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Registros recuperados: 47 | |
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Burat, Amédée. |
Les voyages et la villégiature sur les bords de la mer sont passés dans nos mœurs ; c'est un nouveau besoin, non seulement pour ceux qui veulent étudier, mais pour le nombre bien plus grand de ceux qui veulent voir. Celte attraction est d'ailleurs motivée par des causes multiples . La vue de la mer est la source d'impressions les plus diverses ; son aspect varie suivant la lumière qui en dessine les horizons, suivant les vents qui en mouvementent la surface , suivant le flot ou le jusant des marées dont les vagues représentent en quelque sorte la vie de la mer et celle de la navigation. [OCR NON CONTRÔLE] |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Histoire; France; Géographie; Océanographie; Côte. |
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00002/11326/7863.pdf |
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Pizzetta, Jules. |
De nos jours encore, les produits de la pêche sont en beaucoup de lieux la principale base de l'alimentation. Les populations ichthyophages sont d'ailleurs des plus belles et des plus fortes qu'on connaisse. Les Norvégiens et les Suédois, dignes descendants des Normands qui, au IXe et au Xe siècle, faisaient trembler l'Europe, se nourrissent presque exclusivement de poissons, et, sans aller chercher si loin, les villages de pêcheurs de nos côtes se distinguent par la vigueur physique, et la valeur morale de leurs habitants. |
Tipo: Text |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00034/14496/11797.pdf |
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Ritsema Cz., C.. |
Length of the male 44 mm., of the female 54 mm.; breadth at the shoulders in the male 15,5 mm., in the female 19 mm. Smooth and shining; black, with the elytra of a beautiful metallic green; the body covered with extremely small scales of a whitish green, forming transverse bands on the elytra and abdominal segments, irregular on the former, widely interrupted on the latter; the antennae annulated and the legs banded with whitish blue. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509119 |
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Man, J.G. de. |
Milne Edwards, Observ. sur la classification des crust., in Annal. des sciences natur: III Série, t. XX, 1853, p. 182. — Heller, Novara-Reise, Crustacea, pag. 65. The Museum contains two specimens (1♂,1♀) of this small species. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508591 |
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Jentink, F.A.. |
Temminck ¹) states »il paraît que les Japonais confondent le Vespertilion macrodactyle avec le Vespertilion abrame, l’un et l’autre sont désignés par eux sous le nom de Komuli In the description of his V. abramus ²) however we read »nous conservons son nom japonais” viz. abrame. Concerning the indigenous name of V. akokomuli3) he says »son nom japonais est Komuli, que porte aussi le V. macrodactyle.” In the Fauna japonica 4) we learn „le nom japonais du V. macrodactyle n’est pas indiqué”, further 5) „le nom japonais du V. abrame est abramusi (insecte du lard)” and 6) »le nom japonais du V. akokomuli (akokomuli see supra) serait selon M. Burger Komuli ou akakomuli (Vespertilion noir)”. Finally Temminck 1) says »le nom japonais du V. molosse est aka-komuli.” |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509103 |
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Candèze, E.. |
Fusco-castaneus, subnitidus, cinereo-pilosulus, fronte convexa, apice parum porrecta; antennis articulis 2 et 3 parvis aequalibus; prothorace latitudine haud longiore, aequaliter convexo, crebre fortiterque punctato, angulis posticis retrorsum productis, brevibus, carinatis; elytris saepe brunnescentibus, tenuiter striato-punctatis, interstitiis planis, transversim subgranulatis; corpore subtus concolore, prosterni mucrone recto. — Long. 11 mm., lat. 3 mm. Hab. Zanzibar. — The specimens of the Leyden Museum were forwarded from the interior (Marangnombe). My own collection contains several specimens captured by Mr. Schaedle at Bagamoyo. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509195 |
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Schlegel, H.. |
Les Mégapodes forment, dans l’ordre des Gallinae, une tribu plus particulièrement isolée par le mode de propagation. La plupart de ces oiseaux rappelle, par l’aspect général et la grosseur, nos poules ordinaires et ce n’est qu’un petit nombre d’entre eux qui égale, sous ce dernier rapport, nos coqs de très forte taille ou la dinde, s’éloignant, en même temps, par des modifications très sensibles dans la conformation de la queue, ou du cou, ou de la tête. Un trait distinctif et commun à tous réside, toutefois, dans la longueur des doigts, y compris le pouce, ainsi que dans leurs ongles robustes, allongés, mais seulement courbés d’une manière plus ou moins faible; enfin dans la disposition de tous les doigts dans le même plan, en sorte que la plante des... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508253 |
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Putzeys, J.. |
Closely allied to Therates Wallacei Thoms. ¹) and found in the same locality. It may perhaps prove to be only a variety of that species. Thorax blue; elytra green with the whole base and the apex yellow, the sutural spines are even shorter, and the legs are entirely testaceous with the exception of the tarsi of the anterior pair and the apical joints of those of the middle and hind legs. — Length 12 mm. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508945 |
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Vosmaer, G.C.J.. |
The Leyden Museum of Natural History possesses a collection of Sponges, which have never as yet been thoroughly examined nor classified in accordance with the progress, which has lately been made in this branch, of science. And so it was with much pleasure that I accepted the honourable task of determining and arranging this collection, being at the same time convinced of the necessity of treating the different groups separately. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508716 |
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Man, J.G. de. |
Milne Edwards, Observ. sur la classification des Crustacea, 1852, pag. 145. Hilgendorf, in Baron von der Decken’s Reise, pag. 83. In the collection of our Museum there are specimens of this species from the Indian Archipelago (Celebes, Amboina, Ceram and Java) and from the island of Nossi-Bé near Madagascar, which entirely agree with one another. The median furrow of the front however is never so narrow and small as has been figured by Milne Edwards (1. c. pl. III, fig. 4). This species may be distinguished at first sight by the characteristical shape of the larger hand, and is distributed throughout the Indo-Pacific Region from Zanzibar to Hongkong and the Fiji Islands. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509073 |
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Trouessart, E.L.. |
The Insectivora from Madagascar generally belong to forms which are quite distinct from each other, such as the genera Centetes, Oryzoryctes, Geogale, etc., and which have now become the types of separate families and subfamilies. Up to 1848 the large group of Shrews, Soricidae, was looked upon as not inhabiting either Madagascar or the little adjoining islands. At that time Mr. Ch. Coquerel, Surgeon in the French Navy, published a good description and figures of Sorex madagascariensis ¹), a very small Shrew, which he had discovered at Nossi-Bé, on the N. W. Coast of Madagascar. Later in 1855 Dr. Leop. Fitzinger briefly described as Pachyura auriculata ²), a much larger Shrew brought home by Mad. Ida Pfeiffer from her travels in Madagascar. But this... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508963 |
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Martin, K.. |
In the year 1854 J. A. Herklots published a description of the fossil Echini, which had been found by Junghuhn in the tertiary strata of Java, in the fourth part of a publication, entitled «Fossiles de Java.” I have been occupied in working out the other groups of animals from these deposits, which by the death of Herklots was left unachieved. The results of my investigations have been embodied in the work entitled »Die Tertiärschichten auf Java”, the palaeontological part of which has appeared a short time ago. I succeeded in demonstrating, that a considerable percentage of these fossils are yet represented in the recent fauna of the Indian Ocean, and for this reason I was astonished to find, that all the Echini, with only a single exception, were... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508476 |
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Jentink, F.A.. |
Fur composed of three kinds of hairs: 1°. woolly hairs, slate-colored near the base and for the rest rusty; 2°. spinous hairs, very narrow and flexible, white near the base, dusky brown towards the tip; and 3°. longer bristles, brown colored. Underparts covered only with woolly hairs, slate-colored near the base and for the rest yellowish rusty. Tail shorter than head and body, with short brown hairs. Ears rather short, rounded. Whiskers as long as to reach the tips of the ears, black. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508639 |
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Schlegel, H.. |
A single skin of this bird was contained in a large collection of birds, made, in 1877, during an expedition to Macassar and the neighboring isle of Saleyer, under the leading of the well known botanical traveller, Mr. Teysman. The bird in question belongs evidently to the group of the Timaliae, strongly characterized like the whole tribe of Formicivorae to which it belongs by the vaulded form of the tail, a characteristic which is found back in the owls in a most remarkable way. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508473 |
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Roelofs, W.. |
Niger; prothoracis lineis tribus, elytrorum linea suturali maculisque irregularibus squamulis viridibus ornatus. Scapo valido compresso, dilatato bicurvato. Femoribus dente parvulo armatis. — Long. 5 mm. Black, the legs of an obscure brown-red colour; furnished with green scales and greyish hairs. Rostrum bare of scales at the apex which is bordered with greyish hairs, concave like the forehead and carrying an impressed median line. Scape of the antennae exceeding the anterior border of the prothorax, robust, enlarged and flattened, curved outward and downward ¹), striped longitudinally and provided with short and stiff hairs. The funicle covered with green scales and as well as the club provided with greyish hairs. Eyes distant from each other superiorly. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509434 |
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Schlegel, H.. |
Siao and Sanghi (the two principal islands of the Archipelago of Sanghi, which forms a kind of link between Celebes and Mindanao) produce a species of Megapode, which is allied to Megapodius cuminghi from the Philippines, Megap. gilberti from the Northern parts of Celebes, Megap. lowii from North-West Borneo, and Megap. forsteni from Ceram, Amboina and Bourou; hut which differs from all these species in a way sufficiently notable to justify its claim to the rank of a separate species. The Philippine bird is at once distinguished from the other above mentioned species by its superior size. The bird of Sanghi, inferior in size to that of the Philippines, is, on the contrary, larger than Megap. lowii and gilberti, and even somewhat larger than Megap. forsteni. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509069 |
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Reitter, E.. |
Nigrum, nitidissimum, antennis, clava excepta, femoribus rufis, tibiis tarsisque rufo-piceis, oculis subdistantibus; prothorace sat dense punctato, antrorsum lateribusque lineatim marginato, ante basin linea transverse arcuata et secunda media ante scutellum longitudinali, antrorsum abbreviata, grosse punctatis, impresso; elytris subtiliter punctatis, stria suturali fortiter impressa, in fundo punctis minutis perspicuuis, linea basali grosse punctatis; pygidium, propygidium subtusque fere laevis. — Long. 3,3 mm. Entirely black and very shining; the antennae except the club, and the femora rusty-red, the tibiae and tarsi dark brown; upper surface finely although very distinctly and rather densely punctured; under surface with hardly any punctures. The... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
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Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508840 |
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Registros recuperados: 47 | |
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