Bulletin of the New York State Museum, Ausgaben 139-142University of the State of New York, 1910 |
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abundant Adirondack adnexed adult Agric Albany aphid apple August basin beds beetle brown brownish calcite Cambric caterpillars cave Champlain clay cm broad cm long Codling Moth color convex crystalline cystidia dentpits deposits dolomite Entomologist eurypterids experimental tree feet fibrillose formation galls Geology glabrous glacial gray green gypsum Hebeloma inches injury Inocybe insect July June Lake lamellae larvae limestone Linn Little Falls Little Falls dolomite LL.D margin marketable fruit material mineral Mohawk Museum N. Y. State Cab N. Y. State Mus Onondaga Ordovicic output Paleozoic pest Pileus plant lice plate plot portion Potsdam production quadrangle quarry quartz region Rep't reported rock sand sandstone Saratoga September shale Short tons slate slightly small fruit spec species specimens spores spray spring stem equal stone surface thick tion Total Tribes Hill upper valley whitish wormy wormy fruit yellowish York ΙΟ
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 212 - DANIEL BEACH Ph.D. LL.D. - Watkins 1914 PLINY T. SEXTON LL.B. LL.D. - ... Palmyra 1912 T. GUILFORD SMITH MACE LL.D.
Seite 2 - Attendance, JAMES D. SULLIVAN Educational Extension, WILLIAM R. EASTMAN MAMLS Examinations, CHARLES F. WHEELOCK B!S. LL.D. Inspections, FRANK H. WOOD MA Law, THOMAS E. FINEGAN MA School Libraries, CHARLES E. FITCH LHD Statistics, HIRAM C. CASE New York State Education Department Science Division, April 23, 1906 Hon.
Seite 212 - HARLAN H. HORNER BA Attendance, JAMES D. SULLIVAN Educational Extension, WILLIAM R. EASTMAN MAMLS Examinations, CHARLES F. WHEELOCK BS LL.D. Inspections, FRANK H. WOOD MA Law, FRANK B. GILBERT BA School Libraries, CHARLES E. FITCH LHD Statistics, HIRAM C. CASE Trades Schools, ARTHUR D.
Seite 98 - DANIEL BEACH Ph.D. LL.D. Watkins 1914 PLINY T. SEXTON LL.B. LL.D. Palmyra 1912 T. GUILFORD SMITH MACE LL.D. ... Buffalo 1918 WILLIAM NOTTINGHAM MA Ph.D.
Seite 36 - General. The work of the office has been materially aided as in past years, by the identification of a number of species, through the courtesy of Dr LO Howard, chief of the bureau of entomology, United States Department of Agriculture, and his associates.
Seite 192 - Frontenac with six hundred ; at still another, Frontenac with a thousand. Always there came also a cloud of Algonquin allies. Always the Iroquois retired and then returned, rebuilt their villages, replanted their fields, resumed their operations and in their turn took ample revenge for their injuries. So, to and fro the war parties went, harrying and burning and killing, but always the barrier stood, and always with its aid the English colonies labored and fought and grew strong. When the final struggle...
Seite 188 - The stern, repressive and despotic control over body and soul effected by the union of military and religious organization during the first century of United Spain was accompanied by a marvelous efficiency and energy that made Spain for a time the foremost maritime and colonizing power of the world. The price of that efficiency, however, was the loss of the only permanent source of national energy, the independence and free initiative of individual character among her citizens. Thenceforth Spain...
Seite 186 - ... the member of the tribe to fill it was elected by the tribe. The sachems of each nation governed their own nation in all local affairs. Below the sachems were elected chiefs on the military side and Keepers of the Faith on the religious side. Crime was exceedingly rare ; insubordination was unknown ; courage, fortitude and devotion to the common good were universal. The territory of the Long House covered the watershed between the St Lawrence basin and the
Seite 33 - ... dry. GILLS adnexed, subdistant, ascending, narrow, yellowish-cinnamon. STEM 2.5-5 cm. long, 2-3 mm. thick, solid or with a small hollow tubule, white, then whitish. SPORES 8-10 x 6-7 micr., ellipsoid. "Swamps. Massachusetts. October. Closely allied to C. acutus, from which it differs in the darker color of the young moist pileus and whiter color of the mature dry pileus, the white color of the young stem, the adnexed gills, and especially by the larger spores and absence of striae from the pileus.
Seite 33 - Kalmia angustifolia L. South Acton, Mass. October. S. Davis and GE Morris. "This species is allied to Clavaria ligula Fr. from which it differs in its smaller size, in its color becoming whitish or paler with age or in drying, but being lemon-yellow and more persistent within, in its glabrous lemon-yellow stem and in its broader spores. It is apparently a rare but very distinct species.