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  • Pages
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Scientific Names on this Page

Indexed by Global Names
Book Title
Lake Superior: its character, vegetation, and animals, compared with those of other similar regions
By
Publication Details
Boston, Gould, Kendall & Lincoln, 1850
DOI
Holding Institution
Cambridge University Library
Sponsor
JISC & NEH
Copyright & Usage
Rights:
Darwin Estate and Cambridge University Library

Copyright Status:
In copyright


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Optional
Example: Charles Darwin, Carl Linnaeus
Example: Birds, Classification, Mammals
Contributed by Cambridge University Library
Annotation Not Available

top-margin annotation Charles Darwin, Esq with the highest regards of Prof. Agassiz


lines 16—13 score

lines 9—7 score
bottom-margin annotation ∗ an entomostracous animal is lower than cirripedes
from End Slip 2, Side 1 annotation 36 on lowness. because like Embryo.
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lines 4—2 apparently unintentional mark


line 1 apparently unintentional mark


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line 15 underline "any ... living"
line 16 underline "guidance ... man"
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lines 17—20 annotation !
line 18 underline "the ... over"


lines 2—6 double score
lines 2—6 annotation ⸮ !
from End Slip 2, Side 1 annotation 150 .On analogy of recent of N. America & Miocene of Europe


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[continuation; continues overleaf] 13 annotation X [marked in error?]
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line 36 annotation X
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line 6 annotation X [marked in error?]
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[continuation] 3 annotation X
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from End Slip 2, Side 1 annotation 175 List of F.W. Plants of Lake Superior; I doubt whether any use


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[continues overleaf] lines 16—13 score in pale pencil
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from End Slip 2, Side 1 annotation ‹187› 193 On ant. & post. extremities of th Bat, being alike at early age — so in Birds


lines 7—14 score
lines 7—12 annotation see to Plants / very singular /
from End Slip 2, Side 1 annotation 239 — On entomology of ‹N. America› L. Superior — No. American forms.— a common Fauna with N. Europe & N. Asia — species different, but most close (Mem. Kirby thought same) admit identity in Arctic, & most close analogues in L. Superior.

lines 14—19 score
lines 14—15 annotation Europe first cold
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line 13 underline "many genera"
line 12 underline "Europe ... Asia"
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line 19 underline "analogous species"

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line 13 underline "equivalent species"

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lines 27—31 annotation Sub-genera

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line 5 underline "Arctic circle"
lines 3—2 underline "We ... points"


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lines 11—8 annotation !


lines 11—10 )
lines 11—10 annotation —!!
from End Slip 2, Side 1 annotation 247 F. Water animals under similar latitudes are uniform as vegetation
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lines 10—14 annotation ⸮ X
top-margin annotation X It comes to this that arrested development ought not to weigh with difference of full development; I doubt truth.
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation [illegible word]› 252 On embryonic forms «fish» not deserving a separate cla■ss.


lines 16—11 score
line 15 underline "ten ... species"
lines 15—13 annotation ?
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 255 Ganoids &c in ■F.W.

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from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 257. on impossibility of making groups of equal value


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lines 8—6 annotation “    ”
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 260 Reptilian character of Ganoid, “enbodying prospective view of another class”


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lines 18—17 annotation New Law
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bottom-margin annotation in pale pencil insects wd illustrate this — or Plants . Mem. Hooker then an a wandering species is often aberrant
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 265 on Families intermediate in character & in space or position .

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line 10 annotation F.W.
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line 4 at "never" annotation in pale pencil with this exception

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line 8 underline "chalk"

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line 25 underline "Ctenoids and Cycloids"
lines 18—26 annotation I wonder «wheth»t01 this agrees with Müllers Classification, as seen in Owen Lectures XX
bottom-margin annotation XX if Fish properly classed, whether so related to geologc. formations.
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 285. Excellent case of Percopsis of Chalk, which combined characters, which soon diverged, intermediate between Ctenoids & Cycloids.
t01 - `wheth' in dark pencil


lines 13—9 score
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lines 11—4 annotation —opposed—
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 289. Hardly one Family in which some species are not both marine & F.W.
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from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation horizontally crossed 317. Esox boreus is made distinct by Agassiz


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from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 327. Accounts for uniformity of Salmonidae by uniformity of conditions
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line 13 annotation Yes Sir J Richardson
from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 352 Range of Cyprinoids p 363

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lines 7—6 underline "they ... streams"
lines 5—3 annotation p. 353


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from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 352 Range of Cyprinoids p 363


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from End Slip 2, Side 2 annotation 374 All F W. Fish of N. America distinct.


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from End Slip 2, Side 3 annotation 375 . On F.W. Fish being analogous with those of Eurpe & Asi■a.

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bottom-margin annotation I think Behring St. must have been land before Glacial epoch


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lines 17—18 !!!!
from End Slip 2, Side 3 annotation 377 on shoals created as■ shoals
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lines 11—9 annotation Andrew Smith
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bottom-margin annotation argumentum ad absurdum
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lines 4—9 score
lines 4—9 annotation i.e. W. of Lake Superior
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lines 7—1 score


line 19 annotation cancelled
line 15 underline "eastern"
line 15 annotation N
line 14 underline "western"
line 14 annotation S
lines 9—3 score
lines 9—4 annotation “    ”
from End Note annotation p. 406 .Scratches .


top-margin annotation Why scratches all N. & S. or near it — for any current temporary or permanent from S. wd not tend to scratch.—