Mallory Burton, Reading the water: stories and essays of flyfishing and life, Sandpoint Idaho, Keokee Co Publishing 1995, p. 74.
Archives du mot-clé tent
The pebbles used
Ross E. Hutchins, Nature Invente It First, New York, Dood, Mead & Company, 1980, p.84.
How funny he must look
Anonyme, « One Way to Live Under Water », Domestic Science Monthly, vol. 2-4, 1901, p. 123.
In the jewelled bravery
E. F. Staveley, British Insects, a familiar description of the form, structure, habits and transformations of insects, Londres, L. Reeve & Co., 1871, p. 148-149.
We have repeatedly tried experiments
James Rennie, Insect Architecture, édition augmentée par J.G. Wood, Londres, Bell & Daldy, 1869, p. 202-207.
A strange voice
Mona B. Bickerstaffe, Down Among the Waterweeds or Marvels of Pond Life, Johnstone, Edimbourg Hunter & Co., 1867.
By cement, my love
Elizabeth Grant, Holiday Rambles-Or peeps into the Book of Nature, Londres, G. Routledge & Co., 1857, p.158-166.
The poor animal
Thomas Rymer Jones, The Natural History of Animals, vol. II, Londres, John van Voorst, 1852, p. 205- 210.
A more laborious structure
Anonyme, “Water Insects” The youth’s Cabinet: a book of gems for the mind and the hear, vol. 2, New York, 1852, p. 10-11.
A more laborious
John Barlow Burton, Lectures on Entomology, Londres, Simpkin & Marshall, 1837.
Moveable tents
Anonyme, Insects and their Habitations, Londres, John W. Parker, 1834, p.67-68.