- Zerolene Ad
- young corn plant
- wood lily covered with underground leaves
- winged fruits of the maple
- Wild Swan
- Wild Goose
- Wild Beach plums
- Wild Beach plums
- White-tailed Eagles
- White-Capped Tanager
White-Capped Tanager - White-banded Mocking-Bird
White-banded Mocking-Bird - white potato
- white baneberry
- Wasp thief
- Vulture Buzzards
- Two Wolves
Two Wolves Black and White Ware. 11 by 5½ inches. Osborn Ruin. - Two toads
- Two owls
- Two cows
- Two cows
- Two children offering hay to cow
- Two calves
- Two birds watching a bug
- Turkey Vulture
- Tropicbird
- Tree falcon
- Tortoise
The figure represents a tortoise. When one sees a resemblance between this creature's head and neck and the linga, one can understand why both in. India and in Greece the animal should be regarded as sacred to the goddess personifying the female creator, and why in Hindoo myths it is said to support the world. - Tiger head
Tiger head - Tiger Cub
- The Wolf among the Sheep. (John x. 12)
There is no doubt that the Hebrew word Zeëb, which occurs in a few passages of the Old Testament, is rightly translated as Wolf, and signifies the same animal as is frequently mentioned in the New Testament. - The Wanderoo
There is one species of monkey, which is extremely likely to have been brought to Palestine, and used for the adornment of a luxurious monarch's palace. This is the Wanderoo, or Nil-Bhunder (Silenus veter). The Wanderoo, or Ouanderoo, as the name is sometimes spelled, is a very conspicuous animal, 7on account of the curious mane that covers its neck and head, and the peculiarly formed tail, which is rather long and tufted, like that of a baboon, and has caused it to be ranked among those animals by several writers, under the name of the Lion-tailed Baboon. - The Red-footed Falcon
- The Pursuit
Birds chasing insects - the pine just starting out in the world, with its six seed leaves
- The King or Imperial Eagle
- the fruit of the poppy
- The fruit of the dandelion is the silvery puffball
- the fruit of Solomon’s seal
- the fruit cluster of the aster
- The flowers of the partridge vine
- The coffee tree
The Coffee Tree For the Satisfaction of the Curious, have prefix’d a Figure of the Tree, Flower, and Fruit, which I delineated from a growing Tree in the Amsterdam Gardens. - The cockroach mite
The cockroach mite, Pimeliaphilus podapolipophagus - The bear stops and looks at us
- Tea time interrupted
- sumac
- Stork
- Stethaspis suturalis - Larva
Stethaspis suturalis - Larva - Stethaspis suturalis
Stethaspis suturalis - Staphylinus oculatus
Staphylinus oculatus - Stages of the Diamond-back Moth
a, Diamond-back Moth (Plutella cruciferarum) b, young caterpillar, dorsal view c, full-grown caterpillar, dorsal view d, side view e, pupa, ventral view. From Journ. Dept. Agric. Ireland, vol. I - Stages of growth of a squash plant
- squirting cucumber
- Spur-winged goose
- Spoonbill
- Spiderweb
The simple nests and tubes that have been described are made by spiders, most of which spin no other webs. The larger and better known cobwebs for catching insects are made by comparatively few species. On damp mornings in summer the grass-fields are seen to be half covered with flat webs, from an inch or two to a foot in diameter, which are considered by the weatherwise as signs of a fair day. These webs remain on the grass all the time, but only become visible from a distance when the dew settles on them. Figure is a diagram of one of these nests, supposed, for convenience, to be spun between pegs instead of grass. The flat part consists of strong threads from peg to peg, crossed by finer ones, which the spider spins with the long hind-spinnerets - speckled red berries of the false Solomon’s seal
- Sparrowhawk Vulture
- Sparrowhawk
- Southern European Vultures
- Slobe duck