GRATWICKE STAKES. | 6 to I agst Belns | Bto 1 agst Vanguard GOODWOOD CUP
... GRATWICKE STAKES. | 6 to agst Belns | Bto agst Vanguard GOODWOOD CUP. 9 to 1 agst Surplice to 1 Jellyfish ...
... GRATWICKE STAKES. | 6 to agst Belns | Bto agst Vanguard GOODWOOD CUP. 9 to 1 agst Surplice to 1 Jellyfish ...
... incidental, even accidental. Certainly it can only be accidental that human beings are stung by jellyfish since they are not normally an enemy. Some jellyfish, like the Portuguese man-o’-war, or bluebottle, now becoming better known by its scientific name ...
... “burin” settlements. There are other more enigmatic sites about which we can only guess at present. Among these are the “jellyfish”, so called because of their unusual shape. They are usually 30 to 50 metres in diameter, consisting of two concentric circles ...
... SHOWING SOME OF THE 350 FISH FOUND LIVING INSIDE IT: THE GIANT JELLYFISH FROM BELOW—THE HOME OF MANY BUMPERS. ww:;:;::”:;;;:;: THE GIANT BLACK SPONGE -FROM LAMENTIN REEF : ITS SURFACE CRATINGWITH HOLES LARGE ENOUGH FOR SOME OF THE SPECIALLY ADAPTED FISH ...
... * '* *l' ' / - • •• %r«. * *. * *.* • .%•: . . *- . . ■ • . *3» *f V« ...
... THE ADULT STAGE. The almost ghost-like discs of this jelly-fish are commonly to be seen all round our coasts during the summer, swimming just below the surface, often in vast numbers. The long tentacles capture and convey the food to the mouth. The shcrt ...
... - r*W. -, , jMta r Syria -j \ Iraq / Jordan } Knapping sites yy///^y > \ 1 “burin” sites / \ / * “jellyfish” / \ t§] basalt -— \l / , 020 40 60 80 100 U / Saudi Arabia A map showing distribution of prehistoric sites in the north Arabian desert A hilltop ...
... the little jelly-fishes takes place, but sooner or later these appear. What are the factors which inhibit the normal sequence of events yet remains to be discovered Though to most people these creatures are but ** nasty, stinging jellyfish,” they prove ...
... SEASIDE: WONDERS OF l THE FIXED AND THE FREE IN MARINE LIFE: STATIONARY ANIMALS ATTACHED A WHARF PILE CONTRASTED WITH A JELLY-FISH {DACTYLOMETRA OUINQUECIKRA) THAT SWIMS AIMLESSLY WITHOUT POWER OF DIRECTION. AND WITH THE SQUID {LOLKO PEALII) AND THE CUNNER ...
... NOLO BA DIANTHUS), A LARGE AND BRIGHTLY COLOURED JELLY-FISH. ANIMAL ORGANISMS OF THE SEA-FLOOR THAT RESEMBLE FLOWERS : A GROUP OF SEA-PINKS, OR PLUMOSE SEA- ANEMONES (ACTINGLOB DIANTHUS), TYPICAL JELLYFISHES OF THE NORTH SEA. r Then the tentacles re-expand ...
... directly downwards by the vibrations of its two great fins, used at propellers. The small breast-fins serve as balancers. jelly-fish must fall an easy prey. But by what means does the creature precipitate himself to unknown depths when the pangs of unsatisfied ...
... can be two inches long. It is adapted to catch insect prey that falls on or near the surface of the water. Chrysaora, a jellyfish which can grow to three or four feet long. The colour of the domed umbrella varies. A feeder on small planktonic animals ...