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178 Sentences With "rust coloured"

How to use rust coloured in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "rust coloured" and check conjugation/comparative form for "rust coloured". Mastering all the usages of "rust coloured" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Habit Phebalium speciosum is a species of shrub that is endemic to a restricted area of New South Wales. It has branchlets covered with rust- coloured scales, lance-shaped to narrow elliptical leaves covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales, and umbels of white to pale pink flowers with silvery or rust-coloured scales on the back of the petals.
The calyx is hemispherical, about high and wide and covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales. The petals are yellow, elliptical, long and about wide with silvery and rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs in spring.
The five sepals are about long, joined for half their length and covered with rust-coloured scales on the outside. The petals are elliptical, about long with rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from September to December.
The five sepals are long, joined for half their length and covered with rust-coloured scales on the outside. The petals are broadly elliptical, long and wide, covered with silvery or rust-coloured scales. Flowering occurs from September to November.
The calyx is hemispherical, about high, wide and covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales. The petals are bright yellow, elliptic to egg-shaped, about long and wide with silvery and rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from June to September.
The five sepals are about long, joined for half their length and covered with rust-coloured scales on the outside. The petals are broadly elliptical, long and wide, covered with rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from August to November.
The five sepals are long, joined for half their length and covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the outside. The petals are white, elliptical, about long with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from September to December.
The calyx is top-shaped, about long with teeth about half that length, covered with silvery to rust- coloured scales inside and out. The petals are white to pink, egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, about long, wide and covered with rust- coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from July to August.
The petals are broadly elliptical, long and wide, covered with rust-coloured scales on the outside. Flowering occurs from June to October.
Large and Braggins (2004) note that the specific epithet ferruginea, meaning "rust-coloured", may refer to the brown scales of this species.
The petals are egg-shaped, long and about wide, covered with rust- coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from September to November.
The sepals are about long and joined at the base and covered with rust-coloured scales on the outside. Flowering occurs in July.
The petals are white, broadly elliptical, long and wide, with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from September to December.
Phebalium squamulosum , commonly known as scaly phebalium or forest phebalium, is a species of shrub or slender tree that is endemic to eastern Australia. It has smooth branches covered with rust-coloured scales, linear to elliptical or egg-shaped leaves with the narrower end towards the base, and pale to bright yellow flowers in umbels with rust-coloured or silvery scales on the back.
Anisophyllea ferruginea is a tree of Borneo in the family Anisophylleaceae. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "rust-coloured", referring to the leaf hairs.
The body of this smallish day gecko is lime green with rost-coloured dots and bars on the back which are irregularly shaped. Those reddish dots form a thin mid-dorsdal stripe, which may be broken and may have some bars extending from it. There is a rust-coloured stripe between the nostril and the eye. On the head there is a rust-coloured, v-shaped marking with two transverse bars.
They are either smooth or sparsely covered with fine hairs and have prominent veins on both sides; the veins are raised and rust-coloured on the leaf underside. Flowering occurs August to December. The few-flowered cymes are densely covered with hair, and the calyces are rust-coloured and hairy on the outside and cream and smooth inside. The hairless inside of the flowers distinguishes it from Lasiopetalum ferrugineum.
The five petals are yellow, elliptical, long and covered with star-shaped, rust-coloured hairs on the back and there are ten stamens. Flowering occurs from October to November.
The sepals are long and the petals are yellow, elliptical, long, covered with rust-coloured, star-shaped hairs on the back. There are ten stamens. Flowering occurs in spring.
Asterolasia drummondii is woody perennial shrub that typically grows to a height of . The leaves are leathery, egg- shaped, long and glabrous. The flowers are arranged in umbels of five to ten, mainly on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel long and covered with rust-coloured, star-shaped hairs. The petals are white, broadly elliptical, about long, with rust-coloured, star-shaped hairs on the back, and there are ten stamens.
The species name refers to the orange rust elements of the wing pattern and is derived from Latin ferrugineus (meaning rust coloured)., 2007, Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia 50B (2): 1-25.
Phebalium squamulosum is a shrub that typically grows to a height of , sometimes a slender tree to . It has smooth branchlets covered with rust-coloured scales. The leaves are papery or leathery, linear to elliptical or egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide on a petiole long. The upper surface of the leaves is more or less glabrous but the lower side is covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales and star- shaped hairs.
Agonoxena phoenicia is a moth of the family Agonoxenidae. It is found in Australia (Queensland). The wingspan is about 10 mm. Adults are yellow, with a rust-coloured line along each forewing.
The calyx is cup-shaped, long, covered with woolly, rust-coloured hairs and with a wavy rim. The corolla is cylindrical, long and greenish- yellow or reddish-mauve. Flowering mostly occurs in spring.
Phebalium speciosum is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has branchlets covered with rust-coloured scales. Its leaves are lance-shaped to narrow elliptical, long and wide on a petiole long. The upper surface of the leaves is dark green with silvery scales and the lower surface is covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales. The flowers are arranged in sessile umbels of four to eight flowers on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a scaly pedicel long.
Cochylimorpha nuristana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Afghanistan and Iran.Cochylimorpha at funet The wingspan is 19–25 mm. There are rust-coloured spots on the forewings.
This bird has rust-coloured upper parts and white underparts with grey plumage on the sides of its face and neck. It has flesh-coloured legs and a dark brown tail with white tips.
The calyx is about long, with silvery to reddish -brown scales on the outside. The petals are broadly elliptical, long and covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs from July to September.
Phebalium longifolium is a shrub that typically grows to a height of . It is more or less covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales except for the upper surface of the leaves and the front of the petals. The leaves are narrow elliptical to narrow lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide on a petiole long. The leaves are more or less glabrous and glossy green on the upper surface, densely covered with rust-coloured scales on the lower surface where there is a prominent mid-vein.
The calyx is hemispherical, about long, with silvery to reddish- brown scales on the outside. The petals are elliptical, about long and covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs in spring and summer.
Ledum species often grow together with poisonous plants such as bog-laurel and bog-rosemary, but certain species (e.g. L. groenlandicum and L. palustre) are easily distinguished by the distinctive rust coloured fuzz on the bottom of leaves.
The calyx is shortly cup- shaped, long and wide with rust-coloured hairs on the outside and with a wavy rim. The corolla is narrow cylindrical, long, pale green and covered with soft hairs. Flowering mostly occurs in spring.
The fruits are round to ellipsoid, up to long. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "rust-coloured", referring to the indumentum. The timber is used commercially. Habitat is mostly mixed dipterocarp forests from sea-level to altitude.
Phebalium whitei is a small shrub that is endemic to south-east Queensland. It has branchlets covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales, leathery, oblong to elliptic leaves and bright yellow flowers arranged in sessile umbels on the ends of branchlets.
The five sepals are long, joined for half their length and covered with rust- coloured scales on the outside. The petals are broadly elliptical, long and wide, covered with silvery scales on the outside. Flowering occurs from September to December.
The calyx is hemispherical to shortly cup-shaped, long, covered with woolly, rust- coloured hairs and with a wavy rim. The corolla is narrow cylindrical, long, pink to dull red with green lobes and covered with small, compact, star-shaped hairs.
Phebalium tuberculosum is a species of erect shrub that is endemic to Western Australia. It has glandular-warty and scaly branchlets and leaves and white flowers arranged in umbels of three or four with rust-coloured scales on the back of the petals.
Bidorpitia biforis is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Cotopaxi Province, Ecuador. The wingspan is about 15 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is cream ferruginous, with more rust coloured suffusions and strigulations (fine streaks).
The texture of each layer is rough with some holes from weaving. There are a few contenders for fiber sources. Some fibers were fine and grey, while some were coarse and straw-coloured. Occasionally there were black and rust coloured fibers as well.
' leaves of Darlingtonia californica Digitalis ferruginea owes its specific name to its ' (rust-coloured) flowers. Calochortus fimbriatus has ' flowers. Panaeolus cinctulus has gently ' . The of Zinnia elegans is typical of many Asteraceae in that it includes two types of s, ray florets and disk florets.
They have slender bodies and long legs. Red ruffed lemurs have a narrow snout with small back ears that are sometimes hidden by their long fur. They groom themselves using their toothcomb. As their name would suggest, they have a rust-coloured ruff and body.
The sepals are long and joined for about half their length, and densely covered with silvery scales and star-shaped hairs. The petals are egg-shaped, about long and wide, covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering occurs August to September.
The sepals are joined to form a hemispherical calyx about long and wide, covered with silvery or rust-coloured scales on the outside. The petals are elliptical, about long and wide and scaly on the back. Flowering occurs from late winter to early spring.
The sepals are about long and joined for about half their length, scaly on the outside but glabrous inside. The petals are broadly elliptical, about long and wide, covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the outside. Flowering occurs from August to November.
Fruits measure up to 20 mm in length. An inconspicuous indumentum of reddish or rust-coloured simple (unbranched) hairs measuring 0.1 mm in length may be present on the pitchers and inflorescence. Tepals are minutely tomentose. The stem, laminae and androphores are typically glabrous.
A rust-coloured stripe extends from the nostril to behind the eye. On the back there are brownish or red-brick coloured dots which may form a thin line along the mid back. These geckos do not have eyelids, and they have flattened toe pads.
The inflorescence consists of 16-36 sweetly scented white-cream or yellow showy flowers in axillary clusters. The inflorescence stalk is long with coarse longish hairs. The over-lapping bracts are long and inner bracts rust coloured. The pedicels are long and the pistil long.
Phebalium obovatum is a species of spreading shrub that is endemic to Western Australia. It has thick, egg-shaped or elliptical leaves densely covered with silvery scales on the lower side and white flowers arranged in umbels with silvery or rust-coloured scales on the back.
The calyx is cup-shaped, long and wide, covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales inside and out. The petals are narrow egg-shaped to spatula-shaped, long and wide with the stamens, which have bright yellow anthers, distinctively offset to one side. Flowering occurs in spring.
The ground colour of the forewings is ferruginous cream with more rust suffusions especially in terminal part of the wing. The strigulation (fine streaking) is rust coloured and the markings are pale rust with much darker, linear edges. The hindwings are cream orange. The larvae are polyphagous.
Cuproxena aequitana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Napo Province, Ecuador. The wingspan is 19.5 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is yellowish cream, forming an elongate-triangular area along the costa, but the costal edge is rust coloured.
Macroglossum soror is a moth of the family Sphingidae. It is known from Réunion (formerly known as Île Bourbon). It is similar to Macroglossum milvus and Macroglossum alluaudi. There are four large, deep rust-coloured lateral patches on the abdomen that are not separated from one another.
Hakea ferruginea was first formally described by the botanist Robert Sweet in 1827 and the description was published in Flora Australasica. Hakea repanda R.Br. is a synonym. The specific epithet is a Latin word meaning "rust-coloured" or "rusty", referring to the colour of new growth.
The mushroom stains red when in contact with potassium hydroxide (KOH). Fruit bodies identified as C. v. hercynicus are less robust than those of the nominate subspecies. The spore print is rust- coloured, while the spores themselves measure 12 to 15 µm by 7 to 8.5 µm.
Cochylimorpha kurdistana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Iraq, Syria and Iran.Cochylimorpha at funet The wingspan is 21–26 mm. The ground colour of the forewings varies from cream and yellowish cream (with some rust-coloured spots) to greyish cream.
Phebalium canaliculatum is a species of erect shrub that is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. It is more or less covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales and has thin, cylindrical leaves and dark pink to pale mauve flowers in umbels on the ends of branches.
New growth is covered in a fine rust-coloured fur. Flowering takes place from September to November, peaking in October. The inflorescences measure and are rusty coloured. Flowers are followed by the development of the large, woody, pear-shaped seed pod which is up to long and wide.
The length of the forewings is . The forewings are uniform lustrous, brownish grey, with scattered ochreous scales and a weak indication of two linear rust coloured stigmata in the cell. The hindwings are pale grey. & , 2001: Gnorimoschemine moths of coastal dune and scrub habitats in California (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae).
The overlapping bracts long, the inflorescence stalk long hairy and rust coloured. The pedicel long with white flattened dense silky hairs extending to the whitish long perianth. The fruit are "S" shaped, long and wide. The white to cream flowers appear in leaf axils from February to July.
The Atlantic paper mussel has a pair of fragile, elongated, oval valves. The shell is narrower at the anterior, hinged end and the umbones are prominent. The outer surface of the valves is a greenish-yellow colour, often with irregular rust-coloured zigzag markings. The interior is glistening white.
Asterolasia buckinghamii is a species of slender, erect shrub in the family Rutaceae and is endemic to eastern New South Wales. It has star-shaped hairs on its young branches, broadly egg-shaped, hairy leaves and yellow flowers with rust-coloured, star-shaped hairs on the back of the petals.
Phebalium lowanense, commonly known as the Lowan phebalium, is a species of slender shrub that is endemic to southern continental Australia. It is more or less covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales and has leaves appearing to be cylindrical, and yellow mauve flowers in umbels on the ends of branches.
The nape is rust-coloured. In flight, this wary bird shows white flight feathers and undertail, and reddish sides to the tail. Male and female plumages are similar, but the juvenile is slightly smaller and duller in appearance. Caucasian snowcock has a desolate whistling song, vaguely like a Eurasian curlew, '.
Phebalium distans, commonly known as the Mt. Berryman phebalium, is a species of small tree that is endemic to south-east Queensland. It is more or less covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales and has warty branchlets, linear leaves and creamy yellow flowers in umbels on the ends of branchlets.
The sepals are joined at the base to form a cup-shaped calyx long and wide, covered with silvery or rust-coloured scales. The petals are white to pale pink, egg-shaped to elliptical, long and wide and scaly on the back. Flowering occurs from June to August or in February.
Phebalium brachycalyx is a species of shrub that is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. It is more or less covered with silvery and rust- coloured scales, and has narrow oblong leaves with wavy-glandular edges, and white to pale yellow flowers in umbels on the ends of branches.
They have cylindrical bodies covered with long grey or brown fur with pale grey underparts. A patch of rust- coloured hair is seen at the base of the ears. They have small eyes, a hairy snout, and a short tail. They have 16 teeth and their upper incisors are grooved.
Clepsis paralaxa is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in the Federal District of Mexico. The wingspan is about 17 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is pale brownish cream, strigulated (finely streaked) with brownish ferruginous and with yellow-brown markings with rust coloured anterior edges.
The groups are on a rachis long and covered with rust-coloured hairs. The rachis has thickly matted hairs or more or less raised short silky rusty coloured hairs, occasionally white hairs. The pedicels are long and scantily covered with mostly white flattened soft silky hairs. The perianth is long and pistil long.
Young branches are covered with rust-coloured hairs. Leaves measure 5.5–13.5 × 3.5–6 cm, more or less lanceolate to ovate, acuminate apex, rounded to cordate at the base, often bullate, and glabrous to pubescent beneath. Acarodomatia present in the axils of the veins. Petioles are covered with crisped or patent hairs.
Asterolasia drummondii, commonly known as Gairdner Range starbush, is a species of small shrub that is endemic to a restricted area of the southwest of Western Australia. It has egg-shaped leaves and white flowers arranged in umbels of five to ten flowers with rust-coloured, star-shaped hairs on the back of the petals.
Phebalium verrucosum is a species of shrub that is endemic to New South Wales. It has branchlets densely covered with white scales, narrow elliptic, oblong or linear leaves covered with white scales on the lower side, and umbels of creamy white flowers with silvery or rust-coloured scales on the back of the petals.
Phebalium appressum is a species of shrub that is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. It is more or less covered with silvery scales and has egg- shaped to heart-shaped leaves pressed against the stems, and flowers with rust-coloured scales on the pedicel. It is only known from the type specimen.
The cap is completely attached to the hollow, conical stipe, which measures long by wide. Initially whitish, it becomes rust-coloured in maturity or after drying. White granules are present at the top of the stipe and in the grooves at the base. The hymenium (fertile, spore-bearing surface) is 6–10 µm thick.
Red sea fingers is similar in shape to Alcyonium digitatum but is usually blood red or rust coloured. The finger- shaped lobes are slender and can be up to thirty centimetres long. The polyps are white and each one has eight pinnate tentacles which give the colony a feathery appearance when they are extended.
The college also offers a grade 13 for those who wish to further their education or if further education is necessary. The college also accepts many international exchange students from countries including Japan and Italy. The college is distinguished by its rust coloured blazers - with the school colour scheme being gold, rust, black and white.
Tsutsusi are characterised by the presence of terminal buds that contain both floral and vegetative shoots. Many also have flattened multicellular ferrugineous (rust coloured) hairs, which can cover the leaves and stems providing a coppery appearance, or pseudoverticillate leaves that are rhombic in shape. However some have hairs confined to the axils, or base of floral buds.
The young leaves are covered in rust- coloured hairs, which distinguishes this species from the similar Hakea megadenia. Unisexual populations have male plants which do not produce fruit but flowers that produce pollen. Female populations have fruit with no pollen. There are recorded populations of bisexual plants where the fruit occur together with flowers producing pollen.
The sepals are joined at the base to form a cup-shaped calyx wide, warty and covered with white, star-shaped hairs. The petals are creamy white and egg- shaped, long and about wide and with silvery or rust-coloured scales on the back. Flowering mainly occurs from September to November with sporadic flowering in April and June.
Lead exposure can cause delays in physical and mental development in children. Long term exposure to copper may cause liver and kidney damage. High or long term exposure of cadmium may cause damage to various organs. Corrosion of iron materials causes the discoloring of the water that is shown as rust-coloured water or red water.
Congoprinsia is a genus of moths belonging to the family Tortricidae. It contains only one species, Congoprinsia juratae, which is found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The wingspan is 12–14.5 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is ferruginous cream with rust coloured suffusions and strigulation and a few paler spots in a reticulate area subterminally.
This rustyhood orchid was first formally described in 2009 by David Jones who gave it the name Oligochaetochilus ferrugineus. The description was published in The Orchadian from a specimen collected in the Padthaway Conservation Park. In 2010 Gary Backhouse changed the name to Pterostylis ferruginea. The specific epithet (ferruginea) is a Latin word meaning "rusty" or "rust-coloured".
NASA image of Saskatchewan and a portion of Manitoba. Dark to light rust coloured areas in the north are burn scars from forest fires Saskatchewan is bordered on the west by Alberta, on the north by the Northwest Territories, on the east by Manitoba, and on the south by the U.S. states of Montana and North Dakota.
Hakea bicornata is a lignotuberous, multiple stemmed shrub high. The many smaller branches are rusty coloured and covered with small hairs. The simple rust coloured leaves grow alternately along the stem; they are long and wide, ending in a point long. The young leaves are densely covered in matted silky hairs but become smooth as they mature.
It is topped by a blunt, oblong or nearly hoof-shaped stigma of about 1⅓ mm (0.05 in), that is slightly thicker than the style. The one-seeded fruit sits on a short stalk, is about 2 mm (0.08 in) long, more or less egg-shaped, with a short beak and covered in rust-coloured hairs.
The Northern Limestone Alps are considered the main source of the Kaiserstuhl loess. A rust-coloured band occurs at irregular intervals. It developed as a new material and did not arrive regularly but in phases of different intensities. In a phase of weak sedimentation the material on top weathered – and the calcium carbonate was washed out.
Up to 9 cm (3.5 in) long, it is variable in appearance; all black in northern KwaZulu-Natal and brown with yellow legs in Mpumalanga. The legs are otherwise rust-coloured. It has a heavy-set body with stocky legs and stout arms (pedipalps) with short pincers (chelae). Its cephalothorax around 11 mm long and broader (11.5 mm) across.
The great desert skink is a medium-sized skink, reaching an average snout-to-vent length (SVL) of 19 cm (about 7 in). It has smooth, small, glossy scales and is mostly rust-coloured on the top of the body, with the belly a vanilla color. It has relatively large circular eyes and a short snout.
Phebalium longifolium is a species of shrub that is endemic to far north Queensland. It is more or less covered with silvery to rust-coloured scales and has smooth branchlets, narrow elliptical to narrow lance-shaped leaves and cream-coloured flowers in umbels on the ends of branchlets. It grows in the boundary between forest and rainforest in tropical areas.
The field sparrow (Spizella pusilla) is a small New World sparrow in the family Passerellidae. It is about long and weighs about . The head is grey with a rust-coloured crown, white eye-ring and pink bill. The upper parts are brown streaked with black and buff, the breast is buff, the belly is white and the tail is forked.
Darlingia ferruginea grows as a tall tree in its native rainforest habitat, forming part of the canopy and reaching in height, though likely to only grow a third this size in cultivation. The trunk is not buttressed. The initial leaves are entire but juvenile leaves are lobed, reaching long. The leaf veins and undersurface, and stems are covered with fine rust-coloured hairs.
The nest is made in holes in a riverbank, under stones and rocks and in crevices. It is made from dried grass stems and lined with slender roots and a few downy feathers. Four to six greenish-blue eggs with rust-coloured spots on the larger end are laid from early May onwards. They average and there is normally a single brood.
Lomatia ilicifolia, commonly known as holly lomatia or native holly, is a plant in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to south-eastern Australia. It is a stiff, erect shrub with hairy, rust-coloured new growth and which recovers from fire from a lignotuber. It has dull green, leathery, prickly, holly-like leaves and long sprays of cream flowers, usually after fire.
There are many ghost stories at Groombridge Place. The ghost reported most often is the Ostler. The Ostler is reported to have drowned in 1808 and is usually seen wearing a rust-coloured smock and standing in the doorway of the cottage that backs onto the moat. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle describes his encounter of a ghost in his book At the Edge of the Unknown.
Persoonia longifolia is an erect shrub or small tree that typically grows to a height of , usually with a single main trunk. It has flaky-papery bark, brown or greyish on the surface and reddish purple below. Young branchlets are covered with brown to rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are linear to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide.
The southern boubou (Laniarius ferrugineus) ('ferrugineus' - rust-coloured) is a bushshrike. Though these passerine birds and their relations were once included with true shrikes in the Laniidae, they are not closely related to that family. This species is found in southeastern Africa, mainly in southeastern Zimbabwe, eastern Botswana, Mozambique and southern and eastern South Africa. It frequents dense thickets in forests, mangroves, scrub and gardens.
The cap is flat when young, soon funnel shaped and weakly striped; somewhat sticky and shiny, pale green to light grey-green, more rarely olive green. It is often in diameter. The closely spaced gills are pale cream when young, later becoming light yellow when the spores mature. The stipe is white, occasionally with rust-coloured spots at the base, often rather short with longitudinal furrows.
Correa baeuerlenii is a dense, rounded shrub that typically grows to a height of with rust coloured hairs on its stems. Its leaves are narrow egg-shaped to egg-shaped or elliptical, long, wide, and more or less glabrous. The flowers are usually borne singly on short side branches on a pendulous pedicel long. The calyx is cylindrical, about long with a dilated base in diameter.
Banksia benthamiana is a shrub that typically grows to a height of but does not form a lignotuber. Its bark is roughly flaking and grey and the branchlets are densely covered with rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are linear in shape, mostly long and wide on a petiole long. The sides of the leaves usually have small teeth long and apart along one half or more.
Correa calycina is a dense shrub that typically grows to high and wide with its branchlets covered with rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are narrow oblong to elliptic, long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are borne singly on short side shoots on pedicels long. The calyx is green, top-shaped, square in cross-section and up to long with four lance-shaped lobes.
Metapenaeus stebbingi grows to a maximum length of 11 cm in males and 14 cm in females. The shell is off white or cream, marked with rust- coloured speckles. The tail fan has reddish margins, with the antennae being a similar colour. The upper margin of the rostrum has 7–10 teeth while the first and third pairs of walking legs have a basal spine.
Phebalium brevifolium is a shrub that typically grows to a height of about . It has warty branchlets and sessile, wedge-shaped leaves about long and wide with the narrower end towards the base. Up to three white flowers are arranged in umbels, each flower on a pedicel long. The calyx is about long, warty and covered with scales and star-shaped hairs on the outside and with rust-coloured scales inside.
The erect and slender shrub or small tree typically grows to a height of It is usually single stemmed and the young branches are covered in spreading often rust coloured hairs. The stipules are narrow triangular and around in length. The alternately arranged leaves have an elliptical blade to around in length. The species has purple or blue flowers that appear between August and December in its native range.
Phebalium appressum is a rounded shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with silvery scales. The leaves are sessile, crowded, egg-shaped to heart-shaped, about long and wide and pressed against the branch. The flowers are white and borne singly or in pairs on the ends of branchlets. The pedicels are about long, thick and densely covered with rust-coloured scales.
Correa lawrenceana var. latrobeana is a shrub that typically grows to a height of or a tree to . Its leaves are elliptical to egg-shaped, arranged in opposite pairs, long and wide and covered with felt-like, cream- to rust-coloured hairs on the lower side. The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to seven in leaf axils and on the ends of branchlets on a stalk long.
Correa lawrenceana var. lawrenceana is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has papery, oblong leaves long, wide and sometimes covered with rust-coloured hairs on the lower surface. Specimens in the north-east of the state have narrow leaves, while those from the south and west have wider leaves with hairy undersides. The flowers are borne singly on the ends of branchlets on a stalk about long.
Queensland botanist John Frederick Bailey described Darlingia ferruginea in 1899. The species name is the Latin adjective ferruginea "rusty", and refers to the rust-coloured fur on the stems and leaves. Molecular analysis indicates Darlingia ferruginea and its relative D. darlingiana join Floydia prealta as members of the subtribe Floydiinae within the subfamily Grevilleoideae in the family Proteaceae. Common names include brown silky oak, rose silky oak, and rusty silky oak.
Lepidoptera and Their Ecology. It is one of the most damaging pests of maize in the Mediterranean region. Larvae of the first generation are particularly destructive, because they tunnel the maize stem during the whole larval stage."Insect Resistance Monitoring in Iberian collections of Sesamia nonagrioides: 2012 Season" The larvae are yellowish to brownish with a rust- coloured back and reach a length of 30–40 mm when full grown.
The solitary inflorescence has 20-38 white flowers on a short stalk with white flat silky hairs and rarely rust coloured. The sepals and petals are cream-white, the style long. Fruit are warty and egg-shaped with a slight curve long and wide ending with a sharp short point. Small white flowers often with a pink tinge appear along branches in axillary clusters from October to November.
Thick-billed longspurs are about 15 cm long and weigh around 25 g with a wingspan of 28 cm. They have a large cone-shaped bill, a streaked back, a rust-coloured shoulder and a white tail with a dark tip. In breeding plumage, the male has a white throat and underparts, a grey face and nape and a black crown. Other plumages are very plain brown overall with pink bills.
Tornier's forest toad is sexually dimorphic and the colouring also varies considerably between individuals. The males are smaller at , with the dorsal surface brownish-red and the ventral surface grey or white. The females measure in length with the dorsal surface rust coloured with a central yellow region and a ventral surface that appears translucent. Females may also have two black bands across the lower legs and feet.
Kamatchiamman Temple is located on Bharathi Street, this temple is different from most other South Indian temples by virtue of its lack of colour and ornamentation. Its starkness is what makes it stand out from the rest. This dark rust coloured temple is dedicated to Durga, the goddess of war. Sri Ponniyamman Temple in Solai nagar it was in existence before the French came and settled in Pondicherry i.e.
Hakea ceratophylla is a stiff, multi-stemmed shrub that typically grows to a height of . Its young branchlets and leaves are covered with rust coloured hairs but become glabrous as they age. The mature leaves vary in shape from linear to narrow egg-shaped with the narrow end towards the base, long and wide, to leaves with between three and five lobes. Lobed leaves are wide with lobes long.
The flowers are arranged in umbels containing between two and ten flowers with no apparent stalk. Each flower has a pedicel long and is covered with white and rust- coloured hairs. The perianth (the non-reproductive part of the flower) is long and the style is long. Flowering occurs from September to December and the black fruit that form afterward are more or less egg-shaped, long and wide.
The chapel was partly demolished, leaving only the central part as an open pavilion-like domed structure. The building is partly overgrown by ivy. The surrounding garden spaces of the two axes, creating a Greek cross, are confined by tall yew hedges and have a grass surface. Embedded in the lawns of the cross arms are narrow, rust coloured paths made of oxidized iron plates, flanked by rows by cherry trees.
At the end of each cross arm is a 9 metre tall rust coloured iron arch. The design of the project is inspired by Bramante's Tempietto in Rome and the baroque gardens of Villa Gori in Siena. The latter is characterized by the garden being contained in the two axes of the garden, instead of the axes being the connecting feature of the surrounding gardens as is normally the case.
Lasiopetalum macrophyllum Lasiopetalum macrophyllum was introduced to cultivation in England in 1835. Its flushes of rust-coloured new growth have some ornamental appeal, and it grows fairly readily in part-shade in the garden, and is propagated by seed or cutting. Forms with more attractive new growth and prostrate habit have been selected for the garden. It grows in well-drained soils in sun or part shade and is frost tolerant.
Asterolasia rupestris is a species of erect shrub that is endemic to New South Wales. It has heart-shaped to triangular leaves with the narrower end towards the base, and densely covered with star-shaped hairs. The flowers are yellow and arranged singly or in groups of three to six in leaf axils or on the ends of branchlets, the back of the petals densely covered with rust-coloured, star-shaped hairs.
Phebalium whitei is a shrub that typically grows to a height of about and has silvery to rust-coloured scales on its branchlets. Its leaves are leathery, oblong to elliptic, long and about wide on a petiole long. The leaves are oval in outline, the upper surface smooth and glabrous, the lower surface covered with silvery scales. The flowers are arranged in sessile umbels of up to six flowers, each on a thick pedicel long.
Plumages can be uniform in colour or patterned with barring or spots. Sexual dimorphism – differences in plumage colour and pattern between males and females – is common in the family. Overall the pattern within the family is for the males to have combinations of grey, black or white plumage and the females having buff, rufous and brown colours. For example, the male dot-winged antwren is primarily blackish, whereas the female has rust-coloured underparts.
Phebalium tuberculosum is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of with glandular-warty branchlets, leaves and sepals. The leaves are oblong with the edges rolled under, appearing more or less cylindrical, and are about long and about wide. The flowers are borne in umbels of three or four, each flower on a thick pedicel long covered with rust-coloured scales. The five sepals are long, joined at the base.
Correa lawrenceana var. macrocalyx is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has leathery, egg-shaped to broadly egg-shaped leaves long and wide with woolly hairs on the lower surface. The flowers are borne singly or in twos or threes in leaf axils or on the ends of short branchlets on stalks long. The calyx is deeply cup-shaped, long with a slightly wavy rim, and covered with rust- coloured hairs.
The male has an iridescent blue bib edged below with successive black, white and rust coloured borders. Some subspecies, such as L. svecica svecica (red-spotted bluethroat) of northern Eurasia, have a red spot in the centre of the blue bib. Others, such as L. svecica cyanecula (white-spotted bluethroat) of southern and central Europe, have a white spot in the centre of the blue bib. L. svecica magna in Turkey has no central spot.
Between five and ten or more flowers are arranged in umbels on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel long. The calyx is hemispherical to top-shaped, long and wide, glabrous on the inside and covered with scales on the outside. The petals are pale to bright yellow or cream- coloured, elliptical, long with silvery to rust-coloured scales on the back. The fruit is a follicle about long and erect.
Correa alba is a prostrate to spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of and has rust-coloured, woolly-hairy young stems. The leaves are leathery, elliptic to more or less round, long and wide on a petiole long. The lower side of the leaves is densely covered with woolly hairs. The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to five on the ends of short side branches on pedicels long.
Here Cliff was allowed to decorate some of the old defective 'glost' (white) ware in her own freehand patterns. For these she used on-glaze enamel colours, which enabled a brighter palette than underglaze colours. She covered the imperfections in simple patterns of triangles, in a style that she called 'Bizarre'. The earliest examples had just a hand-painted mark, usually in a rust coloured paint, 'Bizarre by Clarice Cliff', sometimes with 'Newport Pottery' underneath.
Phebalium filifolium is an erect, spreading or rounded shrub that typically grows to a height of . Its branchlets are smooth and covered with silvery, scale-like hairs. The leaves are more or less cylindrical or bluntly triangular in cross-section, about long and wide, glabrous on the upper surface and covered with silvery or rust-coloured scales on the lower surface. The flowers are pale to bright yellow and borne in umbels of three to eight.
Asterolasia elegans is a species of slender, erect shrub that is endemic to a restricted area of New South Wales. It has dense, woolly, rusty star-shaped hairs on its stems, lance-shaped leaves densely covered with white and rust- coloured hairs on the lower surface, and white flowers arranged singly or in groups of up to nine in leaf axils or on the ends of branchlets, the back of the petals densely covered with woolly, white hairs.
Phebalium brachycalyx is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales. The leaves are narrow oblong, about long and about wide on a short petiole. The edge of the leaves are wavy-glandular and the mid-vein on the lower surface is warty. The flowers are white to pale yellow and arranged in umbels of three to six flowers, each flower on a thin pedicel long.
Butia eriospatha is a small species of Butia palm endemic to the highlands of southern Brazil. It is very similar to B. odorata, but is easily distinguished from this species by the distinct spathes which are densely covered in rust- coloured, woolly hairs. Indeed, the specific epithet is derived from Greek ἔριον, wool, and Latin spatha, which refers to the spathe. It has been given the name woolly jelly palm (UK) or wooly jelly palm (US) in English.
The common tailorbird (Orthotomus sutorius) is a songbird found across tropical Asia. Popular for its nest made of leaves "sewn" together and immortalized by Rudyard Kipling as Darzee in his Jungle Book, it is a common resident in urban gardens. Although shy birds that are usually hidden within vegetation, their loud calls are familiar and give away their presence. They are distinctive in having a long upright tail, greenish upper body plumage and rust coloured forehead and crown.
Phebalium stenophyllum is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has silvery to rust-coloured scales on its branchlets. It has narrow oblong leaves with the edges rolled under, appearing more or less cylindrical, long and wide on a short petiole. The upper surface is glabrous on older leaves, the lower surface covered with silvery scales or obscured. The flowers are arranged in sessile umbels of three to ten flowers, each flower on a pedicel long.
Amyema gaudichaudii is a mistletoe with wedge-shaped leaves long, wide, tapering to a petiole long and with a rounded end. The plant is glabrous apart from a few short rust-coloured hairs on the young branches and flower buds. The flowers are arranged in a group of three, the group resembling a candelabra, with a stalk or peduncle long. The flowers on the end have a stalk or pedicel long but the central flower is stalkless.
Brandt's ground squirrel is smaller than most other Spermophilus species being 165 to 210 millimetres long with a short tail some 30 to 50 millimetres long and weighing up to 440 grams. It is an ochre brown colour with distinctive lighter coloured spots. The hind feet are russet as is the tail, though in some parts of the range the tail is yellowish. There are paler regions around the eyes with rust coloured patches above and below.
This ground squirrel has a strawy-brown colour which takes on a more sandy hue in summer but is still paler than other similar species. The short tail is a whitish-yellow colour with a rust coloured stripe most of the way along the upper side. There is a white streak across the side of the face, white eyelids and a rusty coloured spot under each eye. The underside is generally paler and the length is about twenty centimetres.
During the Olympics, the underside of the bridge over the lock was covered in mirrors, and this feature has been retained on the new narrower structure. The job of manufacturing the gates, the new gantries and the controls was awarded to Mayflower Engineering of Sheffield. The gantries are being clad in weathering steel, which forms a rust-coloured protective layer over time, and this is designed to contrast with the bridge over the lock, which is clad in stainless steel.
Phebalium festivum is a shrub that typically grows to a height of . It has mostly smooth branchlets densely covered with rust-coloured scales. The leaves are egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide, the upper surface and covered with warty glands, the lower surface densely covered with silvery scales. Three to ten white to pale yellow flowers are arranged in sessile umbels on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a silvery-scaly pedicel long.
Phebalium bifidum is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with glossy, grey to rust-coloured scales. Its adult leaves are Y-shaped, long on a petiole long. The flowers are cream-coloured to bright yellow and arranged in sessile umbels on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel about long. The sepals are joined to form a cup-shaped calyx about long and wide, densely covered with on the outside.
The white-breasted mesite is a forest species; living in groups of two to four individuals which can be seen resting, or feeding on the ground during the day. The brown upper plumage provides camouflage while the bird forage on the forest floor, flicking over leaf-litter to find invertebrates. Diet includes beetles, centipedes, cockroaches, crickets, flies, moths, spiders, and also seeds. Egg-laying mainly takes place from November to January with one to three white eggs with rust-coloured spots.
Hakea kippistiana is a woody shrub or small tree with spreading branches growing to a height of and forms a lignotuber. The branchlets are covered in white and rust coloured flattened hairs but quickly become smooth except at the leaf base. The dark green needle-shaped leaves are long and wide, ending with a hook at the apex. Flowering occurs from November to February and the flowers are strongly fragrant, white, cream or pink and arranged in groups of between 8 and 26.
Correa backhouseana is a rounded shrub that typically grows to a height of with its young branchlets covered with woolly, rust- coloured hairs. The leaves are leathery, elliptical to egg-shaped or more or less round, mostly long on a short petiole. The upper surface of the leaves is more or less glabrous but the lower surface is densely covered with woolly hairs. The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of two or three on short side shoots and are usually pendent.
Correa decumbens is a prostrate to spreading shrub that typically grow to a height of with its branchlets covered with reddish brown hairs. The leaves are narrow oblong to narrow elliptical, mostly long and wide on a petiole long. The upper surface of the leaves is glabrous and the lower surface is covered with woolly, rust-coloured hairs. The flowers are usually arranged singly on the ends of short side shoots on pedicels long with linear to spatula-shaped bracts at the base.
Asterolasia phebalioides is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with woolly, grey hairs and silvery to rust-coloured star-shaped hairs. The leaves are densely crowded on short branches, wedge- shaped to heart-shaped, long and densely covered with star-shaped hairs. The flowers are borne singly on the ends of branchlets with five scaly bracts at the base. The petals are yellow, broadly elliptical, long and covered with star-shaped hairs on the back.
Asterolasia pallida is a woody, perennial herb that typically grows to a height of about and sometimes forms a rhizome. The leaves are elliptical, long and covered with star-shaped hairs on the lower side. The flowers are arranged in umbels of three to six in leaf axils and on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a thin pedicel long. The petals are white, elliptical, long, with rust-coloured and colourless, star-shaped hairs on the back, and there are fifteen to twenty-five stamens.
Phebalium canaliculatum is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales. The leaves are cylindrical to slightly flattened, about long and wide on a very short petiole. The flowers are dark pink to pale mauve and arranged in sessile umbels on the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are about long and joined for about half their length, scaly on the outside but glabrous inside.
The Tahiti rail appears to have been closely related to, and perhaps derived from, the buff-banded rail, and has also been historically confused with the Tongan subspecies of that bird. The Tahiti rail was long, and its colouration was unusual for a rail. The underparts, throat, and eyebrow-like supercilium were white, and the upper parts were black with white dots and bands. The nape (or hind neck) was ferruginous (rust-coloured), the breast was grey, and it had a black band across the lower throat.
Lomatia ilicifolia is a stiff, erect shrub which grows to a height of and has its young foliage and flower buds covers with rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are dull green, leathery and holly-like, mostly glabrous and egg-shaped to lance-shaped or elliptic. They are long, wide, have sharp teeth along their edges and a prominent network of veins. The flowers are arranged on the ends of the stems in a spike-like panicle or raceme long, each flower on a stalk long.
Phebalium laevigatum is an erect, slender shrub that typically grows to a height of . Its branchlets are glandular-warty and the leaves are linear to narrow oblong, mostly long and wide on a petiole about long, mostly glabrous on the upper surface and covered with silvery scales on the lower surface. The flowers are white or yellow and borne in umbels of about seven, each flower on a pedicel about long. The five sepals are about long, joined for half their length and covered with rust-coloured scales on the outside.
Phebalium lowanense is a slender shrub that typically grows to a height of and is more or less covered with silvery or rust-coloured scales. The leaves are linear, long and about wide but with the edges strongly rolled under, so that they appear cylindrical. The upper surface of the leaves is glabrous and slightly scaly, and the lower surface is covered with silvery scales. The flowers are yellow and arranged in umbels on the ends of branchlets with up to six flowers, each flower on a thick pedicel long.
Phebalium distans is a tree that typically grows to a height of up to , but is shrub-like when young. It is more or less covered with silvery to rust coloured scales except for the upper surface of the leaves and petals. It has warty branchlets and linear leaves that are glabrous and glossy green on the upper surface, densely covered with scales on the lower surface, long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers creamy yellow and arranged in umbels, each flower on a pedicel long.
Phebalium verrucosum is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has branchlets covered with white scales. Its leaves are narrow elliptic, oblong or linear, long and wide on a petiole long. The upper surface of the leaves is warty and the lower surface is covered with silvery and rust-coloured scales. The flowers are arranged in umbels of mostly three to five flowers on the ends of branchlets, sometimes singly in adjacent leaf axils, each flower on a pedicel long and covered with star-shaped white hairs.
Persoonia leucopogon is an erect to low-lying shrub that typically grows to a height of with branchlets that are densely covered with greyish to rust-coloured hairs when young. The leaves are arranged alternately, narrow oblong to narrow elliptical, long and wide and twisted through 360°. The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to four along a rachis up to long that grows into a leafy shoot after flowering, each flower on a pedicel long. The tepals are yellow to greenish yellow, densely hairy on the outside, long with yellow anthers.
It is possible that it was based on the drawing in the Leverian collection, since Latham stated that this drawing showed the end of the tail as "deep ferruginous" (rust-coloured), a feature also depicted in his own illustration. World Museum in Liverpool, where the only specimen is kept The spotted green pigeon was scientifically named by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1789, based on Latham's description. The original binomial name Columba maculata means "spotted pigeon" in Latin. Latham himself accepted this name, and used it in his 1790 work Index ornithologicus.
Plants with severe rust infection may appear stunted, chlorotic (yellowed), or may display signs of infection such as rust fruiting bodies. Rust fungi grow intracellularly, and make spore- producing fruiting bodies within or, more often, on the surfaces of affected plant parts. Some rust species form perennial systemic infections that may cause plant deformities such as growth retardation, witch's broom, stem canker, galls, or hypertrophy of affected plant parts. Rusts get their name because they are most commonly observed as deposits of powdery rust-coloured or brown spores on plant surfaces.
Double Haven or Yan Chau Tong () is a harbour hugged by Double Island, Crescent Island and Crooked Island with north-eastern New Territories. It contains many deep red coloured rocks formed during a period of global warming in Tertiary. Oxidation rate of iron increased due to higher temperature and humidity, forming the iron oxide (rust) Port Island (), as the Chinese name Chek Chau implies, Port Island is a place of red earth. The ground on the entire island is rust-coloured conglomerate and siltstone formed similarly during Teritary.
Nematolepis ovatifolia is a small, dense shrub with more or less angled to terete stems covered in light rust coloured scales and sparsely dotted with warty glands. The leaves are wide egg-shaped to broadly elliptic, long, wide, margins mostly flat, upper surface dotted with glands, underside silvery scales. The inflorescences are a small, tight cluster of 1-3 white flowers, petals about long, pink in bud, dotted with glands, individual flowers and cluster stems thick, flattened and together long. The bracts oblong to egg-shaped, long, sepals almost upright, triangular shape and long.
Rhododendron ferrugineum (sometimes called alpenrose, snow-rose, or rusty- leaved alpenrose) is an evergreen shrub that grows just above the tree line in the Alps, Pyrenees, Jura and northern Apennines, on acid soils. It is the type species for the genus Rhododendron. It may grow up to 1 m tall and produces clusters of pinkish-red, bell-shaped flowers throughout the summer. The undersides of the leaves are covered in rust-brown spots, which give the species the second part of its binomial name (ferrugineum, Latin for 'rust- coloured, ferruginous').
Against the backdrop of his qualifications in the field of landscape, it does not surprise that land-art objects and installation represent an important part of the current works by Kurt Fleckenstein. His objects deal with the surrounding landscape or town-scape. Strong encounters of the monumental, rust coloured objects which are a contrast to the green landscape come into being and connect with nature. Playing with gravity is particularly distinct in his work - when balls threaten to roll down a hill or cubes are ready to tip - but do not fall down.
Correa eburnea is a shrub that typically grows to a height of and has branchlets covered with rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are papery, egg-shaped to elliptical, mostly long on a short petiole and covered with minute white hairs on the lower surface. The flowers are arranged singly or in groups of up to five in leaf axils, each flower nodding on a pedicel about long with two round to heart-shaped bracts long at the base of the flowers. The calyx is cup-shaped, long including the four triangular teeth about long.
Atherstone was a hatting town, where hats were made from Tudor times, including many for the armies of the world. Towards the end of the twentieth century, hats went out of fashion, and the economy of the town declined. Mercury was used to make certain types of felt, and its toxicity, which affects the brain, led to the expression "Mad as a Hatter". Between Atherstone and Nuneaton, the canal water is rust coloured, caused by leaching of minerals from the soil, and there are the remains of large granite quarries, many now landscaped and acting as nature reserves.
Rogers was born in New Plymouth on 12 July 1913.Who’s Who in New Zealand, 12th edition, edited by Max Lambert p543 (1991, Reed, Wellington) The doctor who delivered him spotted some rust-coloured hairs on his head and wanted to call him a "haematite", but his mother insisted that if anything, he was to be called Rufus. That name always stuck. Rogers later attended Whitiora School and Hamilton High School, as well as Nelson College from 1930 to 1931Nelson College Old Boys' Register, 1856–2006, 6th edition and the University of Otago, where he completed an MB ChB degree in 1938.
Persoonia arborea is a large shrub or small tree that typically grows to a height of , its young branchlets densely covered with greyisf to rust-coloured hairs. The leaves are narrow spatula-shaped to lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide. The flowers are arranged singly in the axils of leaves on a pedicel up to long, the tepals long, hairy on the outside with a spine long on the end and white anthers. Flowering occurs from December to March and the fruit is a yellowish green, oval drupe up to about long and wide.
Orites excelsus is a tree that typically grows to a height of up to with more or less smooth brown or grey bark, often with minute scales, and new shoots are covered with rust- coloured hairs at first. The leaves are elliptic, lance-shaped, egg-shaped or oblong, long and wide on a petiole long. They are usually lobed, usually have teeth regularly arranged along the edges, shiny green on the upper surface and grey to whitish below. The flowers are white or creamy-white, fragrant, about long and are arranged in leaf axils along a rachis long.
Runemarks follows Maddy, a young loner who has been ostracised from her town for the rust-coloured rune mark she carries on her left hand. Animals born with a rune mark on their bodies are seen as cursed or deformed and are usually quickly slaughtered. Maddy is allowed to live because she is human, but is always viewed with suspicion despite this. Her village does not follow the Norse Gods, as the puritanical regime known as the Order has mandated that no one is to speak or acknowledge any of the old ways, let alone use magic.
In its native rainforest habitat, Grevillea baileyana can grow as a tree to 30 m (100 ft) high. Its hard scaly bark is grey. Both adult and juvenile leaves are 6–30 cm (5.2–12 in) long; the juvenile leaves are pinnatifid, that is, divided into five to nine lanceolate (spear-shaped) lobes on each side of the leaf, while the adult leaves are a simple spear- shape (lanceolate) and 1–6 or rarely 10 cm (0.4–4 in) wide. They are a shiny smooth green above with a conspicuous midvein, and covered in rust-coloured fur below.
Persoonia confertiflora is an erect to low-lying shrub that typically grows to a height of with branches and leaves that are covered with light brown to rust-coloured hairs when young. The leaves are usually arranged in opposite pairs, egg- shaped to narrow elliptic or lance-shaped, long and wide. The flowers are arranged in clusters in leaf axils or on the ends of branchlets that do not continue growth after flowering. Each flower is on an erect, hairy pedicel long, the tepals long and hairy on the outside with a short spine on the tip, the anthers white.
Pacific baza, Newell Beach, Queensland, Australia Females can be distinguished from males by having a slightly browner upperside and sometimes more barring on their secondary flight feathers. Juveniles can be differentiated from adults by having a much browner upperside. They also have pale eyes, rather than the sharp yellow eyes of adults, a patterned face, smaller barring on their belly, a rust-coloured breast, a white throat, and a cream to blue-grey coloured cere. The Pacific baza can be distinguished from the long-tailed honey buzzard (Henicopernis longicauda), which is similar in appearance to this species, by having less-rounded wings and a breast that is barred rather than streaked.
The leaves of Northern rātā have a distinct notch at the tip Northern rātā is a massive tree, easily distinguished from other Metrosideros species by its small, leathery, dark green leaves which are 25-50mm long by 15-25mm wide, and have a distinct notch at the tip. Young growth is generally pink and covered in fine rust-coloured hairs that are gradually shed as the foliage ages but tends to persist at the midrib and in the vicinity of the leaf base. The flowers, borne in sprays on the tips of branches, are a mass of dark scarlet stamens. Flowering peaks between November and January, and seeds take a year or slightly more to ripen.
The nape (or hind neck) was ferruginous (rust-coloured), the breast was grey, and it had a black band across the lower throat. The bill and iris were red, and the legs were fleshy pink. The sexes were presumably similar, and the immature and juvenile were not described. Forster's original description of the bird follows below, in a translation from Latin published by the English naturalist Walter Rothschild in 1907: The Tongan subspecies of the buff-banded rail, which has been confused with the Tahiti rail Forster also stated that the total length to the middle toe was long, the bill was long, the tibiae (shinbones) long, and the middle toe long.
This differs from the rust-coloured tail-tip apparently shown in the drawing owned by Lever, and Latham's own illustration. The legs are small and slender, have long toes, large claws, and a comparatively short tarsus, whereas the Nicobar pigeon has shorter claws and a longer tarsus. 1898 illustration by Joseph Smit, incorrectly depicting the bird with a knob on its bill and legs in reverse positions When examining the specimen, van Grouw noticed that the legs had at one point been detached and are now attached opposite their natural positions. The short feathering of the legs would therefore have been attached to the inner side of the upper tarsus in life, not the outer.
Limited-stage small cell lung carcinoma (LS-SCLC) is a type of small cell lung cancer (SCLC) that is confined to an area which is small enough to be encompassed within a radiation portal. This generally includes cancer to one side of the lung and those might have reached the lymph nodes on the same side of the lung. 33% patients with small cell lung cancer are diagnosed with limited-stage small cell lung carcinoma when it is first found. Common symptoms include but is not limited to persistent cough, chest pain, rust- coloured sputum, shortness of breath, fatigue, weight loss, wheezing, hoarseness and recurrent respiratory tract infections such as pneumonia and bronchitis.
The upper part (or limbs), which enclosed the pollen presenter in the bud consists of four elliptic lobes of about long, which are covered in straight, white to rust-coloured silky hairs. The elliptic anthers are directly fused to the limbs. From the perianth emerges a style of 3½–5 cm (1.4–2.0 in) long, bent slightly in upper third in the direction of the centre of the head. The thickened part at the tip of the style called pollen presenter is narrowly cone- to egg-shaped and 1½–2 mm (0.06–0.08 in) long, greenish (in the south) and crimson (in the north of its distribution), with a groove acting as the stigma across the very tip.
The Fitzroy Iron Works—built to exploit the iron ore—was important in the development of Mittagong, and left its own legacy and remnants. A pile of ironstone rocks, some rust-coloured buried concrete, stonework and brickwork, and some vandalised cast-iron lamp-posts—all still present in January 2019, at the top of the hill, in the former Mineral Springs Reserve—are the remnants of the last incarnation of the Chalybeate Spring. The Chalybeate Spring, at least as it was in 1988, no longer exists. A little further down the hill from the pile of rocks—towards the Old Hume Highway—there is a low retaining wall and a patch of permanently wet ground.
Lactifluus volemus was the type species of the section Dulces in subgenus Lactarius, and is currently classified in Lactifluus section Lactifluus. The group around this L. volemus includes species with a dry cap, abundant latex, and a white or pale cream spore print. Because the closely related L. corrugis has overlapping morphological characters, including similar colouration in the cap and stem, it has been difficult to reliably distinguish between the two species. The difficulty in discerning the two is exacerbated by the fact that both species have several colour forms: Japanese specimens of L. volemus may have a red cap, a yellow cap with a long stem, or a velvet-like surface texture; the caps of L. corrugis may be either red, commonly rust-coloured.
153x153px Wet ground and grass-covered iron oxide mound at the site of the former Mineral Springs Reserve – Jan. 2019 There is an interpretive sign with information about the spring and the history of the land, outside the former Mineral Springs Reserve near the entrance to the Mittagong RSL Club from the Old Hume Highway. The name of the nearby Springs Resorts—owned by the Mittagong RSL Club—refers to the old spring, There is still a significant amount of iron ore—deposited over millennia by chalybeate springs—on the southern side of the Old Hume Highway, at the western end of the former Mineral Springs Reserve and under nearby houses along the Old Hume Highway. Bare patches of the hillside are rust-coloured and ironstone rock outcrops in places.
The wingspan is 28–32 mm. The forewing has a small excision, or is at least faintly sinuous, in the anterior half of distal margin; 1st and 2nd subcostal stalked or more often coincident throughout, arising from cell. Hindwing whitish with moderate ochreous-grey dusting, a rust-coloured costal patch distally to the postmedian line of the forewing and a dark line round the distal marginal excision; the dark marks distally to the middle of the postmedian line are usually very well developed, but variable. The combination of the black spot in the form of a paw print in the middle of the whitish grey brown speckled forewing, the well defined cut in the front half of the rear edge of the forewing and the strongly pointed rear wing, distinguishes notata from other Macaria with the exception of Macaria alternata.
Profile Books, 2014. . Gilbert White recorded his perceptions of the event at Selborne, Hampshire, England: :The summer of the year 1783 was an amazing and portentous one, and full of horrible phaenomena; for besides the alarming meteors and tremendous thunder-storms that affrighted and distressed the different counties of this kingdom, the peculiar haze, or smokey fog, that prevailed for many weeks in this island, and in every part of Europe, and even beyond its limits, was a most extraordinary appearance, unlike anything known within the memory of man. By my journal I find that I had noticed this strange occurrence from June 23 to July 20 inclusive, during which period the wind varied to every quarter without making any alteration in the air. The sun, at noon, looked as blank as a clouded moon, and shed a rust-coloured ferruginous light on the ground, and floors of rooms; but was particularly lurid and blood-coloured at rising and setting.
In 1900 the Villa was acquired by Henry White Cannon from New York City, who landscaped the gardens, erected large greenhouses and restored the building after the fashion of the Victorians, by adding wrought iron gates and by applying a rust-coloured patina to the walls. He also converted the courtyard into a winter garden by covering it with a roof of glass and iron. During World War II, the Villa was badly damaged and, in 1950, it was bought by Monsieur Lucien Tessier as a private residence He set about restoring the 20 first floor rooms, while living on the second floor, but the cost involved was substantial and to finance it, he turned the villa in to a hotel for those wanting to visit the nearby art treasures of Florence and the surrounding countryside. In 1982, Orient-Express Hotels, which already owned the Hotel Cipriani in Venice bought the Villa San Michele and the surrounding land.

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