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and other countries, there is reason to believe that our knowledge of this most difficult department of science will go on increasing until the knotty problem is finally solved. If this day should ever come, it will not be too much to affirm, that it will inaugurate a new era in the history of mankind; and that great as the destiny of our race has been hitherto, it will be quite out-lustred by the grandeur and magnitude of coming events.

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INDEX.

AERIAL creatures not stronger than terrestrial ones,
Aerial flight as distinguished from sub-aquatic flight,
Aeronautics,

Air cells in insects and birds not necessary to flight,

Albatross, flight of, compared to compass set upon gimbals,

Amphibia have larger travelling surfaces than land animals, but less

than aërial ones,

Artificial fins, flippers, and wings, how constructed,

Artificial wings, Borelli,

Marey,

Chabrier,

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Straus-Durckheim,

PAGE

13

92

209

115

199

8

14

219

226

233

233

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how to apply to the air,

245

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nature of forces required to propel,

246

Artificial wave

wing of Pettigrew,

236

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how to construct on insect type,

240

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how to construct to evade the superimposed air during

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can be driven at any speed; can make new currents

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compound rotation of: the different parts of the wing

travel at different speeds,

252

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necessity for supplying root of, with elastic structures,

247

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Body and wing reciprocate in flight, and each describes a waved track,
Bones,

12

21

Bones of the extremities twisted and spiral,

28, 29

Bones of wing of bat-spiral configuration of their articular surfaces,
Bones of wing of bird-their articular surfaces, movements, etc.,
Borelli's artificial bird,

176

178

220

CHABRIER'S artificial wings,

233

PAGE

Flight the least fatiguing kind of motion,

Flight-the regular and irregular,

ELYTRA or wing cases and membranous wings,

FEATHERS, primary, secondary, and tertiary,

Fins, flippers, and wings form mobile helices or screws,

Flight, weight necessary to,

Flight the poetry of motion,

Flight under water,

Flight of the flying-fish,

Flight, horizontal, in part due to weight of flying mass,

Flight-how to ascend, descend, and turn,

Flight of birds referrible to muscular exertion and weight,

Fluids, mechanical effects of, on animals immersed in them,
Fluids, resistance of,

170

180

14

3, 4, 110, 111, 112, 113

6

13

90

98

110

201

201

204

18

18

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Forces which propel the wings of insects, bats, and birds,

GRAVITY, the legs move by the force of,

HISTORY of the figure-of-8 theory of walking, swimming, and flying,

JOINTS,

KITE-LIKE action of the wings,

Kite-how kite formed by wing differs from boy's kite,

LAWS of natural and artificial progression the same,
Legs, moved by the force of gravity,

2, 3

186, 189

8, 104, 165

18

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18

15

23

98

166

4, 17

18

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Ligaments, elastic, position and action of, in wing of pheasant, snipe,
crested crane, swan, etc.,,

191

Ligaments, elastic, more highly differentiated in wings which vibrate
quickly,

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Motion associated with the life and well-being of animals,

Motion not confined to the animal kingdom,

Motion, natural and artificial,

2

PAGE

Motion, of uniform,

Motion uniformly varied,

Muscles, their properties, mode of action, etc.,

Muscles arranged in longitudinal, transverse, and oblique spiral lines,
Muscles, oblique spiral, necessary for spiral bones and joints,
Muscles take precedence of bones in animal movements,

Muscular cycles,

Muscular waves,

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PENDULUMS, the extremities of animals act as, in walking,
Plane, inclined, as applied to the air,

17

17

24

28

26

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211

Pettigrew's method of constructing and applying artificial wings as
contradistinguished from that of Borelli, Chabrier, Durckheim,
Marey, etc.,

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QUADRUPEDS walk, fishes swim, and insects, bats, and birds fly, by
figure-of-8 movements,

SCREWS the wing of the bird and the extremity of the biped and
quadruped screws, structurally and functionally,

235

236

242

37

64

103

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Screws-difference between those formed by the wings and those em-

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Speed of wing movements partly accounted for,

Spine, spiral movements of, transferred to the extremities,

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Swimming of the turtle, triton, crocodile, etc.,

TERRESTRIAL animals have smaller travelling surfaces than amphibia,
amphibia than fishes, and fishes than insects, bats, and birds,
The travelling surfaces of animals increase as the density of the media
traversed decreases,

The travelling surfaces of animals variously modified and adapted to
the media on or in which they move,

WALKING, Swimming, and flying correlated,

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how to construct to evade the superimposed air during the
up stroke,

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forces required to apply to the air,

necessity for supplying root of, with elastic structures,

245, 246

247

Wave wing, compound,

PAGE

242

Weight necessary to flight,

110

Weight contributes to flight,

112

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The wing of the bird and the extremity of the biped and quadruped are
screws, structurally and functionally,

Wing in flight describes figure-of-8 curves,

Wing during its action reverses its planes and describes a figure-of-8

Weight, momentum, and power to a certain extent synonymous in
flight,

114

12, 136

12

track in space,

140

Wing when advancing with the body describes looped and waved tracks,
Wing, margins of, thrown into opposite curves during extension and
flexion,

143

146

Wing, tip of, describes an ellipse,

147

Wing and body reciprocate in flight, and each describes a wave track,

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Wing vibrates unequally with reference to a given line,

150, 231

Wing, compound rotation of,

149

Wing a lever of the third order,

103

creases,

Wing acts on yielding fulcra,

Wings, their form, etc., all wings screws, structurally and functionally,
Wing capable of change of form in all its parts,
Wing-area variable and in excess,

Wing-area decreases as the size and weight of the volant animal in-`

Wing, natural, when elevated and depressed must move forwards,
Wing, angles formed by, when in action,

Wing acts as true kite both during down and up strokes,

Wing, traces of design in,

Wing of bird not always opened up to same extent in up stroke,
Wing, flexion of, necessary to flight of birds,

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Wing flexed and partly elevated by action of elastic ligaments,

191

Wing, power of, to what owing,

194

Wing, effective stroke of, why delivered downwards and forwards,

195

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Wing acts as an elevator, propeller, and sustainer both during exten-
sion and flexion,

197

Wings, points wherein the screws formed by, differ from those in ordi-

nary use,

151

Wings at all times thoroughly under control,

154

Wings of insects, consideration of forces which propel,

186

Wings of bats and birds, consideration of forces which propel,

189

PRINTED BY T. AND A. CONSTABLE, PRINTERS TO HER MAJESTY,

AT THE EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS.

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