N | Coord. | Preceding Context | WORD | Following Context |
1 | | | zambesi | |
| 5630.262 | across the Continent, down the River | Zambesi, to the Eastern Ocean. Thirtieth |
32 | | | zealand | |
| 890.741 | Dr. Hooker tabulated the trees of New | Zealand, and Dr. Asa Gray those of the United |
| 1600.292 | nature. The endemic productions of New | Zealand, for instance, are perfect one compared |
| 2570.974 | have recently spread over New | Zealand, and have seized on places which must |
| 2570.1135 | of Great Britain were set free in New | Zealand, that in the course of time a multitude |
| 2570.1343 | from what we see now occurring in New | Zealand, and from hardly a single inhabitant of |
| 2570.1501 | doubt, if all the productions of New | Zealand were set free in Great Britain, whether |
| 2570.1758 | be said to be higher than those of New | Zealand. Yet the most skilful naturalist from |
| 2584.1069 | the extinct and gigantic birds of New | Zealand. We see it also in the birds of the |
| 2809.547 | of former glacial action in New | Zealand; and the same plants, found on widely |
| 2825.353 | Introduction to the Flora of New | Zealand,' by Dr. Hooker, analogous and striking |
| 2831.300 | is certainly a wonderful fact that New | Zealand should have a closer resemblance in its |
| 2831.501 | the reappearance on the shores of New | Zealand, Tasmania, &c., of northern forms of |
| 2831.625 | five species of Algæ are common to New | Zealand and to Europe, but have not been found |
| 2863.344 | remote as Kerguelen Land, New | Zealand, and Fuegia, I believe that towards the |
| 2867.312 | shores of America, Australia, New | Zealand have become slightly tinted by the same |
| 2918.246 | large size and varied stations of New | Zealand, extending over 780 miles of latitude |
| 2922.68 | naturalised on it, as they have on New | Zealand and on every other oceanic island which |
| 2930.173 | Galapagos Islands reptiles, and in New | Zealand gigantic wingless birds, take the place |
| 2942.354 | mountains of the great island of New | Zealand; but I suspect that this exception (if |
| 2948.936 | do occur on almost every island. New | Zealand possesses two bats found nowhere else |
| 2978.601 | currents, this anomaly disappears. New | Zealand in its endemic plants is much more |
| 2978.981 | disappears on the view that both New | Zealand, South America, and other southern |
| 3614.12 | geological succession, 449.
Algæ of New | Zealand, 376.
Alligators, males, fighting |
| 3803.17 | to selection, 102.
Crustacea of New | Zealand, 376. Crustacean, blind |
| 3817.25 | of Japan, 372.
—, on crustaceans of New | Zealand, 376.
DUCK.
De Candolle on struggle |
| 4028.29 | Hooker, Dr., on trees of New | Zealand, 100.
[page] 496 INDEX.
HOOKER |
| 4037.19 | of Himalaya, 373.
——, on algæ of New | Zealand, 376.
——, on vegetation at the base of |
| 4215.8 | the indigenous species, 115.
—in New | Zealand, 201. Nautilus, Silurian, 306. Nectar |
| 4216.4 | Newman, Mr., on humble-bees, 74.
New | Zealand, productions of, not perfect |
| 4253.26 | on fossil birds of New | Zealand, 339.
—, on succession of types |
| 5229.85 | Ancient Traditional History of the New | Zealand Race. "Woodcuts." Post 8vo. 10s.6d |
| 6106.38 | WAKEFIELD'S (E. J.) Adventures in New | Zealand. With some Account of the Beginning of |
9 | | | zebra | |
| 1323.342 | its legs, like those on the legs of a | zebra: it has been asserted that these are |
| 1323.1179 | quagga, though so plainly barred like a | zebra over the body, is without bars on the |
| 1339.318 | that it must have been the product of a | zebra; and Mr. W. C. Martin, in his excellent |
| 1339.502 | seen, of hybrids between the ass and | zebra, the legs were much more plainly barred |
| 1345.161 | variation, striped on the legs like a | zebra, or striped on the shoulders like an |
| 1349.121 | and I see an animal striped like a | zebra, but perhaps otherwise very differently |
| 1349.320 | of the ass, the hemionus, quagga, and | zebra.
He who believes that each equine |
| 4572.0 | Wings, reduction of size, 134.
| ZEBRA.
Wings of insects homologous with |
| 4600.0 | horns in young cattle, 454.
Z.
| Zebra, stripes on, 163.
THE END |
2 | | | zebra-like | |
| 1323.1286 | figured one specimen with very distinct | zebra-like bars on the hocks.
With respect to the |
| 1339.1301 | the dun Welch pony, and even had some | zebra-like stripes on the sides of its face. With |
1 | | | zenith | |
| 4688.28 | s.
1854.—I. Description of the | Zenith Tube. 3s.
II. Six Years' Catalogue of |
1 | | | zincali | |
| 4844.4 | s., or Popular Edition 16mo, 6s.
——— | Zincali, or the Gipsies of Spain; their Manners |
11 | | | zones | |
| 1183.766 | and on many islands in the torrid | zones. Hence I am inclined to look at |
| 1406.433 | varieties existing in the intermediate | zones. By changes in the form of the land and |
| 1434.197 | have been formed in the intermediate | zones, but they will generally have had a |
| 1434.489 | varieties), exist in the intermediate | zones in lesser numbers than the varieties |
| 2345.359 | to the equator, inhabiting various | zones of depths from the upper tidal limits |
| 2817.694 | equator and under the warmer temperate | zones, and on both sides of the southern |
| 2833.224 | but belong to the northern temperate | zones. As Mr. H. C. Watson has recently |
| 2845.185 | the northern and southern temperate | zones into the intertropical regions, and |
| 2857.191 | in the northern and southern temperate | zones and on the mountains of the |
| 3404.666 | probably exist in the intermediate | zones, will be liable to be supplanted by the |
| 3502.800 | in the northern and southern temperate | zones, though separated by the whole |
2 | | | zoological | |
| 2735.755 | as I know from experiments made in the | Zoological Gardens, include seeds capable of |
| 3032.534 | or water, which separate our several | zoological and botanical provinces. We can thus |
1 | | | zoologist | |
| 548.1003 | doubtful forms, ranked by one | zoologist as a species and by another as a |
1 | | | zoologists | |
| 552.185 | have been ranked as species by some | zoologists. Several most experienced |