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The nation28.12.1876
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 28. Dezember 1876
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] bird.” - The breeding peculiarities of the ostrich are curious, and but little un derstood. The popular notion that the eggs are left lying about to be hatched by the sun is fallacious. The bird is polygamous, one male asso ciating with two or three females. The females are very careless concern [...]
[...] During the heat of the day he may safely leave them to the care of the sun's rays and to the negligent sitting of the mothers, but at night he covers them closely—twenty-five to thirty eggs, each weighing about three pounds. These are probably about half the eggs laid by his hens. The remainder are dropped at such a distance from the nest as to escape his observation. [...]
[...] These are probably about half the eggs laid by his hens. The remainder are dropped at such a distance from the nest as to escape his observation. The fresher of these eggs often serve as food for the young brood. The cock continues the duties which are usually considered maternal after the young have left their nest, taking entire charge of them, brooding them. [...]
[...] bird with struthious characteristics, but weighing only about four pounds. It may perhaps be regarded as one of its rudimentary ostrich characteristics that it lays an enormous egg of nearly one-quarter its own weight. Ostrich-farming promises to rescue the ostrich-feather supply from its threatened extinction. The birds were becoming more and more scarce [...]
[...] its best at the sitting time, and is much injured by the sitting. This has led to the adoption of artificial incubators, which have gradually been improved until they hatch the eggs with quite as much certainty as do the birds themselves. Another chief advantage of the artificial system lies in the fact that the feathers may be plucked when in their best condition, while [...]
[...] The Land-Birds and Game-Birds of New England, with descriptions of the birds, their nests and eggs, their habits and notes. With illustrations. By H. D. Minot. (Salem : Naturalists' Agency. Boston : Estes & Lau riat. 1877. 8vo, pp. xvi., 456.)—This volume is post-dated, according to [...]
[...] A brief diagnosis rather than a description of each species, and a state ment of its geographical distribution in New England, are followed by a description of the nest and eggs, a general sketch of habits and manners, and an account of the song or other notes the species may possess. The in troduction is chiefly devoted to instructions for the formation of oëlogical [...]
[...] troduction is chiefly devoted to instructions for the formation of oëlogical collections, and includes a very sensible and humane protest against unne cessary destruction of birds and their eggs. Mr. Minot's advice is generally sound, though we cannot agree with him “never to fire a gun "in our orni thological pursuits. The appendix contains an ornithological calendar for [...]
[...] thological pursuits. The appendix contains an ornithological calendar for Eastern Massachusetts, and an entirely novel feature—namely, a “Key to the Eggs of Massachusetts.” This is an analysis of the character of the eggs of those birds which breed in that State, by means of which a given specimen may be identified. It is prepared upon the plan recently adopted [...]
[...] specimen may be identified. It is prepared upon the plan recently adopted by Dr. Coues for the determination of birds themselves, but is the first in stance of use of the method in studying eggs. Another key of similar character analyzes the birds, giving good results ; though an infallible analysis, based like this one on color alone, is, in the nature of the case, [...]
The nationInhaltsverzeichnis 07.1872/08.1872/09.1872/10.1872/11.1872/12.1872
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. Juli 1872
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] republished, 154–Lagrèze's Pompell, Catacombs, Al hºmbra, 217–Lenormant's suspected Greek inscriptions, 281–1, egge's translation ºf the Sn K, nº. 217–Labor ques. tion in Massachusetts in 1633, 315–Library buildings, 216– Longevity of literary inen, 123–Literary impostures, 91– [...]
The nation18.01.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 18. Januar 1877
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] of how apt they are at engrafting scions of Western craft upon their own original stock of cleverness, has recently come to light. During several years past the hatching of silkworms' eggs in France and Italy has been very precarious, the entire produce of more than one season having been carried off by disease. Accordingly, cultivators have had to look to other [...]
[...] very precarious, the entire produce of more than one season having been carried off by disease. Accordingly, cultivators have had to look to other countries to supply them with eggs, both to replenish their nurseries and to give fresh vigor to native breeds of silkworms. Japan has been the principal source of the required supply, and in the fall of each year [...]
[...] principal source of the required supply, and in the fall of each year graincurs, as they are called, arrive in that country, deputed by French and Italian nurseries to purchase the cards on which the eggs are deposited. The number of these cards supposed to be required for the season of 1876 for Europe was 1,200,000. Mr. Shibusawa, formerly Vice-Minister of Fi [...]
[...] divert it into Japanese coffers. Before the opening of the season he organ ized a confederacy, of which he constituted himself the head, of the princi pal holders of silkworms' egg-cards. When the graineurs arrived, they found, to their dismay, that they could only buy cards at a fixed, and what they considered an exorbitant, tariff. So they bought a few, comparatively, [...]
[...] the association, two members of which travelled by the same vessel to Milan, for the purpose of establishing there a Japanese agency for the sale of silkworms' egg-cards, and thus to do away with the necessity of the intermediary work of Italian and French graineurs, and the consequent diversion of profits from first hands. [...]
The nation11.09.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 11. September 1873
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] for the purpose cans and alcohol at cost. The only exception was in the case of a skate brought in by a dredging party, which proved to contain in each oviduct an egg in its case or shell, apparently just formed and ready to [...]
[...] be laid; and the finder gladly placed at the Professor's disposal a specimen of which he could make the best use. Among other prizes were the sharks with eggs bearing young in different stages of growth (for many sharks bring forth living young), and a skate five feet across, with a tail of still greater length, and so heavy as to require two men to carry it into the [...]
[...] insects. No reptiles were found upon the island, but a number of turtle have been introduced as a supply in future years. Several kinds of birds were obtained, but the most abundant were three species of term, whose eggs and young were in some localities not easy to avoid treading upon. None of these were killed for sport, and the means for embryological study will [...]
[...] would not be easy. A series of admirable lectures on glaciers, embody ing much that has never been published, and a course upon radiates, and a third upon the egg, formed nuclei around which were grouped discourses upon general topics and special questions, such as were never before brought within the same time. And when it is remembered that the school opened [...]
The nation16.06.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 16. Juni 1870
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] chores. Every morning “they give the coffee-pot a ration of fragrant beaten paste—the brown kernels mixed with an egg; ” into one frying-pan “they set the milk for the brewis, into which, when it boils up white and drifting, go the sweet fresh butter and the salt, and then the bread-crumbs; [...]
[...] drifting, go the sweet fresh butter and the salt, and then the bread-crumbs; and the result is a light, delicate, savory bread-porridge, to eat daintily with a fork, and be thankful for.” In the other pan “are the fried eggs and the sprinkle of salt and pepper,” and “over it stands Barbara, with a tin-spoon, to toss up and turn till the whole is just curdled with the heat [...]
[...] Emerson. When they propose to take a few boarders in summer, what wonder if people from the city fly to them, and smack their lips over the prospect of the coffee and the brewis and the scrambled eggs, and sniff in anticipation the aroma of the tea-rose [...]
[...] maids milk the early cow and make the fragrant butter, and stout cooks serve the delicious coffee, and the savory brewis, and the perfect scrambled eggs; and in which stout kitchen maids scrape the dishes, not as the painter scrapes his palette, but in whatever fashion will take the grease off quickest; and stout laborers handle the shovel and the hoe, and the farmer [...]
The nation23.03.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 23. März 1871
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] FAMILY. GENUs. SPECIES. SUPPORTERs. - Production of adults........................ Milton. Independent } Production of eggs.......................... Swedenborg. Creati ſ Pºlon | Transmutation . . . . Lamarck. reation () r [...]
[...] animals and plants were created independently of all other species, then they must have been made as either perfect and fully formed individuals or as seeds and eggs. The former view is here ascribed to Milton rather than to Moses or to Scripture, because most intelligent people now ad mit that the earlier chapters of Genesis cannot reasonably be interpret [...]
[...] ed in their literal sense ; so that for a distinct statement of this view we must look to the great English poet, who, however, was not a scientific man.* The idea that organisms were created as eggs, which have a sim pler structure, is less difficult to comprehend than the foregoing, but it is not easy to see how this could occur with the higher animals whose [...]
[...] pler structure, is less difficult to comprehend than the foregoing, but it is not easy to see how this could occur with the higher animals whose young are born alive, and not in the form of eggs. A rather vague enunciation of this idea is contained in a little work by Swedenborg, which is probably to be regarded as purely philosophical and not as one [...]
The nation09.07.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 09. Juli 1874
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] Or, Ducks' Eggs in a Hen's Nest. By Florence Mont gomery, author of “Thrown Together,' 'Misunder stood,' etc. 12mo, extra cloth, $125. [...]
[...] the Witch of the Wave and the long line of clippers famous for their quick trips to California and the East Indies. The John Bertram carried as part of her cargo ten thousand dozens of eggs, put up in tins, which brought $10,000, as well they might in a country where eggs in 1849 cost two dollars per dozen, milk the same per gallon, and a squash the same, so that a batch [...]
The nation25.12.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 25. Dezember 1873
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] we should say. And to say so may be well enough, for our men of letters still have a trick of magnifying their office. We make as much noise over some titmouse's one egg as if eggs were a new thing in the world, and the one just laid were the roc's egg itself. It is pleasant to imagine the anguish of some of our American men of letters could they be put into the spiritual [...]
The nation13.08.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. August 1874
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] transformation of the homogeneous, through successive differentiations, into the heterogeneous. The type of the process is the development of the embryo within the egg, but it is supposed to be exemplified in all progress, whether in the development of the earth, or of life upon the earth,” etc. In other words, according to Spencer (and scientists generally), evolution is [...]
[...] ralization, or greater likeness to older forms; the correspondence of the suc cessive changes which each form undergoes, in its actual development from the egg to the adult condition, with more generalized forms; the corre spondence (but with some limitations) of the earlier inhabitants of the earth with the earlier embryonic conditions of existing forms; the similarity [...]
[...] and ignorance prevail in his remarks on embryology, the “geological suc cession of organic types,” etc. Thus, the antiquated errors that “the chick in the egg assumes in succession the aspect of a fish, a snake,” etc.; that man “assumes in succession the aspect of a seal,” etc. (p. 29), are repeated, and analogous errors are abundant. Only one, however, need be specified, and that [...]
The nation12.03.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 12. März 1874
  • Erschienen
    New York, NY
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    New York, NY
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] “RECEIPT FoR A Most ExCELLENT PLUM-PUDDING.—Take one pound of suet, spread very small and sifted; one pound of raisins stoned; four spoon fuls of flour; five eggs, but only three whites. Beat the eggs with a little salt. Tie it up close, and boil it at the least four hours.” . This is what we, in our advanced state of culinary civilization, regard as a [...]
[...] Oriental magnificence of spices, need scarcely be pointed out. In 1747, we find the porridge still reigning; pudding is only conspiring, slowly gaining strength for the revolution it is about to effect. To its eggs and raisins it has ventured on the addition of currants—an innovation to be marked. By successive innovations were added candied lemon-peel, citron, spices, brandy. [...]
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