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Word: hindes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Technique. The earliest cave pictures were not painted but scratched on walls with sharpened flints. Profiles were absolute with but single fore and hind legs, and lacking were such details as hooves, eyes, hair and nostrils. But as Aurignacian scratching developed into painting, remarkable sophistication of draftsmanship appeared. In the Montignac group, stiffness of profile has relaxed and action abounds - the beasts run, leap, browse, swim, lie down, chew their cuds. The head of an ancient long-horned cow (see cut) displays an excellent eye and nostril, subtle shading and dappling. To the Paleolithic artist, the more realistic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: New Prehistoric Art Gallery | 7/28/1941 | See Source »

...driven the Fifth across the Duck River. As in the first exercise, George Patton, wearing his newfangled globular tank helmet,* was in the thick of action, ran his show with snap and speed. (Said he: "You can't move a string of spaghetti by pushing it from the hind...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMY: Test in the Field | 6/30/1941 | See Source »

Like infuriated hippos Kidwell's tanks plowed ahead. Forty feet from the antitank gun they burst out of the woods, a medium and two lights-rearing on their hind treads as they cracked through the fence and crossed the road. The gun crew swung their piece, first on one, then on another. In battle they would not have had a chance. They were ruled out of action...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMY: Test in the Field | 6/30/1941 | See Source »

...lived like Windy McPherson's son, on the wrong side of the railroad tracks in Clyde, Ohio. With a boy's keen eyes he had seen the hates, passions and queer lives that lie just be hind the drab fagade of a small...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Dark and Lonely | 4/7/1941 | See Source »

Excited as a hungry terrier was Bryan Patterson when erosion revealed a deposit of old bones in a pasture near London Mills, 111. Out of the glacial blue clay came parts of a hind leg, pelvis, forefoot, vertebrae, a molar tooth. Back in Chicago's Field Museum, where he is Assistant Curator of Paleontology, Patterson pieced the fragments together. Last week he announced that he had one of the finest fossil ground sloths discovered in the U. S. since 1796. In that year the huge, extinct beast was first studied and named Megalonyx by a great U. S. paleontologist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Jefferson's Big Lion | 2/17/1941 | See Source »

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