1.Springhouse Sallies, 2 p.m. at McCormick's Creek State Park in Spencer: Meet Naturalist Jessica at Deer Run Shelter to take a short hike on Trail 9 to see what salamanders are living in the Springhouse.
英:[ˌsælə'mændrɪn]
美:[ˌsælə'mændrɪn]
noun
a mythical animal having the power to endure fire without harm
an elemental being in the theory of Paracelsus inhabiting fire
any of numerous amphibians (order Caudata) superficially resembling lizards but scaleless and covered with a soft moist skin and breathing by gills in the larval stage
an article used in connection with fire: such as
a cooking utensil for browning a food (such as pastry or pudding)
a portable stove
a cooking device with an overhead heat source like a broiler
a mass of unfused material (such as metallic iron or partially reduced ore) in the hearth of a blast furnace
the pocket gopher (Geomys tuza) of the southeastern U.S.
newt, axolotl
apyrous, fire-resistant
Middle English salamandre "a reptile believed to live in fire," borrowed from Anglo-French, borrowed from Latin salamandra, borrowed from Greek salamándra, probably of pre-Greek substratal origin
The first known use of salamander was in the 14th century
salarynoun
money paid at regular times for work or services : stipend
salarynoun
money paid at regular times for work or services : stipend
salamandernoun
an imaginary creature not harmed by fire
any of an order of amphibians that are covered with scaleless usually smooth moist skin and look like lizards
1.Springhouse Sallies, 2 p.m. at McCormick's Creek State Park in Spencer: Meet Naturalist Jessica at Deer Run Shelter to take a short hike on Trail 9 to see what salamanders are living in the Springhouse.
2.While in that part of the state, Hendricks donned a wetsuit and went underwater to capture life in the Savage River — a brook trout foraging among boulders for aquatic insects; minnows devouring a caterpillar; a wood turtle, a crayfish and the large salamander known as the Eastern hellbender.
spotted salamander
tiger salamander