Figure 139. Digger Wasp. Figure 140. Common Wasp, or Hornet. Figure 141. Bumble-bee
- Part of Popular Zoology
- 1887
Figures 139, 140, and 141 of the 1887 volume Popular Zoology. Figure 139 depicts a digger wasp. Figure 140 depicts a common wasp, or hornet. Figure 141 depicts a bumble-bee.
Designed to give students an understanding of the animal worlds, Popular Zoology describes and identifies the animals in two kingdoms of nature: the Invertebrates and the Vertebrates. The volume includes copious intaglio printed illustrations of the animals described, as well as a series of charts detailing the systematic arrangement of representative forms. This is one of a series of textbooks written by American educator Joel Dorman Steele (1836-1886), who often worked in collaboration with his wife Esther Baker Steele (1835-1911). Subjects addressed in a similar manner in other volumes include chemistry, human physiology, physics,and astronomy. Popular Zoology was completed posthumously by J. W. P. Jenks (1819-1894), Professor of Agricultural Zoology at Brown University, who is credited as a co-author on the volume.
Property | Value |
---|---|
Author | |
Publisher | |
Place of publication | |
Format | |
Genre | |
Extent |
|
Language | |
Subject | |
Rights | Public Domain Mark 1.0 |
Credit line |
|
Institutional location
Department |
---|
Related Items
Cite as
Steele, Joel Dorman, and Jenks, J. W. P. (John Whipple Potter). “Figure 139. Digger Wasp. Figure 140. Common Wasp, or Hornet. Figure 141. Bumble-Bee.” Popular Zoology. New York, New York: Chautauqua Press, 1887. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/zarbi2z.
This citation is automatically generated and may contain errors.