. The animals and man; an elementary textbook of zoology and human physiology. Zoology; Physiology. Fig. 103. A lizard in the grass. (Photograph from life by Cherry Kear- ton; permission of Cassell & Co.) air. Note the "shell," consisting of a dorsal plate, the cara- pace and ventral plate, plastron, and the lateral uniting parts, the bridge. Almost all the fresh-water and land turtles are carnivorous, but few catch any very active The blue-tailed skink, Eumeces skeltonianus. (From lite.) While some a,re strictly aquatic others are as strictly terres- trial, never entering


. The animals and man; an elementary textbook of zoology and human physiology. Zoology; Physiology. Fig. 103. A lizard in the grass. (Photograph from life by Cherry Kear- ton; permission of Cassell & Co.) air. Note the "shell," consisting of a dorsal plate, the cara- pace and ventral plate, plastron, and the lateral uniting parts, the bridge. Almost all the fresh-water and land turtles are carnivorous, but few catch any very active The blue-tailed skink, Eumeces skeltonianus. (From lite.) While some a,re strictly aquatic others are as strictly terres- trial, never entering the water. The eggs of all are oblong and are deposited in hollows, sometimes covered in the sand. The newly hatched young are usually circular in shape, and differ in color and pattern from the adults. The group of lizards (fig. 103) is a very large one, about. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Kellogg, Vernon L. (Vernon Lyman), 1867-1937; McCracken, Mary Isabel. New York, H. Holt and Company


Size: 3335px × 750px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookd, booksubjectphysiology, booksubjectzoology