- late Dr.
Joseph Leidy, who in 1851
found from 12 to 20
specimens of
C.
septendecim "which
though living had the
posterior third of the
abdominal contents...
-
Magicicada septendecim,
sometimes called the
Pharaoh cicada or the 17-year locust, is
native to
Canada and the
United States and is the
largest and most...
- – via
Internet Archive. Marlatt,
C.L (1907). "Brood XIV—
Septendecim". The
Periodical Cicada (71 ed.). Washington, D.
C.:
United States Department of Agriculture...
-
scientific paper on the
North American 17-year
periodical cicada,
Magicicada septendecim. Kalm
wrote an
account of his
travels that was
translated into numerous...
- but
seems to be most
closely related to the 17-year
species Magicicada septendecim. Both
species are
distinguished by
broad orange stripes on the abdomen...
-
calling for mates.
Brood V
consists of
three species of 17-year cicadas:
Magicicada septendecim,
Magicicada c****ini, and
Magicicada septendecula.
Brood V...
- to
apply to
IIIXX and IIIC,
since the
Latin words for 17 and 97 were
septendecim (seven ten) and
nonaginta septem (ninety seven), respectively. The ROMAN()...
-
species of
periodical cicadas:
Magicicada septendecim,
Magicicada tredecim, and
Magicicada neotredecim. M.
septendecim,
first described by Carl Linnaeus, has...
- 11.17 Caesar, B.
C. 3.9 Livy, 36.3 Livy, 22.54
Lewis & Short,
Latin Dictionary.
Allen &
Greenough (1903), New
Latin Grammar, §137.
C. G. Zumpt, "A Grammar...
-
explained by the fact that the Gr****
letter kappa can be
transliterated either "
c" or "k".) In
chemical nomenclature, 11 is
generally mixed Latin-Gr**** undeca-...