New West Indian Spiders Bulletin of the AMNH, Vol. XXXIII, Art. XLI, pp. 639-642

audiobook

New West Indian Spiders Bulletin of the AMNH, Vol. XXXIII, Art. XLI, pp. 639-642

by Nathan Banks

EN·~18 minutes·4 chapters

Chapters

4 total
1

New West Indian Spiders. - By Nathan Banks.

0:10
2

Article XLI.—NEW WEST INDIAN SPIDERS. - By Nathan Banks.

17:24
3

EXPLANATION OF PLATE.

0:25
4

Bulletin A. M. N. H. Vol. XXXIII, Plate XLIII.

0:04

Description

A recently revived scientific bulletin from 1914 brings listeners into the meticulous world of early‑twentieth‑century arachnology. Researchers at the American Museum of Natural History examined collections gathered by field‑working naturalists in Cuba and Puerto Rico, and the paper announces a handful of spider species never before recorded. The article reads like a field notebook, noting where each specimen was found and preserving the original museum catalogue numbers for future reference.

The descriptions are strikingly vivid: a pale cephalothorax marked by a black median stripe, long slender legs accented with white bands, and intricate patterns of spots and streaks that set each species apart. One spider boasts a greenish stripe along its body, another is almost entirely unmarked, while a third displays a bold gray‑white abdomen with contrasting black lines. Listeners will hear the careful measurements, eye‑arrangements, and spination details that made these discoveries notable for their time, offering a snapshot of biodiversity work that still informs modern studies.

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Details

Full title

New West Indian Spiders Bulletin of the AMNH, Vol. XXXIII, Art. XLI, pp. 639-642 Bulletin of the AMNH, Vol. XXXIII, Art. XLI, pp. 639-642

Language

en

Duration

~18 minutes (17K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Josephine Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.

Release date

2010-09-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Nathan Banks

Nathan Banks

1868–1953

A pioneering American entomologist, he helped shape the study of insects, spiders, and mites in the United States. His long career produced hundreds of scientific papers and made him especially well known for his work on lacewings and other lesser-known groups.

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