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Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 8

Casey, Thomas Lincoln
Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 8
Excerpt from Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 8: 1918In almost every considerable collection of the Insecta, there are usually many unworked sections consisting principally of uniden tified material. This is especially true of those accumulated by students not having with them assistants to perform the more mechanical work relating to mounting and cleaning specimens and restoring such as may deteriorate through unfavorable conditions in the lap...

CHF 29.90

Meaning in Myth

Casey, Thomas M.
Meaning in Myth
Why is one person a believer and another an atheist? Why does one person demand facts for verification, while another trusts feelings? Why are some who hear voices declared psychotic while others are called saints? The answers to these questions are not mere speculation or amusing distraction, rather they are the essential components in developing curiosity, open-mindedness and tolerance for differences.Meaning in Myth speaks to the various wa...

CHF 42.90

Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 4

Casey, Thomas Lincoln
Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 4
Excerpt from Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 4: 1913Our Cicindelidae have been considered more or less seriously by a number of authors recently, but the Carabidae have been singu larly neglected - even those genera composed of conspicuous species. No good tabular key to the species of Cambus or Calosoma, as represented in our fauna, has ever been published, and there is no evidence to show that the material in most of our rather numerous coll...

CHF 29.90

Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 3

Casey, Thomas Lincoln
Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 3
Excerpt from Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 3: 1912Form oblong - oval, evenly convex, strongly shining, deep black, the tarsi slightly piceous, the antennae ferruginous, short, slender, with a broad and very abrupt club of three subequal transverse joints the last rounded at tip, head wider than long, strongly parabolic in outline, the eyes basal, well developed, prothorax two and three fourths times as wide as long, the sides strongly, evenl...

CHF 29.50

Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 5

Casey, Thomas Lincoln
Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 5
Excerpt from Memoirs on the Coleoptera, Vol. 5: 1914About the PublisherForgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.comThis book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in...

CHF 29.50

Revision of the Stenini of America North of Mexico

Casey, Thomas Lincoln
Revision of the Stenini of America North of Mexico
Excerpt from Revision of the Stenini of America North of Mexico: Insects of the Family Staphylinidae, Order ColeopteraProthorax usually more or less elongated, always strongly convex and sometimes sub-cylindrical, often longitudinally canaliculated, and more or less tuberculate at the base.About the PublisherForgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.comThis book is a reproduction...

CHF 19.50

Studies in the American Buprestidæ (Classic Reprint)

Casey, Thomas L.
Studies in the American Buprestidæ (Classic Reprint)
Excerpt from Studies in the American BuprestidæThe latter of these subgenera seems to be peculiar to the fauna of Arizona and the adjacent parts of California, where it replaces H ippo melas, which is widely diffused from our southern boundaries to southern Mexico.About the PublisherForgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.comThis book is a reproduction of an important historica...

CHF 15.90

Descriptive Notices of North American Coleoptera, Vol. 1

Casey, Thomas Lincoln
Descriptive Notices of North American Coleoptera, Vol. 1
Excerpt from Descriptive Notices of North American Coleoptera, Vol. 1: With Plate VII In this connection it may be stated that it is my intention to include, if possible, Within the faunal region considered, the entire North American continent terminating on the south in the isthmus of Panama and including the islands of the west-indian archipelago, as this appears to consti tute a more natural region than that which is limited on the south b...

CHF 15.90