Lower third, television graphics that occupy the lower area of the screen
Lower Saxony | Lower Austria | Lower East Side | Lower Canada | Lower Silesia | Lower Manhattan | Nienburg, Lower Saxony | Lower Bavaria | Lower Mainland | Gleichen, Lower Saxony | Lower Hutt | Esens, Lower Saxony | Lower Dir District | Lower Silesian Voivodeship | Lower Lusatia | Lower Egypt | Lower Canada Rebellion | Henryków, Lower Silesian Voivodeship | The Lower Depths | Srebrna Góra, Lower Silesian Voivodeship | Lower Ninth Ward | Lower Navarre | Lower Juba | Lilienthal, Lower Saxony | Special Council of Lower Canada | Seeburg, Lower Saxony | Nienhagen, Lower Saxony | Lower West Side | Lower Rhine region | Lower Rhine |
Local insertion on cable television is used especially on The Weather Channel in the U.S. and The Weather Network/MétéoMédia in Canada, where systems like the WeatherSTAR, IntelliSTAR and PMX have been used to show local weather forecasts (known as "Local on the 8s" on The Weather Channel in the U.S.) every ten minutes, and well as the lower display line (LDL) or lower-third graphic that is shown at other times.
The race was shown on the top two-thirds of the screen in a 16:9 format, with statistics and other information below on the lower third of the screen.
Collected in 1972 by one Gerard R. Case from a mine on the southern side of the Pamlico River near Aurora, North Carolina, the holotype is a right lower third of a femur of an egg-laying female.