Physics
Scientific paper
Aug 1883
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1883natur..28q.366h&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 28, Issue 720, pp. 366 (1883).
Physics
Scientific paper
THE allusion that you made to the marine invertebrates in our department led one of your scientific readers immediately to examine them. He was surprised to find them properly arranged, classified, and named, with a few exceptions. All the alcoholic specimens were looking bright and beautiful. The specimens of the marvellous Alcyonadan of British Columbia, Osteocella, Gray, or Verrillia Blakeii, as it is called by those who have sent it, are in a state of perfect preservation. They are not so well accommodated as I could wish, owing to their great length, 6 or 7 feet; still they are to be seen very distinctly, doubled up in a glass jar, 3 feet 5 inches in height, filled with strong alcohol clear as water. The fine specimen of Cryptochiton stelleri, collected and contributed by His Excellency the Marquis of Lornee, was also found by your reader to be properly exhibited in a convenient glass jar, and labelled inside and out. The large and interesting collection of marine invertebrates exhibited by the Government of the Dominion of Canada is formed of collections contributed by the Museum of McGill College, Montreal, Laval University, Quebec, and from the Nova Scotia Provincial Museum. The collection of Edible Mollusca was made by the late John R. Willis, of Halifax, N.S.
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