| Alexander Wilson, George Ord - 1828 - 464 páginas
...Carolina, about twenty miles from the former place, can have striking and melancholy proofs of this fact. In some places the whole woods, as far as you...blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation. And yet ignorance and prejudice stubbornly persist in directing their indignation against the bird... | |
| 1819 - 424 páginas
...woods, as far as you can see around you, are dead, stripped of the bark, their wintry-looking arras and bare trunks bleaching in the sun, and tumbling...blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation. " In looking over the accounts given of the Ivory-billed Woodpecker by the naturalists of Europe, I... | |
| 1820 - 422 páginas
...you, are dead, stripped of the bark, their wintry'.looking arms and bare trunks bleaching in the *un, and tumbling in ruins before every blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation !' The flowers of the crocus (crocus vernusj appear, before their leaves are grown to their full length... | |
| 1826 - 376 páginas
...fact. In some places, the whole woods, as far as' you can see around you, are dead, stripped of their bark, their wintry-looking arms and bare trunks bleaching...blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation. One of these woodpeckers slightly wounded in the wing, was locked in a room in an inn for about an... | |
| Pierce Egan - 1823 - 300 páginas
...woods, as far as you can see around you, are dead, stripped of their bark, their wintry-looking arms are bare trunks bleaching in the sun, and tumbling in...blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation. In looking over the accounts given of the ivory-billed Woodpecker by the naturalists of Europe, I find... | |
| Reuben Percy - 1826 - 380 páginas
...place, can have striking and melancholy proofs of this fact. In some places, the whole .woods as far you can see around you, are dead, stripped of the...blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation. One of these woodpeckers slightly wounded in the wing, was locked in a room in an inn for about an... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - 1831 - 620 páginas
...thousand acres of pine trees, many of them from two to three feet in diameter, and 150 feet high ? In some places, the whole woods, as far as you can...the sun, and tumbling in ruins before every blast" The subterraneous larva? of a species of beetle has often caused a complete failure of the seed-corn,... | |
| James Rennie - 1830 - 440 páginas
...of pine trees, many of them from two to three feet in diameter, and a hundred and fifty feet high ? In some places the whole woods, as far as you can...the sun, and tumbling in ruins before every blast f." The subterraneous larva of a species of beetle (Zabrus gibbus) has often caused a complete failure... | |
| Alexander Wilson, Charles Lucian Bonaparte, George Ord, William Maxwell Hetherington - 1831 - 426 páginas
...as far as you can see around yon, are dead, stripped of the bark, their wintry-looking arms and hare trunks bleaching in the sun, and tumbling in ruins...blast, presenting a frightful picture of desolation. And yet ignorance and prejudice stubbornly persist in directing their indignation against the bird... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - 1831 - 616 páginas
...some placee, the whole woods, as far as you can see around you, are dead, stripped of the bark, then- wintry-looking arms and bare trunks bleaching in the sun, and tumbling in ruins before every blast." The subterraneous larvse of a species of beetle has often caused a complete failure of the seed-corn,... | |
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