Magazine of Natural History and Journal of Zoology, n.s. v. 1 (1837), Page 326, ASC00007gc
figure
posted on 2023-02-07, 12:11 authored by Science Gossip‘Science Gossip’ is born from a collaboration between an Arts and Humanities Research Council project in the UK, called ‘Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the 19th and 21st Centuries’ (ConSciCom) and the Missouri Botanical Garden who are providing content from the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL).
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Journal
Magazine of Natural History and Journal of ZoologyYear
1837Volume
n.s. v. 1 (1837)Page
Page 326Species
Coordinates: [444, 1050, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "common"=>["finch", "finches", "Finch"], "scientific"=>[""]Drawing
Coordinates: [0, 0, 282, 989, 185, 132], Details: "keywords"=>["beak", "bird", "finches"]; Coordinates: [0, 0, 108, 914, 562, 258], Details: "keywords"=>["bird", "finch", "bills", "beak shape", "gape", "beak", "bill", "coccoborus", "western africa", "Bird", "swainson", "finches", "birds", "beaks", "dertroides", "South America", "biology", "ornithology", "variation", "Western Africa", "mandible"]PageID
2334442Classification No
16Image Scale
0.358974Usage metrics
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Keywords
diagrambirdbeakcomparisonfinchfinchesbillsbeak shapegapebillcoccoboruswestern africaBirdswainsonbirdsbeaksdertroidesSouth AmericaIfas naturalists conceivethe typical character of the finches is in the strength and conic form of the billthen the bird before uspossessing both in the most eminent degree of perfectionmust stand at the head of the entire family. Birds of West AfricabiologyornithologyvariationWestern Africamandible
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