Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and SciencesAcademy, 1895 - Humanities Vol. 15, "To the University of Leipzig on the occasion of the five hundredth anniversary of its foundation, from Yale University and the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1909." |
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Results 1-5 of 47
Page iii
... Plates 1 , 2 , ... VI . THE DEVELOPMENT OF TEREBRATULA OBSOLETA , DALL . 376 By C. E. BEECHER . Plates 2 , 3 , - 392 la , 2a , 3a , 4 ,. VIa . - CANADIAN SPIDERS . By J. H. EMERTON . Plates VII . - ON SOME BIRDS AND EGGS COLLECTED BY MR ...
... Plates 1 , 2 , ... VI . THE DEVELOPMENT OF TEREBRATULA OBSOLETA , DALL . 376 By C. E. BEECHER . Plates 2 , 3 , - 392 la , 2a , 3a , 4 ,. VIa . - CANADIAN SPIDERS . By J. H. EMERTON . Plates VII . - ON SOME BIRDS AND EGGS COLLECTED BY MR ...
Page 332
... plates . 367 pp . and 7 plates .. $ 2.50 3.50 208 pp . and 7 plates ... 3.00 202 pp . and 11 plates .. 248 pp . and 37 plates ... 260 pp . and 23 plates . 242 pp . and 2 plates 3.00 3.50 2.50 2.50 100 pp . and 11 plates . 1.50 267 pp . and ...
... plates . 367 pp . and 7 plates .. $ 2.50 3.50 208 pp . and 7 plates ... 3.00 202 pp . and 11 plates .. 248 pp . and 37 plates ... 260 pp . and 23 plates . 242 pp . and 2 plates 3.00 3.50 2.50 2.50 100 pp . and 11 plates . 1.50 267 pp . and ...
Page 376
... Plates I and II . ) THE recent publications of Fischer and Ehlert , 8 , 9 , 10 , combined with previous observations by Friele ... plate forming the connection between the descending branches . The cirri in early stages of the animal are ...
... Plates I and II . ) THE recent publications of Fischer and Ehlert , 8 , 9 , 10 , combined with previous observations by Friele ... plate forming the connection between the descending branches . The cirri in early stages of the animal are ...
Page 378
... Plate I , figure G1 , has the structure of Terebratalia . The descend- ing lamell and the median V - shaped plate correspond to the pri- mary loop , while the secondary loop or posteriorly recurved portion has greatly increased in size ...
... Plate I , figure G1 , has the structure of Terebratalia . The descend- ing lamell and the median V - shaped plate correspond to the pri- mary loop , while the secondary loop or posteriorly recurved portion has greatly increased in size ...
Page 382
... Plate I , figure A. The structure just before the appearance of the septum is the same as that described in Gwynia by King . The brachia form a slender fleshy ellipse or circle , resting in front on the floor of the interior of the ...
... Plate I , figure A. The structure just before the appearance of the septum is the same as that described in Gwynia by King . The brachia form a slender fleshy ellipse or circle , resting in front on the floor of the interior of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdomen ACAD action of papoid Agarum alliteration Baffin Bay beef proteids birds blade body-wall brain-lobes cæsura canal cells cent century cephalic cephalothorax Christ church ciliated circular cisterns coast color Comer commodity connective tissue cycle dark district dorsal drama dry proteid eggs England English epigynum epithelium female ferment fibres Figure genera genus gild Gough Island grams of dry hydrochloric acid intestinal Jesus Kerguelen lacunæ Laggan Laminaria lateral cords legs light liturgy longitudinal loop Macrocystis Magellania Magi male palpus marginal utility Maria markings Mary muscles muscular layer mystery plays nephridial northern outer pageants palpus Plate portion posterior proboscis proboscis-sheath Proteid digested region rime series septenar septum side side-organs sodium sodium bicarbonate solution species specimens sporophylls stage stanza stipe subtribe thick tion transition-place Tunc undigested residue ventral verses Weight of undigested wind hauled Woodkirk York play
Popular passages
Page 138 - And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets are read, as long as time permits; then, when the reader has ceased, the president verbally instructs, and exhorts to the imitation of these good things.
Page 125 - The effort of the economist is to "see," to picture the interplay of economic elements. The more clearly cut these elements appear in his vision, the better; the more elements he can grasp and hold in his mind at once, the better. The economic world is a misty region. The first explorers used unaided vision. Mathematics is the lantern by which what before was dimly visible now looms up in firm, bold outlines. The old phantasmagoria disappear. We see better. We also see further.
Page 221 - I think I heard of that man you spake of, once in a play at Kendall, called Corpus Christi play, where there was a man on a tree, and blood ran down,
Page 135 - The Presentation in the Temple: a pageant, as originally represented by the Corporation of Weavers in Coventry. Now first printed from the books of the company.
Page 382 - ... tendencies due to old age ; so that nearly every stage passed through by the higher genera has a fixed representative in a lower genus. Moreover, the lower genera are not merely equivalent to, or in exact parallelism with the early stages of the higher, but they express a permanent type of structure...
Page 60 - Labour affects supply, and supply affects the degree of utility, which governs value, or the ratio of exchange. In order that there may be no possible mistake about this all-important series of relations, I will restate it in a tabular form, as follows : — Cost of production determines supply. Supply determines final degree of utility. Final degree of utility determines value.
Page 121 - The chief use of pure mathematics in economic questions seems to be in helping a person to write down quickly, shortly and exactly, some of his thoughts for his own use: and to make sure that he has enough, and only enough, premisses for his conclusions (ie that his equations are neither more nor less in number than his unknowns).
Page 213 - Christi day afternoon, at procession passed through the principal streets of the city, wherein was borne more than one hundred torches of wax, costly garnished, burning light, and above two hundred clerks and priests, in surplices and copes, singing. After the which were the sheriffs...
Page 20 - If the two highways were inclined at 10° and 20° respectively, the "grades" have a ratio of 1-97 if measured by sines, of 2'OV by tangents, and exactly 2 by angles. For a long time philosophers could define and determine when two bodies were equally or unequally hot. But not till the middle of this century* did physicists attach a meaning to the phrase " twice as hot." It is here especially that exactitude has been hitherto lacking in mathematical economics. Jevons freely confesses that " We can...
Page 147 - Three pair of angels' wings ; four angels, made of timber, and well painted. Item. The Father, the crown and visage ; the ball with a cross upon it, well gilt with fine gold. Item. The Holy Ghost coming out of heaven into the sepulchre. Item. Longeth to...