| William Bingley - 1803 - عدد الصفحات: 624
...extend themselves on all sides, for several years ; destroying in succession every sugarplantation between St. George's and St. John's, a space of about...same time colonies of them began to be observed in other parts of the island. All attempts of the planters to put a stop to the ravages of these insects... | |
| Bryan Edwards - 1806 - عدد الصفحات: 426
...island by droghers, or vessels employed in carrying stores, &c. from one part of the island to another. From thence they continued to extend themselves on...began to be observed in different parts of the island, particularly at Duquesne on the north, and Calavini on the south side of it. All attempts of the planters... | |
| Bryan Edwards - 1819 - عدد الصفحات: 644
...island by droghers, or vessels employed in carrying stores, &c. from one part of the island to another. From thence they continued to extend themselves on...began to be observed in different parts of the island, particularly at Duquesne on the north, and Calavini on the .south side of it. APPEN- it well became... | |
| William Bingley - 1829 - عدد الصفحات: 380
...extend themselves on all sides, for several years ; destroying in succession every sugar-plantation between St. George's and St. John's, a space of about...same time colonies of them began to be observed in other parts of the island. All attempts of the planters to put a stop to the ravages of these insects... | |
| Gill's scientific, technological and microscopic repository - 1829 - عدد الصفحات: 424
...succession, every sugar plantation between St. George and St. John's, a space of about twelve miles; and at the same time colonies of them began to be observed in other parts of the island. All attempts of.the planters. to put a stop to the ravages of these insects... | |
| Robert Hermann Schomburgk - 1848 - عدد الصفحات: 780
...and Martinique suffered more than any other island from this plague. In Grenada every sugarplantation between St. George's and St. John's, a space of about twelve miles, was destroyed in succession, and the country was reduced to a state of the most deplorable desolation.... | |
| Hesketh Bell - 1893 - عدد الصفحات: 246
...were supposed to have been imported from Martinique. They spread on all sides with wonderful rapidity, destroying in succession every sugar plantation between...John's, a space of about twelve miles. At the same time, numbers of these same ants were also noticed on the northern and southern coasts. All attempts to put... | |
| René-Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur - 1926 - عدد الصفحات: 322
...Martinique suffered more than any other island from this plague. In Granada every sugar-plantation between St. George's and St. John's, a space of about twelve miles, was destroyed in succession, and the country was reduced to a state of the most deplorable desolation.... | |
| Edward O. Wilson - 2006 - عدد الصفحات: 746
...and Grenada in 1770. On Barbados, the naturalist RH Schomburgk later wrote, "Every sugar-plantation between St. George's and St. John's, a space of about twelve miles, was destroyed in succession, and the country was reduced to a state of the most deplorable condition"... | |
| Edward O. Wilson - 2006 - عدد الصفحات: 190
...the last island, RH Schomburgk later wrote in his 1848 History of Barbados, "every sugar-plantation between St. George's and St. John's, a space of about twelve miles, was destroyed in succession, and the country was reduced to a state of the most deplorable condition."... | |
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