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  • Pages
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Scientific Names on this Page

Indexed by Global Names
Journal Title
The Malay Archipelago : the land of the orang-utan and the bird of paradise : a narrative of travel, with studies of man and nature
By
Publication Details
London, Macmillan and Co, 1869
Holding Institution
Sponsor
Natural History Museum Library, London
Copyright & Usage
Copyright Status:
Public domain. The BHL considers that this work is no longer under copyright protection.


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Optional
Example: Charles Darwin, Carl Linnaeus
Example: Birds, Classification, Mammals
Annotation Not Available

lines 14—16 score
from End Slip 1 annotation p.43 Man — a small colony lose its language and yet impresses its character to certain extent & may increase into large nation.— 49 do

lines 19—21 score

line 22 underline "Malay ... language"

bottom-margin annotation if a small colony [illegible]

bottom-margin annotation native language [illegible]


lines 18—20 underline "[whole line]"


line 16 underline "Orang Sirani"
from End Slip 1 annotation p.43 Man — a small colony lose its language and yet impresses its character to certain extent & may increase into large nation.— 49 do

lines 21—23 score
lines 21—23 underline "with ... stocks"


lines 16—24 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 103 Tropical fruits have all been improved by Selection


lines 9—15 score
from End Slip 1 annotation lines 141—142 Distribution — Pigs swimming


lines 1—9 score
from End Slip 1 annotation lines 141—142 Distribution — Pigs swimming


lines 12—16 score


lines 3—13 score


lines 4—6 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 150 Casuarius females sitting alternately ??
from End Slip 2 annotation p150 ask Casuarius


lines 3—11 score


lines 13—17 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 178 & 207 Man

lines 25—26 score


lines 4—5 score

line 8 underline "twisted beard"

lines 13—15 score


lines 16—20 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 203 Birds of Paradise seasonal


lines 11—15 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 178 & 207 Man


line 5 annotation [(sub)editorial marking(s)]
from End Slip 2 annotation 236 ✔ for Western read Eastern


line 17 underline "dancing-parties"
from End Slip 1 annotation 252 do Dance

lines 21—26 score


line 8 underline "are ... over"

line 11 underline "striped ... the"

line 13 underline "then overshadowed"

lines 14—15 underline "emerald ... throat"


lines 16—17 score
lines 16—17 annotation self-vanity
from End Slip 1 annotation 255 Man lines 445—453
from End Slip 2 annotation 255 Savages males self-ornament — do they care for admiration of women? or of other men, for presumably not exclusively self-admiration ?


lines 3—13 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 276 failure of instincts in Insects boring trees or sticking in holes

lines 23—26 score


lines 1—6 score

lines 8—11 score


lines 7—23 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 290 Distribution


lines 20—23 score


lines 9—15 score
lines 7—23 annotation so many insects no need to be conspicuous
from End Slip 1 annotation 295 Flowers not fine in Tropics
from End Slip 2 annotation 295 number of insects no need to be conspicuous.


lines 6—14 score
lines 7—25 annotation I think Humboldt remarks Tropical plants not so social


line 26 score


lines 5—15 score


lines 1—3 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 306 Man beauty


lines 12—14 underline "[most of line]"
from End Slip 1 annotation 314 Sexual characters Diptera


lines 1—3 score
from End Slip 2 annotation 315 ✔ like Elk — do you not mean Moor or fallow Deer 399 ask

line 4 underline "elk"
line 4 annotation ?

lines 13—16 score
line 14 underline "None ... any"


lines 11—12 score
line 12 underline "feathers ... colour"

line 14 underline "across ... forehead"


lines 1—2 score

lines 17—18 score

lines 18—19 underline "effect ... moultings"

lines 23—26 score
lines 24—25 underline "assumed ... season"


lines 4—9 score


lines 24—25 score


lines 1—2 score


lines 5—8 score

lines 9—12 score


lines 1—19 annotation variety of colour
from End Slip 1 annotation 388 Paradise — skim through Chapt.— 399
from End Slip 2 annotation 315 ✔ like Elk — do you not mean Moor or fallow Deer 399 ask

lines 9—22 score

lines 21—22 annotation I do not see & I wish I did see it the connection between variation having been first a long ago selected & then appearing at an earlier age than more recently selected variations. I can see, why an increase in the length of feathers, which has to be fully formed & then added to in length by variation & then further modified, shd appear later in life


line 8 underline "[a species name]"

lines 17—20 score
lines 19—20 underline "[most of line]"


line 5 score

line 6 underline "black ... colour"

lines 11—12 score


lines 7—12 score


lines 9—12 score


lines 2—4 score


line 9 underline "eighteen"


lines 19—26 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 431 Distrib, 435, 436


lines 7—10 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 431 Distrib, 435, 436


lines 18—22 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 431 Distrib, 435, 436


lines 15—16 score
from End Slip 1 annotation 255 Man lines 445—453


lines 1—6 score
line 3 annotation 456
from End Slip 1 annotation 255 Man lines 445—453


lines 8—13 score


lines 15—18 score


lines 7—10 score
lines 7—10 annotation like a herd of animals