Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 17U.S. Government Printing Office, 1924 - Science Each volume comprises one or more monographs, many of which are issued also as separates. |
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Page 83
... fossil insects is due to Scudder's painstaking examination and description of the most minute details of structure exhibited by these forms . A strange contrast there was between the two pupils of Agassiz , Scudder and Hyatt ; for ...
... fossil insects is due to Scudder's painstaking examination and description of the most minute details of structure exhibited by these forms . A strange contrast there was between the two pupils of Agassiz , Scudder and Hyatt ; for ...
Page 84
... fossil insects , and no more fortunate choice of a specialist to study these could have been made than that of Scudder who remained attached to the staff of the survey as paleontologist from January 1 , 1886 , to July 31 , 1892 . Not ...
... fossil insects , and no more fortunate choice of a specialist to study these could have been made than that of Scudder who remained attached to the staff of the survey as paleontologist from January 1 , 1886 , to July 31 , 1892 . Not ...
Page 85
... fossil forms . Yet such a brief summary gives a wholly imperfect idea of the wide scope of his interests , much less of the sunny charm of his more popular writings which always seemed to have caught the generous cheer of a June day of ...
... fossil forms . Yet such a brief summary gives a wholly imperfect idea of the wide scope of his interests , much less of the sunny charm of his more popular writings which always seemed to have caught the generous cheer of a June day of ...
Page 86
... fossil centipede , but later , upon discovering that the specimen was more probably part of a fern leaf , he told his friends that it should be called " Tricky " ulus . His work upon fossil insects was of the pioneer sort and thus much ...
... fossil centipede , but later , upon discovering that the specimen was more probably part of a fern leaf , he told his friends that it should be called " Tricky " ulus . His work upon fossil insects was of the pioneer sort and thus much ...
Page 87
... , 1865. 12 p . 29. Revision of the hitherto known species of the genus Chionobas in North America . Proc . Entomological Soc . of Phil . , 1865 , v . 5 , pp . 1–28 , il . 30. On the fossil insects from Illinois , the Miamia 87.
... , 1865. 12 p . 29. Revision of the hitherto known species of the genus Chionobas in North America . Proc . Entomological Soc . of Phil . , 1865 , v . 5 , pp . 1–28 , il . 30. On the fossil insects from Illinois , the Miamia 87.
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Acad Academy of Sciences Amer Anonymous editorial Anonymous review April Association asteroids Astr Astron Astronomical Society Astronomy Astronomy 1906 Astrophysical Bost Boston Soc Bowditch Bull butterflies Cambridge Canadian Entomologist Carboniferous Catalogue College cols Cretaceous Dated Washington Diptera discussion eclipse editions or reprints Entomological Ephemeris figs fossil insects genus Gould Harvard Hist interest Jour Journ July June Kansas Univ London longitude Math Mathematical memoir moon mosasaurs motion Nachr National Academy Nautical Almanac Naval Observatory North American Note observations Orthoptera paper parallax Permian planets plesiosaurs Portrait president Proc Prof Professor Psyche published Quart Remarks reptiles right ascensions scientific Scudder Section Sept Side-Lights on Astronomy Simon Newcomb Smithsonian solar solar eclipse species stars Trans transit of Venus U. S. Geol U. S. Naval Observatory University vertebrates volume Williston York zodiacal light
Popular passages
Page 5 - When an officer is known or suspected to be guilty of malversation in office, some member of the house of representatives usually brings forward a resolution to accuse the party, or for the appointment of a committee to consider and report upon the charges brought against him.
Page 36 - The Uranian and Neptunian systems, investigated with the 26-inch equatorial of the United States Naval observatory.
Page 55 - Elements of Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, with Logarithmic and other Mathematical Tables, and Examples of their Use and Hints on the Art of Computation, by Simon...
Page 5 - On the Right Ascensions of the Equatorial Fundamental Stars and the Corrections Necessary to Reduce the Right Ascensions of Different Catalogues to a Mean Homogeneous System.
Page 38 - On the recurrence of solar eclipses with tables of eclipses from BC 700 to AD 2300, by Simon Newcomb.
Page 16 - Sciences in 1900; the Bruce Gold Medal of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific in...
Page 96 - The Earliest Winged Insects of America: a re-examination of the Devonian Insects of New -Brunswick, in the light of criticisms and of new studies of other Palaeozoic types.
Page 189 - Deprivation of the comforts of life has a greater tendency to diminish stature than the weight," and "that the importance of mode of life as a factor in determining the size of growing children in this community is at least equal to and possibly even greater than that of race.
Page 3 - I date my birth into the world of sweetness and light on one frosty morning in January, 1857, when I took my seat between two well-known mathematicians, before a blazing fire in the office of the Nautical Almanac at Cambridge, Mass.
Page 95 - A brief account of some of the scientific institutions of Boston and vicinity.