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  • How the Rosy Cheeked Baby seemed to thrive in the Open Air from the book ' Mistress Branican ' by Jules Verne, illustrated by Leon Benett. The story begins in the United States, where the heroine, Mistress Branican, suffers a mental breakdown after the death by drowning of her young son. On recovering, she learns that her husband, Captain Branican, has been reported lost at sea. Having acquired a fortune, she is able to launch an expedition to search for her husband, who she is convinced is still alive. She leads the expedition herself and trail leads her into the Australian hinterland. Mistress Branican (French: Mistress Branican, 1891) is an adventure novel written by Jules Verne and based on Colonel Peter Egerton Warburton and Ernest Giles accounts of their journeys across the Western Australian deserts, and inspired by the search launched by Lady Franklin when her husband Sir John Franklin was reported lost in the Northwest Passage. Translated by A. Estoclet, Published in New York, Cassell Pub. Co. 1891.
    IR_f_Mistress-Branican_0058.jpg
  • The black-cheeked woodpecker (Melanerpes pucherani) is a resident breeding bird from southeastern Mexico south to western Ecuador. This woodpecker occurs in the higher levels of wet forests, semi-open woodland and old second growth. It nests in an unlined hole 6–30 m (20–98 ft) high in a dead tree. The clutch is two to four glossy white eggs, incubated by both sexes
    BT_f_Woodpecker_EYL05481.jpg
  • The black-cheeked woodpecker (Melanerpes pucherani) is a resident breeding bird from southeastern Mexico south to western Ecuador. This woodpecker occurs in the higher levels of wet forests, semi-open woodland and old second growth. It nests in an unlined hole 6–30 m (20–98 ft) high in a dead tree. The clutch is two to four glossy white eggs, incubated by both sexes
    BT_f_Woodpecker_EYL05322.jpg
  • The black-cheeked woodpecker (Melanerpes pucherani) is a resident breeding bird from southeastern Mexico south to western Ecuador. This woodpecker occurs in the higher levels of wet forests, semi-open woodland and old second growth. It nests in an unlined hole 6–30 m (20–98 ft) high in a dead tree. The clutch is two to four glossy white eggs, incubated by both sexes
    BT_f_Woodpecker_EYL06692.jpg
  • The black-cheeked woodpecker (Melanerpes pucherani) is a resident breeding bird from southeastern Mexico south to western Ecuador. This woodpecker occurs in the higher levels of wet forests, semi-open woodland and old second growth. It nests in an unlined hole 6–30 m (20–98 ft) high in a dead tree. The clutch is two to four glossy white eggs, incubated by both sexes
    BT_f_Woodpecker_EYL06693.jpg
  • The black-cheeked woodpecker (Melanerpes pucherani) is a resident breeding bird from southeastern Mexico south to western Ecuador. This woodpecker occurs in the higher levels of wet forests, semi-open woodland and old second growth. It nests in an unlined hole 6–30 m (20–98 ft) high in a dead tree. The clutch is two to four glossy white eggs, incubated by both sexes
    BT_f_Woodpecker_EYL05480.jpg
  • The black-cheeked woodpecker (Melanerpes pucherani) is a resident breeding bird from southeastern Mexico south to western Ecuador. This woodpecker occurs in the higher levels of wet forests, semi-open woodland and old second growth. It nests in an unlined hole 6–30 m (20–98 ft) high in a dead tree. The clutch is two to four glossy white eggs, incubated by both sexes
    BT_f_Woodpecker_EYL06283.jpg
  • silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis) This large hornbill is identified by the cream casque that covers its beak. It lives in pairs which often form part of a larger flock. It mainly feeds on fruits and insect but may also eat the eggs of other birds. Photographed in Lake Awassa in Ethiopia.
    BT_f_Silvery-cheeked-Hornbill_08.jpg
  • silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis) This large hornbill is identified by the cream casque that covers its beak. It lives in pairs which often form part of a larger flock. It mainly feeds on fruits and insect but may also eat the eggs of other birds. Photographed in Lake Awassa in Ethiopia.
    BT_f_Silvery-cheeked-Hornbill_05.jpg
  • silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis) This large hornbill is identified by the cream casque that covers its beak. It lives in pairs which often form part of a larger flock. It mainly feeds on fruits and insect but may also eat the eggs of other birds. Photographed in Lake Awassa in Ethiopia.
    BT_f_Silvery-cheeked-Hornbill_12.jpg
  • silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis) This large hornbill is identified by the cream casque that covers its beak. It lives in pairs which often form part of a larger flock. It mainly feeds on fruits and insect but may also eat the eggs of other birds. Photographed in Lake Awassa in Ethiopia.
    BT_f_Silvery-cheeked-Hornbill_06.jpg
  • silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis) This large hornbill is identified by the cream casque that covers its beak. It lives in pairs which often form part of a larger flock. It mainly feeds on fruits and insect but may also eat the eggs of other birds. Photographed in Lake Awassa in Ethiopia.
    BT_f_Silvery-cheeked-Hornbill_03.jpg
  • silvery-cheeked hornbill (Bycanistes brevis) This large hornbill is identified by the cream casque that covers its beak. It lives in pairs which often form part of a larger flock. It mainly feeds on fruits and insect but may also eat the eggs of other birds. Photographed in Lake Awassa in Ethiopia.
    BT_f_Silvery-cheeked-Hornbill_01.jpg
  • HEAD OF GREAT BLACK COCKATOO, WITH CREST DEPRESSED. The palm cockatoo (Probosciger aterrimus), also known as the goliath cockatoo or great black cockatoo, is a large smoky-grey or black parrot of the cockatoo family native to New Guinea, Aru Islands, and Cape York Peninsula. It has a very large black beak and prominent red cheek patches from the The royal natural history edited by Richard Lydekker, Volume IV published in 1895
    IR_f_Royal-natural-history-41_0127.jpg
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