Lexicographical Neighbors of Middorsal
Literary usage of Middorsal
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Entomological News and Proceedings of the Entomological Section of the by Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Entomological Section (1912)
"Abdomen black above, pale below on the sides on all segments but 7, pale narrow
blue basal rings on 3-7, a longitudinal middorsal stripe, absent or very ..."
2. Notes on a Fauna of the Vigo Group and Its Bearing on the Evolution of by Roy Ernest Dickerson (1921)
"A single middorsal line, forked on the neck for a distance of two to fourteen
... Along the middorsal line, at nearly regular intervals of three or four ..."
3. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (1900)
"Prothorax green on either side, and a middorsal black baud half as wide as the
prothorax itself. Thorax pale green, a middorsal and a humeral stripe black, ..."
4. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences by California Academy of Sciences (1912)
"A row is almost always present from the neck to the base of the tail immediately
outside the middorsal band of small granules. ..."
5. Anatomy of the Cat by Jacob Ellsworth Reighard, Herbert Spencer Jennings (1901)
"The most cranial fibres of all are inserted about one to one and a half centimeters
from the middorsal line ; thence the line of insertion approaches the ..."
6. Proceedings of the Ohio Academy of Science by Ohio Academy of Science (1901)
"Abdomen with a middorsal row of large black spots widest Abdomen with a ...
Abdomen with a middorsal yellow stripe 17. Abdomen with a yellow stripe on ..."
7. Expedition of the California Academy of Sciences to the Galapagos Islands by California Academy of Sciences (1912)
"A row is almost always present from the neck to the base of the tail immediately
outside the middorsal band of small granules. ..."
8. Description of a New Species of Sea Snake from the Philippine Islands: With by John Van Denburgh, Joseph Cheesman Thompson (1908)
"The upper lateral and middorsal lines are evident on the tail. The limbs arc
brown, the centers of the scales being lighter. The lower surfaces are greenish ..."