dcsimg
Please read BHL's Acknowledgment of Harmful Content
FAQ
Close Dialog

Download citation


Close Dialog

Text Sources


Page text in BHL originates from one of the following sources:
Uncorrected OCR Machine-generated text. May include inconsistencies with the content of the original page.
Error-corrected OCR Machine-generated, machine-corrected text. Better quality than Uncorrected OCR, but may still include inconsistencies with the content of the original page.
Manual Transcription Human-created and reviewed text. For issues concerning manual transcription text, please contact the original holding institution.
  • Pages
  • Table of Contents
URL for Current Page
Scientific Names on this Page

Indexed by Global Names
Book Title
An introduction to entomology
By
Publication Details
London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, 1818-1826
DOI
Holding Institution
Cambridge University Library
Sponsor
JISC & NEH
Copyright & Usage
Rights:
Darwin Estate and Cambridge University Library

Copyright Status:
In copyright


Search Inside This Book:
Results For:
Click/Shift+Click pages to select for download
Cancel Generate Review No Pages Added

If you are generating a PDF of a journal article or book chapter, please feel free to enter the title and author information. The information you enter here will be stored in the downloaded file to assist you in managing your downloaded PDFs locally.

Thank you for your request. Please wait for an email containing a link to download the PDF.

For your reference, the confirmation number for this request is .

Join Our Mailing List

Sign up to receive the latest BHL news, content highlights, and promotions.

Subscribe

Help Support BHL

BHL relies on donations to provide free PDF downloads and other services. Help keep BHL free and open!

Donate

There was an issue with the request. Please try again and if the problem persists, please send us feedback.

For your reference, the confirmation number for this request is .

  
Optional
Example: Charles Darwin, Carl Linnaeus
Example: Birds, Classification, Mammals
Contributed by Cambridge University Library
Annotation Not Available

lines 4—7 score
from End Slip 3, Side 3 annotation 4 p31 Sedentary Spider turned Hunter
from End Slip 2 annotation 31 Crippled Spider from Sedentary became Hunter See. J. Banks. Ch. 8 (Q)

lines 8—10 score


lines 8—9 score
lines 8—9 annotation ?
from End Slip 2 annotation 156 stings & ovipositors described.—


top-margin annotation Calcaria


line 10 score

line 12 score


line 3 score

line 16 score

line 19 score

line 27 score


line 27 score


line 11 score

line 27 score


line 5 score

line 27 score


line 17 score

line 19 score

line 20 score


line 12 score


lines 18—21 score


line 19 score

line 28 score


line 12 score

line 18 score


line 21 score

line 28 score

line 31 score


line 20 score


line 3 score

line 27 score


line 1 score

line 8 score

line 16 score


line 1 score

line 3 score

line 7 score

line 13 score

line 21 score

line 24 score


line 27 score


line 1 score

line 4 score

line 7 score

line 15 score


line 21 score


line 6 score


line 17 annotation Margin

lines 20—21 score

line 23 score

line 25 score


line 3 score

line 17 score

line 25 score


line 30 score
line 30 underline "Spurious suture"


lines 18—22 score

lines 27—29 score


lines 5—6 score

lines 9—11 score

lines 17—20 score


line 27 score


line 14 score

line 17 score


line 18 score


line 7 score


lines 19—20 score


line 10 score

line 15 score


lines 7—11 score


lines 7—13 score

lines 15—17 score

lines 30—33 score


lines 5—6 underline "⟨most of line⟩"

lines 19—20 score

lines 26—29 score


lines 22—27 score
from End Slip 2 annotation 373 on use of larva in classification


lines 4—13 score
lines 6—7 underline "especially ... distinct"

lines 14—19 score
lines 15—16 underline "⟨most of line⟩"
lines 18—19 underline "⟨most of line⟩"


lines 1—2 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 405, 6, 8, 411 to 15 wretched trash;

lines 16—21 score

lines 16—19 score

lines 20—25 score

line 30 score


lines 26—30 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 405, 6, 8, 411 to 15 wretched trash;


lines 1—17 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 405, 6, 8, 411 to 15 wretched trash;

lines 19—20 score

lines 29—30 score


lines 4—7 score


lines 18—21 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 405, 6, 8, 411 to 15 wretched trash;


lines 16—19 score


lines 21—27 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 405, 6, 8, 411 to 15 wretched trash;


bottom-margin apparently unintentional mark


lines 9—15 score
lines 8—12 annotation Think over this
from End Slip 2 annotation 478 On number of individuals in different orders, without relation to number of species


lines 18—21 score


lines 11—16 score
lines 13—14 underline "⟨most of line⟩"


lines 8—10 score

lines 20—22 score

lines 29—32 score


lines 20—21 score
from End Slip 2 annotation 488 Calasoma poor in species & individuals, very wide ranging genus.

lines 23—28 score

lines 27—28 score

bottom-margin annotation This is opposed to my notion of formation of genera. Think over this Extension in this case must depend on adaptation to some peculiar food & not to any general superiority over congeners.—


lines 1—11 score

lines 17—18 score

lines 23—32 score

bottom-margin annotation My notions require that number of individuals & species & genera shd in some degree accord which is doubtful.— NB Comparison can be instituted only when there is struggle. Diptera & Coleoptera cannot be compared


lines 1—6 score

lines 22—25 score


lines 3—7 score


lines 1—2 score

lines 9—11 score

lines 12—16 score


lines 22—27 score


lines 1—5 score

lines 21—22 score

lines 25—28 score


lines 4—7 score


lines 3—6 score
lines 4—5 underline "⟨most of line⟩"
from End Slip 2 annotation 500 Battles of Lethrus (a vegetable feeder)


lines 19—25 score


lines 25—27 score