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R. S. Phil. Trans., 1774. Ibid, 1783. Observations on the Spots on the Sun, etc., 4 degrees; London and Edinburgh, 1863. Periodicitat der Sonnenflecken. Astron. Nach. R.S. Phil. Trans. "Researches on Solar Physics," by De la Rue, Stewart and Loewy; R. S. Phil. Trans., 1869, 1870. "The Sun as Photographed on the K line"; Knowledge, London, 1903, p. 229. R. S. Proc., xv., 1867, p. 256.
See Mr. In regard to birds which build in holes or construct domed nests, other advantages, as Mr. Mr. Mr. C. Horne, 'Proc. Zoolog. It is a more serious objection to Mr. Wallace's view, as is admitted by him, that in some few groups the males are brilliantly coloured and the females obscure, and yet the latter hatch their eggs in domed nests.
Searle, Harvard Annals, vol. xxix., p. 223; Boss, Astr. Roy. Messenger, vol. iv., p. 282; Hasselberg, Astr. Roy. Astr. Pac. Nach., Nos. 3,752, 3,753; Kapteyn, Ibid., No. 3,756; F. W. Very, Ibid., No. 3,771; and W. E. Wilson, Proc. Roy. Trans., vol. clviii., p. 540. Nach., No. 3,476; Astroph. Roy. Astr. Pac. Soc., vol. ii., p. 265; Proc. Roy.
See Heywood Townshend, Proc. in the Last Four Parl. of Eliz., Debates, passim. J.E. Foster: Ch'wd'ns Acc'ts of St. Thos. North, Chronicle of St. E. Freshfield, Vestry Minutes of St. Christopher-le-Stocks, Append., 71. Ibid., 7. For similar vestry orders see Vestry Minutes of St. Burn, Eccles. Memorials of Stepney, 51. Cf. Op. cit., 43. Art. xxi, Cardwell, Doc. Ann., i, 326. Leicest. Archit.
In an allied bird, the Penelope nigra, Mr. Salvin observed a male, which, whilst it flew downwards "with outstretched wings, gave forth a kind of crashing rushing noise," like the falling of a tree. Mr. Salvin, in 'Proceedings, Zoological Society, 1867, p. 160. Gould, 'Introduction to the Trochilidae, 1861, p. 49. Salvin that the noise was intentionally made. Sclater, in 'Proc. Zool.
On a fragment of another Nippur text, No. 4611, Dr. Univ. of Penns. Mus. Publ., Bab. Sec., Vol. It may be added that, on either alternative, the meaning of the name is the same. The meaning of the Sumerian element u in the name, rendered as utu in the Semitic form, is rather obscure, and Dr. Poebel left it unexplained. It is very probable, as suggested by Dr. Proc. Soc. Bibl.
A not uncommon entry in the act-books is "no levy of the fyne of 12d." See, e.g., Manchester Deanery Visit., 57, et passim. Barnes' Eccles. Proc., 119, et passim. Hale, Crim. Prec., passim. See examples in note 32, pp. 19 supra. Hale, Crim. For some interesting receipt items see The Westminster Tobacco Box, Pt. ii, Overseers Acc'ts, 18 ff. Wandsworth Acc'ts, Surrey Arch.
Wild horses and cattle do not, I believe, make any danger-signal; but the attitude of any one of them who first discovers an enemy, warns the others. Rabbits stamp loudly on the ground with their hind-feet as a signal: sheep and chamois do the same with their forefeet, uttering likewise a whistle. Mr. R. Brown in 'Proc. Zoolog.
That is to say, the surfaces of the lava-streams are not at all, or only slightly, decomposed into soil suitable for the growth of plants, except in rare instances. E. G. Hull, "On the Domite Mountains of Central France," Scien. Proc. Roy. Dublin Society, July 1881, p. 145. Dr. Hull determined the density of the domite of the Puy de Dôme to be 2.5, while that of lava is about 3.0.
We have a number of these articles of inquiry formulated by archbishops or bishops. Cf. Cardwell, Doc. The last named work hereinafter cited as Hale, Churchwardens' Prec. For numerous examples of excommunication for non-appearance, see Barnes' Eccles. Proc., 29 ff. Incumbents, wardens and sidemen were almost always in attendance. Schoolmasters usually so when there were such.
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