| Harry Thurston Peck - 1898 - 998 pagina’s
...a long flight at the rate of 60 m. an hour. Passenger pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which...fields of Carolina or Georgia not many hours before. The nest of the passenger pigeon in the American forests generally consists of a few dry twigs placed... | |
| Franklin Thomas Baker, George Rice Carpenter, Jennie Freeborn Owens - 1906 - 504 pagina’s
...time. This is proved by facts well known in America. Thus, pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia andio Carolina, these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
| Franklin Thomas Baker - 1909 - 504 pagina’s
...time. This is proved by facts well known in America. Thus, pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia and1o Carolina, these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
| Franklin Thomas Baker - 1910 - 504 pagina’s
...time. This is proved by facts well known in America. Thus, pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia and 10 Carolina, these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
| Leroy E. Armstrong - 1916 - 408 pagina’s
...time. This is proved by facts well known in America. Thus pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia and Carolina, these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
| Milo Burdette Hillegas, Thomas Henry Briggs - 1927 - 588 pagina’s
...time. This is proved by facts well known in America. Thus, pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia and Carolina, these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1912 - 854 pagina’s
...tune. This is proved by facts well known in America. Thus, pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia and Carolina, these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
| Indiana. Commissioner of Fisheries and Game - 1906 - 826 pagina’s
...astonishing extent of country in a very short time. Thus, pigeons have been killed in the neighborhood of Xew York with their crops full of rice, which they must have collected in the fields of Georgia and Carolina; these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly have procured... | |
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