Birds and nature (1901) (14755364162)


Formát:
3028 x 4576 Pixel (834828 Bytes)
Popis:

Identifier: birdsnature91901chic (find matches)
Title: Birds and nature
Year: 1900 (1900s)
Authors:
Subjects: Birds Natural history
Publisher: Chicago, Ill. : A.W. Mumford, Publisher
Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Biodiversity Heritage Library

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.

Text Appearing Before Image:
re taken fromDutch Guiana to Holland, where they be-came thoroughly domesticated, breedingas readily as any other kind of domesticpoultry. Though a tropical bird, it woulds-eem that they might be acclimatized.They would certainly form a valuable ad-dition to the list of our farm fowls, fortheir flesh is said to be exceedingly whiteand delicate. The female is not as large as the maleand is usually reddish in color. Theirfood consists almost entirely of fruit andinsects. About the middle of the eighteenth cen-tury Eleazar Albin wrote A NaturalHistory of Birds, in which he gives avery interesting account of the Curassowand an excellent illustration of the bird.He says : I took a pourtray of this birdat Chelmsford in Essex; it was very tameand sociable, eating and drinking withany company. The Cock I had of a manfrom the West Indies. They are gen-erally brought from Carasow, fromwhence they take their Name. They arecalled by the Indians Tecuecholi, Moun-tain-Bird or American Pheasant. 146
Text Appearing After Image:
FROM COL. CHI. ACAO. SCIENCES. CRESTED CURASSOW. (Crax globicera.) 1 5 Life-size. fOPVRGHT 1901, BYW. MUMFORO, CHICAGO. SOME NOTABLE NESTS. The Clymer boys and girls, of Clover-dale, New England, belonged to a BirdClub ; they were proposed to membershipby their neighbors, the Walkers; in fact,the two families composed the club, andit partook of the nature of a secret so-ciety. All this was before the young peopleof Cloverdale knew of Clark University,and Dr. Hodges Ten to One Clubs,wherein the members pledged themselvesto strive by all imaginable means—pro-vided they were also practical—to induceten song birds to live and sing each year,where only one was found the year be-fore. It was not necessary for the CloverdaleClub to put up carefully constructed andartistic bird houses, or to hang cottonand the like fine nest-building materialsin choicest ornamental shade trees—notat all. The English Sparrow had not foundthe village in those days; the song birdswere there, they knew all

Note About Images

Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
Komentář k Licence:
At the time of upload, the image license was automatically confirmed using the Flickr API. For more information see Flickr API detail.
Licence:
Licenční podmínky:
No known copyright restrictions
Sdílet obrázek:
Facebook   Twitter   Pinterest   WhatsApp   Telegram   E-Mail
Více informací o licenci na obrázek naleznete zde. Poslední aktualizace: Wed, 22 Nov 2023 22:33:41 GMT

Relevantní obrázky

(c) Teleuko, CC BY 3.0

Relevantní články

Hoko černý

Hoko černý, dříve hoko pospolitý, je velký druh ptáka z čeledi hokovitých, který obývá lesnaté oblasti severních částí Jižní Ameriky. Opeření je většinou černé, pouze spodní část těla je bílá, výrazná je černá chocholka se zatočenými pery a mohutný žlutý či oranžovočervený zobák s černou špičkou. Místy je hojně loven. .. pokračovat ve čtení