Magazine of Natural History, Band 3John Claudius Loudon, Edward Charlesworth, John Denson Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1839 |
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Seite 6
... animals , appear to me to prove that this configuration has been greatly exaggerated . Let us only examine the false molars of a carnivorous animal , a panther for instance - and we perceive that they are also formed of a middle ...
... animals , appear to me to prove that this configuration has been greatly exaggerated . Let us only examine the false molars of a carnivorous animal , a panther for instance - and we perceive that they are also formed of a middle ...
Seite 7
... animal . If we compare the fossil animal with the Insectivora , we perceive in the latter the coronoid process carried more for- ward , and separated from the condyle by a deeper space ; the angular process of the jaw is shorter ...
... animal . If we compare the fossil animal with the Insectivora , we perceive in the latter the coronoid process carried more for- ward , and separated from the condyle by a deeper space ; the angular process of the jaw is shorter ...
Seite 43
... animals whose footmarks have been left in rocks of still higher antiquity , are two subjects now before the scientific ... animal which has left them . In attempting to draw determinate conclusions from imperfect relics of this kind , it ...
... animals whose footmarks have been left in rocks of still higher antiquity , are two subjects now before the scientific ... animal which has left them . In attempting to draw determinate conclusions from imperfect relics of this kind , it ...
Seite 44
... animal of the class Mammalia , and of the order Marsupialia . The free condition of the supposed thumb both on the large hind feet and on the small anterior extremities in the specimen before you , as in those of Germany , might as well ...
... animal of the class Mammalia , and of the order Marsupialia . The free condition of the supposed thumb both on the large hind feet and on the small anterior extremities in the specimen before you , as in those of Germany , might as well ...
Seite 46
... animal , for 20 or 30 feet over the surface of the rock , and they occur everywhere at this level in the quarry . Sometimes the impressions are crowded together in great numbers in a small space , as in the specimen before you , where ...
... animal , for 20 or 30 feet over the surface of the rock , and they occur everywhere at this level in the quarry . Sometimes the impressions are crowded together in great numbers in a small space , as in the specimen before you , where ...
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Agassiz Amphibia animal antennæ appears argonaut Basilosaurus beds birds Blainville body bones branchia branchial British brown cavity Cetonia chalk characters clay colour common condyle coralline crag Cuvier descending ramus described Didelphis distinct Ditto elytra examined external extremity Fabricius feet figure fossil genera genus Geological gills Göpp grey grey squirrel habits hairs hamster head hind Hist Hybodus III.-No inch incisors insect Insectivora Kirtlington Latreille latter Leach length Linn Linnæus lower jaw MacLeay mammals margin marsupials membrane molars mollusc Museum Natural History naturalists nearly nest Norwich observed Olivier oolite organs Owen plate portion possession posterior poulp present prothorax quadrupeds ramus red crag remarkable Sciurus seen shell side species specimens squirrel Stonesfield structure Studland sub-genus surface tail teeth tion tooth Trans tree upper valves wings yellow young Zoological