| David Starr Jordan, John Arthur Thomson, Herbert Spencer Jennings, George Howard Parker, Ernest William MacBride, Edwin Grant Conklin, William Berryman Scott, Francis Arthur Bather, John Walter Gregory, Arthur Smith Woodward, Charles Stuart Gager, Edward Wilber Berry, Sir Edward Bagnall Poulton, Sir Arthur Everett Shipley, William Morton Wheeler, Frederic Brewster Loomis, David Meredith Seares Watson, Richard Swann Lull, William King Gregory, Grafton Elliot Smith, Samuel Jackson Holmes, Julian Huxley - 1928 - 464 pages
...communities and elaborate habitations, their roadways, their possession of domestic animals, and even, in some cases, of slaves, it must be admitted that they...to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence." — Sir John Lubbock. THE EVOLUTION OF THE HORSE AND THE ELEPHANT BY FREDERIC BREWSTER LOOMIS Professor... | |
| Royal Entomological Society of London - 1877 - 616 pages
...published by Sir John Lubbock, full of interesting particulars of the economy of these insects, "which have a fair claim to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence, although the anthropoid apes no doubt approach nearer to him in bodily structure." Sir John Lubbock... | |
| Entomological Society of Ontario - 1884 - 184 pages
...communities and elaborate habitations, their roadways, their possession of domestic animals, and even in some cases of slaves, it must be admitted that they...to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence." In this respeot, the Anthropoid Apes, so closely related to man in structure, and which so many naturalists... | |
| James Hastings - 2004 - 564 pages
...communities and elaborate habitations, their roadways, their possession of domestic animals, and even, in some cases, of slaves, it must be admitted that they...to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence.' GE POST. ANTELOPE.— See Ox. ANTHOTHIJAH (.vnhjy, AV Antothljah). — A man of Benjamin (1 Ch 8M).... | |
| 1877 - 936 pages
...communities, elaborate habitations, their roadways, their possession of domestic animals, and even in some cases of slaves, it must be admitted that they...more than seven hundred kinds are known. Even this large number certainly is far short of those actually in existence. I have kept in captivity nearly... | |
| 1885 - 574 pages
...communities and elaborate habitations; their roadways, their possession of domestic animals and even, in some cases, of slaves, it must be admitted that they...to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence.' If man is linked with the ape because ot physiological similarities, he is related to the ant by what... | |
| ALFRED T. STORY - 1882 - 544 pages
...that they at times are monarchical or republican, " it must be admitted," writes Sir John Lubbock, " that they have a fair claim to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence." This most interesting work may be considered as a study, not so much directed toward the habits of... | |
| 1882 - 708 pages
...ordinary English mansion. Sir John Lubbock who has carefully studied their habits, maintains that the ants have a fair claim to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence. the above-named animals also do, but they collect together stores of grain*, they fortify their houses,... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1883 - 584 pages
...Lubbock's conclusion is that, though the anthropoid apes approach nearest to us in structure, ants have a fair claim to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence. Of bees our author notes their want of affection ; you may kill a bee close to its sister, and it will... | |
| Royal Entomological Society of London - 1877 - 588 pages
...published by Sir John Lubbock, full of interesting particulars of the economy of these insects, " which have a fair claim to rank next to man in the scale of intelligence, although the anthropoid apes no doubt approach nearer to him in bodily structure." Sir John Lubbock... | |
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