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Pages in category "Chicken plumage patterns" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. F.
In Aristophanes's comedy The Birds (414 BC) a chicken is called "the Median bird", which points to an introduction from the East. Pictures of chickens are found on Greek red figure and black-figure pottery. In Ancient Greece, chickens were still rare and were rather prestigious food for symposia. [6] Delos seems to have been a center of chicken ...
The "lavender" gene (lav) in the chicken causes the dilution of both black (eumelanin) and red/brown (phaeomelanin) pigments, so according to color background, dilution due to "lavender" gives a sort of plumage color patterns: On an extended black background, this condition causes the entire surface of the body an even shade of light slaty blue, which is the typical phenotype known as '"self ...
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The first edition was published in 1897 by Dodd, Mead & Co. under the pseudonym "Rafford Pyke" with illustrations by Melanie Elisabeth Norton. [1] [2] At the time, Peck was the editor of The Bookman, a literary journal which published an effusive review of The Adventures of Mabel in December 1897 under the byline Nicholas Brown, [3] and had previously published an article under Peck's name ...
Mabel Grammer (1915 – June 5, 2002) was an African-American journalist. Her "Brown Baby Plan" led to the adoption of 500 mixed race German orphans after World War II.
Mabel Martin Wyrick (9 March 1913 – 12 October 2003) was an American writer. Her published books include If Quilts Could Talk... I'd Listen, Tales of the Rails, How to Bury a Drifter, The Ultimate Irony, Factual Folklore, and Land Beneath the Lake. Her work has also been published in collections of Appalachian writing.
Mabel Leigh Hunt (left) and her sister Agnes Hunt in Dr. Tilghman Hunt's parlor on West Main Street, Plainfield, Indiana. Hunt was born in Coatesville, Indiana, on November 1, 1892, to Quakers Dr. Tilghman Hunt and Amanda (Harvey) Hunt. [1] She was raised in a Quaker home in Greencastle, Indiana. [2]