Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Том 48

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Smithsonian Institution, 1907

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Стр. 372 - Institution, the income from a part of which was to be devoted to "the increase and diffusion of more exact knowledge in regard to the nature and properties of atmospheric air in connection with the welfare of man.
Стр. 438 - In Egypt, in the thirteenth century, the habit of eating human flesh pervaded all classes of society ; extraordinary snares were spread for physicians in particular. They were called to attend persons, who pretended to be sick, but who were only hungry ; and it was not in order to be consulted, but devoured. An historian of great veracity, Abd-Allatif, has related, how a practice, which at first inspired dread and horror, soon occasioned not the slightest surprise...
Стр. 138 - Barb, 5 inchcs. can be got most easily attached, and by this the shark is towed on shore; several boats are requisite for towing. The Mhor is often 40, sometimes 60 feet in length; the mouth is occasionally 4 feet wide. All other varieties of shark are caught in nets, in somewhat like the way in which herrings are caught at home. The net is made of strong English whip-cord; the meshes about six inches; they are generally 6 feet wide, and from 600 to 800 fathoms, or from threequarters to nearly a...
Стр. 438 - Europe, were to reproach us with the habit of feeding on the flesh of animals. In the eyes of the Indian of the Guaisia, the Cheruvichahena was a being entirely different from himself; and one whom he thought it was no more unjust to kill than the jaguars of the forest.
Стр. 37 - The Silver fish, or Grande Ecaille, is common everywhere on the Gulf coast. It is an immense and active fish, preying eagerly upon schools of young fry, or any small fish that it is able to receive into its mouth, and in pursuit of which it ascends fresh-water rivers quite a long distance.
Стр. 449 - Ignorant as we were of the facts, it was' impossible to come to a definite conclusion. There were certainly many proofs of an invasion by a hostile people, so that the Admiral was at a loss what to do ; he with many others thought...
Стр. 409 - A distinct electric shock was given by this fish when alive, the electric organs being in the fleshy areas on top of head behind 2310 Bulletin 47, United States National Museum.
Стр. 233 - Siberia, which points to the surmise that the mammoth became extinct in Alaska before the last of the species succumbed in Siberia. Associated with the mammoth were herds of large bison and horses. This species of horse may have been the last native to North America, the rear guard of the last migration of these animals across the region of Bering Straits to Asia before the land connection disappeared. There was a species of musk-ox, together with sheep and bear. Descendants of these last three forms...
Стр. 438 - These captive women told us, that the Caribbee men use them with such cruelty as would scarcely be believed ; and that they eat the children, which they bear to them, only bringing up those, which they have by their native wives. Such of their male enemies as they can take away alive, they bring here to their homes to make a feast of them, and those, who are killed in battle, they eat up after the fighting is over. They claim...
Стр. 230 - Mr. FV COVILLE, curator of the division of plants in the National Museum represented the Smithsonian Institution and the Museum at the Second International Botanical Congress at Vienna, June ii to 18, 1905.

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