tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">87
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Animals of the Cambrian Period |
90 |
From Knipe's Nebula to Man. |
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A Trilobite |
90 |
Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S. |
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The Gambian Mud-Fish, Protopterus |
91 |
Photo: British Museum (Natural History). |
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The Archæopteryx |
91 |
After William Leche of Stockholm. |
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Wing of a Bird, Showing the Arrangement of the Feathers |
91 |
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Pictorial Representation of Strata of the Earth's Crust, with Suggestions of Characteristic Fossils (Coloured Illustration) |
92 |
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Fossil of a Pterodactyl or Extinct Flying Dragon |
94 |
Photo: British Museum (Natural History). |
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Pariasaurus: An Extinct Vegetarian Triassic Reptile |
94 |
From Knipe's Nebula to Man. |
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Triceratops: A Huge Extinct Reptile |
95 |
From Knipe's Nebula to Man. |
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The Duckmole or Duck-Billed Platypus of Australia |
95 |
Photo: Daily Mail. |
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Skeleton of an Extinct Flightless Toothed Bird, Hesperornis |
100 |
After Marsh. |
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Six Stages in the Evolution of the Horse, Showing Gradual Increase in Size |
101 |
After Lull and Matthew. |
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Diagram Showing Seven Stages in the Evolution of the Fore-Limbs and Hind-Limbs of the Ancestors of the Modern Horse, Beginning with the Earliest Known Predecessors of the Horse and Culminating with the Horse of To-Day |
104 |
After Marsh and Lull. |
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What is Meant by Homology? Essential Similarity of Architecture, though the Appearances May be Very Different |
105 |
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An Eight-Armed Cuttlefish or Octopus Attacking a Small Crab |
116 |
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A Common Starfish, which has Lost Three Arms and is Regrowing Them |
116 |
After Professor W. C. McIntosh. |
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The Paper Nautilus (Argonauta), an Animal of the Open Sea |
117 |
Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S. |
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A Photograph Showing a Starfish (Asterias Forreri) which has Captured a Large Fish |
117 |
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Ten-Armed Cuttlefish or Squid in the Act of Capturing a Fish |
118 |
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Greenland Whale |
118 |
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Minute Transparent Early Stage of a Sea-Cucumber |
119 |
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An Intricate Colony of Open-Sea Animals (Physophora Hydrostatica) Related to the Portuguese Man-of-War |
119 |
Photo: British Museum (Natural History). |
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A Scene in the Great Depths |
119 |
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Sea-Horse in Sargasso Weed |
120 |
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Large Marine Lampreys (Petromyzon Marinus) |
120 |
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The Deep-Sea Fish Chiasmodon Niger |
120 |
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Deep-Sea Fishes |
120 |
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Flinty Skeleton of Venus' Flower Basket (Euplectella), a Japanese Deep-Sea Sponge |
121 |
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Egg Depository of Semotilus Atromaculatus |
121 |
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The Bitterling (Rhodeus Amarus) |
124 |
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Woolly Opossum Carrying her Family |
124 |
Photo: W. S. Berridge. |
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Surinam Toad (Pipa Americana) with Young Ones Hatching out of Little Pockets on her Back |
125 |
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Storm Petrel or Mother Carey's Chicken (Procellaria Pelagica) |
125 |
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Albatross: A Characteristic Pelagic Bird of the Southern Sea |
128 |
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The Praying Mantis (Mantis Religiosa) |
138 |
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Protective Coloration: A Winter Scene in North Scandinavia |
138 |
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The Variable Monitor (Varanus) |
139 |
Photo: A. A. White. |
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Banded Krait: A Very Poisonous Snake with Alternating Yellow and Dark Bands |
140 |
Photo: W. S. Berridge, F.Z.S. |
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The Warty Chameleon |
140 |
Photos: W. S. Berridge, F.Z.S. |
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Seasonal Colour-Change: Summer Scene in North Scandinavia |
141 |
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Protective Resemblance |
142 |
Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S. |
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When Only a Few Days Old, Young Bittern Begin to Strike the Same Attitude as their Parents, Thrusting their Bills upwards and Drawing their Bodies up so that they Resemble a Bunch of Reeds |
143 |
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Protective Coloration or Camouflaging, Giving Animals a Garment of Invisibility (Coloured Illustration) |
144 |
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Another Example of Protective Coloration (Coloured Illustration) |
144 |
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Dead-Leaf Butterfly (Kallima Inachis) from India |
146 |
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Protective Resemblance between a Small Spider (to the left) and an Ant (to the right) |
146 |
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The Wasp Beetle, which, when Moving amongst the Branches, Gives a Wasp-Like Impression |
147 |
Photo: J. J. Ward, F.E.S. |
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Hermit-Crab with Partner Sea-Anemones |