Journal of the Royal Microscopical SocietyRoyal Microscopical Society, 1896 - Microscopes |
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Common terms and phrases
1te Abt acid alcohol Algæ Anat animals Anzeig apparatus appears bacillus bacteria Bakteriol blastomeres body buds canal cavity cells cent central Centralbl centrosome characters chromatin chromosomes ciliated coli colour connection coronal cup cultivated cultures describes disc divided division dorsal ectoderm eggs embryo endoderm endosperm epithelium eye-piece fermentation filaments fluid Flustra formation fungi Gault gelatin genera genus germination gives glands granules growth Herr infection intestinal Journ Journal large number larvæ lateral layer membrane method Micr Microscope Microtomes Mikr mitosis nuclear nucleus object observed occur organs ovum Parasitenk parasitic pigment plants plate points posterior present Proc Prof protoplasm rare regard Rotifers screw segments slide solution species specimens spermatozoa spores stage stained structure substance surface temperature tion tissue tube vesicle wall wiss Zeitschr zone Zool zygospore
Popular passages
Page 372 - A MANUAL OF THE INFUSORIA. Including a Description of the Flagellate, Ciliate, and Tentaculiferous Protozoa, British and Foreign, and an account of the Organization and Affinities of the Sponges.
Page 184 - You say that you have been somewhat surprised at no notice having been taken of your paper in the Annals.* I cannot say that I am, for so very few naturalists care for anything beyond the mere description of species. But you must not suppose that your paper has not been attended to : two very good men, Sir C. Lyell, and Mr. E. Blyth at Calcutta, specially called my attention to it.
Page iii - ... discussion, and publication of observations and discoveries relating to (1) improvements in the construction and mode of application of the microscope, and (2) biological or other subjects of microscopical research.
Page iii - Fellows (limited to 100), consisting of the Presidents for the time being of any Societies having objects in whole or in part similar to those of the Society, are elected on the recommendation of ten Ordinary Fellows, and the approval of the Council. The Council, in whom the management of the property...
Page 639 - There is probably for each species of animals a minimal mass of definite size consisting of nucleus and cytoplasm within which the Organisation of the species can just find its latent expression. This is the minimal organization mass.
Page 43 - ... it is in the highest degree improbable that the two series of phenomena can have been independently evolved ; and whatever the synapsis may eventually turn out to be, it is evidently a cellular metamorphosis of a profoundly fundamental character, which would appear to have been acquired before the animal and vegetable ancestry went apart, and to have existed ever since.
Page 506 - We must suppose thas this continent threw off first New Zealand, then Australia, then Chili, and finally disappeared under the waves. At a later date, New Zealand must have formed part of a large island joined to New Caledonia, but not to Australia. The objections to this theory are geological rather than biological, involving the doctrine of the persistence of continental and oceanic areas upon which geologists are not agreed; and such objections are equally applicable to the theory of an Antarctic...
Page 8 - Buliminse ; occurring in zone vi., rare ; zone vii., very common ; zone viii., frequent ; zone ix., common ; zone x., common ; zone xi., 55 ft. from the top, very common ; 50 ft., very...
Page 416 - Triarthrus. No traces of any special organs for this purpose have been found in this genus, and their former existence is very doubtful, especially in view of the perfection of details preserved in various parts of the animal. The delicacy of the appendages and ventral membrane of trilobites and their rarity of preservation are sufficient demonstration that these portions of the outer integument were of extreme thinness, and therefore perfectly capable of performing the function of respiration. Similar...
Page 47 - Holothnridse, as denizens of Torres Straits and the northern region of the Great Barrier Reef. The anomalous character of the marine fauna of Houtman's Abrolhos as herein defined can only be accounted for by the assumption that an ocean current setting in from the equatorial area of the Indian Ocean penetrates as far south as this island group, and has borne with it the floating embryos of the Holothuridse and Coslenterates, &c., that so characteristically distinguish it.