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Tinged With Green: Male and female alike; head blackish or blackish-brown merging into yellow on neck and upper breast; breast some¬times tinged with orange on throat; remainder of plumage green, paler on abdomen; lower rump tinged dull, dark blue; tail marked with black; bill red; large white circle around eye; length 5% inches
Habitat: Throughout wooded areas
N. suaveolens comes from Australia and grows some 21/2 feet tall. Leaves are somewhat sticky. The 2-inch-long and 1-inch-wide flowers are cream-colored tinged with green on the outside and white within. These plants like partial shade, are especially fragrant at night, and are beloved by moths.See Also Faint Green Mould:While the various hams have their own (secret) methods of curing they are, unlike bacon, generally unsmoked. It takes from 3-5 months to cure a ham and at the end of that time a perfect ham has a faint green mould, known as the 'bloom'. Never take this off until you are ready to cook it. Gammon, on the other hand, is also the leg of the pig, but this is cured with the whole bacon side before being cut away.
Description: Changes color readily; from dark brown to bright green with intermediate shades which may include light brown, yellowish-green, yellow, and bright green; gular sac or throat Fan in male is bright red; female lacks gular sac but sometimes has faint spot of color in middle of throat; climbing habits are due to peculiar pads on feet which enable lizard to hang on to fairly smooth sur¬faces; when mature reaches length of 8 inches. Because of ability to change color, anoles are popularly but inaccurately called "chame¬leons."
On The Other Hand See And Green Filters:The filters recommended for use with Kodak Films are the Kodak Sky Filter, Kodak Color Filter, and green filters Wratten Kl, K2, G, and green filters A Filters. There are other filters but they are intended for more or less technical and green filters specific purposes and green filters need not be mentioned here. They are described fully in these Eastman Kodak Company publica¬tions: "Filters—Kodak Data Book on Filters and green filters Other Lens Ac¬cessories," "The Photography of Colored Objects," and green filters "Wratten Light Filters," all available at Kodak dealers'.
In front of each projector was a glass cell filled with colored solution: one was red, a second, blue and green filters a third, green. Each slide had been made from a negative that Thomas Sutton had taken through the identical glass cells or filters; each was theo¬retically a record of the red, blue, and green filters green rays reflected by the ribbon. The result was a color photograph—crude, but prophetic of the future. |
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