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The wood is excellent, of a beautiful satiny texture, and adapted for carvers' and turners' work. [Grows in] all the colonies except Western Australia and Queensland."
1890. `Goldfields of Victoria,' p.7:
"Forty additional heads will be shortly added to the crus.h.i.+ng power, bringing the battery up to sixty heads."
1885. Mrs. Campbell Praed [t.i.tle]:
"The Head Station."
1835. W. Yate, `Account of New Zealand,' p. 151:
"The latter idea [that they are representatives of G.o.ds] was conceived from the hei-tiki being taken off the neck, laid down ... and then wept and sung over."
1889. Dr. Hocken, `Catalogue of New Zealand Exhibition,'
p. 81:
"Hei means ornament for the neck. Tiki was the creator of man, and these are the representations of him. By a sort of license, they are occasionally taken to represent some renowned ancestor of the possessor; but wooden Tikis, some of immense size, usually represented the ancestors, and were supposed to be visited by their spirits. These might be erected in various parts of a pa, or to mark boundaries, etc. The Maories cling to them as sacred heirlooms of past generations, and with some superst.i.tious reverence."
1852. Mrs. Meredith, `My Home in Tasmania,' vol. ii. p. 168:
"I also found three varieties of a singular green orchis, of a helmet shape, growing singly, on rather tall slender footstalks."
It is not endemic in Australia.
Heron, n. common English bird-name. The species present in Australia are--
Ashy Reef H.-- Demiegretta asha, Sykes.
Great-billed H.-- Ardea sumatrana, Rafll.
Grey H.-- A. cinerea, Linn.
Night H.-- Nycticorax caledonicus, Lath.
Reef H.-- Demiegretta sacra, Gmel.
White-fronted H.-- Ardea novae-hollandiae, Lath.
White-necked H.-- A. pacifica, Lath.
The Cranes and the Herons are often popularly confused.
1884. Rolf Boldrewood, `Melbourne Memories,' p. 11:
"There did I shoot ... a blue crane--the Australian heron."
1884. Rolf Boldrewood, `Melbourne Memories,' c. v. p. 35:
"The beautiful umbrageous blackwood, or native hickory, one of the handsomest trees in Australia."
Called also Leather-jacket (q.v.).
1798. D. Collins, `Account of English Colony in New South Wales,' p. 612:
"E-lee-mong-s.h.i.+eld made of bark."
1834. L. E. Threlkeld, `Australian Grammar,' p. 5:
"As an initial, h occurs in only a few words, such as hilaman, a `s.h.i.+eld.'"
Ibid. p. 10: