| William John Broderip - 1849 - Страниц: 416
...incessantly its mournful cry. This was on the 10th of December. Mr. Blackwall thus continues his narrative : swan, supposed to be the same individual, made its...immutabilis ? Unlike those of the other swans, the cygnet of this species is white, and no change takes place in the colour of the plumage after its sortie... | |
| Mrs. Loudon (Jane) - 1850 - Страниц: 630
...water. -3*N»~-^ CT^-^~ THE HOOPOE. (Upupa epops.) THIS is a small bird, measuring no more than twelve inches from the point of the bill to the end of the tail. The bill is sharp, black, and somewhat bending. The head is adorned with a very beautiful, large, moveable... | |
| A. E. Belknap - 1850 - Страниц: 70
...old cotton from the throat, mouth, and nostrils, and replace it by fresh. Then take the dimensions from the point of the bill to the end of the tail, from the tip of one wing to that of the other, when both are extended, and from the tip of the wing... | |
| William Thompson - 1851 - Страниц: 528
...the bill to the end of the tail. The bird being laid on a flat surface, the space which it occupied from the point of the bill to the end of the tail was 12 inches 6 lines. The length of three specimens given in the ' Faun. Bor.-Amer.' was from 15 in.... | |
| Samuel Maunder - 1853 - Страниц: 880
...ornithology, the red and blue macaw. This bird is the finest of the parrot kind ; being a full yard long, from the point of the bill to the end of the tail, and its plumage adorned with the most beautiful variety of colours. :SC] Scientific antr HUtcraru tfoasurn... | |
| Samuel Maunder - 1853 - Страниц: 872
...ornithology, the red and blue macaw. This bird is the finest of the parrot kind ; being a full yard long, from the point of the bill to the end of the tail, audits plumage adorned with the most beautiful variety of colours. NO CUILDRKtf. E SCALA'DE, in the... | |
| Zadock Thompson - 1853 - Страниц: 736
...toothed; tarsus roundish, two thirds feathered; feet strong, toes rasp-like on the underside. Length from the point of the bill to the end of the tail 3 feel 7 inches, folded wing 26 inches; tail hevond the folded wirgs 6.5 inches; from the tip of the... | |
| 1853 - Страниц: 428
...old cotton from the throat, mouth, and nostrils, and replace it by fresh. Then take the dimensions from the point of the bill to the end of the tail, from the tip of one wing to that of the other, when both are extended, and from the tip of the wing... | |
| Mayne Reid - 1854 - Страниц: 530
...making notes upon its size, colour, and other peculiarities. The owl measured exactly two feet in length from the point of the bill to the end of the tail j and its " alar spread," as naturalists term it, was full five feet in extent. It was of a clove-brown... | |
| John Kitto - 1855 - Страниц: 676
...the rest of the plumage being nearly all black and brown. It often measures four feet two or three s promised himin a vision. 10 He is driven by a famine into E the spread of its wings is sometimes not less than ten feet across. This, then, being the ancient ossifrage,... | |
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