London - 1864 - 274 pages
...arrived at his conclusions. He says in his ' Lectures on Invertebrate Animals ' (p. 437, edition 1855), " Metropolitan duties shut out much of the field of...a Crustacean. I saw that it passed through stages answering to those at which other insects were arrested : there was a period when its jointed legs... | |
| Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh - 1858 - 552 pages
...after-passage on the same subject, and which I have pleasure in quoting for more reasons than one, he says, " Metropolitan duties shut out much of the field of...be found and studied everywhere. I first learned to * Lectures on Invertubrate Animals, Ed. 1855, p. 424. appreciate the true nature and relations of the... | |
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