|
Definition of Banded krait
1. Noun. Sluggish krait banded with black and yellow.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Banded Krait
Literary usage of Banded krait
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1905)
"Rogers found that on the injection of a Viperine venom, or of the venom of the
banded krait (Bun<j<<rin< fini-intus), into an animal, a marked fall of blood ..."
2. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1904)
"7) certain results, and conclusions drawn from them, as to the action of the
poison of the banded krait. They are as follows:—(1) Cases of intoxication with ..."
3. The Outline of Science: A Plain Story Simply Told by John Arthur Thomson (1922)
"Perhaps, that is to say, its striking coloration serves as an advertisement,
impressing other creatures with the fact that the banded krait should be left ..."
4. Practical Bacteriology, Blood Work and Animal Parasitology: Including by Edward Rhodes Stitt (1918)
"banded krait (mean yield); 64.4 mgm. Russell's viper (mean yield) 108.0 mgm. FIG.
127.—I, Single row of scales posterior to vent (poisonous snake—water ..."
5. Poisons: Their Effects and Detection by Alexander Wynter Blyth, Meredith Wynter Blyth (1906)
"Bungarus fasciatus, or the banded krait, acts similarly to the cobra poison ;
but since its activity is destroyed by heating from 73°-75°, it is less stable ..."