Homes Without Hands: Being a Description of the Habitations of Animals, Classed According to Their Principle of ConstructionLongmans, Green and Company, 1892 - 632 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 71
Page 96
... described , and find that there is no resemblance in their forms , the shape and direction of the holes being evidently caused by an animal of no great length in proportion to its width . In my own specimen , every hole is contracted at ...
... described , and find that there is no resemblance in their forms , the shape and direction of the holes being evidently caused by an animal of no great length in proportion to its width . In my own specimen , every hole is contracted at ...
Page 103
... described , and the process by which the feat is accom- plished is quite as enigmatical . Several conchologists have ex- pressed an opinion that the animal must secrete some liquid solvent , which softens the rock , and permits the ...
... described , and the process by which the feat is accom- plished is quite as enigmatical . Several conchologists have ex- pressed an opinion that the animal must secrete some liquid solvent , which softens the rock , and permits the ...
Page 122
... described as the Visiting Ant , it is in reality a distinct species , as will be seen in the course of a few pages . The Saüba Ant is restricted to tropical America , where it exists in such vast profusion , that it oftentimes takes ...
... described as the Visiting Ant , it is in reality a distinct species , as will be seen in the course of a few pages . The Saüba Ant is restricted to tropical America , where it exists in such vast profusion , that it oftentimes takes ...
Page 124
... described among the building- insects . MOST of the British ants are among the burrowers , hollowing out subterranean abodes of great extent , and constructing them upon some intricate plan , the principle of which is 124 HOMES WITHOUT ...
... described among the building- insects . MOST of the British ants are among the burrowers , hollowing out subterranean abodes of great extent , and constructing them upon some intricate plan , the principle of which is 124 HOMES WITHOUT ...
Page 138
... described according to personal experience . Generally , the Lapidary Bee makes its nest in heaps of stone , sometimes choosing those hillocks of rough stones which are heaped on the sides of roads , awaiting the stone - breaker and his ...
... described according to personal experience . Generally , the Lapidary Bee makes its nest in heaps of stone , sometimes choosing those hillocks of rough stones which are heaped on the sides of roads , awaiting the stone - breaker and his ...
Contents
117 | |
120 | |
151 | |
167 | |
183 | |
193 | |
199 | |
200 | |
213 | |
229 | |
251 | |
305 | |
421 | |
446 | |
467 | |
500 | |
513 | |
515 | |
520 | |
566 | |
593 | |
595 | |
625 | |
631 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen animal antennæ ants attached beak beautiful beetles body branches British British Museum build burrow called caterpillar cells cocoon colour combs common constructed covered crab creature crustacea curious earth Eciton eggs entomologists entrance example excavated Fairy Martin fastened feathers feeding feet female fibres flies gall garden genus grass ground grub habits hair hatched hole hollow humming birds hymenoptera ichneumon illustration inhabitants insect labours larva larvæ leaf leaves look male manner materials mentioned Mole Mole Cricket molluscs moth natives nearly nest nest-The ordinary parasitic pass peculiar pensile nests placed plentiful pupa pupal reader remarkable resemblance rock Sand Martin scarcely seen shape shell Shipworm side silken similar slender soft sometimes species specimens spider spot structure substance surface tail Tallegalla Termites thick threads Titmouse tree tube tunnel twigs walls wasps Weaver Weaver Bird wings wood yellow young
Popular passages
Page iii - HOMES WITHOUT HANDS; a Description of the Habitations of Animals, classed according to their Principle of Construction.
Page 404 - ... space, if the two edges of the band meet ; or a semi-cylindrical space, if they only imperfectly meet. This inimitable mechanism enables each filament to take up and firmly grasp, at any point of its length, a molecule of sand ; or, if placed in a linear series, a row of molecules. But so perfect is the disposition of the muscular fibres at the extreme...
Page 235 - ... flew to the face of the rock, which was thickly clothed with soft dry moss, and hovering on the wing, as if before a flower, began to pluck the moss, until she had a large bunch of it in her beak; then I saw her fly to the nest, and having seated herself in it, proceed to place the new...
Page 154 - ... at first, namely, disappear under the bird and scrape away the earth until the hole is large enough to allow the bird to sink into the required position. The time occupied in the transaction necessarily varies, according to the size of the buried object and the condition of the beetle ; but on the average an ordinary finch, or a mouse, can be buried in the course of a day. When the task is completed, a number of eggs are laid upon the buried animal, and then the beetles emerge, cover it with...
Page 524 - The rook, however, remains in society the year throughout. In flocks it builds its nest, in flocks it seeks for food, and in flocks it retires to roost. About two miles to the eastward of this place are the woods of Nostell Priory, where, from time immemorial, the rooks have retired to pass the night. I suspect, by the observations which I have been able to make on the morning and evening transit of these birds, that there is not another roosting-place for, at least, thirty miles to the westward...
Page 416 - The lodges are nearly circular in form, and much resemble the well-known snow houses of the Esquimaux, being domed, and about half as high as they are wide, the average height being three feet and the diameter six or seven feet. These are the interior dimensions, the exterior measurement being much greater, on account of the great thickness of the walls, which are continually strengthened with mud and branches, so that, during the severe frosts, they are nearly as hard as solid stone. Each lodge...
Page 125 - The third order of workers is the most curious of all. If the top of a small, fresh hillock, one in which the thatching process is going on, be taken off, a broad cylindrical shaft is disclosed, at a depth of about two feet from the surface. If this be probed with a stick, which may be done to the extent of three or four feet without touching bottom, a small number of colossal fellows will slowly begin to make their way up the smooth sides of the mine.
Page 6 - MOLE is entitled to take the first place in our list of burrowers. This extraordinary animal does not merely dig tunnels in the ground and sit at the end of them, but forms a complicated subterranean dwelling-place, with chambers, passages, and other arrangements of wonderful completeness. It has regular roads leading to its feeding-grounds ; establishes a system of communication as elaborate as that of a modern railway, or to be more correct, as that of the subterranean network of metropolitan sewers...
Page 330 - Kolobeng, that the bird comes forth when the young are fully fledged, at the period when the corn is ripe ; indeed, her appearance abroad with her young is one of the signs they have for knowing when it ought to be so. As that is about the end of April, the time is between two and three months. She is said sometimes to hatch two eggs, and, when the young of these are full-fledged...
Page 236 - Acoucagua, inhabiting a zone of very great elevation, seldom being seen less than ten thousand feet above the level of the sea. With the exception of a bright emerald-green gorget, it is rather a dull-coloured bird, the prevailing hue being brown. The nest is shaped something like a hammock, not unlike that of the...