Citation
A book for the sea-side

Material Information

Title:
A book for the sea-side with numerous engravings
Creator:
Religious Tract Society (Great Britain) ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London
Publisher:
The Religious Tract Society
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
viii, 275, 4 p. : ill. ; 17 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Glory of God -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Natural history -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Seashore -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Bryozoa -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Beaches -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Fishes -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
Publishers' advertisements -- 1852 ( rbgenr )
Pictorial cloth bindings (Binding) -- 1852 ( rbbin )
Bldn -- 1852
Genre:
Publishers' advertisements ( rbgenr )
Pictorial cloth bindings (Binding) ( rbbin )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Publisher's advertisement follows text.
General Note:
Includes index.
General Note:
Date from inscription.
Funding:
Brittle Books Program

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026595941 ( ALEPH )
45839843 ( OCLC )
ALG2599 ( NOTIS )

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Full Text
Stead Matter reece
Letty oa Ba S48?







The Baldwin Library

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Vn



MARGATE,





BOOK FOR THE SKA-SIDE.

Beautiful, sublime, and glorious ;
Mild, majestic, foaming, free ;—
Over time itself victorious,
Image of Eternity.

Such art thou, stupendous Ocean!
But, if overwhelm’d by thee,
Can we think without emotion,

What must thy Creator be ?
BARTON,

With Dumerous Cugranings.

ee LONDON:
THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY;

DEPOSITORY, 56, PATERNOSTER ROW, AND 65, ST. PAUL'S CHURCHYARD;
AND SOLD BY THE BOOKSELLERS.

/







CONTENTS.

CHAPTER I.
PAGE
nn Or CCR. og kg Se A ee ee 1
CHAPTER IL.
Deeeen Gp mum Came . ww ke ee tt 8 ee
CHAPTER Il.
gg sw 0 ek eee eee) a
CHAPTER IV.
Tur Bracu—1tTs Stones AND FLowers, Mottuscous ANIMALS,
ree . . 4 kOe eee ee ee ee
CHAPTER V.
Sanp AND SAND-RIPPLES, PLANTS OF SANDS AND MARSHEs,
STAR-FISHES, SEA-URCHINS, SEA-JELLIES, PHOSPHORESCENCE
ab een fess kek we ee se Se

CHAPTER VI.

a gk Rg See eae e |p hak ee

jhe
ae
oan Saal



vi CONTENTS.

CHAPTER VII,

SEA-BIRDS .

CHAPTER VIII.

SEA-MOUSE AND OTHER ANNELIDES—VARIOUS CRUSTACEANS

CHAPTER IX.

SEA-ANEMONES, CORALLINES, AND OTHER ZOOPHYTES.- .

PAGE

193

223

239



ENGRAVINGS.

Margate ( Frontispiece).
Sea View ... ice
Terebratula Diciets
Section of an Ammonite
Belemnite .

Dover

Samphire

Sea-cabbage

Tamarisk

Fishermen . .

Heads of the Yering
Mackerel Midge .

The Father Lasher

The Fishing-frog, or ~~
The Wolf-fish . . .
The John Dory . .
Head of the Sucker-fish .
The Sun-fish

The Beach .
Yellow-horned —
The Ascidia

Botryllus

Teredo Navalis

Pholas Dactylus .

PAGE

PAGE

The Barnacle . . . .. . 86
Solen Ensis . .... ~~ 92
Psammobia Ferroensis . . . 93
Tellna Tennis. s8i53. . BW

Group of Mactra. . . . . 95
Donax Trunculus. . . . . 96
Pinne . . ie
Pecten Ricnaints ae
Anomia Ephippium . . . . 108
Muddy red Trochus. . . . 118
Octopus Vulgaris. . . . . 121
Pevensey Bay. . . . . . 128
Convolvulus Soldanella. . . 128

Comatula Rosacea . . . . 131
Uraster Rubens . . . . . 133
Ophiura Texturata . . . . 135
Shell of Globular Echinus . . 136
Crickieth Castle, Wales. . . 148
Fucus Nodosus ... . . 155
Fucus Vesiculosus . . . . 156
Cysosteira Ericoides. . . . 160
Halidrys Siliquosa . . . . 162
Chorda Fium. ... . . 166
Delesseria Sinuosa . . . . 171



Vili

ENGRAVINGS.

PAGE PAGE
Rhodymenia Palmata . 173 | Prickly Sea-mouse . 224
Laurencia Pinnatifida . 176 | Terebella Varidbilis . . 228
Chondrus Crispus . . 177 | Terebella Medusa . 229
Griffithsia Setacea . 180 | Scarborough . 239
The Hair-flag . . 181 | Sea-anemones and other rom
Corallina Officinalis . . 182 tinize : . 241
Ulva Latissima . . . 167 | Sear 2. . . 253
The Needles, Isle of Wight . 192 | Magnified portion of the Sea-fir 254,
Fishing off Yarmouth . 193 | Sea-hair . : . 255
Sea-gulls aa . 196 | Magnified portion of Sea-hair . 255
Larus Ridibundus . 198 | Sickle-beard i . 257
Head of Guillemot - 206 | Magnified portion of Sickle-
Head of Razor-bill Auk . 209 beard . 258
Head of Puffin - 209 | Flustra Carbacea . . 263
The Cormorant . 211 | Magnified portion of the Sea-
The Stormy Petrel . . 215 WR. aie he ee
Brading Harbour, Isleof Wight 223 Action of a Living Sponge . 269



A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.



CHAPTER I.

THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS.

Tun noonday sun is shining out upon the sea in all
its lustre, and the small waves come rippling up on the
pebbles so peacefully, that the melody of their motion
is heard only’ by those who wander in silence on the
shore. The old cliffs towering up so boldly are gleam-
ing in its light, and contrasting beautifully with that
B *

)



2 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

deep blue sky above them, and with the golden flowers
whose seeds were scattered there by the wild wind,
making each crevice a spot of fertility and brightness.

That great and wide sea! With what earnest and
solemn thoughts did the psalmist look upon it, as he
pondered on the things innumerable, both small and
great, which dwell among its depths ; as he saw the
white sails of the ships, and mused on the stormy
wind which lifteth up the waters ; and remembered,
with solemn confidence and joy, that word of power
which “maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves
thereof are still !”

The old ocean rolls on yet, as mightily and as musi-
cally as it did then, bearing to us all the same recollec-
tions as it brought to Israel of old ; fraught, too, with
other associations of power and sweetness. We look
on its waves, to remember how the Saviour himself
walked upon the waters, in the calm majesty of the
Godhead, and with the loving spirit of human sympa-
thy. For us are written the words of pity and en-
couragement which he spoke, when, though the disciples
had but little faith, he could yet save and cheer them
with the assurance, “It is I; be not afraid.” For us,
too, is recorded a description of that haven of rest upon
which the believer shall one day enter, where no storm
shall terrify, no wave shall roll its sorrow; for there
shall be “no more sea.”

That sea told, to by-gone ages, of the “ Eternal Power
and Godhead ;” and the greater revelations still which it
bas made to the men of modern days, have taught us
this as impressively as the waves themselves could
utter it, had they voices to tell the truth. Suc-
ceeding generations have learned more thoroughly to
read the handwriting of God on the page of nature, as
one thoughtful mind has bequeathed to another some-
thing of the results of its own researches ; and the
flowers of the fields, and the stars of the sky, and the
wonders of the deep, are now so much better known
and understood, that nature should bear to us a still



THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 3

more impressive lesson of Deity than it conveyed to
our fathers. .

That deep, independently of its vast stores of life, is
in itself a wonder, and has a wonderful influence on the
earth and its inhabitants. Three-fifths of the entire
surface of our globe are surrounded with water,—a
proportion so absolutely necessary for maintaining the
productive powers of the land, that were any change to
take place in these relations, a barren and withered
condition would quickly succeed to its present fer-
tility. It is by means of the vapours perpetually
arising from so vast a body of water, that the atmo-
sphere is rendered sufficiently moist for the use both of
animals and vegetables. The presence of this moisture
renders the neighbourhood of the sea favourable to a
luxuriant vegetation ; and although on many parts of
our coast this is not to be seen, and the trees on the
shore are few and stunted, it is because the land there
is generally very much exposed to high winds; the
soil is rocky, sandy, or chalky; and the constituents of
sea air, though absolutely necessary to the growth of
many plants, are unfavourable to others. Still, not-
withstanding the aspect of sterility of a large portion of
the coast, there are sheltered places, and better soils,
which are well wooded, and have luxuriant flowers.
The great beauty of the natural productions of the
Channel Islands is often attributed to their lying in the
midst of the waters. The environs and neighbourhood
of the town of St. Helier’s, in Jersey, built immediately
in front of the sea, are remarkable for their fertility,
for their cabbages seven feet high, for their flowering
shrubs down close to the shore, and for their beautiful
myrtles ; while the banks of Guernsey are gay with
their daffodils and primroses, sweet with their woodbine
scents, and tuneful with their singing birds. Ivy grows
about the rocks near the sea, in Jersey, so as to make
the sea-cliffs seem like ruins ; and nowhere are flowers,
both of wood and garden, finer than in the Channel
Isles.



4 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

Even on our own southern shores there is a general
appearance of luxuriance, and many plants of tropical
lands will flourish by the sea, which would not thrive so
well away from its influence. It is a generally acknow-
ledged fact, that the climate of a place on the shore is
‘not so cold as that of an inland district in the same
latitude. The atmosphere near the sea is never heated,
during the day, to the same degree as in a place of that
latitude far from the coast ; but it is, in the same pro-
portion, less cooled through the night; and the result
is, not a colder, but a warmer climate than an inland
place near it. The absence, also, of the extremes of
daily heat and cold diminish the annual extremes of
summer and winter; and thus a climate is produced
which is favourable to the growth of these plants of
warmer countries. The myrtle thrives in Ireland,
almost as well as in Portugal ; and so, too, on the coast
of Devonshire,

“The meek unshelter’d myrtle sweetly blooms.”

At Salcombe, this plant and the aloe attain remarkable
perfection. Several houses in Mary Church, and, in-
deed, of almost every village on the southern coast of
Devon, are profusely adorned with the former plant.
Even on more exposed and colder coasts, as at Dover,
in gardens sheltered by the cliffs, may be seen the
rich orange fruits of the common passion-flower, look-
ing, as they hang from the green bough, scarcely less
beautiful than the starry blossoms which hung among
those festoons in the summer.

That this sea air, with its peculiarities, is favourable
to the health of man, and exceedingly beneficial in
many cases of disease, all experience has proved. Most
of our sea-side towns are the gathering places of thou-
sands during summer ; while others afford a sheltered
asylum to the invalid in the cold of winter. There the
patient breathes an atmosphere impregnated with a
profusion of common salt, and a lesser degree of bromine
and iodine; substances which, if inhaled into the system,



THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 5

have a singular and restorative power. So favourable
to the health of the lungs is the salt air, that in Alex-
andria, which is at all times damp, but the atmosphere
of which is surcharged with muriate of ammonia and
muriate of soda, disease of the lungs is unknown. The
saline particles are so abundant there, that it is quite
impossible to keep iron from rust, and they condense on
the walls and furniture of the houses in small crystals.
The constant agitation of the waves has also a most
important influence on the neighbourhood of the ocean.
It is by means of their incessant ‘motion that the air
is purified. Those deep waters contain, not only the
living, but the dead. Vast masses of decomposing
animal and vegetable matters, the refuse of the sea
itself, and the refuse also of the land, lie beneath the
waves. The mineral ingredients of the waters them-
selves possess a foetid, slimy matter, of which we are
made conscious by their bitter and nauseous flavour,
which is probably induced by the decomposition going
on in the ocean. So great is the amount of this,
that if sea-water remain long without agitation, it
passes into a state of putrefaction ; and on some low
tropical coasts, where long calms are experienced, it
exhales very unpleasant odours, which are noxious also
in their effects on the health of man. Much of the
decomposing matter is devoured by living creatures, to
whom God has given a voracious appetite, that they
may prey on dead things ; much is assimilated to the
nutrition of the sea-weeds ; and the brine preserves
much from decay: yet, after all, we need those ever-
rolling waves to render the air perfectly healthful,
Besides the physical influences of the sea air on the
visitors to our shores, there are various mental ones,
which go to aid in the restoration of lost health. We
live in days of peculiar mental excitement, in days of
great contrasts of religious opinions, of great competi-
tion in all departments of the business of life, and
when even the hours of recreation are but too often
occupied with pleasures of an exciting nature. The
B3



6 “, BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

very facilities of travelling afforded to the men of our
times, and the various other methods of dispatch so
general now, have given to the present age a restless
activity, which, favourable as it is to progress, is, doubt-
less, often unfavourable to bodily health. Never was
there a time when repose of mind was more desirable,
and when the occasional relaxation of a sea-side visit
was more commonly needed. Here, free alike from the
cares of life and from household anxieties, from the
stimulating pleasures of fashion, and even from the
more reasonable restraints of society, the wanderer by
the shore may find repose ; while, if he have a mind at
leisure to contemplate nature, he may behold himself
surrounded by all that is sublime and soothing. Here
are no temptations to linger within doors. The shining
sun, and the rolling sea, and the fresh pure breezes,
encourage him to bodily exercise. Even the mind of
the listless or idle can find some amusement in watching
the coming and going of the vessels, the mirth of the
glad companies of children, and the playful merriment
of older people, who, in the glad buoyancy inspired by
the air, are wisely forgetting that they are no longer
children, as they play with the advancing waves. ‘To
the reflective mind, however,—to the lover of nature
and of knowledge,—what a field is here for thought
and interest! Those who already know something of
marine productions, and are longing to know more,
have only to wander on with observing eyes, and proofs
of the skill and power of God shall be brought by the
waters to their very hand. Even those, who without
thinking further of these things, but who have a love
of beauty and grace, find their gratification here among
the most common objects around them ; while the sea
itself, in its grandeur of storm or its smoothness of
calm, amidst the glowing hues of the rising or setting
sun, or by the light of the silver moon and the stars, is
a never-failing source of admiration.

_ The fitness of those waters for the purposes of civi-
lization and of moral and religious progress, cannot fail



THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFYS. ° :

to interest the considering man. To cast the eye on
a map of the world, and see how islands, continents, and
other portions of land are separated by the sea, one
might think that it would prove a barrier to the inter-
course of nations. But the God who spake those seas
into existence gave. to man the skill to traverse them,
and to make them the silent and pathless highway, over
which, in safety and comparative speed, those ships
should be borne which go so often to carry, from land
to land, the necessaries and luxuries of life, and to
awaken to thought and feeling, to light and to devotion,
the people who have long dwelt in moral darkness.

We know but little of the depths of seas. Our En-
glish Channel, at the east of the Eddystone lighthouse,
is not more than fifty fathoms deep, and its depth in-
creases but slowly to the west. The Irish Channel is
some thirty or forty fathoms deeper than this, but the
depth of the main body of the sea is far greater ; and
in some parts of the Atlantic no bottom was found in
soundings which reached 300 fathoms, while in sound-
ings made in several places between Spitzbergen and
Greenland, with from 780 to 1200 fathoms, no base
was reached. |

As we walk on the shore, looking on the sea, we re-
mark how variously it seems coloured at different parts.
Here a long line of darkly tinted sea-weeds, growing on
rocks just covered with water, and which at low tide
form a margin to the shore, gives to the waters above
them a blackish hue. Now a passing cloud tinges the
surface with a bright sea-green, or a line glitters like
gold in the sunlight. It is not, however, till we have
quitted the shore and sailed away into greater depths,
that we come into what the sailor terms blue water, and
see the beautiful ultramarine tint of the sea. This
was long supposed to be caused by reflection from the
atmosphere ; but as it is often of a far deeper blue
than the sky itself, and as it is blue still when murky
clouds obscure the azure, its cause must yet be sought.
Some changes occur in this blue colour owing to the



8 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

material and hue of the soil beneath the waves, and it
is modified by the presence of shoals. The Greenland
sea has long been known to vary more than most others,
changing its tint from ultramarine to olive-green, and
passing from the most perfect clearness to deep opacity.
Mr. Scoresby ascertained that in this case the green
colour and opaqueness were caused by innumerable
animals of the tribe of jelly-fishes, which, when ex-
amined, seemed like little crystal drops or air-bubbles,
being semi-transparent globular substances, about one-
twentieth or one-thirtieth part of an inch in diameter.
These exist, but in far less quantity, in the bluish-
ereen water ; but so innumerable are they im the olive-
ereen part of the sea, that Mr. Scoresby calculated that
a cubic fathom of this water would contain twenty-three
millions eight hundred and eighty-seven thousand eight
hundred and seventy-two individuals. :

How regular are many of the operations of nature !
We lie down at night after seeing the sun apparently
sink in the waves of the west, knowing confidently that
it will again to-morrow gild the eastern gates of the
heavens. So it is with the flowers and fruits in their
appointed seasons : S80 it is with death itself ; for however
human life may be prolonged, we know that the threescore
years and ten shall have few to succeed them. Constant
as any law of nature, ;3 that which regulates the rise
and ebb of the tide. Every mariner can calculate upon
it ; yet as we daily mark this regularity, we know not
how it is to be accounted for. We are aware of the
fact that the alternate ebb and flow are caused by the
attraction of the sun and moon ; but when the philo-
sopher is asked to explain that attraction, he declares it
to be inexplicable—he only knows it by its results.
Like electricity, like life itself, like the eternity revealed
by the Scripture, it cannot be explained ; and the mind
of the Christian, while contemplating such subjects, 18
compelled, amidst the feeling of his own finite under-
standing, to think on the infinite nature of God.

The difference made by the winds in the surface of



THE SEA AND SBA-CLIFFS. 9

the sea is not only useful in changing all the air about
us, but it gives it its various aspects of beauty or sub-
limity. Now the margin of the ocean 1s scarcely
rippled into a wave, and is falling gently on the shore.
Now it is somewhat rougher, and far away over the blue
distance we see those breaking surges, which the sailor
calls white heads or white horses. Again the wind
sweeps sullenly over the sea, and rising higher and
higher, strikes the face of the water in an oblique
direction, driving a portion on the surface over that
which is near; and, raising it thus so far above the ordi-
nary level, accumulates so much water as that the
wind cannot maintain it in that position, and thus again
it dashes downwards. Every wave presents to the
windward a gently ascending surface, and to the lee-
ward a nearly perpendicular descent ; while the size of
the wave is greatly determined by the strength of the
wind which raises it, though varying in some measure
according to the depth and extent of the sea. The
waves on our own shores seldom rise to a height of more
than six or eight feet above the level of the water ; but
stronger gales and deeper seas have waves far more
terrible to the sailor. Nor do the waves subside
always immediately as the wind lowers ; for when the
gale is over they still keep raging on awhile, bring-
ing up to us as we wander by them many a treasure
which winds and waters have torn from the deep.
below. =
Amidst all the changes effected by winds and waves,
few thoughtful persons look upon the sea without
feeling the truth of the words of the poet, who, in
describing the tide, says—

“Its everlasting changes bring no change ;”
and who refers to
‘‘'The ocean’s face immutable as heaven’s.”

Something like these are the thoughts which arise
within us as we look upon the cliffs. Numerous ages



10 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

have rolled away since they were in the course of
formation. Even since the period when our land re-
ceived its name from the white cliffs about our shore, -
more than sixty generations have lived and died.
Could the men of those times revisit earth, how great
would be the alterations which they would see in things
around! Nothing, perhaps, would seem familiar to
them save that unchanging sea and those everlasting
hills. “One generation passeth away, and another
generation cometh ; but the earth abideth for ever.”
What revelations of older ages lie embedded among
the mass of which our cliffs are composed! The chalk
is entirely a marine deposit. . That white substance 1s
composed of lime and carbonic acid, and may have been
precipitated from water holding lime in solution, from
which an excess of carbonic acid was expelled. Buta
large proportion of our purest chalk is evidently chiefly,
if not wholly, composed of the remains of corals,
zoophytes, shells, star-fishes, and other animal sub-
stances ; and in some portions of chalk, relics of sea-
weeds appear in great abundance. We can at any
time find remains of large shells in the chalk ; but
never till the microscope was brought to bear upon the
crushed or perfect shells which form the grains of this
material, could we imagine how many myriads of these
lay hidden to the human eye. Ehrenberg ascertained
the wonderful fact, that a cubic inch of chalk contains
upwards of a million of the fossil remains of perfect
shells and corals. Little does the thoughtless wan-
derer on the shore think to what small animals he is
indebted for the portion of earth on which he is walking.
That chalk too will, if burned, make as good lime as the
hardest marble. Many buildings have been made of
chalk. Thus the abbey of Hurley, in Berkshire, and its
parish church, anciently a chapel, are said to be made of
chalk, and the remains of these are as fresh and unim-
paired as if the builders had been men of the last century.
The same may be said of the abbey at St. Omer’s, which
was ruined during the French Revolution, but which still



THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. | ll

retains its beautiful Gothic ornaments in great per-
fection. Many other deposits besides the chalk consist
largely of marine remains, and, like these hills, some-
times stand far away from the present boundaries of
ocean, containing still traditions of the sea. But the
extensive and magnificent range of chalk cliffs along our
southern coasts, and the remarkable features and per-
fectly distinctive characters of this rock, render it more
especially a fitting subject for our remarks.

Among those patriarchal cliffs some of the commonest
fossils may be found at any time, but we may chance
too to find some of the rarest; for however carefully
any portion of cliffs may have been examined, the fre-
quent fracture, and constant wearing of the surface,
leave fresh parts yet unstudied. The shells contained
in the chalk are often somewhat similar to those which
are now washed up by the waves, and are at once
recognised as resembling familiar things ; but they are
found to be different species from those now in our seas.
Oysters, scallops, tellens, and various other common
genera abound there ; while there are also many, which
even at a glance we know to be different from the
shells of the present times. The shells found in the
chalk are chiefly two-valved species. The most nu-
merous kinds of shells which we shall
find are the different species of tere-
bratula, which are two-valved shells,
sometimes quite smooth, in other
kinds furrowed ; various shells belong
to the oyster tribe, one of which is ex-
ceedingly similar to owr oyster, and Siemans
several scallop-shells, well known by
the ridges, which run like rays from the top of the
shell to the base. But perhaps the shells most easily
described to a reader unacquainted with these ob-
jects, are those of the nautilus and ammonite. The
ammonite is altogether extinct in our seas, yet it
must once have abounded there, for in some lime-
stone districts the marble is almost wholly composed





a

* 7

12 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

of its shells; and at low water on some parts of
the Sussex coast, where the chalk forms the basis,
enormous specimens are often seen embedded. ‘The



SECTION O# AN AMMONITE.

ammonite (Cornu Ammonis,) was 80 named from its
fancied resemblance to the horn of Jupiter Ammon,
and it varies in size from a most minute shell to one of
twelve, or even fourteen fect in circumference. ‘This
coiled shell is well known in geological collections by
the name of snake-stone. Old superstitions relate
that—

“Of a thousand snakes each one
Was turn’d into a coil of stone
When holy Hilda pray’d.”

And some similar traditions yet linger in the north of
England, where these shells abound. The species of
the nautilus found in chalk will be easily distinguished
from other shells, because although the exact forms are
extinct, yet the nautilus still spreads its gauzy sail to
the zephyrs of tropical seas, and its clear and beauti-
fully formed shell is so commonly used as an ornament
that we are all familiar with it. The nautilus and its
congeners are among the earliest traces of the animal
kingdom, and must once have been very numerous.
Mrs. Howitt’s lines to this fossil shell are very appro-
priate :—

“Thou didst laugh at sun and breeze,
In the new-created seas;
Thou wast with the reptile broods
In the old sea solitudes ;



THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 13

Sailing in the new-made light

With the curl’d-up ammonite.

Thou survivd’st the awful shock

Which turn’d the ocean-bed to rock,
And changed the myriad living swarms
To the marble’s veinéd forms.”

It is not always the shells themselves which we find as
fossil relics, sometimes it is but the cast of the am-
monite or the nautilus. The same may be said of those
spiral species, the tower shells, (Z’wrrilites,) which occur
in the chalk in great abundance, and the largest speci-
mens of which are found in the cliffs of Dover, and in
the chalk marl at Ringmer, near Lewes, in Sussex.

Everybody familiar with chalk cliffs has
seen there those common fossils the belemnites,
which form almost the entire substance of
some limestones on the continent. They are
long cylindrical stones, terminating in a point,
and having at the uppermost and largest end,
a conical cavity. In perfect specimens a shell
is situated in the hollow, but this is rarely
found in the chalk fossil. These belemnites
are commonly called thunder-stones, and the
writer has heard children term them slate-
pencils, and seen them used for writing on
slates. Sometimes they are dark brown, // Mg)
sometimes clear as amber, and though usually Gigi
about the size of a common lead-pencil, yet
they are occasionally twelve inches long. BELEMNITE.

But as chalk cliffs are not found on every shore, we
must not linger over their contents. Star-fishes and
various kinds of sea eggs, or echinites, as the geologist
calls them, are plentiful there; the last equalling in
number all the other shells found in this deposit,
one entire genus being peculiar to it. Helmet-shaped,
conical, heart-shaped, and spheroidal sea eggs may all
be easily distinguished, sometimes having on them the
remains of their spiny covering, sometimes presenting
on their surfaces the traces whence the spines have
been detached.

Perhaps a wanderer, in striking some ledge of that

c





14 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

old chalk cliff, may bring to light a fossil fish, more or
less perfect in form, and lying there as if it had been
moulded in plaster of Paris, with fins, scales, head, teeth,
and sometimes even with the capsule of the eye, all plainly
visible. Each geological formation exhibits groups of
fossil fishes, but those found in the chalk are evidently
the representatives of species which have now no exist-
ence in our seas.

These fossil remains not only reveal absolute facts to
the man of science, but enable him often to deduce
valuable inferences of a less obvious character. We
will adduce one simple mode of reasoning from an
isolated fact, in order to show this to the reader.
Those common fossils, the trilobites, are found to have
the compound eyes belonging to existing insects, and to
animals of the crab and lobster kind—crustaceous, as the
naturalist terms them. This construction proves that
the mutual relations of light to the eye, and of the eye
to light, were the same in the periods when the trilo-
bites flourished as at the present day; and that the con-
dition of the waters of the sea and of the atmosphere,
and the relation of both to light, have undergone no
change during the years which, minute by minute, have
been since then rolling onwards to eternity. This will
show how much may be learned of the past by thought-
ful inquiry into its relics. The steps in the progress in
any department of science may be slow, but when once
made, the knowledge becomes, as has been well ob-
served, “a mighty instrument of thought, enabling us
to link together the phenomena of past and future
times, and gives the mind a domination over many
parts of the natural world, by teaching it to comprehend
the laws by which the Creator has ordained that the
actions of material things shall be governed.”s

Beds of flint in the upper chalk are too obvious not to
be seen by all; and often, embedded in the chalk, or lying
at its base, or mingling with the pebbles of the beach,
we may find masses of iron pyrites. This is sometimes
called copperas, and round pieces of it are known on



THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 15

some parts of our coast by the name of potatoe-stones or
thunderbolts, and are common articles of sale among
the fossils in sea-side places. These masses are often
bronzed on the surface, but in some cases they have
glittering small knobs. Many of them are no larger
than a pea, occurring from that size to pieces several
inches in diameter. They are mostly crystalline, and
on being broken generally exhibit a fibrous and diverg-
ing structure of glittering rays. Beautiful little
crystals of this mineral are often found filling the
cavities of shells. Sometimes the chalk is stained of
rich rust colour by this iron, thus contrasting with its
pure whiteness. Fossil fish, too, are often marked with
most brilliant tints, their bones, scales, etc. having a
rich bronzed hue. This is owing to the circumstance
that during the process of their decomposition they
emitted sulphuretted hydrogen, and this sulphur enter-
ing into combination with the surrounding water,
sulphuret of iron was formed by the chemical action.





=

EU
\ AC
Hl og gate



DOVER.

CHAPTER II.

PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS.

Or whatever geological formation our cliffs may be,
they contain hidden objects of great interest. But
this is not all. There is an outward beauty con-
ferred on many; and soft green grasses, and flowering
shrubs, and blossoms of the richest hue, are studding
their slopes and summits. The wild sea-bird looks
down on many a lovely floweret, blooming far from the
eye of man; and plants which we should search for in
vain on inland meadows or banks, have their home



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS, © 17

here, and are sending their roots down in that soil,
consolidating it by their fibres. ‘To see how small a
portion of earth is lodged in the crevices, and what
a shallow ridge of land crowns the height—to hear the
roaring gales of winter rushing round the cliffs—one
would think that this was no place for flowers.
But if gales blow there, the high cliff forms on the
other side a shelter, and the sun shines out in all its
glory there as elsewhere; and plants suited to barren
places and sea airs spring up and thrive, and green
leaves wave to the morning gale or sparkle with the
evening dewdrops.
‘¢ Man who, panting, toils

O’er slippery steeps, or, trembling, treads the verge

Of yawning gulfs, o’er which the headlong plunge

Is to eternity, looks shuddering up,

And marks you in your placid loveliness—

Fearless, yet frail.”

Not to tell of white knots of squinancy wort, look-
ing like patches of snow; or blossoms of the eyebright,
almost hidden among the grass; of golden rock-roses
and wallflowers; of clumps of honey-scented bedstraw,
and wide-spread masses of bugloss, blue as the heaven
above—we must describe such flowers, and such only,
as belong to the sea-side; and if found at all away from
the melody of Ocean’s music, are only to be seen clus-
tering on the mountain heights of lands distant from
the sea. Some of them, indeed, are found nowhere
save on the sea-coast.

Such a plant is the samphire (Orithmum maritimum),
whose green tufts hang high up on several of our sea-
side cliffs, always beyond the reach of even the highest
tide, though not so far removed as that a dashing surf
may not sometimes send up its spray upon them.
Sometimes this plant grows within the reach of the
passer-by; but more often the eye of the flower-lover
detects it far away from his grasp, knowing it easily
from all other plants by its clumps of sea-green foliage,
varied in August by clusters of little pale yellow flowers.
The tallest stalks are usually about a foot in length,

c3



18 A BOOK FOR THE SBHA-SIDE.

and it is very succulent in its nature. It belongs to
the umbelliferous tribe of plants, and its clusters grow .
in rays from a central point, like the spokes of an



SAMPHIRE.

umbrella. This is the sampier, or sampire, of our older
writers, mentioned in so many ballads and poems, and
referred to by Shakspeare. It is decidedly the best
fitted of all our wild plants for pickling; for it does not,
like the saltwort, which is often sold as its substitute,
depend wholly for its excellence on vinegar and spices.
It is pungent and agreeable in flavour, though not
often in our days used as a salad, as it was formerly.
It would, however, be no bad addition to this dish ;
and some who have studied various subjects connected
with the diet of past and present times, are of opinion
that the modern salad is very inferior to that served up
two hundred years ago. The samphire is still pickled
at sea-side places, and may, in its season, be procured
in the London market; but were John Evelyn living,
he might complain now, with even more justice than he



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. ° 19

‘did in the days of the second Charles, of the general
neglect of this herb. This writer remarks that, for its
“aromatic and other excellent vertues,” and effects
against the spleen, for sharpening the appetite and
various good purposes, it is “so far preferable to most
of our hotter herbs and sallet ingredients,” that he says,
“T have often wondered it has not been propagated in
the potagére, as it is in France, from whence I have
frequently received the seeds, which have prospered
better and more kindly with me than what comes from
our coasts. It does mot, indeed, pickle so well, as being
of a more tender stalk and leaf; but in all other
respects, for composing sallets, it has nothing like it.”
Gardeners of our days have cultivated it for pickling
with great success; but a large quantity of it dies
ungathered every summer on many of our sea-side
rocks and cliffs, or remains half through the winter, to
enliven them with its greenness. The French call it
creste-marin, or la bacile ; but long before the time
of John Evelyn, it was called by them herbe de St.
Pierre, of which our modern name seems the corrup-
tion. It is the critmo of the Italians, and the meer
fenchel of the Germans. .

Hanging like tresses down the rocky sides, we may
often see the green trailing stalks of that little plant,
the sea spurrey sandwort (Arenaria marina). It is
very succulent, its stems about as thick as twine, its
leaves of semi-cylindrical form, as sharp pointed as a
needle, and scarcely thicker than that little implement.
Small, reddish lilac, star-shaped flowers grow here and
there between the leaf and stem; and when the blossom
is over, seed-vessels hang down on the flower stalks,
and are plucked in autumn by the robin or sparrow,
or any other bird which may wing its way from inland
haunts to take a look at the sea. Nor does our sand-
wort confine itself to the rocky height. It grows on
the sandy shore, among the pebbles of the beach,
beyond the reach of the waves; and spreads its clumps
over the ground of many a yard by the sea, where



20 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

boats and ships are being built and repaired, seeming
to need but the saline air to call it into existence. It
is always, however, a far more elegant plant when
erowing up the cliff than on the ground.

Round about the base of the cliff, where the sand
lies scattered, or is trodden into a firm soil, we may
often gather the prickly saltwort, or sea-grape, (Sa/-
sola kali,) with its prostrate angular stems, bearing a
single flower of pale greenish hue, with three little
leaves, or bracteas, as the botanist calls them, at the
base of each floweret. This genus was named from sal,
salt, because an alkaline salt is obtained from it, and
this exists especially in our British species. The soda
contained in some of them was in former times of so
much value, that large quantities were cultivated in the
south of Europe.

A much prettier plant than the saltwort is the
common thrift (Statice armeria), often called sea-pink,
or sea-gilliflower, and which is not only ornamental to
the maritime cliffs, but also to the marshes at some
distance from the sea. During winter, its foliage seems
like tufts of grass among the crevices of the slopes; but
in some of these quiet nooks, where a projecting ledge
shelters it from the keen north and east winds, it
blooms there even in December, lingering on with many
an autumnal or summer flower, as if it had forgotten
that winter had come. On the marsh, its large round
heads of pale rose-coloured or purple flowers are more
conspicuous, as they form bright patches among the
short grasses and taller rushes, or, in July and August,
are so numerous as to make it seem one sheet of white.
Little gardens, rescued from the beach itself, and en-
closed around with the pale green feathery boughs of
the tamarisk, exhibit richly coloured rows of this
pretty flower around their beds; and high up on the
mountain, far away from the sea-shore, the thrift is
sometimes seen.

Here the wanderer might think of him described by
Mrs. Sigourney, who



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. v1

«¢ Blesses their pencill’d beauty. ’Mid the pomp
Of mountain summits, rushing on the sky,
And charming the rapt soul in breathless awe,
He bows to bind them drooping to his breast ;
Inhales their spirit from the frost-wing’d gale,
And freer dreams of heaven.”

But when the thrift grows on the inland hills,
though no outward change marks it, yet it is changed
in its properties. Here, on our cliffs and marshes, it
contains in some abundance both iodine and soda.
These are greatly lessened in the mountain flower,
while, on the other hand, this increases to quantities
of potash.

It is only of late years that iodine has been proved
to exist in maritime plants, though it has long been
procured from those of the sea itself. Chemical investi-
gation has, however, proved that it occurs in the sea-
side feverfew; in the sea grimmia, a dull-looking
ereen moss, which in spring and autumn grows in
rounded tufts on the rocks about our shores; and in
that yellowish grey lichen, called the ivory ramalina
(Ramalina scopulorum), which often hangs in loose
tufts beside it. A chemical analysis was made of these
three plants, and of the little olive-coloured tuft which,
being washed by the spray at high tide, is by some
writers considered a sea-weed, by others a lichen, and
called the lesser lichina (Lichina conjinis). All these —
were growing near together, and were during storms
occasionally washed by the sea spray; and all except
the lichina were found to contain iodine. As the
specimens were carefully washed previously to analysis,
the iodine could not have been derived from saline
incrustation. All these vegetables were healthy; and
Mr. Brand, who made this experiment, has thence con-
cluded that the marine algee—the sea-weeds—“ are not
the only plants which possess the power of separating
from sea-water the compounds of iodine, and of con-
densing them in their tissues, and this without any
detriment to their healthy functions.”.

Look up, and see how the grass, far above, is speckled



22 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

with yellow flowers of dandelions and hawkweeds, or
with pink tufts of the centaury, while the red sorrel
and the pellitory of the wall stand above them. How
glad are the butterflies of the numerous blossoms which
hang about the spiny boughs of the furze (Ulex Huro-
peus), so plentiful on many banks by the sea, and
bearing well the winds there, and receiving no harm
from an occasional dash of salt spray. Well may the
French call it jone marin—sea-rush—for it seems to
rejoice in saline airs, and to grow quite as well there as
on the inland common. It is not so useful on the cliff
as on the village green, for it is not so accessible to
those who would gather it for domestic purposes. It is
well, however, that it is not, for it is of no small service
in holding together the loose soil, and it gives a beauty
in summer and winter to our shores, which have usually
but few shrubs and trees to grace them.
‘* Mountain gorses, ever golden,
Canker’d not the whole year long;
Do ye teach us to be strong,
Howsoever pinch’d and holden,
Like your thornéd blooms? and so,

Trodden on by rain and snow,
Along the hill-side of this life, as bleak as where ye grow.”

On cliffs and banks by the sea which are not too
precipitous for the peasant boy, we may see him some-
times gathering the furze for fuel, or for heating the
oven, for it burns with rapidity, and with a great
degree of heat. In the olden times, the peasant col-
lected the boughs for burning lime; but improved
roads and canals have brought coals so much more
within reach, that it is less used now. Yet the young
shoots are good food for cattle, and, if rolled, are
greatly relished by horses. Furze is said always to
contain salt, so that it is not only nutritious and
agreeable to cattle, but is a valuable preventive and
remedy for some of their maladies.

But we must turn to a plant to be found on no place
away from the sea, and which is quite peculiar to our
maritime cliffs. This is the seaside or cliff cabbage



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 23

(Brassica oleracea) ; and if we tell our reader that its
young clumps of leaves are very similar to the young
garden cabbage plants, he will know it at once in its

4h

4g

m8
ll
f | yi 9



SEA CABBAGE.

wild state. The flowers, which come in May and June,
-are very large and very handsome, shaped like those of
the wallflower, but of a pale yellow. They make a
very conspicuous figure on the heights, for in favourable
seasons the stem attains two or even three feet in
length, and is branched like a shrub; while in the
winter the woody stems, stripped of flowers, rattle to the
roaring winds, and drop the icicles from their boughs.
Even then, however, the leaves are very pretty. Waved
and lobed, and thicker than those of the garden cab-
bage, they are, like them, of a rich green, with a sea-
green bloom upon them ; and many of them, in autumn
and winter, are most richly tinted with hues of delicate



24 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

lilac or deep violet, and, covered with powdery bloom,
are of the colour of the ripest plum.

This plant is the origin of our garden cabbages, in
all their endless varieties; though we may ask with
Beckmann, “ Who knows how many steps and grada-
tions were necessary before cabbages, savoys, and cauli-
flowers were produced from our common colewort ?”
Yet a similarity is certainly apparent between our cliff
cabbage and the leaves of all those varieties which
furnish our vegetable diet. As this learned author
humorously remarks, “ With a little ingenuity, one
might form a genealogical tree of them, as Buffon has
done of the race of dogs; but a genealogical tree,
without proofs, is of as little value in natural history
as in claims for hereditary titles or estates.”

Some species of cabbage were used by the Romans.
Their brassica very evidently belonged to the cabbage
genus, though which kinds were included under it, it
would now be impossible to define. No doubt, in the
course of ages, some varieties ‘have been lost, as we
know several have been obtained by long-continued
culture. It is therefore probable that the cabbage
which the ancients, to prevent intoxication, ate in a raw
state, like a salad, is not now in existence ; though we
know that our common cabbage is sometimes dressed
in this way. The ancients were in the habit of eating
a curled cabbage, which was probably some kind of
brocoli. But Beckmann observes, that we can nowhere
fnd traces of that “excellent preparation of cabbage,”
called by the Germans sour kraut, though the ancients
dressed turnips in the same manner. He adds, “I
should have been inclined to consider sour kraut as a
German invention, first made in Lower Saxony, which
our neighbours learned from us in modern times, had
not Bellon related that the Turks are accustomed to
pickle cabbage for winter food.”

Sometimes our cliff cabbage is eaten, and even carried
about for sale, in places near the sea; but the little
expense of garden vegetables renders it of slight service



_ PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 25

to us. It requires long washing previously to cooking,
and is then, as the writer knows by experience, as good
as a dish of garden greens. Perhaps, in long remote
periods of our country, it may have been prized by
those who lived among the old hills where it flourishes ;
but it is not likely that it ever was so welcomed as was
the sea-side cabbage of the Kerguelen Island, when it was
gathered from that dreary land by the crews of the
Erebus and Terror. This plant is described by Sir James
Ross as abounding near the sea, ascending to the very
summits of the hills on the shores. The leaves and heads
were of the size of a good cabbage-lettuce, “and,” says
our Antarctic voyager, “the plant possesses all the good
qualities of its English namesake; while, from its
containing a great abundance of essential oil, it never
produces any heartburn, or any of those unpleasant
sensations which some of our vegetables are apt to do.”
The roots have the flavour of horseradish, and the
young leaves or hearts that of mustard-and-cress.
How welcome was this plant to our countrymen in
those inhospitable regions where vegetables are so few,
and after their long confinement to a diet consisting
wholly of salt provisions! For one hundred and thirty
days the crews of the ships required no other vegetable
food than this, and for nine weeks it was regularly
served out with the salt beef and pork of the vessel,
during which time there was no sickness on board.
Nor was this the only service rendered by this mari-
time plant. The ducks of the island fed chiefly on the
seeds, and these birds formed a delicious addition to
the table of the mariners.

Our cliff cabbage is not to be found on all our shores.
On the sea-cliffs of Dover it is very abundant ; it is so
also on many cliffs of Devonshire, Cornwall, Yorkshire,
and other counties ; and it is common on many parts
of the shore of Wales, and on the rocks of the Frith of
Forth. In some seasons it is devoured into shreds,
. during summer, by the caterpillars ; for as the insecti-
vorous birds delight in woods and gardens, and are

D



26 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

singing their songs to the music of silver rivulets, and
not to the loud roar of ocean, these insects revel on,
unpursued by the race which are elsewhere their
destroyers.

The sea-side cabbage grows all up the cliffs, even to
the very summit; but when the sea kale (Crambe
maritima) grows on clifis, as it sometimes does, it is
generally lower down, and is more often seen on the
sandy soils below, or among the beach stones, than on
the cliff itself. No plant, however, is more beautiful
there,—not from its white cross-shaped flowers, but
from its wavy leaves, which vary from sea-green into
all the shades of pinkish purple, down to a deep rich
violet tint. So showy are these leaves, that the writer
once passing some cliffs on which they were abundant,
and going rapidly by in the train, at first thought that
the foliage was a clump of bright flowers, till a better
opportunity of viewing them showed the mistake. The
blossoms have a strong scent of honey; and the seed-
vessels are pouches about the size of black currants.
Country people, at the west of England, watch for the
young shoots and leaf-stalks pushing up through the
sand’ when they cut them off underground, and boil
them. It is often planted in gardens, sometimes for
its beauty, sometimes that it may be blanched under
sand or garden-pots for a culinary vegetable. It is,
indeed, almost as general in our kitchen gardens as
the asparagus, and, like it, may be easily forced ; but
unlike that plant, it yields its produce the first spring
after being raised from seed. Its flavour, when cooked,
is like that of the caulifiower.

On many a cliff, and under the hedges of lanes
a little way from the sea, or scattered in clumps over
the salt marshes, we find the alexander (Smyrniwm
olusatrum), which pleases our eye by its bright foliage,
and its thick cluster of small flowers of yellowish green.
In the seventeenth century, this plant was in common
use for the same purposes for which we now employ
the garden celery, and was boiled with other vegetables



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 27

in soups. Long before that period, it had been used as
salad; and our ancestors were well pleased with their
water cresses, and their winter cresses, and the common
alexanders; while they flavoured their “cool tankard”
with the blue flowers of the borage, and put the mari-
gold petals into their ragouts, and gathered the goose-
foots from the salt marshes, and raised the sprout kales
—which were but a variety of our cliff cabbage—for
their daily dish of greens. It is possible that cultiva-
tion somewhat altered the flavour of this plant; or,
perhaps, in this, as in many cases, the general taste has
changed. Whatever the boiled alexanders may be,
neither the odour nor the flavour of the raw plant is
at all agreeable. Pennant, however, says that it is
boiled and eaten with avidity by sailors who, on their
return from long voyages, happen to land at the south-
western coast of Anglesey; and Dr. Withering, who
remarks that it is the principal produce of the Isle of
Steep Holmes, in the Severn, says that it is well worthy
the attention of mariners.
All up the cliff are

‘* Hill flowers running wild,
In pink and purple chequers.”

There is a pink centaury, scarcely differing from the
common centaury, (Hrythrea centauriwm,) so frequent
in our pastures; and there is a sea carrot (Daucus
maritimus) so like the carrot of field or garden, not
only in its white cluster of flowers and its elegant
feathery leaf, but also in its strongly-scented root, that
we need not stay to describe it. Rising above them,
and bearing as pretty a blossom as either, is the upright
spiked thrift (Statice spathulata), which, on some cliffs
and rocks—as on those near Holyhead, and on the
coast of Dover—is, during August and September,
beautiful with its numerous panicles of small lilac
blooms; while, if we wander by the sea-shore of
Norfolk, we may gather a rarer species, called the
matted thrift (Statice reticulata). But the muddy



28 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

shores about almost all parts of our coasts, and the
salt marshes too, abound with the larger and more
showy kind, the spreading spiked thrift, or sea
lavender, (Statice limonium,) that has flowers which
‘colour are much like the plant of our gardens, whence

it takes its English name; but it is, after all, but

«‘ The sea-lavender, which lacks perfume.”

It is, however, a great addition to the nosegay of wild
flowers gathered in the sea-side walk ; and on summer
evenings, many a visitor from inland places may be
seen wending his way homewards, with bunches of this
and the yellow poppy, and other plants to which his
eye is unaccustomed.

So, too, the hoary shrubby sea stock (Matthiola
incana) 18 a favourite flower with those who can gather
it from the cliffs. It is, however, very rare, and per-
haps after all is not truly wild, though the great sea
stock (Matthiola sinuata), which grows on the sands, is
apparently really so. The former plant is the origin of
the stock gillyflower of our gardens. Both have pur-
ple flowers. Delightful it 1s to wander along the sands
where the great sea stock is growing on a midsummer
evening, when the flowers are sleeping, and the quiet
stars are reflected in the soft blue of the waters, which
are murmuring their gentle welcome to the coming
night ; for sweet ‘ndeed is the scent which this flower
then floats upon the air, delicious as any which we can
inhale, even from those sweetest of inland spots, the
fragrant field of beans, or of flowering hops. These
perfumes are the more cherished because we do not
expect them, and when they mingle, as they sometimes
do, with the night odours of the Nottingham catchfly
(Silene nutans), Which grows on limestone rocks, not
only by the shore, but by the side of inland lanes and
meads, we pause to ask if even the scents of tropical
flowers can be stronger and richer than these.

There is a common species of the catchfly frequent








- PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. » 29

by our sea-shores, both among rocks and also on ‘the
sand, called sea campion (Silene maritima), but which
neither by night nor day delights us with its fragrance.
Any one who knows the common bladder campion of
our hedges, with its clusters of white blossoms, set on
flower-cups inflated like bladders, and veined with a
net-work, will at once recognise the sea-side species ; for,
excepting that it is of humbler growth, it scarcely
differs from it. There is a variety on the shores of
Devonshire, which bears handsome double flowers.
How dark and rich is the green tint of those leaves
which, on their long stalks, lie about the root of the sea
beet (Beta maritima), and how well does the deep
green hue contrast with the pale sea-green leaves of the
perfoliate yellow wort, and of many other plants of the
‘rock! Pull up that strong root and taste it, and you
will find it sweet as sugar itself, for, like all the beets, this
possesses the saccharine principle in great abundance.
The common beet (Beta vulgaris) has been exten~
sively planted in France and Belgium, for making sugar.
Our sea beet, if little fitted for this, may yet be esteemed
a very useful plant, and it is often gathered and sold by
the poor who live near the sea, to be boiled as spinach.
It is quite as good as the cultivated spinach, and is a
most plentiful vegetable, frequently growing all about
the cliffs, and even on the sea-beach and salt marshes,
in great masses ; many of the leaves in winter assuming
a rich purple or crimson hue. The flower is but a tall
spike of pale-green blooms, arrayed in little groups of
two or three together, up the stem, having a small leaf
at the base of each. It appears in August. The leaves
of another species of beet, called the cicla (Beta hor-
tensis), are among the most common cooked vegetables,
used by labourers and small farmers for spinach, in
France and Germany ; while the Swiss have a variety
which they call chard, the succulent leaves of which
are used instead of greens, and the leaf stalk and
middle vein are stripped and boiled as asparagus. It
does not appear that the beet so commonly used as
D3



30 A BOOK FOR THE SHA-SIDE.

spinach on the continent is at all superior to that which
grows on our cliffs, hanging out there sometimes its
long spikes of blossoms two or three feet from the
surface; and Dr. Mackay says, “that the sea beet is
often cultivated on the coast of Cork, as well as in
other places, as an edible vegetable.”

Another plant, whose dark green foliage often con-
trasts beautifully with the surface of the rocky cliff, or
the bank on which it grows, is the common fennel
(Fenicula vulgaris), and, from its size, it also makes a
conspicuous figure on the marshes, or by the road-side,
where some salt river is running onwards to the sea. It
has a hollow stem, often three feet high, numerous leaves
‘which are divided into soft hair-like segments, and its
flowers, which appear in July and August, are large
clusters of small yellow blossoms ; its tender stalks
were formerly much eaten as salad, and the plant had the
old name of finckle. The leaves are still used to form
a garnish for dishes, and, cut up and boiled in butter,
are served up as a sauce for fish. They have a strong
odour, and a sweet flavour. The blanched stalks of a
dwarf variety, called finochio, are eaten with vinegar,
oil, and pepper as a salad, and are also sometimes boiled
in soups. This variety is marked by a tendency in the
stalks to swell to considerable thickness. The thickest
part is then earthed up, and acquires a very pleasant
flavour and a tender substance. It is a good deal culti-
vated in Italy. Our common fennel is a very elegant
plant, when the wind sways its light branches up and
down, and carries afar their sweet scents.

While recounting the plants of our sea rocks and
banks which furnish food to the present generation,
or which have been prized among the vegetables of
olden days, we must not forget the broad-leaved pepper-
wort (Lepidium latifolium), which sometimes grows on
the maritime rocks of our shores, or in the salt marshes
near them. “When pepper was so dear,” says Beck-
mann, “that to promise a saint, yearly, a pound of it,
was considered a liberal bequest ; economical house-



vr,

PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. ° 31

wives seasoned their dishes with the leaves of pepper-
wort, which on this account is called at present, in
England, ‘poor man’s pepper.’” Poor man’s pepper is
also the name of another flower, the yarrow, which has
the Latin name of Achillea, because Achilles is said
to have discovered its healing virtues. This, though
common enough on our cliffs, has no pretensions to be
called a sea-side plant, as it grows everywhere ; though
the annalist of the life of Henri de Larochejaquelin,
who fell in La Vendée, mentions as a remarkable
circumstance, that the flower of Achilles should have
sprung up on the grave of the deceased warrior. There
are few churchyards or other grassy spots in our land
where it could not be found, so that they who wanted
it for seasoning their dishes had not far to seek ; but it
has less pungency than our pepperwort. The flowers
of the latter plant appear in July ; they are small, white,
and numerous, and are crowded in leafy clusters.

Then we have a sea radish (Raphanus maritimus),
and though its roots are too tough to contribute to our
salads, yet its white or straw-coloured flowers, veined
with purple, are very pretty. The wild celery (Apium
graveolens), too, is common on our shores, though nat
peculiar to them. Dr. Hooker, in his Flora Antarctica,
mentions this and some other of our maritime plants,
among those of Tierra del Fuego. “It is always inte-
resting,” says this writer, “ to meet with familiar objects
when they are least expected, and to recognise in the pro-
ductions of a strange land, the same, or similar to those
which we have seen elsewhere. ‘Tierra del Fuego pos-
sesses, in common with Britain, the sea pink, or
thrift, a primrose so like our primula farinosa, that
they are scarcely distinguishable, and the wild celery,
which, though a rank weed when it grows wild in
England, is so mild and wholesome in Fuegia, probably
from the absence of the sun’s direct rays, that it affords
an excellent salad.” In our land, death has been caused
by eating a quantity of this wild plant which grew on
the banks of a salt-water river. The primrose to which



32 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

Dr. Hooker refers, is the bird’s-eye primrose, a lovely lilac-
purple flower of our mountains ; but there is a primrose
often found blooming on the sandy sea-shores of the
Orkney Isles, and which grows too on those of Suther-
land, called the Scottish primrose (Primula Scotica),
a deep bluish purple, so pretty that we lament that it
cannot be found on the southern coast of our island.

A curious plant called the red broom-rape (Orobanche
rubra), belongs to the sea-side flowers, though it is by
no means frequent on our English cliffs, abundant as it
is on the basaltic rocks of the Hebrides. It grows, too,
on the shores of Ireland, and on the magnesian rock of
the Lizard Point, Cornwall. It is, like all the broom-
rapes, truly parasitic, and this particular species seems
to prefer the wild thyme, as the plant on whose roots it
shall affix itself, though any one; to look at the stout
plant which springs from the lowly flower, would hardly
suspect that it was parasitic there.

The broom-rapes are a singular tribe of plants, but
all our native species have a general similarity to each
other—they have stout succulent stems, usually of a
reddish brown hue, with no -leaves, but scales on the
stem ; and this stem, at the .base, swells into a knob,
which is thickly covered with scales. The flowers are
large and dull-looking, often so much so that one might
take them for blossoms scorched into brownness by the
summer sun; the plant altogether resembling, espe-
cially when the flowers are hardly expanded, a head of
asparagus. The blossoms are pale brown or yellowish
lilac, and several of the species grow on cliffs, because
there grow the flowers on which they are parasitic,
such as the furze and bed-straw. But besides the red
broom-rape there is another peculiar, to the shores,
called the blue broom -rape (Orobanche ceerulea), but this
does not grow on the rocks, but on the grassy pastures
near the sea. All the species are acrid, and so de-
structive to the plants to which they attach themselves,
that their name, made of orobus, a vetch, and ancho, to
strangle, is well merited.



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. . 33

A graceful plant, which, when growing in any
quantity, is swept up and down into undulating waves,
is the tamarisk, or sea cypress
(Lamarixz Gallica). The lat-
ter English name it owes to
the shape of its foliage, for it
wears no funereal green, but
in summer and autumn is of
rich verdant hue, and its rich
red stems and branches add
much to the beauty of the
shrub. “This elegant plant,”
says Gerard Edwards Smith,
“ forms the ornament of Sand-
gate, flourishing upon its
sandy banks, and flowering
there twice within the year.
Planted inland, it has many
times succeeded. The elegance
of its beaded flower-buds, and
light feathery blossoms, ac-
companied by delicate foliage,
commends this hardy tempter
of the sea-breezes and spray TAMARISK.
to more general cultivation upon such spots.”

Yes, there are lovely flowers all around our path-
ways,



«* And when the breeze was in the veil
Of verdure on the Tamarisk,
And seemed for very sport to whisk
The wildered boughs, so lithe and frail.

‘I thought how oft the gentle mind
Is fretted sore with cross and care,
And wearied with the restless air,

And bent to snapping in the wind.”

Not less beautiful, though very different in appear-
ance, is the sea tree-mallow (Lavatera arborea), which
grows on maritime, always on insulated rocks, in the
south and west of England, and rears its handsome
shining mallow-like, purplish-pink flowers, on the coasts



34. A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

of Teignmouth, Plymouth, some parts of the Isle of
Wight, the shores of Anglesey, and on various parts of
the Scottish islands and mainland. It is a great orna-
ment to sea-side gardens, even in places where it is not
found wild, and grows too in the inland shrubbery or
flower-bed, where, if it is allowed to scatter its seeds, it
will spring up for many successive years, and frequently
attain a large size. Young plants will occasionally
survive a winter or two, but when once it has blos-
somed it perishes.

This beautiful shrub grows on the island of Steep
Holmes, in the Severn, a spot remarkable for being the
only place of growth of our wild peony.

But there are flowers on the cliff to which our space
will not permit us even a notice, for they do not belong
peculiarly to the sea-shore.

‘* Here and there the bed-straw yellow
Carpets it with goldcn thread.”

Here and there too,

** Along this solitary ridge,—
Where smiles, but rare, the blue campanula,
Among the thistles and grey stones that peep
Through the thin herbage—from the highest point
Of elevation o’er thie vale below.”

Here we may find among ferns, which grow also in
the quiet retreats far away from the sea, one which is
peculiar to its shores. The sea spleenwort (Aspleniwm
marinum) has a very elegant spray, with which to
deck their slope, and to hide the crevices which time
has rent among the rocks; while little dark brown
cushions of the sea grimmia (Grimmia maritima),
grow not only far above on the cliffs, but, fearless of the
tide spray, gather too at its base. Succulent stems of
the pretty yellow stonecrop (Sedum acre), the golden
chain, as country people call it, mingle in tufts with
the species which is much more common on the sea-
rock than on the barren inland soil. This is the
English stonecrop (Sedum Anglicum), with its fleshy
egg-shaped leaves, small, thick, and tinged with red; the



PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 35

beautiful clusters of star-like flowers, having white
petals spotted with red and crowned with purple
anthers. During June and July our rocky and sandy
shores have few flowers more lovely and attractive than
this stonecrop.

It is gratifying to the geologist to observe in the
structure of our earth, that nearly all its materials are
such as afford, by their decomposition, a soil fit for the
support of vegetable life. Thus those rocks, formed
either wholly or partly of the remains of animals,
furnish a soil whereon the free winds may scatter the
seeds of shrubs and flowers, whose beauty, and odour,
and utility call for the praise of man to his Maker.
We would not look carelessly at the flower which his
hand has fashioned with skill and beauty. We would
not forget the lilies which our blessed Saviour, when
he dwelt on earth, pointed out as a lesson for hope
and faith. Look only at the structure of that stone-
crop, and you may see how God has cared for the
lowliest things. It belongs to a class of plants growing
in the driest situations ; in some cases, as on the sands
of Southern Africa, where not a blade of grass, not a
tuft of moss could thrive. Some of these plants grow
on naked rocks, on old walls, on sandy plains, exposed
to scorching sunbeams by day, and to heavy dews by
night. What nourishment can they derive by their
roots from a soil so sterile? Scarcely any ; but myriads
of little mouths, in the form of pores, are scattered on
those fleshy leaves and stems, and the dew and moisture
from the atmosphere enter the plant and are’ slowly
evaporated again from the juicy structure. The com-
mon orpine (Sedum telephiwm), or livelong, will grow
for some months if only suspended by a string from the
ceiling of a room, and never supplied with water. An
African species will not only grow under such circum-
stances, but if its leaves be gathered and laid on the
ground, they will send out young shoots from the
notches of their margin, every way resembling their
parent plants.





CHAPTER III.

FISHES.

How interesting is it to remember, as we watch the
magnificent waves, that all that wide-spread ocean is
full of life and enjoyment. It is so in great measure
with earth and air, but the waters are apparently yet
more crowded with living creatures. Room is wanted
on the land for the green fields on which the cattle may
browse, for wide deserts on which the lion may roam,
for forests where birds may sing their songs of praise to
their Creator, and for great cities and small hamlets,
where man should live to his own good and God’s
glory. Even on the land, myriads of insects unseen by
us are living in the air; plants of the fungus tribe, only
to be seen by the microscope, are insinuating them-
selves everywhere ; and living creatures are lurking
near every leaf and flower. But in the waters life seems
even more abundant. This element abounds, too, in the
extremes of minuteness and of bulk, from the monads



FISHES. 37.

which can be seen only by the most powerful micro-
scope, to the whale, which is twenty times larger than
our largest terrestrial animal — that great leviathan,
whom Job describes as making a path to shine after
him, so that one would think the deep to be hoary, and
declares to be a king above all the children of pride.
As the air seems given especially to the birds, which
are fitted to skim through it, and to find much of their
food among its insect multitudes, so the waters are the
domain of the fishes, to whom the smaller living crea-
tures form food, while each in its turn feeds on some
inferior tribe. Comparatively few have the opportunity
of examining the tiniest creatures of the sea, creatures
which teem in myriads in but a drop of that briny
water ; but all can mark the fishes as they glide near
the shore, or in the shallow pools among the rocks,
gleaming with tints which may vie with those of the
richest plumage of the bird, or with the gauzy gold or
silver wing of the gayest insect. The brilliance of
every metal, the splendour of every gem, the tints of
the sky and the rainbow, are there reflected in stripes,
and bands, and angles, and undulations. As the light
falls on the surface we see it, now purple, or green, or
gold, or silver; while some fishes are so brilliant in
colour, that, like the rare band-fish, they deserve the
name of flame and red riband, by which name the
people of Nice call it, from its resemblance to those
objects as it glides through the waters. Take but one
of the scales and place it beneath a microscope, and you
may dream that you are looking at a diamond ; while
without the aid of the instrument you can see it
rivalling the tints which are reflected by the pearl.

‘¢ Full many a gem of purest ray serene
The dark unfathom’d caves of ocean bear ;”

and the words of our poet might refer to the shells,

or the pearls lying within them, to the fishes, or sea-

jellies, or to the sea-weeds, or the coral structures of

beautiful insects, or to those gems of the mine which
E



38 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

lie entombed in the deep with the loved and the lost.
The fishes are eminently beautiful, not only in colour,
but in grace and symmetry, and are fitted by their
structure for their dwellings and purpose in life ; while
their scales form a coat of mail, so that the descrip-
tion of the patriarch is very appropriate to many: “ His
scales are his pride, shut up together as with a close
seal.”

The form of fishes admits of great variety. The most
frequent is that of a cylindrical body, pointed at each
end, and compressed at the sides, as the mackerel.
Some fish, however, are short and round; others
elongated. like the eel, or remarkably compressed, as the
dory ; and some, like the skates and flat-fishes, are quite
flat. The fins, which are useful to them in gliding
through the waters, serve also as characteristics of orders
and families. Fish breathe chiefly by means of their
gills, and are capable of receiving the influence of oxy-
gen, not only from such portions of atmospheric air as
are mixed with the water, but from the atmosphere
itself, They are the very opposite of birds, for as those
joyous creatures were made for air they inhale a vast
amount, and have their whole system full of it ; but
the consumption of the oxygen by the fishes is very
small, and they have but a low degree of respiration.
Such fishes as swim near the bottom of the sea are found
to have this so low, that their temperature rarely ex-
ceeds by more than two or three degrees that of the
water at the surface ; though those which swim nearer
the top have a somewhat higher standard of respiration.
We wonder not therefore that they are, in comparison
with the joyous creatures of air, of a slow and
dull nature.

The gill-flap, which assists in covering the gills, is
movable, like a fin, independently of the gill-lid. On
raising this part we see beneath it the gills, of a
beautiful red colour, composed of arches, varying in
different species, and fringed with a series of fibrils,
set like the plumelets composing the vane of a feather.



FISHES. 39

When these are minutely examined, they appear
covered with a velvet-like membrane, over which
myriads of wonderfully minute blood-vessels are spread



HEAD OF THE HERRING. 4@, the gill-lid; 0, the gill-flap.



HEAD OF THE HERRING, WITH THE GILL-COVER ENTIRELY REMOVED.

a, the gill fringes, on the posterior margin of the arch; 5, the anterior
slender spines directed forwards; c, position of the heart.

like a delicate net-work. There are commonly four
of these fringed arches: they are movable, and allow
the currents of water, driven down by the action of the
mouth, to flow freely through them, so as to lave every
fibril. The concave margin of each arch is always
more or less studded with tooth-like projections; and
these in the herring, and some others, are lengthened



40 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

into slender spines. Their use appears to be to prevent
food taken: into the mouth from being forced out
through the gills with the streams of water sent
through them.*

Every part of the sea has its tribes of fishes; and
there are, besides, flying fish, which can sustain them-
selves for a time in the air; while others, by the
strength of the saw-like serrated bony ray on each
pectoral fin, are enabled to transport themselves even
over the land from one pool to another. Their eyes,
which in different species vary somewhat as to situa-
tion, are always so placed as to meet especially the
conditions of the kind. ‘They are most frequently
placed on the flattened side of the head, but in some
species are higher up. Their structure, adapted as it
is to the dense medium which they inhabit, affords a
good power of vision, at moderate distances, and when
the breeze scarcely ruffles the waves, and the water is
clear, the sight of fish is, as the angler well knows, very
acute. Nor is that beautiful creature of the waves
destitute of the sense of hearing; and violently loud
sounds, as the ringing of bells, or discharge of cannon,
have been known so to terrify the shoals of salmon,
when making their course to the river where they
spend the summer, that they will all turn back and
retreat to the sea which they were leaving.

Those deep waters are almost a world of silence,
save when the wind makes loud music among the
billows. Few of the living creatures have voices to
tell even of their own emotions to their fellows ; yet
there are fishes of our own shores which utter cries
when the fisherman captures them, and some of thie
fishes of other seas give forth loud and continuous
sounds. A large fish, called the drum, is described by
Dr. Mitchell as making a dull hollow sound when
taken out of the water. Various instances of sounds
emitted by fishes are recorded by the editor of
Cuvier's “ Régne Animal.” Mr. White relates, in his

* Wonders of the Waters, p. 16.



FISHES. 4]

voyages in the seas of China, that being at the mouth
of the river Cambodia, his crew and himself were
astonished at sounds heard around the bottom of their
vessel, which he describes as resembling a mingling of
the bass of the organ, the ringing of bells, the
guttural cries of a large frog, and the tones of a
powerful harp. These voices, from a low murmur,
gradually increased, and were heard all over the length
of the vessel and the two sides. As the voyagers
sailed onward the tones diminished, and were gradually
lost in the distance. A man who was their interpreter,
said that these sounds were made by fishes, which he
described. M. Humboldt heard similar sounds in the
South Seas. On February 28, 1803, towards seven in
the evening, “ the whole crew,” says this writer, “were
astonished by an extraordinary noise, which resembled
that of drums beating in the air.” It was at first
attributed to the breakers. Speedily it was heard in
the vessel, and especially towards the poop. It then
seemed like the noise of a boiling, the sound of the
air which escapes from a fluid in the state of ebullition.
The mariners began to fear then that there might be a
leak in the vessel. It was heard unceasingly over
every part of the ship, until about nine o’clock in the
evening, when it ceased altogether.”

Beautiful as fishes are, and useful as they are to man,
yet they are not capable of exciting much individual
attachment ; and were it not that we want them for
food, they would mostly swim on to the end of their
days free from molestation. We can tame the bird of
the air and teach it to love us, sometimes even to’
imitate our language. Its instincts are usually affec-
tionate, and its ways winning and loveable; and the
same may be said of many of the lower animals of the
earth. But fishes are usually unimpressible creatures,
and, save the cravings of a natural voracity, usually
give small evidence of any feeling. But though fishes
in general have little attachment, and no language by
which to express it, yet instances are recorded both im

E3



42 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

ancient and modern times, in which they have exhi-
bited affection towards their young, and have learned
to know and obey those who trained them. Pliny and
Martial believed that they could not only be taught to
recognise their master, but to come at his bidding
when he uttered their names. The Chinese, who keep
large numbers of gold fishes, call them by a whistle to
receive their food. Sir Joseph Banks used to assemble
his fish by ringing a bell : and Carew, the historian of
Cornwall, brought his grey mullets together by striking
two sticks.

Among other instances related by Mr. Yarrell, of the
attachment of fishes to each other, he mentions that a
person who had kept two small fishes in a glass vessel,
gave one of them away: the other refused all food, and
showed evident symptoms of unhappiness, till his com-
panion was restored to him.

The food of the greater number of fishes appears to
be of an animal nature. They prowl the seas as the
beast does the forests, devouring the creatures smaller
than themselves, and apparently to a great extent
feeding on each other indiscriminately, acting on the
principle that might is right. The great Creator, when
he filled that vast world of water so full, gave to his
creatures there a very voracious appetite, that as
numbers are increasing every moment, so too the
means of lessening numbers should be in constant
operation. A war of extermination is perpetually going on
beneath those calm summer waters, or rolling billows ;
while an immense number of fishes are devoted to the
food of man. So constant are the operations of these
two means, that probably few fishes die a natural death..
The inhabitants of our sea-coast towns consume many,
and send many away inland to remote parts of the
country. But there are, in other countries, tribes of
men who live wholly on the produce of the waters.
Many of our fishermen are engaged in procuring for us
the ocean fish, for all are not in season at one period ;
and therefore there is at all times of the year food and



50 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDRE.

the shores of the Orkneys, and forms the grand support
during summer and autumn to the poor. Dr. N eill,
during his tour of the islands of Orkney and Shetland,
saw on almost every projecting rock an old man,
or one or two lads, holding in each hand a wand or
fishing-rod, and catching the young coal-fish as fast as
they could bait their hooks. It is better food when
young than when full grown. They call it by several
names, as sillock, piltock, cooth, and grey lord; and
Mr. Yarrell says this fish has more provincial names
than any other. It dwells in the seas more or less
all round our shores. The ling (Lota molva), though
not so generally distributed, is scarcely less valuable
in the western islands and the Orkneys than the
coal-fish ; and, cut open, salted, and dried in the sun,
forms an article of commerce, which was in former
days more profitable than now. The air bladders, or, as
they are commonly called, the sounds of this fish are
also pickled, and form an article of food ; and the roes
are salted and eaten. The oil taken from the liver
has been found, like the cod liver oil, a useful medicine
in cases of debility and emaciation ; and by the light of
a lamp supplied with it, the Scottish islander sits by
his fireside, mending his nets or reading his Bible. . The
fisheries of the ling occur early in the summer, and the -
prayer of the poor Shetlander, as he returns from them to
his work in the harvest field, is, “God open the mouth of
the gray fish (the sillocks),and haud (hold) his hand about
the corn,” that is, preserve the grain from tempests.
Another important British fishery is that of the
pilchard, or, as the Scotch call it, the gipsey
herring (Clupea pilchardus) ; but the abundance of this
fish is confined to different parts of the coast ; a few
pilchards only rarely visiting any but the south-
western shores of England. Cornwall is the most
celebrated part of our country for the pilchard fisheries,
and on some parts of the Irish coast the fishing stations
are no less important. An immense number of these
fish are sometimes taken; an instance is recorded in



FISHES. Gi:

whivh ten thousand hogsheads have been caught in one
port on a single day: “thus,” says Mr. Yarrell, “ pro-
viding the enormous multitude of twenty-five millions
of living creatures, drawn at once from’ the ocean for
human sustenance.”

The voracity of the pilchard is very great. Mr. Couch
Says that he has found their stomachs crammed, each
with thousands of a minute Species of shrimp, not
larger than a flea. The number of. these minute
creatures must be enormous, if, as Mr. Couch Says, all
the pilchards were as well fed as the one he examined ;
for so numerous are the fishes themselves, that this
valuable writer describes an assemblage of them, when
near the coast, as assuming the arrangement of a mighty
army, with its wings stretching parallel to the land.
“There are,” he says, “three stations assumed by this
great body, that have their separate influence on the
success of the fishery. One is to the eastward of the
Lizard, the most eastern extremity reaching to the Start
Point in Devonshire, beyond which no fishery is carried
on, except that rarely it extends to Dartmouth ; a
Second station is included between the Lizard and
Land’s End, and the third is on the north coast of the
county. It is not an uncommon thing for one of these
districts to be full of pilchards, while in the others
none are to be seen. The length of this fish is nine
or ten inches, and in form it somewhat resembles the
herring. |

The pilchard fishery, though interesting to the
Cornish men, and affording employment to a large
number of people, is not very lucrative. Probably,
in this respect, none are equal to those of the salmon
in value ; but as this fish spends a great part of its life
in rivers, and is little seen by visitors to the sea, we
must not dwell upon it. That common little fish the
sprat (Clupea sprattus) is sure to be seen by those
who are resident near our shores late in the autumn,
or during winter. We have often thought, when seeing
a boat land with its cargo of sprats, that those who



52 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

saw these fish only lying on the fishmonger’s stall had
little idea of their beauty. Glittering in the net in many
a pale and delicate tint, they look like a mags of silver on
which the rainbow is faintly reflected. Cloudy weather
is the time for the fishermen, and after a few days of
this kind we find in our walks on the pier, long rows
of network, hung there to dry. Fine nets of several
yards long are made by the fisherman in the winter’s
evening, or by his wife or children, for the purpose of
catching these fish. This is a very useful species to the
poor of our sea-coast towns, nor is an occasional dish
of sprats unwelcome to the rich, while the fish pickled
in brine is often sold in our inland cities, and is very
good in flavour. Sprats, too, are laid on the fields
for manure, and most of those who have spent some
time near the sea, have seen them borne away in carts
and waggons for this purpose, or perhaps had their
country ramble spoiled by their odour on the land
while they were in the process of decomposition.

But as we watch the contents of the fishing-boats,
we are often delighted by the beauty of some of the
mullets contained in the trawling-net. The striped red
mullet (Mullus swrmuletus) is abundant on our southern
coasts, from Cornwall to Sussex, and is often brought
up in the mackerel net. It is extremely beautiful,
exhibiting every tint of orange, red, and yellow, in
most vivid brilliancy ; though, to see its hues in per-
fection, we should observe it during the summer, for
though caught at all seasons it is not always equally
bright. In some years it is much more plentiful on
our shores than in others, for these fish change their
places, and, swimming miles away from their old haunts,
are sometimes long undiscovered by the fishermen.
The mullets were much prized by the Romans, and
their generic name is said to refer to the scarlet colour
of the sandal or shoe worn by the Roman consuls, and
afterwards by the emperors. ‘They were also consecrated
to Diana, the goddess of hunting ; because they were
believed in those days to pursue and attack large and



FISHES. 53

dangerous fish. The red mullet (Mullus barbatus) ig
not only rare on our shores, but is also a much less
abundant fish in all seas than the striped variety,
and excels it not only in flavour, but in richness of
colour. It is connected with such records of cruelty
and folly, that one blushes for human beings as we
peruse the details; and we are reminded how much
the refinement of arts and of science can exist, while their
cultivators have hearts as hard as those of the untaught
Savage. Poetry, and painting, and sculpture had shed
their influence over the ancients 3 but the mild light of
revelation had not yet dawned upon them ; and thus
their land, with all its advantages, was but as the dark
places of the earth, which are full of the habitations
of cruelty. The beautiful mullet was brought before
the Roman to die ; and as the rich epicures sat around
the table, their luxurious repast acquired a new zest, as
they looked on the fish, and saw its bright red colours
gradually passing into various shades of purple, violet,
bluish, and white ; till one convulsive throb of agony
put an end to its pain. More cruel practices still were
used towards these poor fish ; and the luxurious and
wealthy Roman delighted in exhibiting his ponds or
vivaria containing the mullets, which afforded un-
doubted evidence of the wealth of their owner, since,
according to Martial, a fish of four pounds and a half
cost a ruinous price ; and mullets of extreme size, one
weighing six pounds, are recorded to have been pur-
chased at a sum equal to 48/., while a still larger fish
was paid for at the value of 64/.

The food of the mullet consists of the soft crustaceous
and molluscous animals, and cirrhi are arranged around
the mouth of this, as of some other fish. Mr. Yarrell,
who dissected them, remarks: They are, I have no
doubt, delicate organs of touch, by which all the Species
provided with them are enabled to ascertain, to a
certain extent, the qualities of the various substances
with which they are brought in contact ; and are ana-
logous in function to the beak, with its distribution

F 3



54 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

of nerves, among certain swimming and wading birds
which probe for food beyond their sight ; and may be
considered another instance among the many beautiful
provisions of nature, by which, in the case of fishes
finding at great depths their light deficient, compen-
sation is made for consequent imperfect vision.

The grey mullet is a pretty little fish, with its rich
blue tints ; and several species of gurnard are extremely
beautiful, and are besides useful and delicate articles of
food. . October is their especial season, and to see them

in full beauty, we should look at them when just taken

from the water. The red gurnard (Zrigla cuculus)
is the most frequent of the nine British species, and
though chiefly found in deep water, yet it sometimes
frequents the rocky pools, which we find at low tide
full of beautiful and living creatures, and adorned with
our loveliest sea plants. The red hue of the upper
portion of the fish seems to mingle imperceptibly with
the silver whiteness which distinguishes the lower
portion, and which glitters in the sunshine. Like several
of our fishes, it utters a sound when taken out of the
sea; and this is so similar to that of the bird of our
summer woods, that the fish is familiarly named the
cuckoo gurnard; while the grey gurnard (Lrigla
gurnardus), & common fish, especially on the southern
shores of England, and very abundant on the west of
Scotland, is on the latter shore called crooner, because
of the dull croak or croon which is its lament for
its native sea.

But without waiting till the fishing-boats have
brought their stores for our inspection, we may wander
away to the tide-pools, and find among the rocks,
covered with their dark sprays of olive-green, or
fringed with grass-green leaves and ribands, some of
our common fishes. What a scene of life and anima-
tion is here! 4Here are crabs running along by
thousands ; star-fishes twisting their limbs in strange
contortions ; shrimps darting by as if every motion
were one of gladness’; limpets, and barnacles, and



FISHES. 55

periwinkles holding the rock tightly; and mussels
moored to it safely by their silken threads; and red-
looking worm-like creatures with many feet gliding in
the clear water, and feather-like plumes emerging from
shells, and bending there most gracefully. Many a
pretty fish seems hiding from our view among the
entangling weeds ; and then, perchance, that ill-looking
little fish with its long wide head, the father lasher, or
long-spined cottus (Cottus bubalis), looks up at us with
such unamiable aspect, as if it only wanted strength
to use its threatening spiny head as a weapon of warfare
against us, and to punish us for intruding into its
domain. There are few parts of our coast where it
may not be seen during the greater part of the year, and









THE FATHER LASHER.

if we only touch it with a finger, it distends its gill
covers, and setting out its numerous spines, as if, like
the Scottish thistle, it would claim the motto, “ Nemo
me impune lacessit,” which, Baxter says, means in plain
Scotch, “Ye maunt meddle wi’ me.” This bold and
voracious fish has tints of a beautifully vivid red, green,



56 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE,

and brown. It is not eaten in our country ; but in
Greenland, where it is much larger, it is the chief food
of many people, and the soup made of it is described
by travellers as good in flavour. The N orwegians also
extract oil from the liver of this fish. The Scotch call
it the lucky proach. It is on our shores often termed
toad-fish, and well named, for its large head would
remind one of a toad. Its name of father lasher is
probably given because, in its active darting progress,
it strikes the water with its broad tail fin. Several of
these fish may often be found hid beneath a bed of
Sea-weeds.

Crantz, in his History of Greenland, says of it,
“Next to augmarsett (capelin), the Greenlanders eat
most of the ulkes, what we cal] toad-fish, or in New-
foundland, scolpings ; it lives all the year round in the
little and large bays near the land, yet in deep water.
It is caught, especially in winter, by poor women and
children, with a line of whalebone or bird’s feathers,
thirty or forty fathoms long. At the end, a blue
longish stone is fastened, to sink it. Instead of a bait,
they put on the hook a white bone, a glass bead, or a
bit of red cloth. The fish is commonly a foot long, and
full of bones. The skin is quite smooth, and spotted
with yellow, green, red, and black spots, like a lizard.
It has a very large thick round head, and a wide mouth,
and its fins, especially on its back, are broad and
prickly. Though this fish hath a very ugly look, yet
its flesh and the soup that is made of it taste ex-
tremely agreeable, and are very wholesome, and the sick
may eat of them.”

The short-spined cottus, or sea Scorpion (Cottus scor-
prus), a fish about four or five inches long, often lurks
among the sea-weeds, or swims into our harbours. Like
the father lasher, it is go common all round our
coasts, as that every haul of the dredge will bring up
one or the other, though seldom both, for they do not
frequent the same spots. The body of this fish ig
mottled with dark purple, brown, or reddish brown:



FISHES. 57

the under part being white, and sometimes it is of
bright scarlet.

Some of these pools are at times half filled with
little. fishes left there by the tide. Several Species of
the wrasse glide about among the rocks, glittering in
red, orange, and green ; and here the gilt head or golden
maid (Crenilabrus melops), sometimes finds its way into
‘the crab creels, which the fisherman places there ; eat-
ing the shrimps and little crabs, so numerous among
the sea plants, and giving a decided preference to
such rocks as are only reached at unusually high tides,
and thus only moistened in general by the spray. And
now as we look about among the waters and the rogks,
a little lower down, we may chance to see the spotted
gunnel, or butterfish (Muwreenoides guttata), or the
swordick, as it is often called from its sword-like shape.
But the very sound of our footsteps, or the sight of our
shadow, will send it to hide under the stones or weeds,
and if with some difficulty wesucceed in capturing it, it is
no easy matter to hold it for a minute; for the slimy sub-
stance upon it, from which it takes its name of butter-
fish, as well as its rapid movements, facilitate its escape.
It is generally about five or six inches long. It is only
‘used in our country for bait, but in Greenland it ig
dried and eaten.

It is in these pools also that we shall find a little
fish, well known to all who observe the living creatures
either of sea or river, abounding as it does both in our
salt and fresh waters. Many a time have we, by means
of a gauze net tied to the end of a stick, caught the
stickleback or barnstickle, that tiniest of British fishes,
and kept it for a while in a vase of water. Most per-
Sons accustomed to our sea-side have seen the rough-
tailed stickleback (Gasterosteus trachurus), hiding among
stones or weeds, or darting out and pursuing its prey,
devouring it with voracity, and having nothing to fear,
even from fishes much larger than itself, because it is
so well defended by its spines. We can readily believe
the assertion of Henry Backer, that the sticklebacks



58 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

leap vertically out of the water to the height of more
than a foot ; and that in an oblique direction they will
make springs to a greater distance, where stones or other
obstacles tempt them to try their agility and strength.
They are most fierce little creatures, and a bite from
one of them is by no means to be coveted by the wan-
derer by the sea; while to its companions in the pool
it often proves fatal. A writer in Loudon’s Magazine of
Natural History gives an interesting account of some
of these sticklebacks which he had placed in a large
vessel of water. “ When,” says this writer, “a few are
first turned in, they swim about in a shoal, apparently
exploring their new habitation. Suddenly one will
take possession of a corner of the tub, or, as it will
sometimes happen, of the bottom, and will instantly
commence an attack upon his companions ; and if any
one of them ventures to oppose his sway, a regular and
most furious battle ensues, the two combatants swim
round and round with the greatest rapidity, biting and
endeavouring to pierce each other with their spines,
which on these occasions are projected. I have wit-
nessed a battle of this sort, which lasted several minutes
before either gave way ; and when one does submit,
imagination can hardly conceive the vindictive fury of
the conqueror, who, in the most persevering and unre-
lenting way, chases his rival from one part of the tub
to another, until fairly exhausted with fatigue. They
also use their lateral spines with such fatal effect, that,
incredible as it may appear, I have seen one during a
battle absolutely rip his opponent quite open, so that
he sank to the bottom and died. I have occasionally
known three or four parts of the tub taken possession
of by as many other little tyrants, who guard their
territories with the strictest vigilance, and the slightest
invasion immediately brings on a battle. When a fish is
conquered it loses all its gay colours, as if these depended
on the health and spirits of the wearer, though previ-
ously to death it regains them, but with less clearness
and distinction than when proud and happy.”



FISHES, 59)

Our stickleback is little used as food, but, about
Dantzic, oil has been extracted from these fish ; and
they were, in former days, caught by myriads in the
river Cam, for the purposes of manure. They are
included in the list of fishes of every country of Europe.

Another little fish, which is very common on all
parts of our coast, though not haunting our pools, is
the freckled or spotted goby (Gobius minutus). It is
seldom more than three inches long, has a large head,
and is of a pale yellowish white, freckled and barred
with brown. It very often comes up with the crabs
in the shrimping nets, for it lurks among the sands,
sometimes completely hiding itself in them. Both
this and some others of the goby tribe are said to
deceive their prey by approaching them slowly, while
their bodies are so covered with the sand and mud
which adheres to their slimy surface, that they are not
discovered to be enemies by the smaller marine animals
on which they feed. They, in their turn, supply a
considerable source of food to the larger fishes and sea
birds.

It is in the sandy bay that the less frequent fish, the
gemmeous dragonet, or yellow skulpin (Callionymus
lyra), is to be found. It has a singular appearance,
being shaped like what one would fancy a dragon to be,
and remarkable also for its colours, which glitter like
rubies and emeralds and diamonds, the most conspicu-
ous tint being the yellow. It is, in the north, called
gowdie, from gowd, gold.

One of the most remarkably formed British fishes is
not unfrequent on some coasts, though not universally
distributed. This is the fishing frog, or angler (Lo-
phius piscatorius), that has many ill names among the
fishermen, which we would not repeat. It is generally
about three feet long, and really resembles a frog in its
tadpole condition. It well merits its name of angler,
for it has long thread-like appendages attached to the
head, which serve as its fishing lines) When lying in
the mud or sand, it, by means of its fins, stirs up this



60 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDRE.

so as to becloud the water, and while thus concealed,
it raises its long filaments, and moves them about. The
lesser fishes, probably mistaking them for small worms



THE FISHING FROG, OR ANGLER.

fitted for their food, advance towards it, and are entan-
gled and captured. When in a n-t with other fishes,
this voracious angler seems nothing daunted at its own
danger ; but immediately swallows some of its com-
panions in misfortune, which are afterwards taken alive
from its stomach, so that though its own flesh is not
eaten, it may furnish food to man by this means.
Little intelligence as fishes in general possess, we find
them endowed with instincts fitted to the requirements
of their condition; and when food cannot be provided
easily, several, like the fishing frog, have recourse to
artifices. Thus the lesser weever, sometimes called
the otter pike, or sting fish (Zrachimus vipera), very
ingeniously provides its own meal. This fish, which is
common on all the sandy shores of Scotland, and fre-
quently caught by fishers and shrimpers, feeds on small
crustaceans and insects, and in order to entrap them, it
hides itself in loose sand at the base of the water, leaving



FISHES, 61

only its head above, and here its open mouth serves as a
trap, into which the unheeding animals may glide.

This beautiful and brilliant fish was anciently called
the sea-dragon, for the same reason that we, in modern
times, call it the sting-fish. It has great power for mis-
chief, and can inflict a severe wound with its fin spines,
which will cause considerable inflammation. Pennant
remarks, that the fish knows how to dart its blows with
as much judgment as a fighting cock. The larger
species, called the great weever, or sea-cat (Z'rachimus
draco), is also termed sting-bull by the fishermen of
some of our coasts. It is less frequent than the smaller
kind, living in very deep water, but its sting is no less
severe ; and so injurious is it that the fishermen imme-
diately deprive it of its spiny fin, before it has power to
harm any one. The laws of France and Spain both
enjoin this practice on their fishermen. Unlovely as are
its actions, however, it is eagerly seized, for its flesh is
a great delicacy. It is about twelve inches in length.



THE WOLI-FISH.

The wolf-fish (Anarrhicas lupus) is another fish
marked by a savage character, which may easily be
traced in its physiognomy. It is confined to the

G



62 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

northern parts of our island, but is not unfrequent
there ; and though its flesh is well flavoured, its appear-
ance is so unprepossessing, that few like to eat it. The
people of the Orkney Isles call it swine-fish, but its
name of wolf is very suitable to its voracious and
fierce habits ; while it possesses teeth so formidable
that it can crush the hardest substance. It fights its
enemy with desperate fury. The fisherman’s net stands
no chance from its wild rage, and his hand receives a
severe wound if extended near it, while it battles with
the large fishes, and devours the smaller ones, making
little account of a whole host of crabs and lobsters,
which may be with it in the meshes.

There is a singular looking fish called the gar-fish, or
sea-pike (Belone vulgaris), common on the coasts of
Cornwall, Kent, Sussex, and some other counties. It
is very slender, and about twenty-four inches long, with
very long mandibles, much like the beak of a bird. Its
vivacity is so great that Mr. Couch says it will spring
out of its element, or for a long time play around a
floating straw, leaping over it again and again. As it
is often taken in the mackerel season, our fishermen
call it the mackerel guide : it has, besides, the familiar
names of horn-fish, long-nose, and sea-needle ; and in
Kent is well known by the name of gorebill. Its flesh
is not very well flavoured, but its bones are of a most
beautiful grass-green colour.

The common sea-bream (Pagellus centrodontus) is
a well-known fish on our southern shores, and ladies
living in our sea-coast towns make much use of its
scales for fancy-work. Pearly white roses and other
flowers arrayed on coloured velvet, and formed of these
scales, are exceedingly ornamental and well adapted for
bags, fire-screens, and various other purposes. The
bream is a yellowish red fish, and it is the young
of this species which are so well known as chads, and
which occur so frequently in our rocky pools. Neither
this, nor the equally common black sea-bream, is —
much valued as food.



FISHES. 63

The dory, or john dory as it is commonly called, the
zeus faber of the naturalist, is not one of our common
fishes, though often found, even in profusion, on the
shores of Cornwall or Devon. Yet this flat oval fish is

Li >

— [i

“ y) Z,
. e f Vy MY , y e re s 5
WUOC bY A c
= a A YS
= (%



THE JOHN DORY.

well known, because many are brought to London from
Plymouth and other parts of the Devonshire coast. It
is remarkable for its high repute among epicures, and
for the absurd legends which are attached to it. The
large- spot which is seen on each side of the fish, is
supposed to have been originated by St. Christopher,
who left the marks of his fingers on its body. Hence
the Greeks call it St. Christopher's fish. In France,
however, it is known as poisson St. Prerre, and in that
country the tradition relates that this dory was the fish
taken up by the apostle Peter, with the money in its
mouth for the payment of the tribute. It is also
commonly known in France as the forgeron, or black-
smith, because of its somewhat smoky appearance ; but
its traditionary names are very general, for the Italians



64 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

call it i janitore, or gatekeeper, in allusion to the
unscriptural notion of the keys which were supposed to
be held by the apostle Peter. The flesh of the fish is
excellent, and its name of John, though of uncertain
origin, is said to have been given by Quin, who has the
not very enviable repute of being one of the best judges
in matters of eating and drinking which some centuries
have produced.

Many a man who is waiting for full employment in
the fishing work, goes down and spends some hours in
catching the fish with a line from some pier head or
jutting rock. The atherine, or sand smelt (Atherina
presbyter), is often taken thus, and is a delicate little
fish of silvery hue, speckled with black. Sometimes the
visitor at the sea-side, who is fond of angling, sits
patiently on the rocks of our southern shores, dreaming
away in the sunshine, while from time to time he takes
from his hook this sand smelt, and is rewarded for his
patience by carrying away a basket full of them.

The grey mullet (/ugil capito) may be seen near
the margin of the shore, revelling in warm sunny
weather, and getting into water so shallow that we
can almost take it with the hand. Mr. Couch observes
of this species: “Carew, the Cornish historian, had a
pond of salt water in which these fish were kept ; and
he says that having been accustomed to feed them at
a certain place every evening, they became so tame,
that a noise like that of chopping wood could certainly
cause them to assemble. The intelligence which this
argues, may be also inferred from the skill and vigilance
which this fish displays in avoiding danger, more espe-
cially in effecting its escape in circumstances of great
peril. When enclosed within a ground-scan, or sweep-
net, as soon as the danger is seen, and before the limits
of its range are straitened, and when even the end of
the net might be passed, it is its common habit to
prefer the shorter course, and throw itself over the
head-line, and so escape: and when one of the
company passes, all immediately follow.”



FISHES. 65

Several fishes, as the cod or keeling, the haddock,
the whiting, and the sole, contribute very largely to
the portion of food yielded by the waters. Those
common and plentiful flat species, the plaice (Platessa
vulgaris), the flounder (Platessa flesus), and the dab
(Platessa limanda), ave also deservedly valued for their
abundance, and good qualities as food. They cannot
be called handsome fishes, but the flat form of these,
and other species, admirably adapts them for inhabiting
low places ; and as they are not furnished, like most of
their race, with air bladders, with which to buoy
themselves up, their destined place is near the ground.
Here on the sandy or muddy shore, the plaice hides
horizontally among the loose soil, with the head slightly
elevated above it. The eyes being both on the upper
surface, the fish has a wide range of view, in which to
secure its prey. Mr. Yarrell notices one of those
adaptations, so observable whenever we look into
nature. Referring to the plaice, he says: “ Light, one
great cause of colour, strikes on the upper surface only ;
the under surface, like that of most other fishes, remains
perfectly colourless. Having little or no means of
defence, had their colour been placed above the lateral
line on each side, in whatever position they moved,
their piebald appearance would have rendered them
conspicuous to all their enemies.” The flounder is
sometimes called flook, or mayock fleuke ; while the
Edinburgh fishermen call it the bull.

The turbot (Rhombus maximus) is common on the
sand-banks, at the east of our island, and considerable
numbers are taken at various parts of our coast.
“Though voracious it is somewhat dainty, and will not
touch a bait that is not quite fresh, being best attracted
by such little fish as the sea-scorpion and father
lasher. The brill (Rhombus vulgaris) is often the
companion of the turbot in sandy places, residing how-
ever not alone in the deep waters, but coming into more
shallow parts. It is abundant on the sandy shores.

There are several species called sucking-fishes, from

a3



66 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

their power of attaching themselves firmly to the
bottoms of vessels, or to their companions in the sea.
This they do by means of a flattened adhesive disk on
the top of the head; but whether they thus attach
themselves for the purpose of the shelter or protection
thus afforded, or whether it is in order that they may be
carried onwards ,without any effort of their own, is not
apparent. The common remora (Lcheneis remora) is the
species known to the ancients, and was the subject of



HEAD OF THE SUCKER-FISH.

many wild fancies in other times. It has been found at
Swansea, adhering to a cod, but is very rare on our
shores. This little fish was once believed to have the
power of stopping the sailing of the largest vessel, by
fastening itself upon it.
‘‘ The sucking-fish beneath, with secret chains

Clung to the keel, the swiftest ship detains ;

Such sudden force the floating captive binds,

Though beat by waves and urged by driving winds.”
None of the sucking-fishes are among those universally
distributed on the shores; but some, as the lump
sucker (Cyclopterus lumpus), a most grotesque looking
figure of a fish, is taken on various parts of our coasts,
especially on the north of our island. It is often ex-
hibited in the fishmongers’ shops in London, and is
looked at with wonder, because of the singular and



FISHES. 67

thick form, and the rich shades of blue, purple, and
orange which appear on its surface. It seems to be
common in the Orkneys, and is there called cock-paidle.
Pennant says of this fish, that on placing one into a
pail of water, it fixed itself so firmly to the bottom,
that in taking it by the tail, the whole pail was lifted
up by that means without removing the fish from its
hold, though it contained some gallons.

If we walk along the upper part of the beach where
the waves have left long lines of the refuse of the
deep, and where sea-weed, corallines, and shells engage
our attention, we are almost sure to find those little
things called fairy purses, or mermaids’ purses, lying
in the heap. There are two kinds of these. The
prettiest are of a pale horn colour, semi-transparent,
having at their four corners a tendril not quite so thick
as that on a grape-vine, but usually much larger, and
with more numerous curls. These tendrils cling about
pieces of wood or the stems of large sea-weeds, or creep
over stones, and hold fast. to them. They are the egg
cases of the small spotted dog-fish (Scidlium canicula),
a fish sometimes called on our coast the robin huss.
It is a species of shark; and though not having the
strength of those formidable monsters of tropical seas,
yet it has the true spirit of a shark in its voracity and
fierceness. The fishermen dislike it exceedingly, and
give to it many a familiar name expressive of: their
disgust ; for it not only devours large numbers of the
smaller fishes, but tears their nets by its determined
fighting, often coming up in numbers only to be
thrown away.

As we might easily infer from the numbers of these
purses lying on our shores, this robin huss is one of
the most common fishes, and still more numerous are
the egg cases deposited by the long-nosed skate, or
ray (Raia mucronata). Durmg winter and spring we
caunot take a walk by the shore without seeing them.
They are oblong horny cases of @ dark olive-green, and
having at each corner a projecting piece which looks



68 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

like a handle ; they resemble in form that very com-
mon object, a butcher’s tray. Sometimes they are
inflated, either by being filled with air or sea-water,
or by enclosing the young fish, but at others are empty
and flattened. Ladies frequently cut this case into
narrow strips, and putting them awhile in warm water,
use them as shields to the forefinger when at needlework,
and they answer the purpose very well, as they clasp
tightly round the finger. Sometimes the lover of sea-
weeds finds some very pretty ones attached to these
purses, making a little silky fringe at both ends, and
various beautiful little corallines cluster on and creep
over them. When the young fish is matured, it glides
through the opening at either end, and is at home in
the world of waters. This long-nosed skate, like some
other species of the genus, is a good fish for the table,
and when taken by the hook shakes itself with so much
violence that it needs care to secure jt. All the skates
are very voracious, and will eat great numbers of
smaller fishes, crushing up the crabs and little shell-fish
with great ease by means of their powerful jaws. They
are all flat and have long tails.

The thornback (Raia clavata) is another of these
flat fishes, and as useful as it is frequent, affording when
salted a good meal for sea-side people. It is a dan-
gerous fish if carelessly handled, for, besides that it is
covered on all the upper part of its body with small rough
points, it has large tubercular spines distributed here
and there among them. Often while examining the
things on the sea-shore we find pieces of the skin of
this common fish, the spines themselves having been
torn away by the action of the waters, but the oval bony.
base from which they sprang left there still, and puzzling
the sea-side visitor to tell what it can be. But the
limits of our little work forbid us to linger longer over
the fishes, or to describe some, which, like the sun-
fish, are so singular in form that few who had seen
them would ever forget them. This strange looking
fish, though occurring but occasionally, “may,” Mr.



FISHES. 69

Yarrell says, “ be said to have been taken from John 0’
Groat’s to the Land’s End. It is almost circular in
shape, and when observed in our seas, seems either
dead or asleep, floating along sideways, and of so in-
sensible and dull a nature that it does not even attempt



THE SUN-FISH.

to escape, but lets the sailor take it in his hand into
the boat. They are said to be phosphorescent.

Isaac Walton quotes an “ ingenious Spaniard,” who
says, “that rivers, and the inhabitants of the watery
element, were made for wise men to contemplate, and
fools to pass by without consideration.” Assuredly the
waters which wash our island might serve as food for
thought, did we even confine our meditations to the
largest of their inhabitants. “These,” said the psalm-
ist, “these all wait upon thee; that thou mayest give
them their meat in due season.” When the great
Creator commanded into being “every living creature
that moveth, which the waters brought forth, after



70 A BOOK FOR THE 8EA-SIDE.

their kind,” he was mercifully providing stores of food,
which we around this island are constantly enjoying,
and by means of which a large number of our commu-
nity subsist. Nor should we forget that from those
hardy men who are now casting out the net or line,
have sprung some of our most able pilots, some of our
bravest seamen, and that even in our own days many of
those who go out to succour the shipwrecked, braving
the storm at the peril of their own lives, and with little
prospect of reward, are men whose early days were
spent on the shores, among its rocks and shallows, its
waters and their inhabitants.





a
td
a

oe
Bo



CHAPTER IV.

THE BEACH—ITS STONES, FLOWERS, MOLLUSCOUS
ANIMALS, AND SHELLS.

TuerE is good exercise in walking, for those who are
strong enough to traverse a few miles of beach. Such
a walk may be tiring, but it has great charms to those
who love to hear all the variety of melody which
nature offers to the listening ear. Now the wave
dashes with force on the mass of stones, drawing up as
it retreats large numbers of them, but to scatter them
again with a music all its own: now it ripples more
softly among the pebbles, so gently that we can close.



72 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE,

our eyes, and dream that we are lying by the borders
of some pebbly rill, till the loud scream of the seagull
above us, so unlike the sweet songs of the minstrel of
the meadow or wood, recalls us to the remembrance
that the ocean is rolling there.

Countless numbers of pebbles, long since rounded
by the action of the water, constitute the shingly mar-
gin on which we are treading. We pick up one or
another, fancying, while wetted by the waves, that it is
a piece of jasper, or agate, or some other treasure, but see,
as it dries, that it is nothing uncommon. Dr. Mantell
has told us that those green false emeralds and aqua-
marines which are sought with such eagerness by
visitors on the Brighton and other coasts, are nothing
but water-worn fragments of common green glass
bottles ; and that the moss-agates, jaspers, and other
stones sold by the lapidaries and jewellers of the Isle
of Wight and of Brighton, are in fact of Scotch or
German origin.

But though the wanderer on our shores may never
find one gem of worth sufficient to encircle with gold for
an ornament, he may find at every step some wonderful
stone, with a history well worth his attention. Those
pebbles, rounded now by the long action of the waters
into shingle, are on many beaches mostly flints. They
were originally moulded in the chalk, and, like that
chalk, contain the remains of marine animals embedded.
among them. They are not, however, like the chalk
itself, entirely composed of an aggregate of fossil bodies.
This pebble, hard as it is now, must have been at one
time soft and fluid, for on the surface we may often
trace the markings of various marine objects, as a
sponge, or the spine of a sea-egg ; and on breaking it,
the scales of fishes, fragments of coral, perhaps a sea —
anemone or tiny shell, are perceptible. ‘These little
objects are the centres around which the flinty material
eradually accumulated, while it was in a fluid condition
in water. In this state it was precipitated into the
chalk before the latter was consolidated, these marine



THE BEACH. 73

objects all the while forming nuclei, around which the
siliceous earth hardened. A great proportion of the
pebble therefore, consisting of the siliceous earth, is
composed of the fossil skeletons of animalcules, “so
minute,” says Dr. Mantell, “as to elude our unassisted
vision, but which the magic power of the microscope
reveals, preserved like flies in amber, in all their
original sharpness of outline and delicacy of struc-
ture.”

It is evident that it was in a deep sea that many of
those pebbles had their origin, or they would not have
enclosed species now unknown, but well ascertained to
have lived in such a sea only. It was then that they
became embedded and hardened in the chalk, till the
chalk bed of ocean was upheaved by volcanic agencies,
and thus the line of sea cliffs was raised above the
waters; then came further elevations of land, bringing
up the fragments gradually worn away from the chalk,
and the sea beach was raised to the place which it now
occupies, several feet above the level of the sea. Mingled
with the pebbles lie pieces of limestone, or cement-
stone, or iron pyrites, while traces of human art and
industry, brought there by the tide, show that our sea
washes a shore inhabited by civilized and intelligent
man.

That sea-side poppy, (Glauciwm lutewm,) or horned
poppy, as we sometimes call it, because of the long seed
vessels, which, being often a foot in length, may be
seen afar off, like a horn, is a great and frequent orna-
ment tothe beach. Every rough wind flutters its golden
petals, but they will not fall for the wind, but will wait
till their time of withering comes. This flower is as
large as the poppy of the corn-field, and as shining in
its gold as is that flower in its scarlet. A large mass of
leaves, of most beautiful sea-green tint, grow around
the root, the upper ones clasping the stem, and the
lower leaves having so many prickles on them, that when
young, or when glittering with dew, they seem as if
silver were sprinkled there. All the winter they may

Ul



74 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

be seen on the beach, washed by the surf which is scat-
tered from the wave, or which, if the wind sets in on
the shore, covers them over as with little heaps of froth,
till the next gust blows it onward again. This yellow
poppy grows too on the base of the cliff, or on the
sand below the beach. It is an acrid plant, and its

1/1) WY
{/ iI

MITA

J Wi

AS
WS
‘ Ss



YELLOW-HORNED POPPY.

root, which is of the colour of the carrot, is so much
so, that if the juice is tasted, it long leaves an un-
pleasant and burning sensation on the tongue. Its
name refers to its sea-green or glaucous tint, but like
many a flower whose beauty had been marked by the
ancients, the old fables of the Greek mythology de-
rived it from a fisherman, who jumped into the sea
and became a god; a tale of little worth, save to remind.
us of the advantages which we derive, who have re-
ceived no cunningly devised fables, but have the word
of truth in our hearts and homes.



THE BEACH. , 75

‘« And wandering still beside the wave,
And culling flowers and fancies wild. |
I saw the hornéd poppy gild
The heights with blossoms rich and brave :

‘I saw its pods, like scimeters,
So fiercely battling ’gainst the breeze
That bloweth freshly o’er the seas,
And wafteth songs of mariners.”

Some very pretty trefoils flourish exceedingly well on
our sea-beaches, and tufts of sea-side plantain (Plantago
maritima) help to bind the stones together ; and many
a clump of the buckshorn plantain (Plantago coro-
nopus) is there, though we shall not go out, as the
housewives of old did, to gather it for salads. Starry
sea-side camomile (Anthemis maritimus), with its
cream-coloured rays surrounding a yellow centre, gives
its strong scent to the wind, and, but for its odour,
might, by one who was not a botanist, be confounded
with the sea-side feverfew (Pyrethrum maritimum):
this plant exactly resembles the mayweed of our corn-
fields, and grows all about the cliffs and shingle.
Vetches are there, too, with their tangling stems, and
in some places that pretty and graceful plant, the sea-
pea (Lathyrus pisiformis), creeps about the pebbly
beach. It is common on those of the counties of Lin-
colnshire and Suffolk, and it grows in abundance near
Walmer castle, in Kent, making the spot quite beauti-
ful in the month of July, with its handsome but
scentless flowers. |

But we must wander over these sea-beaches, fearless
of wetting our feet at their margin, if we would see
some of the wonders which the sea is throwing up, We
are no believers in the statement so often made by
people on the coast, that salt water cannot cause cold.
We know it to bea popular fallacy; but with a good
amount of exercise, and by changing the shoes pre-
viously to sitting, we believe we may venture on some
dangers which we could not brave amid the less invi-
gorating air of an inland region. Taking for our
present consideration one tribe of the inhabitants of
the waters, the mollusks and their shells, we have a



76 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

large field for observation and inquiry. A mollusk
may be described as a soft-bodied animal, with no legs,
no jointed members of any kind. These animals either
crawl or swim by means of extended portions of their
skins, which are rarely so enlarged as to deserve the
name of fins. They are sometimes covered with shells,
either composed of one piece or valve, or of two or
more valves ; but some mollusks, like our garden slug,
have no covering; and some, like the ascidians, which
we are about to mention, have only a thick leathery
mantle or tunic.

The greater number of marine mollusks live on sea-
shores, on rocks, on sand, in eddies, or the mouths of
rivers, and are hence called littoral species ; but there
are many kinds which live at great depths, and are
only thrown on the shore by storms. They feed on
animal or vegetable substances, in all conditions,
living or dead ; but the several families confine them-
selves either to one or the other kind of food. Those
which feed on living animals of the larger kind, pierce
holes in their shells by means of a proboscis armed
with hooks, and those which feed on the animalcules so
abundant in the waters, or on the small jelly-fish, or
other microscopic objects suspended in the fluid, can
produce in the water an almost circulatory movement,
by means of which these small creatures are hurried, as
in a whirlpool, within the reach of the mollusk.

The ascidians are shell-less mollusca, some of which
are simple, and others compound. Some of the former
animals are very common among our rocks and weeds
on the shore, adhering at low tide to the under surfaces
of rough stones, and hanging like “bunches of semi-
transparent fruit” to the sea-weeds, clinging with a
tenacity which renders it impossible to shake them off.
So common &re they, that the dredge is rarely brought
up from any sea-bed, without containing some of them.
They are irregularly shaped bodies, fixed at one side to
the rock, weed, or shell, while the other end is free.
Two or more openings are visible, and most persons



THE BEACH. 77

who, while wandering on the shore, have picked up
one of these animals, have been saluted with a shower
of water, which the ascidian ejects with great force
from these apertures on the slightest pressure. They
have not, usually, any beauty of form,—grace and sym-
metry are not their attributes; but the colours of some
species are exquisitely beautiful. Their leathery tunic
is sometimes crowded with small stones, or pretty little
shells, which completely burrow into the substance of
some of them. Often long graceful stems of horn-
coloured corallines hang like waving boughs about
them, or some tuft of sea-weed is like a silky cushion
on their surface.

That inactive apathetic mass, showing no signs of
life, save when it sends up a jet of water into our faces
from a distance of two, or even three feet, — that
apparently lifeless lump, is a creature well fitted by its
organization for its part in life. Its organs of circula-
tion, respiration, etc. are beautifully arranged, and it is
of great value as food to fishes and other marine
animals, while some of the ascidians furnish food for
the human species. Late observations have proved
that some of these, as well as some other living creatures
of the deep, enjoyed, in earlier stages of life, a greater
degree of freedom and activity. The ascidian, while
yet in a tadpole state, is able to swim through the
waters by means of a rapidly vibrating tail. At a
further stage of its existence, however, the tail dis-
appears, the animal affixes itself by its arms to the
stone or sea-weed, the part which appeared to be the
head sends forth roots, the orifices become visible, and
finally the strange tough gelatinous mass seems to have
lost the will and power of motion, and to be de-
pendent for its very existence on the tangle to which it
hangs.

Several of the species, like that common pale-green or
yellow kind, the intestinal ascidia (Ascidia intestinalis),
lie about our shore after a storm, or abound among the
rocks. One species (Molgula oculata) is described by

H3



78 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

professor Forbes as having a space in the midst of its
encrusted tunic, of a bluish or purple tint, mottled with
orange, with similarly coloured orifices, which look like
little dark eyes within a spectacle-formed frame. This was
found adhering to a
scallop-shell. Another
kind resembles at first
a little ball of sand on
a sea-weed, and when
we rub away the sand
we find that this was
merely a crust to an
object resembling a
small globe of ice.
Some are of greyish
white, or ashy red, or
brownish colour; some
of deep crimson, or
brighter scarlet ; ano-
. ther is tawny coloured
—<\ speckled with regular
2}, dashes of purple. One
Ee NN ‘ species taken on an

) oyster by Mr. Alder,























weet 5 ww is described as very
Ps sss ip : °
Cy ae like a raspberry, while
avery common species
THE ASCIDIA. on the sea-weeds, at
most parts of our coast (Cynthia rustica), is white and
smooth. Ascidians coloured like the china rose of our
gardens, or of bright orange and palest straw-colour,
sometimes scarlet within, lie unheeded among our sea-
weeds, and are often so covered with sand that we never
see their colours, while their internal structure is known
only to the anatomist. The most common size of
these animals is about an inch, or an inch and a half,
but many are three inches long.
We have spoken only of the simple form of ascidia,
but various compound species are also among’ the



THE BEACH. 79

common objects of our beaches and rocks. Few things
indeed are more frequent, and we know of none more
beautiful, than some of the larger kinds. If, as we
walk along at low tide, we turn up some of the loose
rough stones at the edges of the pools, or grasp at some
root of sea-weed which has been severed from its hold,
we see them looking like clusters of stars of silver, but
tinted with deep crimson or paler rose colour, with
orange, yellow, blue grey, brightest green or deepest
violet. All hues of beauty are seen on them, as they
are too on some which, instead of stars, seem as if they
were icicles hung on the weed by the hand of winter.
“Tf,” say professor Forbes and Mr. Hanley, “we keep
some of these bodies alive in a vessel of sea water,
we find them lie there as apathetic as sponges, giving
few signs of vitality, beyond the slightly pouting out of
tube-like membranes around apertures which become
visible on their surfaces; though a closer and mi-
croscopic examination will show us currents in active
motion in the water around those apertures, streams
ejected and whirlpools rushing 1n, indicating that how-
ever torpid the creature may externally appear, all the
machinery of life, the respiratory wheels and circulatory
pumps, are hard at work in its inmost recesses. In the
course of our examination, especially if we cut up the
mass, we find that it is not a single animal which hes
before us, but a commonwealth of beings, bound
together by common and vital ties. Each star is a
family, each group of stars a community. Individuals
are linked together in systems, systems combined into
masses. Each member of the commonwealth has its
own peculiar duties, but shares also in operations which
relate to the interest and well-being of the mass. Ana-
tomical investigation shows us the details of these
curious structures and arrangements, beautiful as wise.
Indeed, few bodies among the lower forms of life exhibit
such exquisite and kaleidoscopic figures as those
which are displayed in the combination of the com-
pound ascidians.”



80 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

Several kinds of botryllus are very common on our
weeds, and our engraving will serve to give a general
idea of their structure,—a being the natural size, and
6 a single group magnified. These compound asci-

PP pp neh

i)

HEN
MO ] Wd LLU
S “i Fil VS .
AY pee |
: = rae a /





i
i
‘
A ae =




BOTRYLLUS.

dians, however, vary much in appearance; one is
described as similar to a number of heads of madre-
pore; others are little orange-coloured masses, fixed
by a stalk to the rock. One, which is very common
on all our coasts (Leptoclinum maculosum), is a thin
hard leathery crust, surrounding the root of the
olive-coloured tangle, and is variegated with white
and blue. Our common serrated fucus, a sea-weed
hereafter to be described, has often in abundance a
whitish yellow species investing it. Some of them, as
the species called the sea fig (Aplidium ficus), have a
most disagreeable odour. Some kinds of ascidians are
linked together in chains.

Perhaps while lingering about among jetties, piers,
and other wood-work, the reader may have seen many
of the piles which are at times under water, pierced into
numerous holes, long worm-eaten looking cavities. This
destruction has been all effected by a long worm-like
mollusk, called the teredo, of which we have several
British species. Immense mischief is done by these
worms, undermining as they often do maritime works,
which a few years since have cost much labour and
money, piercing holes in ships, unfitting them for ser-
vice, and sometimes causing them to sink beneath the



THE BEACH. sl

overwhelming billows, while they even make holes in
the roots and stems of submerged living -trees, which
erow on the sea-shore of some of the hotter regions
of the earth.

Mr. Thompson mentions that a piece of pine wood,
nine inches in diameter, after having been for five years
and a half used as a pile, was so reduced by the
perforations of the teredines, as not to contain more



TEREDO NAVALIS.

than an inch of solid timber in any part; while at
several places it was completely bored through. This
pole was placed fifteen feet below high-water mark,
and was only left uncovered during low water at
spring tides. Often before some sea pier or break-
water is finished, the piles are so worm-eaten that
repairs are required for the first portion of the work.
The very existence of Holland was once endangered
by the ravages made by the shipworms in the em-
bankments so industriously and judiciously employed
for the protection of that country, when all at once
they left the spot, without any reason having appeared
for their doing so. Creosote and various kinds of
varnish have been employed to arrest their ravages, but
nothing seems more effectual than placing in the wood
a number of iron-headed nails, which rusting in con-
sequence of the moisture, seem to be unpalatable or
injurious to the teredines, and this drives them away
from the spot. But these shipworms have their uses
too. Every one living near the sea knows how often large
pieces of wood float in the waters, sometimes the
remains of shipwrecks, sometimes washed in from the
trees on the shore, which winds and storms have
brought low. Some of these piles, borne from climes
where vegetation is luxuriant, would hinder the ship in



82 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

its way over thewaters, and cause danger to the mariner,
did not the shipworms break them into small fragments,
and scatter them, leaving the smaller pieces for firewood
to the fisherman and other sailor. Many perhaps,
as well as the poet, have watched the blue flames
which hovered about the salt drift wood,—

« And as their splendour flash’d and fail’d,
Have thought of wrecks upon the main;
Of ships dismasted that were hail’d,
And sent no answer back again ;”

and while winds were blowing without, have lifted up
an anxious and prayerful thought, that He who holdeth
the water in the hollow of his hand would protect the
sailor.

The common shipworm (Zeredo navalis) has a long
tube, generally white and firm as thin porcelain, but
sometimes little more than a film; at times it is
altogether absent. The head is enclosed in a sharp
and hard two-valved shell, and this is the instrument
which, guided by powerful muscles, is employed in its
work. Not only naturalists, but political writers, have
occupied themselves in tracing the history of this
mollusk. Sellius, a native of Dantzic, wrote a book of
three hundred and sixty pages, in which he cited
nearly two hundred authors, and quotes lines of Ovid
alluding to it. Messrs. Forbes and Hanley give an
imitation of the classic lines, adding, that they were
singularly applicable to the history of Sellius himself.

‘“‘ For as the ship by hidden shipworm spoil’d;
Or as the rock by briny wavelet mined;
. Or as the rusted sword by rust is soil’d ;
Or book unused, the tiny moths unb:nd;
So gnaw’d and nibbled, without hope of rest,
By cares unceasing, is my tortured breast.”

But the different species of teredo are not the only
miners, for we have about our shores and lying there
before our eyes, every day, numbers of little excavators,
not only in wood but in stone. We have several
species of pholades, but the one which is most common,



THE BEACH. 83

and is to be seen on all our rocky shores, is the prickly
stone-piercer, or stone pidduck (Pholas dactylus), the
dail commun of the French. The shells of these
piercers are all white, more or less thin and delicate,
and consist of two long valves, of an oval form, which



PHOLAS DACTYLUS.

are open at one end. Several small and curious
valves are placed near the hinge, and just inside each
of the large valves is a little piece shaped like a spoon.
The outside of the valves is marked with ridges of
prickles.

We cannot observe without wonder the caves made
by this little creature, in wood, chalk, limestone, or
other hard substances ; some species of pholas preferring
one, and some another; but all selecting this dark
hiding-place. Not that this shell-fish is quite a hermit.
Apparently, it likes the companionship of its kind, for
the holes often open into one another, like little gal-
leries, unlike the cavities made by the teredo, which
are quite separated, though sometimes by a partition
no thicker than a film. Rocks of chalk, or red sand-
stone, or lias, perforated all over by the common
species, often stand up from the water, at low tide,
and shells then may be seen sometimes five or six
inches in length, and one inch and a half broad, This



84 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

species lives in all the seas of Europe, and in France
is in great request as food, though with us it is only
used for bait. Boys may often be seen searching for
these animals for this purpose. They call them clams.
All the species might be eaten, and one large West
Indian kind is commonly sold in the markets of
Havannah.

The mode by which the pholades make these cavities
has never been satisfactorily explained ; but it seems
probable that they act with the notched edge of the
shell, as with a saw, as they have been observed to
exhibit a rotatory motion while boring. The animal,
too, has, like many of the inhabitants of the sea, small
cilia (so called, because resembling an eyelash), and
these are used for creating currents in the water
around them, which may aid in clearing away the
already loosened particles. Some writers think that
they are aided by a solvent, but as Messrs. Forbes and
Hanley can find no secretion of this kind, they re-
mark, that if the mollusk is assisted by any chemical
action, it must be by the carbonic acid gas set free
during the process of respiration. It is remarkable
that our common snail (Helix nemorosa) has been
known to bore similar cavities in masses of carboniferous
limestone. Some other species of marine sbell-fish
also make the rocks look like honeycomb by their
labours. Such are some of the gastrochzena; but
they are less frequent than the pholades ; and such also
are the saxicavee, some of which, as the rough saxicava
(Saxicava rugosa), are abundant on some parts of the
coast. The shells of these species are not so well
adapted for rasping as those of the stone-piercers, and
both these animals and the land snails are thought
to effect their purpose by means of a weak secretion of
acid.

The stone-piercers are remarkably phosphorescent,
especially when fresh, though some remains of the
luminous property are exhibited, even when dried, and
it may be revived by the application of water. A



THE BEACH. 85

solution of sea water always increases its power, while
brandy immediately extinguishes the light. This is
also slightly decreased by sal ammoniac, and entirely
destroyed by acid. The luminous water becomes more
vivid when poured upon fresh calcined gypsum, rock
crystal, or sugar. Milk may be rendered phospho-
rescent by the pholas; but if mixed with sulphuric
acid, it loses its light, acquiring it anew if oil of tartar
be applied. Coloured substances are differently and
actively affected by it. Thus, white appears to receive
and emit the greatest quantity, while yellow and green
doso ina less degree ; red emits a very faint light, and
violet still less. One single pholas will render seven
ounces of milk so beautifully luminous, that all around
is clearly to be seen by its light. If the milk is ex-
cluded from the air, the light disappears, reviving again
on exposure to the atmosphere ; and in the exhausted
receiver of an air-pump the animal loses its light
altogether.

The rocks have their cavities made by mollusks, and
their surface, on the other hand, is often roughened by
the adherence of other tribes. Sometimes one of these
well-pierced rocks has almost every unbroken portion
crowded with barnacles. The sessile barnacle or ba-
lanus, of which there are many kinds, is known to every
one on the shore, for it encrusts our piers as with a
stony covering, crowds on the oyster shells, the scallops,
the rocks, the drift wood, and stones, either. in the sea
or just out of it, often encrusting vessels, especially
about the helm. This is commonly called the sea
acorn, and the shell is composed of several pieces, alto-
gether forming a cone. Our common specimens are
small, but sometimes we find this an inch long. The
other kind of barnacle is not so frequent, though often
covering masses of wood which the storm brings.
It is called the stalked or duck barnacle (Pentelasmis
anatifera), and its shell of five pieces is at the end of a
long stalk of a reddish colour. The shell itself is
very pretty and clear, with a bluish tint. These bar-

I



86 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

nacles are often seen in clusters, not only on floating
wood, but also on the keels of ships. In China, a deli-
cious dish is made of these shell-fish, which in boiling,
turn from red to white. They are described as resem-
bling the lobster in
yer” flavour. The ani-
/ mals which make
/? these shells are very
y: // beautifully formed,
/ and have arms like
little feathers, which
they put out be-
tween the valves of
their shells when
they catch their
food. No one, to
look at any of these
barnacles, could ima-
gine that they were
once active creatures,
swimming vigorously
and freely about in
the waters, instead
of being fixed to wood
or stone. But in
their first period of
existence, they were
4 a covered only with a
i thin crust, and had
limbs and tails which
adapted them for
making their way in the watery world, in which they
were for a period to find their residence.

The shells which we have hitherto described are,
though beautifully formed, almost colourless ; but we
know that shells are often as gaily tinted as the most
glowing flowers, and much do we prize many which
are gathered from far off seas. Shells are secreted by
the mollusks which dwell within them. The little

NS

LN
\ me }

DD

Hu TY
ye y

Wy

mn

SSS

<<
»



THE BARNACLE.



THE BEACH. 87

animal has, when first hatched, some small beginning of
a shell, quite colourless and simple, which, in the course
of time, it moulds into the shape which all its species
make, and adorns with brilliance like to theirs. The shell
is formed upon a basis of membrane, which, when by a
chemical process it is exposed to view, shows itself to
be either a network of cells, or a series of wrinkled
layers. This membrane is scarcely thicker than such
as the spider would weave ; but it is consolidated by a
mixture of carbonate of lime, which the mollusk secretes
from its food, and which, mingled with a living gelatine,
exudes from the glands of the skin. Doubtless, its life
is pleasantly employed in making this little cell, and
adorning it with pink, or green, or purple, or any other
brilliant tint, or with the various shades of fawn or
brown, which seem those most usually preferred by the
little painter.

Shells, in an early or rude state of society, have
various uses of which, in our age and country, we
know little. We make from them some beautiful gems
of art, and the shell has long formed the substitute for
the hard, flinty stones of which the cameos were formed
by the ancients. Shells are selected which afford the
necessary distinction of colour, and which, while they
are soft enough to be worked with ease, have yet suf-
ficient hardness to resist wear. The shells usually em-
ployed are univalves ; and the bull’s mouth, the black
helmet, the horned helmet, and the queen’s conch,
afford the material in greatest perfection. About twenty
years since, an Italian commenced the manufacture of
these cameos in Paris, and now about three hundred
persons are employed in that city in cutting them. Mr.
Gray, who read to the Society of Arts a paper detailing
the history of the manufacture of cameos, states,—“ The
number of shells used annually thirty years ago, was
about three hundred, the whole of which were sent from
England; the value of each shell in Rome being thirty
shillings.” He adds the prices of various shells used in
1847 in Paris, and observes,—“ The average value of the



88 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

large cameos made there is about six francs each, giving
a sterling value of 32,0004. ; and the value of the small
cameos is about 8,000/—giving a total value of the
cameos produced in Paris for that year of 40,0007. 5
while in England not more than six persons are em-
ployed in this trade.”

Various ornaments and beautiful pieces ofsinlaid work
are made of the nacre, or mother-of-pearl ; and several
bivalve shells furnish us with the pearl for feminineattire.
Some large pearls have been procured from British
species, but no shell of our land yields any to be com-
pared to the oriental pearls, or to that large one called
the globe of light, which is found in the avicula of the
Pacific Ocean.

But in many an island of the distant seas, dishes,
drinking-cups, spoons, knives, razors, and fishing-hooks,
are all furnished by the waters which lave their shores ;
and the very instruments of music are made of the sea-
shell. It has indeed a music of a softer nature for us—
a music which reminds us of rolling waters, and which
tempts us to lay our ear to its cavity, that we may listen
to its sounds.

«« Pleased it remembers its august abode,
And murmurs as the ocean murmurs there.”

But little like to this plaintive tone 1s the loud, sonorous
voice which the shell is made to echo by the savage, or
to the terrible war-cry which sometimes is uttered
through its spiral coils. That old writer, Pietro Martire,
is quoted by Southey as thus describing a custom of the
native Americans :— The doors of their houses and
chambers were full of diverse kindes of shells, hanging
loose by small cordes, that being shaken by the wind
they make a certaine rattelling, and also a whistling
noise, by gathering the winde in their holowe places ;
for herein they have a great delight, and impute this for
a goodly ornament.” In “ Madoc,” the poet describes
a Festival of the Dead, in which he refers to this
practice :-—



THE BEACH. 89

‘‘ Not a sound is heard,
But of the crackling brand, or mouldering fire,
Or when, amid yon pendent string of shells,
The slow wind makes a shrill and feeble sound,
A sound of sorrow to the mind attuned
By sights of woe.”

The negro girl yet decks herself in the nose-jewel and
earring made of the shell ; and so beautifully do some
tribes form their shells into wreaths and bracelets, that
the European traveller looks on them with admiration.
“ Some years ago,” says a writer in the “ Magazine of
Natural History,” “I saw in the museum of Mr. Bullock
a very magnificent piece of dress of this kind. It was
the chief mourning dress of ceremony at the funerals of
Otaheite. The part worn over the face was made of large
plates of mother-of-pearl shell, fastened together with
fibres of the cocoa-nut ; and the elaborate drapery
stretched across the breast was composed of several
thousands of pieces of mother-of-pearl, each separately
drilled and fastened together, in a manner that would be
found difficult for a European artist to copy.” Neck-
laces and other ornaments, made of shells, are also
preserved in the British Museum.

The inner layers of some large flat shells are polished
and used, as glass is for windows, in China and India ; the
flat shells of various species are used to skim milk ; and in
Zetland an elegant lamp is made of the spindle-shell
(Fusus antiquorus), hung horizontally, the cavity being
filled with oil, and the canal serving as a place for the
wick.

Shells are found to form an excellent manure for the
land, and are, even in our country, sometimes used for
this purpose ; and in China, India, and Africa, where
there is no stone for the lime burner, shells are used in-
stead. So pure is the lime procured from them, that
even the ladies in India, who are accustomed to chew
the leaf of the betel and the nut of the areka, commonly
mingle this with them to improve their pungent flavour.

But important as are some of these uses of shells, yet
they are not to be compared to the service which they

I 3



90 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

render in forming extensive portions of land. Chalk,
marl, and limestone are composed of marine relics, in
which shells largely mingle ; and millions and millions,
far beyond our computation, must have gone to make
up the substance of a single cliff. The mollusks die,
and the wave comes, with its broad sweep, and rolls
onward the empty shells, and dashing them against
pieces of rock, or projections of soil, reduces them to
fragments, which gradually become more crushed and
broken as the work is repeated. Then these masses are
drawn along in the direction of currents, and driven in
accumulated heaps along the shores. The strata which
result from this action of the waves are mainly composed
of broken shells, of which the asperities have been rounded
‘nto smoothness. It is also a circumstance worthy of
remark, that in strata of this character the fragments are
usually deposited according to the law of specific gravity,
and that they are scarcely ever mingled with mud or other
foreign matters, such shells as remain unbroken being
filled with shelly sand. Many instances of this increase
of land are to be seen on our coast. Such are the de-
positions, which being in the course of long years
pressed down by superior strata, and having in them-
selves a tendency to crystallize, become more and more
compact, and, finally hardening into solid rocks, leave
fow traces of their origin visible to the naked eye.

But we must return to our account of some of the
shells which the wanderer by the sea may be likely to
find there. Several species belonging to the gaper
tribe are common. ‘They are oblong shells, and some-
what rude in appearance, always more or less gaping
very widely at the two extremities ; both the shell and the
animal within are often covered with a coarse, wrinkled,
thin skin. The species all bury themselves in sand,
mud, or gravel. They have long siphons or tubes, and
when buried they remain in an erect position under
the mud, so that we may discover their retreats by
holes which correspond with the extremities of their
tubes.



THE BEACH. | 91

The truncated mya (Mya truncata) is a very plen-
tiful and widely opened shell, in the wet sand of our
coast. -In Zetland, it is boiled and eaten, and it is
there called smurslin, and several of the species are
good for food. It is abundant on the coast of New-
foundland, and said to be the favourite food of the
codfish.

Some shells which are deemed very rare by natu-
ralists, who seek for them on shores only, are very
common species in the deeper part of the sea. This is
the case with the triangular shell of the gibbous tellina
(Tellina gibba), which is so extremely prevalent as to
be a great annoyance to the habitual dredger. Other
species, which we do not often find on the land, are
brought to us in the stomachs of cods, halibuts, and
other fishes. “The haddock,” says professor Forbes,
“is a great conchologist : in his travels through the
countries of the mermaids, he picks up many curiosities
in the shell way. Not a few rare species have been
discovered by him, and the ungrateful zoologist too
frequently describes novelties without an allusion to the
original discoverer. As haddocks are not in the habit
of writing pamphlets or papers, the fraud remains un-
discovered, greatly to the detriment of science, for had
the describer stated to whom he was indebted for his
specimen, we could form some idea of its habitat and
history.” The cod is also said by this writer to be a great
naturalist in this way, though, apparently, he is not so
much devoted to the study of the mollusca, as to the
‘nhabitant of the sea-eggs, and to the star-fishes.

The razor fishes, though but a small tribe, are im-
portant bivalve mollusks, and are remarkable for their
long narrow shells, which might remind us of a pod
or seed-vessel of a plant. They are longer and narrower
than any other shells, and they and their inmates were
well known to Aristotle, who describes the habits of
one of the species. He says that it buries itself in the
sand at the distance of about two feet; that it does not
leave its hole, though it can sink or raise itself at will ;



92 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

that it is alarmed by noise, and when frightened, buries
itself very rapidly.

This description agrees with the habits of our British
species, two of which are very common, The pod razor
shell (Solen siligua) is a long shell covered with a thin
skin of a light brown or olive green, which when rubbed
off shows the shell beneath to be white, with a few bands
of dull purple. It is the largest British species, varying
in length from three or four to eight inches. The
animal is good for food, and much sought for on various
parts of our coast, but particularly prized in Ireland.
Women and children take many razor fishes by a very
simple process. They have a long wire sharpened at
one end, and bent. Searching in the sand for the holes
made by these animals, they put down the wire and
easily force them out of their hiding-places. The



SOLEN ENSIS.



THE BEACH. 93

French call the solen, manche de couteau, and it is,
indeed, very similar to a knife-handle. On the coast of
Normandy some of the species are very abundant.

The sabre razor shell (Solen ensis) is as plentiful
on sandy places as the other species, and very similar
to it, though more slender. It also inhabits deeper
water.

Much more beautiful in colour are the shells of the
tellen tribe, some of which are strewn upon all our
sandy shores, and occur with the common kinds of
scallop in all the baskets carried about beaches for sale.
They are mostly thin, delicate shells, beautifully sculp-
tured and painted with most rich and glowing hues,
though the little creature which makes the gay dwelling-
place is pale and colourless. The genus psammobia.
belongs to this tribe, and it contains some very ele-
gant and beautiful shells. One of these (Psammobia
vespertina), which, though rather a local species, is
abundant in some parts of the coast, is so beautifully
rayed with rosy hues, that it well deserves its name of
the setting sun. It sometimes is collected in great
numbers on our sands after stormy weather, and it
dwells near the shore, burrowing at a slight depth
beneath the sands at low water.



PSAMMOBIA FERROENSIS.

The faroe psammobia (Psammobia ferroensis) is
well known all round our shores, and is of an oblong
figure, tolerably strong and thick, with the valves
somewhat unequal. When fresh from the water it is
usually covered with a thin olive-coloured skin, and



94 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

when this is rubbed away we find it rayed with white
and delicate rose colour, or marbled with pink on a
whitish ground. Indented lines run closely from the
hinge to the edge, which are crossed by others ex-
tending the whole breadth of the shell, and the edges
are slightly notched. The highly polished interior is
white or purplish lilac.

The tellens are very numerous, not less than two
hundred species of the genus tellina alone being enu-
merated. They are to be found in every sea, though
abounding most in the tropics; and some or other of
them are, like our British kinds, among the most
frequent shells strewn by storms upon shores. The
tropic species are highly coloured and beautiful in form,
and much valued as chimney ornaments. The animals
all burrow in the sand.



TELLiNA TENUIS AND ROCK LIMPETS,.

Shells are so difficult to describe that we cannot
enumerate many species, but one of the very common-
est bivalves all round our coast must be mentioned.
This is the pretty thin tellina (7ellina tenuis), a sub-
oval shell, with a smooth surface, which differs in hue



THE BEACH. 95

in different individuals, being sometimes of pale crim-
son or delicate rose tint, at others, of orange or pale
yellow, or yellowish white. It is often shaded with
darker zones of the same colour, but is never marbled
nor spotted. It is about one inch in length, and five-
eighths of an inch in breadth. The pearly white thin
shell is sometimes iridescent, though now and then
stained with orange or rose colour.

An oval-shaped bivalve shell, called the white mactra
(Mactra alba), is very abundant in most sandy and
muddy places round our coast. It is very thin and



GROUP OF MACTRA,.

brittle, but not clear ; and its white surface is covered
with a thin glossy yellowish skin. It is about two-
thirds of an inch in size. Several other species of mac-
tra are cast ashore by the waves on our sandy margins,
and the solid mactra (Mactra solida) is a thick shell,
covered with an olive-green skin. It is sometimes
deeply furrowed or veined with grey or slate colour,
and sometimes of a dull yellow. A very similar species



96 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

is common on the shores of the isle of Arran, and is
there collected as food for pigs.

The donax is another large family, whose strong
shells are well known and abundant, and scarcely any
bivalve is more general on our shores than the trun-
cated donax (Donax trunculus). It is oblong wedge-
shaped, firm and glossy, one inch and a quarter broad,
and marked both from the hinge to the edge and from
side to side with close
deep lines, banded
_ with purple, and hav-
ing small notches at
the edge. The animal
within is usually of a
dull white, but is
sometimes of pale
orange colour, and the
form of its shell is

DONAX TRUNCULUS. admirably adapted to
its habit of burrowing in the sand. The name of donax
is from the Greek word for reed, and a flying reed is
used by the ancients for an arrow. ‘The shape of the
shell is very similar to the head of a javelin, being thick
at one end, and gradually tapering towards the other.

The truncated mya abounds on the sand, and its
shell looks as if one end had been cut off; and several
species of lutraria are common shells. One of the
many species of Venus, the striated species (Venus
striatula), is more easily described, and is found every-
where on sandy tracts. It is triangular and _ heart-
shaped, often painted with delicate zigzag lines of a
brown or purplish brown colour, nearly an inch and
a half in length. Several of the species are common,
and some are more gaily painted than this, and are
justly admired for their brilliancy and smoothness of
surface. It was the beauty of some of these which led
to the fable that Venus selected one of these shells for
her car, and they are used everywhere as decorations.
The North American Indians cover their dancing shoes





THE BEACH. 97

with them, and their movements produce a tinkling
sound. There are one hundred and fifteen species of
Venus enumerated.

The island cyprina (Cyprina islandica) may claim
a passing notice as being one of our largest native shells.
It is not rare on any part of our coast, though essentially
it is anorthern species. It has been known to measure
four inches and a half in breadth, and more than an
inch in length, but its ordinary size is somewhat less.

A singular and handsome shell is the heart isocardia
([socardia cordata). Its name would enable the reader
to identify it, for it is truly heart-shaped. It is of a
dull white colour, marked with fawn or dingy red.
The animal within appears to be insensible either to
sound or light. It fixes itself, by means of its foot, on
the margin of a sand-bank, at too great a distance to
be disturbed by storms. “There,” says the Rev. Jas.
Bulwer, “the isocardia of our Irish Sea patiently col-
lects its food from the surrounding element, assisted in
its choice by the current which it is capable of creating
by the alternate opening and closing of its valves.” It
is chiefly obtained off the Dublin coast.

The last named shell is better known to those who
are in the habit of examining collections of shells, than
to'the wanderer by the sea-side. Not so the common
cockle (Cardium edule), whose strong ribbed shell is
familiar to everybody, being found all round our coast
wherever there is any sand. The shell is still used in
the Hebrides for skimming milk; and in the feast of
shells in the days of Fingal, that of the cockle was,
according to Macpherson, the heroes’ cup of festivity,
being known by the name of sliga-crechin, or the drink-
ing shell. Large heaps of the empty shells, strewed by
the doors of cottages, often serve to show howagreeable a
food to the labourer are the small globose animals
which once occupied them ; and the cockle is certainly
one of the best flavoured of the mollusca. Though we
cannot agree with those who prefer it to the oyster, as
some do, yet it is no despicable food when roasted or

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'2011-11-17T00:38:36-05:00'
describe
'313' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYA' 'sip-files00001.txt'
a9a2b8e9e46ac814afb5679f9614c750
37bc15d0cd8c2a39be141b0f5d65e3e42b0a04c1
'2011-11-17T00:33:29-05:00'
describe
'3292' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYB' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
4f63646be6525d081bd360ab6aecad94
79d5c198c0c38397a14fdec1932ba3b48e1555a8
'2011-11-17T00:33:58-05:00'
describe
'1062048' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYC' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
b65c40044c7a45995100da6969a279d6
3cb5a549595363d21da056a942e30e93fd6d6140
'2011-11-17T00:31:22-05:00'
describe
'44848' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYD' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
3b6e34be74f62530b5101e222141321a
be0ec793746dd0b82afc82eca82efe7fbcef7711
'2011-11-17T00:38:37-05:00'
describe
'1327' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYE' 'sip-files00002.pro'
5f656200eaf949b753245e36ab173d30
230a3e951a85b33eb872c392ee0e18f8bcfcc1a9
'2011-11-17T00:35:05-05:00'
describe
'13232' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYF' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
efdd1538545404acdba822353d3e8fae
16e12e5bcb5c35de6a57b1e85a0a49e8c37f4477
'2011-11-17T00:31:58-05:00'
describe
'8506843' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYG' 'sip-files00002.tif'
f51299f00dd2d4215b59c65cf9f6552d
0f902053314c0a71a90760b37470a647a67fbe6d
'2011-11-17T00:31:27-05:00'
describe
'466' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYH' 'sip-files00002.txt'
eea7a25b1b75abaf217479aeca2456c8
4e71d10e28e86dd0e8fb06599381cca996bd7e55
'2011-11-17T00:33:44-05:00'
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'4353' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYI' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
a8e966eb72331effde90d5176f1aea87
6392465a5fdd1fc3bc80cea1fed683521c9b3103
'2011-11-17T00:40:09-05:00'
describe
'965388' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYJ' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
5b96b073e3422b41796ff25a7ed4e6da
0421b3463c3a751e7a652fea23710c81d5c92060
'2011-11-17T00:31:03-05:00'
describe
'75607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYK' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
61b3bfe1eb384ecd51405d24ed6c777d
7fe1c38ad43660a523c5f0aacce4e662cee24066
'2011-11-17T00:37:24-05:00'
describe
'536' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYL' 'sip-files00003.pro'
fb7e7a2fc82c18e7b591b17b5fd7e677
8112d5f2ef09d01c8e884ce190f870a19d154c21
describe
'19845' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYM' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
658822eb6e145a4da940b2bc7f39bcc3
18e1791ba772ffbe20ea73d749e69e27c0f12870
'2011-11-17T00:34:14-05:00'
describe
'7732359' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYN' 'sip-files00003.tif'
a5e8df565f83d5c8d923caaae1ed8076
8f4126634ebd99ad8d6d93809e51049039a491e5
'2011-11-17T00:32:52-05:00'
describe
'123' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYO' 'sip-files00003.txt'
2bcaff268164017986b1a094580f5def
55a184a2d5f7e1b2dc8f266a753fe7c9e93df7f3
'2011-11-17T00:38:12-05:00'
describe
'6159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYP' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
bbed6d990fb3dbaf4353240964f57bba
f70a1df4d35eee203ff6d02b52f4d0dc9c4ebefe
'2011-11-17T00:36:42-05:00'
describe
'904402' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYQ' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
fb677d8c55932223f2f139e1fc527d01
10f1985383419484f2b36abc2b36b018aa9351d7
'2011-11-17T00:30:49-05:00'
describe
'43578' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYR' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
8c0315b067392df23a39ef1dfc1adf88
98468434db4af66fa4e2bd61d3dd2699af825f44
describe
'11052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYS' 'sip-files00004.pro'
eb6741083916f600183ab83f34314516
796b31c9097434b0b2960aaa28e79841dfe0c74c
'2011-11-17T00:35:20-05:00'
describe
'13932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYT' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
5be89211aee3b380ce89ce3fd07c83de
05e17471c1689bbeeedd253f7dd6bd0fa4949f44
'2011-11-17T00:39:02-05:00'
describe
'7752903' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYU' 'sip-files00004.tif'
1caac6f84d2c6c250df5043a5df22636
59425dfb7041396cd9b736ed9fe31407d0636b30
'2011-11-17T00:34:49-05:00'
describe
'732' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYV' 'sip-files00004.txt'
079c0db4c2164de2018de4324a8a2802
8d41bd49e32b455764ac3508a30a2ac8c5c76a71
'2011-11-17T00:36:46-05:00'
describe
'4655' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYW' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
896fb7e91d1dbcc5b233863e120294c6
17d4f4ca109c1b3f3250b67d42abdd6a5d91b3b3
'2011-11-17T00:38:32-05:00'
describe
'584696' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYX' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
aeb192f9f2e3b98a8034d2912ee4353e
11e36fbd279205c3ff68f2a1abdd344c01bcfa3a
'2011-11-17T00:39:01-05:00'
describe
'14041' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYY' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
40947692e79a0e45f400429215c4b82f
148c5baa4093a17b8f55ba2784d04bd7947ff44d
'2011-11-17T00:38:43-05:00'
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXYZ' 'sip-files00005.pro'
ee46dd94b01ad74cff02096295d9c59c
5542a65465748862094e84674d57e8d3dd1794ac
'2011-11-17T00:35:15-05:00'
describe
'3953' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZA' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
0d0a3e23af1c162cd52ec54acf17a506
cf00e9eb657aad3ba069fa5168662eebb20ef954
'2011-11-17T00:35:09-05:00'
describe
'7704415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZB' 'sip-files00005.tif'
dac94b94d9114a3101cfaa39741dcb1f
f0f4bfeea4d361b4b7d1bd55f9e56565dfab9e4e
'2011-11-17T00:40:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZC' 'sip-files00005.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-11-17T00:32:07-05:00'
describe
'1437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZD' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
ff7918f4de0745579796646374301599
288ce3177dc7d1d396059bf3a710739db808f9bf
'2011-11-17T00:35:23-05:00'
describe
'831205' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZE' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
f59922d7ec04bf7f9433e718c4aab854
90df4a967f22088e9944d55f2e7e76d74f5b5458
'2011-11-17T00:38:48-05:00'
describe
'37385' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZF' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
027d52761e27de7ff371799da3d90dbe
cf908965814a1c467a2bd477c8aef5786d1ec579
'2011-11-17T00:35:02-05:00'
describe
'13344' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZG' 'sip-files00006.pro'
735f3fc38b0acb1311959f1a9a0dff56
86276a657c1752ab1e4fc53f16c5ddb0ac5f7a82
'2011-11-17T00:33:01-05:00'
describe
'13275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZH' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
dfc1682245fce04ce4353808b5874646
986fb1e7b8a08b7d6e8f67498d23077c812a9ba1
'2011-11-17T00:33:48-05:00'
describe
'7951769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZI' 'sip-files00006.tif'
ea86616062ee4301b26950dcc9e92340
0a23e1eca5137247f84884cbd8ff7d3e05b38e4e
'2011-11-17T00:36:24-05:00'
describe
'754' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZJ' 'sip-files00006.txt'
ea2c54bfcef1bedefe17f0a9664c321f
2f0bd9ce229b8d63480df632e4284e0a239ab65c
'2011-11-17T00:37:00-05:00'
describe
'4240' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZK' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
0bb43d6b0cb393f510608a9e7e7213c6
902b25d7b2c45fe8c4890c3674df78b305d486fe
'2011-11-17T00:30:24-05:00'
describe
'712234' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZL' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
987112de9e764cf8b8b0dcb716c8a028
6d6189f50c8ee88f6fb37ad5b2fb3f46ac4cbc73
'2011-11-17T00:35:45-05:00'
describe
'24782' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZM' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
6536fff3de69a817c4f7e96bba82ba86
e187d1abb8d70a34f1912f2a05eac7d8cbf3dfb2
'2011-11-17T00:38:44-05:00'
describe
'6093' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZN' 'sip-files00007.pro'
32ef131e834a01a48959309d43a0b3db
703fdd5aa85f810eabc0db3bb43750cefbbf8749
'2011-11-17T00:30:29-05:00'
describe
'8538' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZO' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
fa63ab5e19d434c23d7b326c1aec5f05
cb5eb260b77d846437cfb164777359e98ea2255f
'2011-11-17T00:31:54-05:00'
describe
'7976323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZP' 'sip-files00007.tif'
844d4cff827f9021278ee916bfc338ec
4a6805d28a4f299f578b6b2013e82dc08d9e9710
'2011-11-17T00:39:20-05:00'
describe
'392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZQ' 'sip-files00007.txt'
377c82214343a7d0a4b1833674683c69
3d37f9ec7bbb1b5d155503ef1db35f5f98225b3f
'2011-11-17T00:35:37-05:00'
describe
'2767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZR' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
8a26cb524347794fe0576962e79e2620
b8d0400daab8335f40e54b220700ce82423753d1
'2011-11-17T00:37:30-05:00'
describe
'982716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZS' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
3736106bdcca187cde6dcce546caabc8
e99dd2f4798c50cebb931e1f6b7576396a7e3cfe
'2011-11-17T00:29:45-05:00'
describe
'69636' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZT' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
6abcf77efcc509fa6b6a5b2d34db6a83
837fce63bd95573a179ead3f06034ca30c19768e
'2011-11-17T00:38:23-05:00'
describe
'33708' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZU' 'sip-files00008.pro'
3b12a0fe26b254a80e4a228b4631a4ea
7b344436049219c77e74d5f7c70a37c5b99afab2
'2011-11-17T00:34:47-05:00'
describe
'24211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZV' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
83c18df2f3fb2b5f79825a2711c607ed
c51262b2481e23da043ee29b534b8e505fce8dd0
'2011-11-17T00:40:18-05:00'
describe
'7871235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZW' 'sip-files00008.tif'
d850315806e7803cb9150fe5d9a37c28
54ce4011253c9001c7a548913f5ce56294db4323
'2011-11-17T00:34:29-05:00'
describe
'1446' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZX' 'sip-files00008.txt'
27b4f5a5a50b5dcaa8c3ecdd23648b2d
d06ac6fa7a86c3d2e9e81da2cf3a88416442ba98
'2011-11-17T00:32:37-05:00'
describe
'6585' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZY' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
aa65a3fd4c2ec051f3164a1f4578caa9
92709f4185a33c9653f51c9f173304ce032eb31f
describe
'973589' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAXZZ' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
4d9939cba8acfc8f4ae2996912bc6cca
522e346e02b0dd1f0a672657f954c88ee807cd92
'2011-11-17T00:34:25-05:00'
describe
'62739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAA' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
9e78faba68e3b9acee5ad561743c1bfe
f2719f02df4b3603fb8bf03191dc22998f8c4c3d
'2011-11-17T00:37:10-05:00'
describe
'26957' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAB' 'sip-files00009.pro'
0e7bfa43c94560cc89530dea645be058
893cd954de8df106c661d9b00546aab1f1ff886a
'2011-11-17T00:29:33-05:00'
describe
'20637' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAC' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
c4321fb817f08fcaab8e4d2d81d55c76
5b52de7cf8817a4707a57fd9d2d1e64edc982f31
'2011-11-17T00:39:21-05:00'
describe
'7797987' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAD' 'sip-files00009.tif'
eb3a6daf0f8972d7d024f0dad1748ae0
ac2784a21bbccea9a6d0f135732dc447b388d21e
'2011-11-17T00:37:28-05:00'
describe
'1206' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAE' 'sip-files00009.txt'
5b719ecdfc774a7581c50af27941d277
a37a3eda0a93fffce93eb632632e5358a50485eb
'2011-11-17T00:34:27-05:00'
describe
'5739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAF' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
2dbe7bfbbabf42293ee6e2709987917b
df5aad471401b6071365fa7c37e1b5dc8978be4d
'2011-11-17T00:31:13-05:00'
describe
'945553' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAG' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
14e817156686cf1a067ac3a3ba9e5250
fc32860fc7c92edb4717634549541b8d86ca3b9b
'2011-11-17T00:39:03-05:00'
describe
'85940' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAH' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
a223f9a40f7ca6e0a26ab5b3757254ae
14d19694ecd55c538557bd301be002424df534a0
'2011-11-17T00:33:34-05:00'
describe
'11437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAI' 'sip-files00010.pro'
c2a930b9a568ff18f1b98a3f0856f2fa
c38739e471d41bd087188d4e5a5498e47927490b
'2011-11-17T00:39:05-05:00'
describe
'25315' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAJ' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
6f4dd0a47a6674342a001407c5174312
a4f4f913f94e2899b697e809a6e381b5b693961e
'2011-11-17T00:29:52-05:00'
describe
'7574211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAK' 'sip-files00010.tif'
2365aee9c90247f12e9d16b203143ce6
4566484cb63488c9208b243bdcd8288f59377173
'2011-11-17T00:34:18-05:00'
describe
'607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAL' 'sip-files00010.txt'
d41f55cf8211a7d903213ac0badd86ed
1677e522f801e31a66f2c65eaa84a846f24f2d40
'2011-11-17T00:37:40-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'7629' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAM' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
a0bbac6b5f109fc37f90e0d07235cc11
3b7ec30857ba7a19653270e9f3091a9bb2ffedcf
'2011-11-17T00:34:02-05:00'
describe
'945256' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAN' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
50fd80affef406b248cc7ee4a203eb9e
f8a837b08101ac1c4caeca4750f1fe0db45fb9fc
'2011-11-17T00:37:57-05:00'
describe
'130130' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAO' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
f559923ded0bc2b55b4b2ab552c3c8d4
f8f2b5d6075ff5cc6882111d85d00c13a38e0a83
'2011-11-17T00:38:34-05:00'
describe
'50819' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAP' 'sip-files00011.pro'
5f4407e256710d151a742843763a0e86
39826c628500fa01acbf1f666e05c5e528da8b87
'2011-11-17T00:34:16-05:00'
describe
'43014' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAQ' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
4c18ea2e4ab8bedfefcce86b1f733d40
2f664f91228f664720b5cee9b35d856f680d42f7
describe
'7571361' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAR' 'sip-files00011.tif'
96a17708956eefe2890f0b08aaf44518
85589b5adf1a2e81d503e0d53d69737fd0f90cf0
'2011-11-17T00:39:56-05:00'
describe
'2153' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAS' 'sip-files00011.txt'
7ae585ad6f2a1b1e42536b29c484abbc
49733efef11a4dc8ed73ae0258e581fad9da0bf5
'2011-11-17T00:33:35-05:00'
describe
'12596' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAT' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
2906f4b7acc730533aa44b8cfc5c1396
7e3d74a002fd547e240803d21a22b699422ec167
'2011-11-17T00:32:15-05:00'
describe
'924446' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAU' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
b98eb1723580c01566958d2974e96828
c8a759ba7d635421e21b7ba80fe110a3d10dcf7c
'2011-11-17T00:34:15-05:00'
describe
'130179' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAV' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
71b1eb4681a0cd6ae48631660136b68f
3f68b7a7a14550d9bea677b6d7a7654b14ae034d
describe
'51153' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAW' 'sip-files00012.pro'
c01ee811451583965ad3ec0df5c46135
e3b6d86bca7dc39c7286057602be67dde87f55ce
'2011-11-17T00:37:47-05:00'
describe
'42923' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAX' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
7e65bcd7231d90a8dd03deb4d6bb7c51
a083d15eaf4304a0911f2628a5d4acd015acc9a7
describe
'7402355' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAY' 'sip-files00012.tif'
7a6c8946dac13535df951508171d29fb
d552f1280795da8c0e41f8b9ee38949ba465d37c
'2011-11-17T00:34:03-05:00'
describe
'2135' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYAZ' 'sip-files00012.txt'
3691008a0aea25df913539caf36e561f
de51e81edfa476f093e7a8c5eb10c7d973d77033
'2011-11-17T00:37:22-05:00'
describe
'12475' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBA' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
dd468b8d97911a277d56d57f46be6b5d
956204eea762ae13e4e991c6b31b1d614c2d6040
'2011-11-17T00:38:21-05:00'
describe
'922222' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBB' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
01a4bdc8f8f49d8317da58caf14994fb
86eb8b8de45606a8aa88676cb99b0e96ff6bbb9f
'2011-11-17T00:40:02-05:00'
describe
'126353' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBC' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
d45558bd22c7145bb949167a13ba8a7f
732f82682cdbdc8622ed431609c05fab589f023b
'2011-11-17T00:39:00-05:00'
describe
'50394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBD' 'sip-files00013.pro'
eefea5e65a0bbf3fc9197ec6b01395fb
24a411f3d60a9853c38cefa4a114613fd604ec00
'2011-11-17T00:37:35-05:00'
describe
'42151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBE' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
0c736eb2cd492f9052b7f6c93dc361d0
22b4dfd98d70599631a0bc28dbdc206de24a5a6d
'2011-11-17T00:32:08-05:00'
describe
'7384745' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBF' 'sip-files00013.tif'
931361134713d24bd38cbd6f09768355
b4cc418ed91c1726c44eaaf0df8df4d9d6b8f35c
'2011-11-17T00:32:21-05:00'
describe
'2138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBG' 'sip-files00013.txt'
81c27bf820e3a7db6dc12c11e8b9c4cf
8727309981982e06239eca75280578a13a9f3352
'2011-11-17T00:34:44-05:00'
describe
'12346' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBH' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
07a479d0f79e43c5547253976c8f51ab
5da18798f9c306ca4fc718e273a9123edd210ea1
'2011-11-17T00:33:52-05:00'
describe
'923154' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBI' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
7ba497297b7f0f3a4f16f4877ac2c7dc
3a64180ebe6a9418dc94a72f8b3361e030730b98
'2011-11-17T00:38:56-05:00'
describe
'134043' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBJ' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
e5b74ac324ff2b87c0900acb69a2c861
5198a6be7e2dd4c8f964d5ccba6c4dbece7af6d3
'2011-11-17T00:37:55-05:00'
describe
'52579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBK' 'sip-files00014.pro'
6a6507947bcc39631c84a90986b46514
16649d0f458f5479f4dca545816abaa32f874418
'2011-11-17T00:37:27-05:00'
describe
'44556' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBL' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
da0ca3142671730a0f22106427349abb
fb97f78e8ded7245ed9658f7043e39f9a6aac7f7
'2011-11-17T00:39:24-05:00'
describe
'7392123' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBM' 'sip-files00014.tif'
f26266b95c5cdf428f8053301a36854a
5c430176dcdc3a41b9ddadd2c41d3e533b5b2abd
'2011-11-17T00:31:48-05:00'
describe
'2257' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBN' 'sip-files00014.txt'
4316acfd6fc6f222775cdc4fd72e00f4
835d9625760aab55922dfce122c3485d9e7780de
'2011-11-17T00:30:13-05:00'
describe
'12693' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBO' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
9db9dfd449189f6162ee38eace50d04d
17c9da844ebb4596e2d198e6c9862b3d7ed935ad
'2011-11-17T00:35:06-05:00'
describe
'913181' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBP' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
cc0b74e01b2f7b3bbea13cbcf6ed078c
9acae8256b72c691846f1b8a2ddae79bb373edfb
'2011-11-17T00:36:03-05:00'
describe
'139426' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBQ' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
fafbfab6ab22a2e2909fe52fd390ed23
60e60584dd2003f672d8a9aa06fa4cc9e46e1687
'2011-11-17T00:38:38-05:00'
describe
'52708' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBR' 'sip-files00015.pro'
8278ba12af7c7b8e2e8fbc780755304d
5dc5fa41fa3ea6ee9349fb35e4af15a97e793e05
'2011-11-17T00:31:39-05:00'
describe
'46553' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBS' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
a20686f3e5a8537a12632f0aea3b7450
a258ef28072d94a46f78143cf7637bc8e142ae32
'2011-11-17T00:38:13-05:00'
describe
'7314465' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBT' 'sip-files00015.tif'
cd599a3a24094c235cf9b78571a7a02e
3bb67fc0363f9e2e611e6ff433baf27b7a422157
'2011-11-17T00:29:35-05:00'
describe
'2233' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBU' 'sip-files00015.txt'
fb29d94770d8475fab2eb5e12758f4de
940e424db37b95beca8e157068b70179a89681f4
'2011-11-17T00:36:04-05:00'
describe
'12963' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBV' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
25d0417527327e82c8ac471c582635a5
f0cbf1509f8b119b4846408bb609cc6e2dee78e5
'2011-11-17T00:35:56-05:00'
describe
'940819' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBW' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
af7d2bc575cde5fe47c3c93c237d6b89
ad93d12b8a1961ffc4d8dc3175128b335349f719
'2011-11-17T00:32:34-05:00'
describe
'132694' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBX' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
1466fba587032caeb68f0fb4379023f4
dd21531628583e7f885d660b45a73720f1627cdd
describe
'51862' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBY' 'sip-files00016.pro'
b58f15ae18d47977976c7c51c0f8a744
b2834c9659e8f6a6851f3e15b6d50b2aaec87d44
'2011-11-17T00:34:01-05:00'
describe
'43958' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYBZ' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
c6c2c40f217d704b21faa3b82d645cf5
02dfbadb72e2c5f7a3b1c52879957c386e3037c7
'2011-11-17T00:34:00-05:00'
describe
'7535955' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCA' 'sip-files00016.tif'
496f5c6e42397c671de3c2c09010158b
78e757eeb62db1b1eae52ce619d09fc048ff9934
'2011-11-17T00:39:40-05:00'
describe
'2184' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCB' 'sip-files00016.txt'
ccdebefdd0f8603a18cfa61dcf8bae07
41351f5d3037db7a4dd77ad7726d6dc3e74f0eb1
'2011-11-17T00:36:19-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCC' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
f5814d8004e21c52704c2f1c5fc7f221
7f7584ddb46bebd5b6848a057108dfacad971e94
'2011-11-17T00:40:17-05:00'
describe
'953927' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCD' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
c0f041e2e1cc8f8462db29bd73b76b19
a5a6b50496518d29b30ea31778b0865440f0088a
'2011-11-17T00:33:43-05:00'
describe
'134119' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCE' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
d5b76847e44b9f8437726985b35f5cac
ec36b0cd6ac1bbc94a176a6af0317de36e71d720
'2011-11-17T00:30:25-05:00'
describe
'53649' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCF' 'sip-files00017.pro'
1843d8d2dfa9c9c95342dd082ec5582e
ce3b19b379eeaeb17230e387a260beaead1a03c7
describe
'44000' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCG' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
6a74dd75983a297b0ae595b7d07c9dd1
8822d11c9ee54497081514b72eddcaeeb73f929e
describe
'7640729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCH' 'sip-files00017.tif'
d99436bb561fd0d7827f2077b127bb36
77be219e9847b080c3bda656e40df441ad284014
'2011-11-17T00:37:05-05:00'
describe
'2277' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCI' 'sip-files00017.txt'
1f35d5ded82c8d18da4708e0ac26801e
fbd174c37a67336b29235ecab19e0047628ff0fa
describe
'12408' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCJ' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
c5ee4e050de72efbda235dcc0a91e52d
14cd461b8c1e124ab599624b25e6629d84f4813c
describe
'936312' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCK' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
c8d9d257a407e5eeb96aa7bd2fa7819e
c22a4575f4ef326a639622b4f3b510c5b5febda0
'2011-11-17T00:33:39-05:00'
describe
'118903' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCL' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
cf28dc30193477e424800fd21ae93fd6
292c85aa9a68afaaccc13ca974fd2900c117a0b0
describe
'45987' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCM' 'sip-files00018.pro'
a94f3fc568eaef97e336cecfbe7ba345
8dac86b79aa5c7ad67825277598b0e8a1f76de96
'2011-11-17T00:30:32-05:00'
describe
'40056' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCN' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
56820f6ee1332a7302933d70a4c18fc6
5e231918d5951eb97127632975a69ae2d0766d9d
'2011-11-17T00:31:02-05:00'
describe
'7499681' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCO' 'sip-files00018.tif'
0df1ffb69aec3477661856bb426ccd65
481354e0cdbcdfdb543368052f5264de66bc27ac
'2011-11-17T00:34:35-05:00'
describe
'1954' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCP' 'sip-files00018.txt'
77caf150033f1424ebf7bfc4a251bc15
fc9fa376e26177dd8e3395bdf2c91e9b8e080bc6
'2011-11-17T00:30:43-05:00'
describe
'11700' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCQ' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
c0bd2e6aed6f9d81d081748f95bfed7e
a000e44f228430a6f3424a61e365461a834202f4
'2011-11-17T00:31:56-05:00'
describe
'929929' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCR' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
272a146e2a3ce101c1296ce848fcc5af
20f018050f0a7347e903abffacb1d8d5fd6d320c
'2011-11-17T00:36:38-05:00'
describe
'133089' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCS' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
8254515d22d0378718a7434a953a6cf8
82f5a90bad0039171a02cbae17ad2eb219c946f7
'2011-11-17T00:40:06-05:00'
describe
'53058' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCT' 'sip-files00019.pro'
645be083fcd33c747225ac69727418d4
4b3cfb0c8c6b793ca2aac5f80882898d214edd21
'2011-11-17T00:33:00-05:00'
describe
'43831' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCU' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
35d1205bdc3594a1ea82823b302fa270
54a6b2408a5b2519a41eebf09773e54134de8344
'2011-11-17T00:30:50-05:00'
describe
'7446255' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCV' 'sip-files00019.tif'
d51bf51ce0130d48c0bc82228048570b
bdc3a3c30771b1156db44b8a59b44c427af64a6c
describe
'2226' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCW' 'sip-files00019.txt'
2a48e0ddb5280c821a10bf8e5bf48cb3
db036feb110448f83c0ff7d1f111fa1e9a3bfb9b
'2011-11-17T00:35:10-05:00'
describe
'12686' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCX' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
5a5e2d1a204390cf2557de3f1b65b7f2
e8c673fc18b31e3a9a70af4778e8ef55d01c1c6f
'2011-11-17T00:37:04-05:00'
describe
'944438' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCY' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
e573f800e7c0bb0c7749cd94b11f729a
1f38d255dfe33f220c82b6ef19be599561113105
'2011-11-17T00:38:50-05:00'
describe
'127424' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYCZ' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
c6acb57e5ea7e680c988683ccc05d610
befaa98f09694b28370c72f6a48a19007f9bd096
'2011-11-17T00:31:16-05:00'
describe
'49411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDA' 'sip-files00020.pro'
3303f684bdac1e566ca9e140d1016f6f
27fe481e136ae1a0a8abc077a105f171bf562efd
describe
'42142' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDB' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
81f080d7b008b11dfff02a92a1cc6a9e
25ed4a11a04128a3002dadfb647fcd62df8c09ba
describe
'7564877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDC' 'sip-files00020.tif'
8949138c249484f80fbe691f87844a0d
3424144af152ddba6ea441a5fa9f037be8bf9072
'2011-11-17T00:33:56-05:00'
describe
'2064' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDD' 'sip-files00020.txt'
886326e4abedb39b3f8501a801ef6b31
8ade18c5a54176059ee4cf5aca8982450cbce8a6
'2011-11-17T00:38:11-05:00'
describe
'12276' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDE' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
3f0ab79b939aed3598c6a6dc69de2b07
36324a29edec1bb02619147604a3dfd1cf9aa0f9
'2011-11-17T00:35:16-05:00'
describe
'939739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDF' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
e47aafaa497b9e254599dd2c24e0ee80
3258c9da1b125a2e3e9be23986646c6856a8d5c4
describe
'100280' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDG' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
5d1a76eaf5f182411e74fb9df76c6908
d15c4dd7d4b1b986db21a26f0589ca51ed94297b
describe
'34112' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDH' 'sip-files00021.pro'
eee63863f06b4931225709a6858ca6be
d94f6a105ee3629db7e89807f6c589b95d93bb6c
'2011-11-17T00:31:37-05:00'
describe
'32303' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDI' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
5a9776a043ee254979f42c4e56fcc273
5cb25e7679c1120cbb8075fcce6349b4fb0180a8
'2011-11-17T00:32:43-05:00'
describe
'7527787' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDJ' 'sip-files00021.tif'
c48c34e0eb55319ea94c41c6cf332803
4b05e67d293cc524dccd4a7ca6f16e114777b915
'2011-11-17T00:30:46-05:00'
describe
'1573' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDK' 'sip-files00021.txt'
f32c636099ed83dccca6e868e0fe4df5
8ace9ab456dee666b1aa71f7e5839f46c6387a05
'2011-11-17T00:32:31-05:00'
describe
'9643' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDL' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
ba0cc17db2a2eca4d89ae128a28c52a8
7b13de51ad2da4f392692a18df10a6961326e4db
'2011-11-17T00:35:07-05:00'
describe
'939001' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDM' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
06007f177dc92768aebcaa9cee4a3069
c755e782404b45053f43baae854c2846b65cc6f5
'2011-11-17T00:34:26-05:00'
describe
'123049' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDN' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
f5a0f1a89dcc9016948cba50b8cc2419
f74d674c6e1333836f0ed8541e30125bf97d36d6
'2011-11-17T00:31:53-05:00'
describe
'48566' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDO' 'sip-files00022.pro'
33a3db1854b4eb4973d81aa7fac7fa3a
56a49985a613964f428240f8c9e51038ed62e5dc
'2011-11-17T00:36:43-05:00'
describe
'40468' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDP' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
e8afa2653f99d9f8367ad8a967800e44
14c3674073000c64155b03b1056bc93da3187617
'2011-11-17T00:35:58-05:00'
describe
'7521363' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDQ' 'sip-files00022.tif'
ea6ad8594a7ae0ed9cbced6ac5b19b5a
5dbf9cfa283ede3bf491fb65df68a0a1e1cf07ac
'2011-11-17T00:38:00-05:00'
describe
'2107' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDR' 'sip-files00022.txt'
d93859be6e5dff90dc44508085b903c3
db6bb77d33b4debadb995720071cb84cd9cc95a5
'2011-11-17T00:39:33-05:00'
describe
'11872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDS' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
da6f909672257c7a516ad0bac105e53b
42d472069387e0208f8b8f03f7c3607762f9a842
'2011-11-17T00:36:13-05:00'
describe
'938351' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDT' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
1642eb20a0028f75e088e6b03672cf53
69c6e3e82357cb57cc892a6e9b92524eb2507317
'2011-11-17T00:38:10-05:00'
describe
'131236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDU' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
caa6b1ac13d4877facb3641a3435e8de
ca7ea894d7816bbf656e2f0237820a856a96d480
'2011-11-17T00:39:09-05:00'
describe
'52957' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDV' 'sip-files00023.pro'
aaf3c73c5536a97cf33060d6fa7e4af7
ab41b60c29020acc19c4ccda4a497134e1ebfd2b
'2011-11-17T00:34:10-05:00'
describe
'43019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDW' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
5b52b9dfa84b0bdc2a2e666e639f567d
2a1ffc1ee2f18e469ecaa9aca31401d6d5b2e7fa
'2011-11-17T00:33:38-05:00'
describe
'7513659' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDX' 'sip-files00023.tif'
61470ed8ae855bbdfd00ddde0cfdc8d8
e048f4857abf88b6ec9cdc6ae236e1780ed2e7de
'2011-11-17T00:38:09-05:00'
describe
'2187' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDY' 'sip-files00023.txt'
5cea110730292cfcc4d998dc6a347c3e
2b2fb8d9586212cd85d8a00a8533eade0012803c
'2011-11-17T00:36:57-05:00'
describe
'12399' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYDZ' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
687fe11e39b90e69fc10939e9eafcd7d
b6bf1363895af872767659c800f586eff04fcd37
'2011-11-17T00:37:16-05:00'
describe
'957747' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEA' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
f75612f6540410a698808fe14f8d2102
fc6140622331aa5c1b954675162a85ea478ba807
'2011-11-17T00:39:08-05:00'
describe
'84116' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEB' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
0acef14a18475539a3e0be1718f3b446
3262dbbe3e6f6588a07206311543640ad7f99e92
'2011-11-17T00:35:53-05:00'
describe
'26162' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEC' 'sip-files00024.pro'
79388e47041f3626e82e3b3af6ca3b5a
283c9d5bfc68c209ba159e42ef085806e131c2c9
describe
'26761' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYED' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
112c7d6c857fe4bbdcf46a353dc99fe6
51d94d3422d916e57ac5bd0c214f1acf9939df35
'2011-11-17T00:37:41-05:00'
describe
'7671979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEE' 'sip-files00024.tif'
fda7898bdff985f5945865d68535592f
e2defbf07b7246d5076fe7c306823bdd6dedc2d6
'2011-11-17T00:35:01-05:00'
describe
'1106' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEF' 'sip-files00024.txt'
f1a4b179e6288938a5469eefa88467c9
05623cfc0b5d8d3cc1abdf79e633b0dfd5e3cd36
'2011-11-17T00:32:59-05:00'
describe
'8304' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEG' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
6efb8da56def8fcd82d91e3fe922ad85
4e8ffe8be385d97d02a0a5070c2d667997281208
'2011-11-17T00:35:17-05:00'
describe
'959992' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEH' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
f461ea52c529adfe732eb554df3d1350
8445677dfdd80e5318057fb883714f77e58ad5de
'2011-11-17T00:36:23-05:00'
describe
'85741' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEI' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
70e786ae89f348b50840808d7d5cad89
7434f712c1f382829193fba92f2758540610fafb
'2011-11-17T00:39:55-05:00'
describe
'13056' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEJ' 'sip-files00025.pro'
0fe5e7615ae28e8743aeb0e200fd0824
d4109ab0072ae371d2c36f05f14535af3f8c0420
'2011-11-17T00:32:17-05:00'
describe
'25383' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEK' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
7f785c97b7cf0c0cdbdbfbd094950730
d8e1c78cb352f357a71d6fe3818434da4bcb45f2
'2011-11-17T00:39:17-05:00'
describe
'7689283' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEL' 'sip-files00025.tif'
7a05f6a27b62a6c46e63f559202c054b
16621e2e7d8e328b8bafdab5d6396410e571f114
'2011-11-17T00:35:29-05:00'
describe
'619' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEM' 'sip-files00025.txt'
cf8186b048de137c01c289a95c3d236c
12fa726a42bab6b065d9ffadbc9546ca66518646
'2011-11-17T00:39:49-05:00'
describe
'8006' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEN' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
cad88d7034669a87c05fae431898021b
47274d5cf8526fe462625ab6ee73ee6f47336363
'2011-11-17T00:32:33-05:00'
describe
'949492' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEO' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
b7b3afe6770c90a187a3d02677938e08
18ad1eef4e43b085d390621ccd42fc7e5aeb50c4
describe
'121898' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEP' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
8980afa6dbac6d15b718d2722f8ebce3
c8b0839251e9a31df5afe916c6741849fc50e955
'2011-11-17T00:32:22-05:00'
describe
'50038' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEQ' 'sip-files00026.pro'
413a1fe4a088372bf4bce6cdb6262540
e9de1c24472780c93b6b0e2c24a24846a0de84e9
'2011-11-17T00:37:08-05:00'
describe
'41014' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYER' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
6756dca549283a9e7be73e7c30b0bb67
290f416330f01f1af199a3d0f755c01082caf325
'2011-11-17T00:33:23-05:00'
describe
'7606131' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYES' 'sip-files00026.tif'
ea3713127f77d45fc1dfc814ec4949cb
6681e725e3da62c0790d92846bb62af55537f68e
'2011-11-17T00:34:05-05:00'
describe
'2173' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYET' 'sip-files00026.txt'
2a89e91ada737047256ac72d51480a6e
c1d835f34982cb57d9c8704cf5f873fb66750045
'2011-11-17T00:38:27-05:00'
describe
'12101' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEU' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
e444719374f3cf054da032bee277a86e
0395684fc7d2ead2dd72b4b1f5c38b6483d490b0
'2011-11-17T00:35:49-05:00'
describe
'916603' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEV' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
847d6a68cc8839cd881c84682f7b429e
cbed571e6c5df2ccf48be88c47e06490ed16d16a
'2011-11-17T00:36:55-05:00'
describe
'91783' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEW' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
b7e71828c9b456c999fbf875007a8599
ad6f594e391c440692c2124a29ac5f846faa6b41
'2011-11-17T00:34:12-05:00'
describe
'26911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEX' 'sip-files00027.pro'
aaa48f439664d585da672f380862ff3c
78c3d9f9e5dd2a779c404fa0060a1f485ab107fa
describe
'30116' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEY' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
394ff34ef995da055e74ccf5d8223efd
a1ae5902647e9d2c7bd8ccf9f470db29702be098
describe
'7339805' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYEZ' 'sip-files00027.tif'
ae35aed31912ca79206e1932e9ded9ef
02f85b581c3cae75413ba588be708c63076706ed
describe
'1141' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFA' 'sip-files00027.txt'
0c19d703578cd3d7bc52751b469f6773
2439d94a9f9204e88fbf255f0c7fc181b1cca6c6
'2011-11-17T00:30:52-05:00'
describe
'9701' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFB' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
c69ae979964348e8ad301b93941d55a7
22e3d71d45a7fefef4c3ccfa21cf4093f4c63db2
'2011-11-17T00:31:31-05:00'
describe
'927215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFC' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
3330bd3712efcf35f59f08b18bffb277
97b0c2d69e2f24a41186f86bd87e951ab06aa94d
'2011-11-17T00:32:47-05:00'
describe
'134446' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFD' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
78a06c36a287e21d64d563b6c469c677
bd0610d348ff0774e4dd63839c5061500ab5d246
'2011-11-17T00:34:33-05:00'
describe
'51506' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFE' 'sip-files00028.pro'
505209919ba9371d0f0334619b565bbe
d6527bfb7e472f01882ddaa5ba6752c91e356b5c
'2011-11-17T00:29:42-05:00'
describe
'45416' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFF' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
eb11650a2b85bbeb41738533e2ccc512
36b0cb76617fec0d06153040b7797f248e22ffe1
'2011-11-17T00:30:47-05:00'
describe
'7427029' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFG' 'sip-files00028.tif'
5e8e6d2fe72c41e6ac23e6d18c8d3630
25317967eca3a79e8be36a6208cde719a551a9b7
describe
'2157' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFH' 'sip-files00028.txt'
01d40f80c75fd21506b236aec6250a83
8cf13e42982b48c39563eb53d0312277ea05038b
describe
'12850' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFI' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
905491452dede87e007cb0bab1d7a13d
06165220cbea25df81df97140eed3833fc22d3df
describe
'914983' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFJ' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
ea52170c64ffcc0f6e00fbb0b8d0c8b2
ba88e75066d67ec7d6a51dab5697100434137930
'2011-11-17T00:40:03-05:00'
describe
'123691' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFK' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
0b1d0afab63ef523db0ed3d0b466a48e
f4bf164764bc4154be0d7edec9fa970310bd9ea0
'2011-11-17T00:37:13-05:00'
describe
'50102' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFL' 'sip-files00029.pro'
cc2640d8f3e1c6614c4610f85485ceee
aae0f3cd554d288d5e17643bb7d50695b616e536
'2011-11-17T00:35:43-05:00'
describe
'41257' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFM' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
5c9eb518e472fc68add75c02f53551b4
d4fd1197ce44b79b395943c013992b8292597b9e
'2011-11-17T00:39:44-05:00'
describe
'7326745' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFN' 'sip-files00029.tif'
78e394c38e345673adc7034a33cf4207
38e101bb617afcc0d7f581b1fdba82181ebdd1b5
'2011-11-17T00:29:51-05:00'
describe
'2097' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFO' 'sip-files00029.txt'
cc3ec36e08a2229e33cbb67b5ab8b4e1
e96de0ff2f1844aa6bdf3b753f613a85be5b861e
'2011-11-17T00:32:56-05:00'
describe
'12823' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFP' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
68d4ef18ea088df92359407e89bf5d83
254bffbf3aae7876505be229b6d24dd4ce59c455
'2011-11-17T00:35:22-05:00'
describe
'940344' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFQ' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
ab7f9d707f1754d7ef8b8051ae4988e1
9f9cd94e452c85419831f31950f4401234cd5466
describe
'120446' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFR' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
88d04358e06249e310fe60720dec01eb
41236c726b5f7f41e3b4effa11a154af74afac5d
'2011-11-17T00:33:42-05:00'
describe
'50293' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFS' 'sip-files00030.pro'
3f6b2c865c27e7e4df55b14b1bdfdd13
5060d0009f9eed36b7e8fe888e263fad695edabc
'2011-11-17T00:33:25-05:00'
describe
'39359' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFT' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
a691616ee99b1da64220d1262a50e541
281639b5cd7821ef4126e0205ff27091ac2089a7
'2011-11-17T00:37:29-05:00'
describe
'7532075' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFU' 'sip-files00030.tif'
97a8064c552c202b3131a20d77d75859
c74fd4892c17a4dca8511e9b1b793010e8dd709b
'2011-11-17T00:30:04-05:00'
describe
'2160' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFV' 'sip-files00030.txt'
e7bb4ea9a6b5f773c6a6367ec3443e48
6355e567f81c59bd6ead97dcda7c4e1e0480ec17
describe
'11764' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFW' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
bf92049ad307f9626d548f16dd4cc399
29e629159f0594b825eeaf61f1ffbf04dce6a6bc
'2011-11-17T00:36:54-05:00'
describe
'937058' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFX' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
48432045c3a45764023027616b2f22c6
6cb2244221cf234ab90f22182dd737defdd90c3a
'2011-11-17T00:34:45-05:00'
describe
'117381' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFY' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
63892917952af9c76b879677c8aead48
2b8d4873d02a10226cce30eabc301899f8ce5e5d
describe
'50647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYFZ' 'sip-files00031.pro'
704e9a5a3bca3e3a3adcd43550fce4cf
a5386e9e885a4b796f879baca77a99e271b66d1c
describe
'38235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGA' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
14bd11aae2d64afb133709a7b1cafa71
f772d98689073fa883f53dad44956b4ab6de7819
'2011-11-17T00:35:51-05:00'
describe
'7503515' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGB' 'sip-files00031.tif'
ea246fc3587b89468916de4994347894
3e2010501fea00c1e2600c6faf33ad28da6a27b5
'2011-11-17T00:32:39-05:00'
describe
'2180' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGC' 'sip-files00031.txt'
cda1cd87d46bdb9af209a97080a8a3b6
923c4b6d190041ea5e10d09454e4f17e5cbbf78e
'2011-11-17T00:32:57-05:00'
describe
'11664' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGD' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
617c73610c834120d7afd9b410a77fae
03c9cb006dbfd61a396a753d1604a80328a6d518
'2011-11-17T00:29:41-05:00'
describe
'958308' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGE' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
553c9a563eba9308dba06ee80c59d5dc
7d738fdb6bf96aa0dbb7b6272acb358b4526d69a
'2011-11-17T00:33:10-05:00'
describe
'86352' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGF' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
7ed80d6208ad3ff2baa82200a9b9288d
acae91436f39852e7403e2bd2e082a3641637973
'2011-11-17T00:39:29-05:00'
describe
'22647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGG' 'sip-files00032.pro'
c59b19b030359654bc739ea37305e98b
9e49b958197591dd1a2ae4835a0c6e18e4fe02ac
describe
'27950' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGH' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
ca9d12f866ed4b061f57f135d107e173
1bdf90d198d85092808d7bffa100705879a2a93a
'2011-11-17T00:37:19-05:00'
describe
'7675785' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGI' 'sip-files00032.tif'
32fefa03371d2fd6760c488c890a1d0d
b2cf53637159a3c7dee98cb45406f0c7424d6cec
'2011-11-17T00:34:08-05:00'
describe
'950' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGJ' 'sip-files00032.txt'
11edc14df1c3788fef759b4fc2e151cc
7776cbc3e91ea192f1a3e2b108d45070fb89f3c6
'2011-11-17T00:38:46-05:00'
describe
'8870' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGK' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
4407e6408365cf7ea00edc784ded0978
72579a3b1e4ec549ea608f1b4aca7185544c9570
'2011-11-17T00:31:26-05:00'
describe
'967673' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGL' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
47ab02bfd160731d9db11135eec3052d
2bc90d18ac7dbbfe104672dd772d16a8f28195d6
'2011-11-17T00:31:25-05:00'
describe
'130446' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGM' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
db7b3832fc53451478a8bd76f672195f
03831b35a22b64918b8a8efea2c6f484204556b4
'2011-11-17T00:33:02-05:00'
describe
'51425' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGN' 'sip-files00033.pro'
67c4c3cb261f945eea0336a8e4014cab
22da88e93b1b6f361124da8aeb4b2ce79a55daea
'2011-11-17T00:37:43-05:00'
describe
'42977' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGO' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
958233b908389ed9608395939e1e171b
c56061d449414cb58b600c3a540ab98869fddd61
describe
'7750835' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGP' 'sip-files00033.tif'
488e9d10f1d4350bc78a4ce341e5112b
330976fdf6a4d291acbd3ebaae31839b196b4f29
'2011-11-17T00:31:36-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGQ' 'sip-files00033.txt'
55bd778014d60a5897f93b00a0a69e34
dcf648b6d63c8c8c7211bd7594e787466ff28987
'2011-11-17T00:32:00-05:00'
describe
'12155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGR' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
9031115898e926727c55e183693fa035
57671dffcb2c92ad1bb58d60f1a69191e182fc4c
'2011-11-17T00:30:31-05:00'
describe
'946199' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGS' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
033d9d08c65e55365595dd4c7de151ec
23133bbae7a2bd2f904352d65503932b6e7489b8
'2011-11-17T00:38:41-05:00'
describe
'131661' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGT' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
c81d56abdf641b0e604b9800b20183d8
95aed46f5cdd206fb752501b367b9634cc22df1f
'2011-11-17T00:32:40-05:00'
describe
'52293' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGU' 'sip-files00034.pro'
8e150f2a38c43e63911fac2241e9d755
43ee8f72f38e614f5888ce8611d0b4b0b9289c4d
describe
'43133' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGV' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
ba7087c3aea3fc85f5260158233e1dd4
ca7f7c42cac7264aca96ac34a97c4ac69abb8823
'2011-11-17T00:31:52-05:00'
describe
'7579095' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGW' 'sip-files00034.tif'
6e3d5e6f08dca4418c4c49447c9f820e
f84f6c1fefabe3c2da340c78af05013e7062a023
describe
'2203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGX' 'sip-files00034.txt'
c6eec2840b7e2e6b0bfc29d7b8a20d40
48d584c4375558d58f75ca3c0247fc10e64b9c5b
'2011-11-17T00:32:09-05:00'
describe
'12709' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGY' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
4268dffcac37ac4d9292e8f34f1733ef
aa6d695f167eb55d509f38a7ce43558990e4932e
describe
'925820' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYGZ' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
21d611ac93eea379fe3e9d31e6f9cb3f
9b09209d9f58cbde43d2f81b0f87ad3a89e60923
'2011-11-17T00:30:16-05:00'
describe
'126133' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHA' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
89427795876c7a90bd3efa1631cde01b
6fda696de00c0b5663f887fe9d9d1238f92eaffb
'2011-11-17T00:34:22-05:00'
describe
'51597' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHB' 'sip-files00035.pro'
f726b380160c665748ae67e6e94b4241
ba7a46fb0673089525528b68a875f154aed23196
describe
'41520' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHC' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
58a3f9b791d9f99cf06d1b63949ea53c
7e1f15c7cc8c27b37dca4481137afff4ef55ba0c
describe
'7413485' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHD' 'sip-files00035.tif'
71cac2051c8879065e05776232732a70
a6efd5399127e0d2a36b90e86cc5f4eb5038d139
describe
'2134' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHE' 'sip-files00035.txt'
a0f40d1bae4ae3d1d7229c76e51bc596
4925e93c06cf7a797b940f03d3a34417b5e9d957
'2011-11-17T00:31:41-05:00'
describe
'12531' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHF' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
47cce404ec927efa2e7e2326dc8a1022
ef51cdbf0bc2b51f7ddf224d7e35defe7935e229
'2011-11-17T00:29:46-05:00'
describe
'936665' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHG' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
25fd4453f99469e4976165e2af6def78
6acc07bb6ef060a8b8907a8b668e5bc05948a3f7
'2011-11-17T00:38:22-05:00'
describe
'120411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHH' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
97d620dbb414a3774f40b69959e8911c
75932bfc5e6fe13ee418ac4be90cc75129c455c6
'2011-11-17T00:37:09-05:00'
describe
'48469' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHI' 'sip-files00036.pro'
dd45621074c5fb091df68fe5f4317f65
c6aa34a411eb0c582442d0fd29009edbe9b9f0e0
'2011-11-17T00:37:53-05:00'
describe
'40474' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHJ' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
963bd49a1a6d4998661c2191d7212dc3
da0b4b014307e5ccb903805356c506a35163864e
'2011-11-17T00:31:50-05:00'
describe
'7502809' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHK' 'sip-files00036.tif'
29219676e3277a3825f0116a83e38cc0
3d92ffdef8574d3a3eab34baaa9de32c81fc8403
describe
'2049' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHL' 'sip-files00036.txt'
cc76d74b81a0e2fc414bccecc28f3366
b7f87ddda7a0468bfc9111729364ed22ebb54e94
'2011-11-17T00:35:13-05:00'
describe
'11688' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHM' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
7721f33fc6ddafb0173b98fb1bacddb8
aeb125e447ddb6e2e3cf41d62707f3775a92d28c
'2011-11-17T00:34:20-05:00'
describe
'916614' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHN' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
ae9c4cac2f70b9367687a6ac75969df3
0892ce9d447e4a796e78d4bfcae511190e136589
'2011-11-17T00:37:48-05:00'
describe
'123428' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHO' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
5f55d912bab7a712b9a60518d6308478
7547d181bd93410c06c596000abcf37fe2c1a266
'2011-11-17T00:34:23-05:00'
describe
'48933' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHP' 'sip-files00037.pro'
eda1bf5d2df2fad8b20a5c374b92dbf2
d8ae6f1b3ce19a643100fb725023cb39c5c461f3
'2011-11-17T00:34:21-05:00'
describe
'41320' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHQ' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
b5cbab4e6ac84decc6d568232f1375c8
48468a20ddec90f479d0c3908956c42015cfa139
'2011-11-17T00:39:27-05:00'
describe
'7339875' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHR' 'sip-files00037.tif'
709bca423e487517cfa8562d17eb04cc
562c7baaf9d74ad7d6f2df5bb0b11281f7ed29cc
'2011-11-17T00:38:52-05:00'
describe
'2087' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHS' 'sip-files00037.txt'
31743dff406f65e1ea453afc4461cd24
92fa7cceee9a6913e53909539e0d5f6f677ecb0a
'2011-11-17T00:39:45-05:00'
describe
'12533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHT' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
d18abc9703f21b00e335ab6e97d1c9b5
e869276a555cba04f1e032d3e58dd276aaa09c1c
'2011-11-17T00:30:30-05:00'
describe
'916329' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHU' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
1b301bce2a6ff539d8ac52100b2edad1
167c42d0107fcd8436f25bd94dddfa628b76fd08
'2011-11-17T00:29:48-05:00'
describe
'132827' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHV' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
179f11bd5b09ee548ac7c3ea1a28d232
655f8625567dcfc5b4e4de20058485966bfd26db
describe
'53417' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHW' 'sip-files00038.pro'
8736111aa6f92acadb6818fcb3c0cf28
079418fe74d5df5ee446205643531c5dfee114bc
'2011-11-17T00:37:37-05:00'
describe
'43970' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHX' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
74831cc1395c92b35ad963b9d9682136
b12ed9b4c399f8631ed60ba87fa918ce98365443
'2011-11-17T00:30:18-05:00'
describe
'7337453' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHY' 'sip-files00038.tif'
d441a4ef3da65e493f188b2d7386f9ac
ff917875bdf31c9e3a708e3243840f4445a58313
'2011-11-17T00:38:19-05:00'
describe
'2267' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYHZ' 'sip-files00038.txt'
7ccd09993a1df942f098ab036853b630
41585faded2fac90ea3e7a22cc2a20daa544b9a3
'2011-11-17T00:30:08-05:00'
describe
'13038' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIA' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
9fc01647de130156a9647232c8330737
33ba443b81f98c0694d90614d71a1abb53fe9c86
describe
'938353' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIB' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
20ee9a3d2f78d342d6fa7163571ba2c2
642e7e23a78d632a24a62989d75ca60b4e5917f7
'2011-11-17T00:36:58-05:00'
describe
'130023' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIC' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
43f81d4c53dc56f63a661f9ed2f6d40a
4c5289cafa0aa3d3e8cf68d9f8afe9f93abe7112
'2011-11-17T00:30:41-05:00'
describe
'52915' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYID' 'sip-files00039.pro'
3e311e090866f553fad9423f90ae3ca1
b51260e665c787b332e64b9043e322e88472e119
'2011-11-17T00:39:36-05:00'
describe
'42850' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIE' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
9ebe2e33d0e9cf0bfa80393ebc231618
e5e1e7311501a705805c08a2d4983027990cfcb9
'2011-11-17T00:33:19-05:00'
describe
'7513737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIF' 'sip-files00039.tif'
504338fa4133fbdf7a2d0df58caa914f
afc7846885683f87a0009d09aea3462a04591b63
'2011-11-17T00:36:31-05:00'
describe
'2189' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIG' 'sip-files00039.txt'
ba0ba32c9c80472b37d1c99407ea185a
53903356469a681c091443e440f20ff091ce6ad4
describe
'12585' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIH' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
93462cbada959773fcc7dc0b656bfd08
ea43bd8950001c9cec5c97c9017519d0898a0b71
describe
'934380' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYII' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
e9208584dbd7f70dbe5629542f8e5b48
2feb41cbac9926642aea6e7521c2f4a497a92e29
describe
'134719' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIJ' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
b181d514659ee15841cda3a31558c428
854739c7b967bc908a1d202bd0f7a760a84ffd06
'2011-11-17T00:37:12-05:00'
describe
'52755' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIK' 'sip-files00040.pro'
668de3d40c3b94292dcea68445d24375
9d9974505172adab13dc9c91ccd2248c8468c549
describe
'44435' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIL' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
d8b1d5152d01782cdec353f74f05d538
c0a5196ae282e79637b53be18fb01a8431d9dad5
describe
'7484253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIM' 'sip-files00040.tif'
e6f7b4a4778bace108adbbb5131c88db
9a55e25b1fe7561c4e43f5f9251bf9923987f260
'2011-11-17T00:32:46-05:00'
describe
'2191' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIN' 'sip-files00040.txt'
fba5c070ee69ca03a3e9abe7d0d9e6dd
4071159d1128a0b69f25e6c1704f1bec915b86b0
describe
'12799' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIO' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
e095f5d494041a9e3036184d5017837d
588bdd068f0a6e0b2df18c4c071c8eb7bd1bb2a7
'2011-11-17T00:32:16-05:00'
describe
'953993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIP' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
288f39cb5845cf2f75e38f569e81aad1
f0ee9f3731960ba29c07ff7ba0cc30793e16ef98
'2011-11-17T00:36:18-05:00'
describe
'127619' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIQ' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
5faed9d25d88ae2fdb850cd3e172c955
f7c902343146336cecb782866dae3215280b9934
'2011-11-17T00:39:19-05:00'
describe
'53155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIR' 'sip-files00041.pro'
05801e9ea1bc434546f90b115fa79f5a
91ec2b87a0d8af67cd09a2dad6afcd4eebab518c
describe
'42094' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIS' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
a26a8e2296864f051155ece6ba199741
cfa24b2015bab9340bd10b0436ea9ec94cdf30be
'2011-11-17T00:36:16-05:00'
describe
'7641263' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIT' 'sip-files00041.tif'
11cc74487db32a5968b435d811fa466c
2f639a89719658f868351a0c8f1b9c9a1b0397a2
'2011-11-17T00:39:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIU' 'sip-files00041.txt'
1062fcf51de39b47def26c5c4f96c816
9790439d7d122b986f3be527e4be7fc1f4a65eb9
'2011-11-17T00:37:01-05:00'
describe
'11911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIV' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
6dae0a7d0021c5c8a205dc1052f61059
5f83eaf7f66776206eb58460f56d6d68a2085874
describe
'945877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIW' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
26ec3d0c2a13e407ec7cd858193a06c3
63f08c01cf1d12fad608b3a20fe2983f86d65c88
'2011-11-17T00:32:02-05:00'
describe
'103616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIX' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
d42b824e08d0ff807f8e58ad5422cba8
9b28ffec980f64c6906c12105e29e79531ae217c
'2011-11-17T00:39:14-05:00'
describe
'35889' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIY' 'sip-files00042.pro'
d1864a21d3b3a5cfedbf4ec20205bf1b
4c314323a508518756e5ce89a4c2904d4a91c0dc
'2011-11-17T00:38:47-05:00'
describe
'34028' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYIZ' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
83fb7528dada10a5dc61025ecb44e7e4
3c535ae4865bc8aee7f4a9524c97117e5051332f
'2011-11-17T00:33:06-05:00'
describe
'7576635' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJA' 'sip-files00042.tif'
4f095064af0bf31d61c2c74580beb754
770f53300f96455501c845bf7fde82773f274325
'2011-11-17T00:38:28-05:00'
describe
'1637' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJB' 'sip-files00042.txt'
9b22308002fb2156fb27afdd8841c4af
4816c9f039d2159bcff6456e83b853563aab95f8
'2011-11-17T00:31:28-05:00'
describe
'10516' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJC' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
a0056f4df4e1abb8dc843996563cf805
a483148cbeec598d3f121462804a008c15786fdf
'2011-11-17T00:31:46-05:00'
describe
'938561' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJD' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
93e632be95cdbc1982dd38a2d0984eb0
74d87050c75636ad3e979383e122b2ef9fead97f
describe
'112170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJE' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
1b32845b1d2fae42f0e2b2d07f03d7e3
0fb2f08a2bbb31332c555fe4133ec8b5fbb82c24
'2011-11-17T00:31:01-05:00'
describe
'47982' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJF' 'sip-files00043.pro'
e843710dcdada021008d56694b52d22d
ec8f503d7fbe4e37f36e754c1a04e600d2712334
describe
'37090' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJG' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
5a78f8ad452b885c8f4ee1889f78127f
8c686037c1c6fd41e20b12fc02d7ea2ff535edd2
'2011-11-17T00:36:26-05:00'
describe
'7517857' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJH' 'sip-files00043.tif'
867fce8e5ef47de2251eec3a24c04174
d3b0c10f24702e9b56129332f7d903dea7095c52
'2011-11-17T00:30:35-05:00'
describe
'2080' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJI' 'sip-files00043.txt'
7b7045f9f2537baa529b3b7ce4a4111b
5bd54b367b40c475ae1fde47fa123cb00de71473
describe
'10733' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJJ' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
b56c5aacc6659c5db6931dcd3a535241
0447a66910d3ee5b21600c80c8709dab4ca2b536
describe
'950704' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJK' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
aa9ac9b9829a7355dd4b0d06e9d4ebb9
e58deabe8fc0edefe8df15df022995db13134d4d
describe
'128191' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJL' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
d5f35103156ce0978bf4c189f7e593db
6ba257ebe39edbb4918b6a1687668067e504160f
'2011-11-17T00:39:34-05:00'
describe
'50431' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJM' 'sip-files00044.pro'
0349cc48686a726e0a471b8ce0c55e0f
278c02bf194951d71c7dcd0fdffe0ed568379716
describe
'43258' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJN' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
515e0a681ae797a80d2c2c1530a2a0d2
2b9fd1eee2f12ca4102724e4f9a7264b4b07659e
describe
'7615073' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJO' 'sip-files00044.tif'
42093321c7605554b8bec4b03c130b03
0a58713e7fc0b82f1110fe5210619e30e5673c4f
'2011-11-17T00:29:36-05:00'
describe
'2091' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJP' 'sip-files00044.txt'
a401b70b1a0754c05115265fe1c23d1f
076c3841b24cf5c147b38372763d3c7a5f9ebbb5
describe
'11752' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJQ' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
48bea688c40c946b720165570dd01f24
a886b409bd551aa58148ab7ff6f1f4de8ccce580
describe
'955326' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJR' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
e4150112fea72041b4d4e947a5922930
5e1a68db555c52020b1d754afe2c4a70fbbfeb24
'2011-11-17T00:36:12-05:00'
describe
'98174' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJS' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
41f4a6a9737c6f5c54cf9739d65c073f
c03736cc0184409b7818c034f1dac01d3d7c760d
describe
'23725' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJT' 'sip-files00045.pro'
6848bdddb6c0b98ffe282e4a50fb7517
2a234515a1f031f11a8b625f6296385477eb433f
'2011-11-17T00:35:21-05:00'
describe
'30434' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJU' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
2f2ad31897c6af022d2be594c81ecae7
db4dadc5291e8279123ac84677fac0d457b9fa1f
describe
'7651819' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJV' 'sip-files00045.tif'
ab5c853c4046fba25aebe43097e3bc44
f8e39852477f6f79b05ae3ef8964b6c73a2eb299
'2011-11-17T00:38:49-05:00'
describe
'1029' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJW' 'sip-files00045.txt'
1b715339d246defa7f5c373fcf42b06b
d0059545794aa973c28c9e3751c47d7459395797
'2011-11-17T00:38:08-05:00'
describe
'8623' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJX' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
5eaeee8c14c12489c234b0dac313979e
c1aeb5375d097ce3ef18cf4cf8e3b5ff671a9294
describe
'970140' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJY' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
ead437ed6c8abb65e5aa9c4c2551ec52
9495f7611219f9ee5bb11919ee6d7c893b9d2420
'2011-11-17T00:36:02-05:00'
describe
'130473' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYJZ' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
f40394ad3dce4db62f4d7c686a972a94
5805449f2ae6d2b2ae9cc2aa4c2055edc105747c
'2011-11-17T00:31:59-05:00'
describe
'50735' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKA' 'sip-files00046.pro'
084fa0e39f9b716bb10019bd05535784
9f8894b990d614e1b5ceef637df07da2077f5304
describe
'42953' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKB' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
aee88f6927b00bb99377fd915a84a2f3
796bb28de2aa50323e2043373f01bd14a6dd9180
describe
'7770867' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKC' 'sip-files00046.tif'
03ff8235ce442300374d1d8b1a073dd6
4365b63f30c3857264ad11799f1bc885353ddbbf
describe
'2149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKD' 'sip-files00046.txt'
67e0077225f8fe500ef9fea62efcc0cf
ac7c10aa29423b528caebc2cdb731d52858881a3
'2011-11-17T00:36:50-05:00'
describe
'11079' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKE' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
fd00b0074d28f50211ce27aec718514f
9025384b494b9ab0a2457088dcf3c3f7c7c8ab5e
describe
'960621' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKF' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
a276705811196f133f2533565cf6391e
de1645238cb43c441bdecd4491d9a973e466bfd2
describe
'132697' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKG' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
0c1ce7b6cd1748a10f7c36112e0f2d62
a5490c240c075b82a24783cfa70215f9f5fb81e0
'2011-11-17T00:36:09-05:00'
describe
'51480' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKH' 'sip-files00047.pro'
fcf8f3d8eebba0418996fe8553d9e108
eb9dec20db898c8217b412b11c8015496d49b24e
'2011-11-17T00:37:50-05:00'
describe
'44554' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKI' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
9457b3d91be943b093be0b33fba3312a
f132a919a06ac62f0e915b243840c8bb3887bd24
describe
'7694187' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKJ' 'sip-files00047.tif'
7b8cc43aef032e578ce1796cbc1d42ea
e0e876d55d73267debce0417bfee3a8b66daeb06
'2011-11-17T00:31:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKK' 'sip-files00047.txt'
35e4a39bf23e9741f80da518064aefe6
f764caa2176b94594981b35627b181e7df2456a5
'2011-11-17T00:31:38-05:00'
describe
'12016' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKL' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
99f7eb07ac8a0addf2fd322f5e45114f
03749d92ed8354036a94b5f425212e9b213c8129
describe
'986825' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKM' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
50d24575f9bb3c8b1bf58de0250847a5
e34b6a1bd601ad8a13fe13e6c61262f3ba6d744b
describe
'79827' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKN' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
de3b405b0defc9301f14a9a68c65a224
f8215df3f77e45e90d0ba0f6829056de726aabd0
'2011-11-17T00:39:52-05:00'
describe
'19647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKO' 'sip-files00048.pro'
0340bb9123de92a04a651d8ab3608593
142a26b66aeb93d78017eff0fa612652b46affa9
'2011-11-17T00:37:07-05:00'
describe
'25643' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKP' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
6c4d929ad48357b87bae1a7d3bd7c27d
2a45085de9d20a54053b626ce2eea3ee3e9b2080
'2011-11-17T00:31:20-05:00'
describe
'7903779' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKQ' 'sip-files00048.tif'
772842c123e7c0cb0caaefaae7b93be8
38a039195c42309ff81d020351b9f405511c4b15
'2011-11-17T00:30:57-05:00'
describe
'836' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKR' 'sip-files00048.txt'
8d143eb7a937cd50394c9faf1bed64cc
1f808cc4841eb34fb687fd28653905a78dfd0361
'2011-11-17T00:31:09-05:00'
describe
'7487' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKS' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
105bd5417a5da93f94478378fa85d822
1bb41515e80d9361017d6d96c9d9d0694c67a14a
'2011-11-17T00:38:45-05:00'
describe
'993408' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKT' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
df3f6d00fd1425107d1cad4c34fe792e
b7f1920ab0a61a96cbc18695b485278b7fd02c4a
'2011-11-17T00:38:58-05:00'
describe
'123764' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKU' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
03510b256070aa3ce9a2a23d6e7c2e53
b07ce35f12b98381f40fa826d9025a4f18f16789
'2011-11-17T00:31:44-05:00'
describe
'50366' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKV' 'sip-files00049.pro'
c13e176387decd89791d7418024f5ee3
44ee3f6a96eb7b55a87bd0e475c962a08f28a5e0
'2011-11-17T00:29:56-05:00'
describe
'41274' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKW' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
b46ead6b9dbe947792d421f2819062b1
5ed45f4a4cda2b80258e4ddbf806f5a6b80e2f4d
describe
'7956859' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKX' 'sip-files00049.tif'
8e6431dc5c095e58df40213b873939ce
b0e6ff678b2499a597081cd04f872875bfcc094f
'2011-11-17T00:30:58-05:00'
describe
'2090' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKY' 'sip-files00049.txt'
114465a17ebd5d3e8f4ab9c4e52fe3fb
17217fca392f19bc75bb34c90763fd34ed3a9740
'2011-11-17T00:30:36-05:00'
describe
'11229' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYKZ' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
0755ba589a02f96dc4d22893e991a859
ebdf2e7ab2801e46da9b641f54eea844ddbe5791
'2011-11-17T00:30:10-05:00'
describe
'977931' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLA' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
5cbbf2b313dbdc4a8c091adb3977982e
8df24c1f6698a27a618d6131eed7d41ca6beb640
'2011-11-17T00:34:32-05:00'
describe
'133589' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLB' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
678c354a4bbe1680ba06e9fc24c4c4f7
5a018770fa5065bc329382af998c33ce7293fcf3
describe
'51504' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLC' 'sip-files00050.pro'
bbb07db29de71c55485977814e141cb3
ed203ee8072aa9481e94d501f86a1f1c8067e26e
describe
'44272' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLD' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
15d1cd51f6217d349daa48e31e57ff2b
5fe4da5b9a7b9fe05331349df4cb1ea0f904a745
'2011-11-17T00:39:04-05:00'
describe
'7832733' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLE' 'sip-files00050.tif'
e34883e58572ced1b89d9922e2800ee2
033932ded6445790a8d5cc136721ddd18e376e2f
describe
'2158' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLF' 'sip-files00050.txt'
3c48804b7b2bacf87eac45ca966c6d25
3b453251e0b25cd984ee16d3626f08caa388087e
describe
'11520' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLG' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
d18d4ac56f0217738eead1f1b2f6e5c6
c892a7c5e8ce7032f427e46ed4f20f4968e62f3f
'2011-11-17T00:40:07-05:00'
describe
'971818' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLH' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
439f2852d392546e4c9a07de8ca2ff42
dc88c05bf2119f9cbbc4fc201f245ff4afd1a993
describe
'129422' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLI' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
fdd1f9e531c28353778d9f8724d90819
050d241f91a4978dbaad94588faff6e5c06a03e6
'2011-11-17T00:31:30-05:00'
describe
'51142' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLJ' 'sip-files00051.pro'
c4be20c5bc7528c50bc54d6771ce41b3
13a0c81ef9507fdce9cc707c833c45c80e6a70f3
'2011-11-17T00:39:41-05:00'
describe
'42590' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLK' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
6cfa5a90003afcc39a93fd782edafdf3
d5f0496b12210b8311364b41c11bb69f6ffed83b
'2011-11-17T00:37:59-05:00'
describe
'7784341' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLL' 'sip-files00051.tif'
50a52ecde58a0acfa0e28398acd8e503
15a75fbbc7e09dd2bfe69425733e888400b6070b
'2011-11-17T00:32:06-05:00'
describe
'2136' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLM' 'sip-files00051.txt'
f3e02b9a3950f285e51299098a80870b
73e7305e424954deb2d2a228847a6c3d8c3b480b
describe
'11709' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLN' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
7b2a640c25415718b15ec0abafa5bdd7
2bc9a0d5942ec80fad6ddbc4b9a29bec8ff2700e
'2011-11-17T00:33:11-05:00'
describe
'980615' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLO' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
bb40fbea1b27a13c93f72448525ac48a
9928ad0175387afc19e53c19114ab5e1761b36b0
'2011-11-17T00:34:06-05:00'
describe
'133519' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLP' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
ab22c493b3ed563abdbdb0df493327dc
b8644a7fdf2da9a84cfc55056b8f02efcc09aa5d
'2011-11-17T00:33:13-05:00'
describe
'53584' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLQ' 'sip-files00059.pro'
288ec101d991b0104d2bc03c4b406541
44289e825c0902c66728c36b2bd8b681562ff780
describe
'43823' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLR' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
e39de187e949dbd9c761899047634543
337f25b617d30e7bdd5125925813144eb84ada57
'2011-11-17T00:39:15-05:00'
describe
'7854619' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLS' 'sip-files00059.tif'
ebf9fc935111a0b2a8478fa4f95e4e46
97a7886dd043d94643b9d4cb0befab788c8d806e
describe
'2212' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLT' 'sip-files00059.txt'
3f98c0f2139c3cf34156a037abe9da42
dd3e04314585dbaf8bddffdcffa61dd519589d3b
describe
'12303' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLU' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
13aa11acc83ec4742910508740d23f3e
d13740391874ff842e2c47ee4a48812067e07106
'2011-11-17T00:39:51-05:00'
describe
'978395' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLV' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
7d19eaeece7e8e3a32fdb452611ee28e
a2fe22c872de9c9e2566642c933b82024ad667b4
describe
'128789' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLW' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
68d1d444fd32881f3bf5ee2a5abef9b3
f36905fb8c9b67767b358d367bc7c11c9ef8a7f7
describe
'50272' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLX' 'sip-files00060.pro'
d7304cc6702032acfa0063021a13e890
1f03ae497773afe75991cb6d52adb5da764b14ca
'2011-11-17T00:31:33-05:00'
describe
'42979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLY' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
cba93b234bf79cf265bad750c74d7099
a9a8c7ca6bbc2f2c54838250ba050718d0b59edf
describe
'7836767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYLZ' 'sip-files00060.tif'
3f632e4421d86aa17e3c5122ec7145b1
f0d472b151467800a0018793fe1c739baa57dfd2
'2011-11-17T00:33:55-05:00'
describe
'2169' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMA' 'sip-files00060.txt'
1c56a15a1c2d3438682e606a00a5bafc
d837ef68e7edd7308195bb2c31b71c1cc2737e59
'2011-11-17T00:31:04-05:00'
describe
'11822' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMB' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
0b24efa398c988bd92d6c99a6851ee51
ec000b6615c14c39e3d0fdc691f745e770d87876
describe
'959667' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMC' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
38882f45dc90b375788e83e950743f63
bc2640017be95007a69717464bf7ed5561da24c0
'2011-11-17T00:38:17-05:00'
describe
'131879' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMD' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
c60ac74e3427b147b9f96f3685b8e8cc
87f8820ffacc8fb85d0b7936dea3f66ee811b61c
describe
'53055' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYME' 'sip-files00061.pro'
9ef41ac00117b79218a62f05f720e5e4
b74a32855a43ad2ea9b2d3b920ab69628acf1de3
'2011-11-17T00:35:24-05:00'
describe
'43705' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMF' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
5d2e65828a4d64e9ab0765d9441b4490
e372a6bc03f2d42374f7c270089c19f86dead162
'2011-11-17T00:30:09-05:00'
describe
'7686773' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMG' 'sip-files00061.tif'
7b07003bfabbae2375cbc51267075c0b
0173a5904edf3a2c1caba0dd44885c9907b4f5ea
'2011-11-17T00:40:04-05:00'
describe
'2243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMH' 'sip-files00061.txt'
0fc7c8c0541180564aad3543b9e95c00
d083284292420e4d8a9e0ff9dada8b116759ba56
describe
'12523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMI' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
238c89ee3942c5cc787b5b96b635bde1
daeb520f4293f2f62ff34ca6f07e8860bdde55af
'2011-11-17T00:38:06-05:00'
describe
'939455' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMJ' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
5fb9a67908e856c5192be67a2fae42a5
8409fd2fde23fa320bb62a0a970db9bb8952fe1c
describe
'135396' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMK' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
c2729c62ea8dab6f57b474915fe53e26
68739d9661c8c5a375c353d9a18323f02f52c4ba
describe
'52250' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYML' 'sip-files00062.pro'
a579a3fd155c57102939420a1fe9aa15
e6393412f4bb115b0c157e085c536cdbf2cfca76
'2011-11-17T00:35:27-05:00'
describe
'45616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMM' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
8da665bdff6cd6b9ce527ba5f3977e2c
cc51a16afe2fc047ef3e26162276260c95e79e2e
'2011-11-17T00:39:57-05:00'
describe
'7524737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMN' 'sip-files00062.tif'
23fa84d89429bc2fbe84bcd2cf035480
cc940bf5a27c64d615bb601f8ba753e06f4297cd
'2011-11-17T00:30:59-05:00'
describe
'2266' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMO' 'sip-files00062.txt'
647b2d5ecdac2ff458d60b6e44348a4c
1fc04d034f53d982d953ae3cbb3f18bf9cdd58a1
describe
'12244' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMP' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
f04ae25017a93a5f98b4222ebc3e5f0f
80373d2e8bfc66799d601cf0913cb64fddfa3d51
'2011-11-17T00:33:15-05:00'
describe
'966225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMQ' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
64d1a7a964cda48a3c28c3fa60aab456
adc0ec2c7e40250f631d6a9134cd9c77410ba1b7
describe
'130049' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMR' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
1b1df1c8806d76d89b9a459a4e13cc07
d04bb9f0a22b4d6018e6811d6501211ca1d83056
'2011-11-17T00:29:38-05:00'
describe
'51635' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMS' 'sip-files00063.pro'
6ae1be4ce55aa25b885657dff4f4dc6e
0e3105277487470507be682d9d7c8a9614e14917
'2011-11-17T00:36:53-05:00'
describe
'42538' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMT' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
058829ac5c8399cbebb264927f51aaa9
9df7e04c4dc76a7eacd8f0334416d7cc02e93bab
'2011-11-17T00:37:56-05:00'
describe
'7739799' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMU' 'sip-files00063.tif'
3c68e9f653e0ec18ed919682db5047b0
1f804ed06560b07427f04129851573e0d82988cd
describe
'2162' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMV' 'sip-files00063.txt'
42f80b35b41c8360e129fd33e5b51291
27e7493d356ee3e914aca6060803f34e536bc584
describe
'12278' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMW' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
6280bda6df72a2bf10fb1b27e92a0634
6883da2b0e2f9a30857788639f0d5ff154ef0334
describe
'977916' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMX' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
587fb9daa070cd0d13b3932aa1e21d5b
6a81fdc8c31aef2fbba59e8f9a8e24b571e5347e
'2011-11-17T00:32:48-05:00'
describe
'111604' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMY' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
558482b7b811f7b6f71b15a5bbf068ed
9b89ec70a0d9d57b3a633301d8456c1517c29520
'2011-11-17T00:34:57-05:00'
describe
'27951' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYMZ' 'sip-files00064.pro'
d7cbcff8f0ff31e5902257532583f894
7ac6a8705555db27358ff675632b628bc9cb2cc5
'2011-11-17T00:35:57-05:00'
describe
'33823' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNA' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
13232e9a246bcbd8d62abc658794455f
7074279b412e314722727b4f1ed03f1c33f10b75
'2011-11-17T00:33:08-05:00'
describe
'7832739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNB' 'sip-files00064.tif'
6eab0079cf57c347ddf1f6d872f396f6
7f5768b4325992ef9d1106d92939cff268cfbb8e
'2011-11-17T00:34:13-05:00'
describe
'1219' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNC' 'sip-files00064.txt'
06747487f306d1c07ed214680901159c
7aa1359036c078fc39910ba6a803fd330cf26e44
'2011-11-17T00:33:46-05:00'
describe
'9819' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYND' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
00c75e7084f8d3ca6c04753a8c305010
e838f16ff668785c610c44c654c7bc8a4e1dffdd
describe
'973892' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNE' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
9c854ab08543113808dfb0c4dc1449dc
961822b8069b9709a76e280295ab6e9afcaf2d14
describe
'126221' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNF' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
f2d8e76669810a3e567cb923edb52645
c7d2ac95971ee65cdd48d103a5554317b1d3a8fb
describe
'51167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNG' 'sip-files00065.pro'
6924eab0c7095a3223b3c480a73aa804
0001f623ec0994bd0a943f5e7953403fe76eeed0
describe
'42296' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNH' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
dfb19b870a0995695426ecf35509738c
75f1819a5da4c3bc709b3a7db3c0c1e102ebb590
'2011-11-17T00:29:54-05:00'
describe
'7801019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNI' 'sip-files00065.tif'
c24cfe852ba6f194e2b4fb48b825138b
7ce9b2b9147925c8023435fb85ea92539988f16e
describe
'2164' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNJ' 'sip-files00065.txt'
efc94553f899ecdad4124d3e89970b82
4de57f1ae02d2e5d8a05cf998e74da77517c2e3f
'2011-11-17T00:37:33-05:00'
describe
'11885' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNK' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
eb680c2df16bcbc7e02252e07b5dc0a6
8a1a94a865010d148c062b882c0054f1d615a7e6
'2011-11-17T00:39:35-05:00'
describe
'949877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNL' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
6e9005c1d8f68f29fe467eed723e2fcc
18e33a0517ac789c929e046f8d749582fd23650b
describe
'129654' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNM' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
163cdce8992f8e7380b4553627ea72cc
1efcc68343e5a276c1f6426461d5c86fe23179b3
'2011-11-17T00:35:39-05:00'
describe
'52155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNN' 'sip-files00066.pro'
55b64b14e9b1acdcb52adb391d7c6dec
25202a6d3b46204fed1ac4d5ea37affe49b2372c
describe
'42488' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNO' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
c3612bea166763175002c6a136058dfc
f93b914d532218efbaf51c9f283c190d5190a41d
'2011-11-17T00:37:58-05:00'
describe
'7608503' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNP' 'sip-files00066.tif'
10dea813baf0bbda7b497c50a49cbf83
cecc49875ae01651c644ecdc17b504bc6284f1e2
describe
'2210' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNQ' 'sip-files00066.txt'
d3dc7143773decd1f0fa8049d3a37c9a
d4d257d030f47ecb4186b1c1bea89ca901ada0d2
'2011-11-17T00:36:45-05:00'
describe
'12151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNR' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
0e481bee010b4fa8d03aeea6963ad411
98b6c61a82c6c4831918254b5273140f0c61cede
describe
'929538' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNS' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
80ca9a98ab8294d5718134f5bc046510
1e4efaca79ca09460ddcde38f0457e9e3c8eecc3
'2011-11-17T00:39:31-05:00'
describe
'138415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNT' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
09bc0980c675ef2ef525bef83b8f5eef
547385a9a435bb2fee7cfef0f70a0c586cc24a6e
describe
'53484' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNU' 'sip-files00067.pro'
3fd005393768b4fbeb1cef58d0ff54de
f7384239f7efa3387882a7a7a6d7f06736463e69
describe
'46359' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNV' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
c259e90f73dbf9d19b8b5597c8b0ed19
7f94ec463bb84c346a3ac06e85e44b2bbd91ae41
describe
'7445591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNW' 'sip-files00067.tif'
7988ba3a59f6c25a5815e1ed0a550090
25a56cd7e76b4ab8b4dbcaf587d0a217e4065751
'2011-11-17T00:32:49-05:00'
describe
'2275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNX' 'sip-files00067.txt'
679c959f12e297ba04dd2c349d6893f4
baaf58f4818de8363fe94384f72458ff2b373282
'2011-11-17T00:40:19-05:00'
describe
'13019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNY' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
bfd35d060c1c1e7ed73f086949b388c5
1e51558b56945e7194d9b11e848355112217b1f2
describe
'946368' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYNZ' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
a05a39994008f9059c96526b4b31397f
443113a3bba31b36c2c0be5d91c559b54b1bbf89
describe
'132450' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOA' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
826f18311f414b3fa4fed1dfbb7b4089
4869645dbf8b30a92f1a6807a3a4b6dd1b58ec4e
describe
'50384' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOB' 'sip-files00068.pro'
ce6480128810dc55edb78a444217694f
2aa0f79300047b94da4a3da91bc841f0533cac88
describe
'44276' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOC' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
e98f894213e805b48000bcd69cbbad5d
7f93d59247ed3453bb572db702defe872f7b0523
describe
'7580277' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOD' 'sip-files00068.tif'
aadc31da403db5278289f66727d6c902
ab21c246357437dbf04793a6841728fa0070a658
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOE' 'sip-files00068.txt'
bb1ac5b0468cfac79ed93a1e00d8f18a
bc340aea0aeee90aa3b564e6d2de76a4890700d0
describe
'12434' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOF' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
deb6107f91282583bface44b7ef02cef
edf493292ed0d05b503ff3bba34761ea1754e7d4
describe
'980208' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOG' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
648331f0b5d60604f68c354d14351418
8c14cd3d6a43f233d0dd6e34b37d75d3928977e5
'2011-11-17T00:30:42-05:00'
describe
'103802' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOH' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
267427c51adf5f6c4620ef69af8705e2
742d5e410ebc5be7c6c0adf90faa42d4b23fdcd6
describe
'30167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOI' 'sip-files00069.pro'
fd154944536d97529134a9728c7afe9e
cee8d4859679cc2d7e26dcd0923c8d2c14f7884a
describe
'32928' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOJ' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
31aee6661635c1666e4d6f3db00152b5
55f7dbcbc481238958e66ddcff8bfd0252bda4c7
describe
'7852059' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOK' 'sip-files00069.tif'
8986694d5ffbcdb031edcbe852f1fe69
d57ab3d1bb71ca5caf186ea2db0f1d90580670c4
'2011-11-17T00:31:42-05:00'
describe
'1300' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOL' 'sip-files00069.txt'
1190c6b824939ad9e926ff26d70602f9
54f57bfaaecfa1c363446b311b1b108cb7872d28
'2011-11-17T00:40:20-05:00'
describe
'9729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOM' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
48c7e97459c424712080bcc9756deb21
f5e6322ec02294128a882cfb26188c8a8fcd5d25
describe
'947728' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYON' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
dcddd182f23dfdaa5775bfac51be9663
a9f79bd361a0bde8ba0607cff1643447aa203ac0
'2011-11-17T00:35:18-05:00'
describe
'111132' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOO' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
32543b8964a13b39a6800595ef280ba1
3c682740966c656cda0cae65a6577123555b7319
'2011-11-17T00:33:40-05:00'
describe
'30762' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOP' 'sip-files00070.pro'
e201304c1e918ac808013b63973a5a4d
6e0f0eabdaff6d30817e4cae0904fccda6adb37f
describe
'35230' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOQ' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
a683eef59bd85d330730d6624083e9e8
14da941ff6a4a815d62186e4c8217229a79ae34e
describe
'7590933' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOR' 'sip-files00070.tif'
29a3c4dfc4cfc63bd95725a50e447839
42b7f8cf6861a8c876bec8688103e7b78d096b54
describe
'1356' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOS' 'sip-files00070.txt'
74a69100b01e4d5b2893dcd5c8bc51df
5d8ad79c080ff2955b0328bfa10544327a4edce5
'2011-11-17T00:32:42-05:00'
describe
'9560' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOT' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
1c896c501b7f8b275460779302ef8707
89f96b7a74eeb00b77e5b210304dd3bde9fe91ec
describe
'990315' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOU' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
ccd007a5173c00d9d2c11afbba981678
ce2d3dc0b3af79b7b2f8e371338303f0a6edfce8
describe
'132630' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOV' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
a498ee745be87185a1c4076320a42ac0
d4d2d205ca4ec6f2ac6f3d221414ce1677ee6b75
'2011-11-17T00:35:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOW' 'sip-files00071.pro'
ecb163cc3b624d1b3f85fe3a330bf2e0
2bc2b8728f592855389a9c3ccc0779fb9760bd91
'2011-11-17T00:30:28-05:00'
describe
'44200' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOX' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
37106682f74f0c035f2a8a6b27eadd4c
57da869da84aea6eccfaf6e63a00b952642f751c
'2011-11-17T00:34:36-05:00'
describe
'7932219' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOY' 'sip-files00071.tif'
f025d534ff81d859e907650b211e9629
1521585705731c0ad7e2a5244ac6ef428ad871b4
describe
'2122' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYOZ' 'sip-files00071.txt'
ed2ff959bc075687085d446c23ba1a6c
0d49afffd3928ef2e73414886c41fcb807392163
'2011-11-17T00:32:28-05:00'
describe
'12418' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPA' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
4d73ea3365509193af24e29bbd479865
968f1d04349252606d18987b8bb22023c3d5334c
describe
'953939' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPB' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
4d1f57836f29f6f61381097e531d1b16
4f0a4e908cdde07f69797461502a7843d01ef93b
describe
'121225' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPC' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
933b73a59e5725d6e1937d443bcc3279
c030e1f80d465eaae3a123b76555bbf4a73ef4e5
'2011-11-17T00:29:55-05:00'
describe
'26268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPD' 'sip-files00072.pro'
5e2098ed275891982a0e0d057f422c92
a22cf0432244b0f192b398557b9e637b077c6c50
'2011-11-17T00:29:34-05:00'
describe
'37883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPE' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
406ba28bc2b8dcf159c74b8e61510716
0f6bb1f182baecd8b22edb972ab6a5b7970d3f9c
describe
'7640923' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPF' 'sip-files00072.tif'
1edf7c475c40a2d56b4ae469f3cc2564
e8ebe26464f4f9fc8cb2836220f51067739bae8d
'2011-11-17T00:36:21-05:00'
describe
'1098' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPG' 'sip-files00072.txt'
0e28dd622ffe505358637cf435edb186
ad9cb9b109ca6067c41158216b5d6e1aa224d5a0
describe
'10932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPH' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
91a4dd6d43890046d793277980a6ebb5
eb66917fb8c3240b9cddbad768ab1e1b3c6514ee
describe
'992488' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPI' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
3e051ee5332f5af5e783b9a827d03623
b6aef4b66e5dd997af418f71a24575167a44ac1e
describe
'130189' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPJ' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
46fe01477c4f51a167f0711ee9d2d914
4f92248f2701896e2f2539dbe6cbc1522b96bbfe
describe
'51716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPK' 'sip-files00073.pro'
58ca86d14daf15995b0949a134ab0a3d
b6d6813bdb562e1e772907e0b132c107b63a5d2b
describe
'42922' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPL' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
c5e9ba13f8b5caa34d10f924e1cb0530
118e8189c2beb946a5f62a3b1d1aca3e2955ce78
'2011-11-17T00:34:54-05:00'
describe
'7949501' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPM' 'sip-files00073.tif'
6f9259e8f4f2d3616c91ead6a4ec01fb
f9709b360b75a290f269a3df3712d4510dedfb5d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPN' 'sip-files00073.txt'
7a720ead843fad6884b0d62a968ff1c8
a3efe648389d03323040c16b460580366bf17464
'2011-11-17T00:35:33-05:00'
describe
'11486' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPO' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
47f05ce136b9040adeb675d7e38bf3ec
58fc8af2d74a09bc9b0c483ad398790533350c34
'2011-11-17T00:36:47-05:00'
describe
'946341' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPP' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
82468b66e6880026f2770b116ebe1909
dd09fa74d01f02ba7591dde667dd065b7b2994a5
describe
'131990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPQ' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
302d66f3195fe60ac413fb2f85b6c5f7
b162df73ee7c99ef3eebfdfbf42375783acbc367
'2011-11-17T00:31:45-05:00'
describe
'52107' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPR' 'sip-files00074.pro'
188a49ba9105824e9bf181318b377d91
79f4ad12770de88f36fb1475f008b90b63899198
describe
'43584' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPS' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
87e87f944734817d88295e42e7c59d26
f195974a09399c3b07662164bd481122ba130601
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPT' 'sip-files00074.tif'
8a60b192a45ff31e8433b4ce110a4ab9
11179ffebc64b53162dde2224a5093149f588a68
'2011-11-17T00:29:40-05:00'
describe
'2249' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPU' 'sip-files00074.txt'
69e06dd9f481044f84ab97f7b5ed6b81
3e43382839715e8290f35dc52c954b2d8946a23b
'2011-11-17T00:36:00-05:00'
describe
'12347' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPV' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
d7ab627f23cc29b42ed701016a72a8c0
d8374585307d35d2e90801ac524b7cf22e7eb4ae
describe
'978794' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPW' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
4f52b4de57c6f9860d94e010322fa9c9
13d90b19f1a0cf53d698fafc374ac5a4e7ccf129
describe
'98130' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPX' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
73ede4a74d6e4a0b71d87c0971b02fe9
5c55cd6fef8636570370e4e1242b17d4caaf9e20
'2011-11-17T00:33:33-05:00'
describe
'33627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPY' 'sip-files00075.pro'
9d142d7e4be8dc7b21f6a2cc9808cccf
5a5a2a7a04ace3fd6e02b803b194c4fe8fabe7ac
describe
'31702' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYPZ' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
87cc3f388f501fb3654d870dcad5d65a
ff6d87f366902cdf2ce7e44d21aca02ecbbeb296
describe
'7839793' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQA' 'sip-files00075.tif'
723ff52ee35226c654fa803dd1c68edd
b8e53e2384750f983fe5c4902248e285eece6bc4
'2011-11-17T00:35:28-05:00'
describe
'1468' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQB' 'sip-files00075.txt'
4b0a5dfb477267be7f716c3f55c253ed
68dd576e0ef7a1494de32b3f448fa8fbff3b212d
'2011-11-17T00:31:23-05:00'
describe
'9295' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQC' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
5e6266e5addeceef75663d88cd1f0b6c
860119e22cf72b0b54d23570a0ff214c466a327d
describe
'919822' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQD' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
5ba6aadcfd73755c4d3344efa30506ab
8186e69e2555eba3a4bd2cbaaed755fa40d69022
describe
'132126' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQE' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
3bfbab36de3c9eaa1d97be51bedf03e8
2dae676abca9454599a39c0243f83a4914b6a9a5
describe
'51303' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQF' 'sip-files00076.pro'
8fae785caf9b5126dbdb3c6cc48119a4
b37b94dcde0f507f4ff197b57c669fee2248696f
describe
'43991' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQG' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
5de79c25fb7f13ec39df5317540b97a5
2c69a99ca3a26471ffb872f6bacfedbeb93a93fd
describe
'7367693' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQH' 'sip-files00076.tif'
7843fada22f31a64fff8f8f536e9ad89
913b27eb1142caf87a06e050b3ac7df225bbfb32
'2011-11-17T00:31:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQI' 'sip-files00076.txt'
819c26b66e5011ad1dfb0357b0d2c05b
1b998c910319129d09c122904db7083433e0a01d
describe
'12259' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQJ' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
29efb8619324bba51106acf1d7f5d0c5
d81985064b51a2a8df381c185162ee30e9098d19
describe
'1010180' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQK' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
760e29c670420093b7f6828cb110aa7f
afc2759f7e5b99bd44db9e137f1b7c86ca9c7af4
'2011-11-17T00:35:36-05:00'
describe
'134965' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQL' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
07f9852dfaa226e766387d532a198603
c046dd4b407a8cf764ab4ab3fcf346e34180f343
describe
'53335' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQM' 'sip-files00077.pro'
9ec1201efd9020bb7f10376e427140d5
f8cf4b7a20f46d796de606957ef4ff406156353c
'2011-11-17T00:30:12-05:00'
describe
'44394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQN' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
c473a6ec712f8e001b2cecd493130cd8
f8f14de26dd4e96e33edcb2d1a8fb12666e110a6
describe
'8090915' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQO' 'sip-files00077.tif'
403fe447babe7a0d886cb42668ee01f9
31975238ad61796581b5c336a1db3f8aba6d3665
'2011-11-17T00:36:15-05:00'
describe
'2206' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQP' 'sip-files00077.txt'
dd38291cf74993d94523ae51cefe221e
de263a358e6689c779bc378768378d2147feaf2e
'2011-11-17T00:30:40-05:00'
describe
'10950' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQQ' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
bd8bb2f2d43a5ffed763d8e3fe1fa4ff
54c05445c09120ef8572d533d7eaa5e998ed83be
describe
'966490' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQR' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
e3429f8034a8a57fba41e539ac2213dd
ccd6d243b8e26cf2dad4a13592b31c9776dd49f6
describe
'100598' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQS' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
b54092c84152111fb63c7a5cb9263a6f
c385e766a4978b321a6b1ffd57c8c031e59ee0f4
describe
'24607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQT' 'sip-files00078.pro'
c3685741ee1da6259ccc163ecec026d9
68820fbf1cb818427578c20f9a3b99a38c328843
describe
'30932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQU' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
54cc7a3c48df9d425c48ce4afb8d4aba
78baa080717fdcd22afbb95f76e2a08a04d3d115
'2011-11-17T00:35:59-05:00'
describe
'7741321' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQV' 'sip-files00078.tif'
518b2384e78b80c00ab5192fafddf98a
7911908beb15c8b2cd734fd8c9c2032ff4d14d5b
'2011-11-17T00:35:35-05:00'
describe
'1058' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQW' 'sip-files00078.txt'
c1d4e69b994064d4893eb3808ae98c6a
faff6e876bd3124657ead44d557da6429247bbde
'2011-11-17T00:40:01-05:00'
describe
'9409' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQX' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
151abc59a5150f3ab9d378e35d0f2fbd
842c1aaecea0f0655598fb24315d220656681a55
'2011-11-17T00:37:45-05:00'
describe
'948524' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQY' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
6324e0fe6ad5650cffab5ce8ebdcc743
35c38d94815b92700475e581d4bf309448db25e8
'2011-11-17T00:30:44-05:00'
describe
'58117' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYQZ' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
8267a8529c8dd4ea8c3d1dadc92b8698
dfa0151f9e0b7cb5f9ec6a78aa4978f24cd81544
'2011-11-17T00:33:51-05:00'
describe
'16377' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRA' 'sip-files00079.pro'
bc5e6a18899e12fb03662554563cd1b3
2af078a3dc1ff14d94aedd8fa372928eaa5ca8ab
describe
'18990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRB' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
df89107914b1de77befad4c7b24270e1
dd85a49068422fc13d1c562ba4fc015420f86a95
describe
'7967155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRC' 'sip-files00079.tif'
463a9b6fc331a9a11d5479349c8140e7
279eae1701c1d642f9c567abcc9538ab287388b8
'2011-11-17T00:37:34-05:00'
describe
'723' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRD' 'sip-files00079.txt'
a8804887b119c0ed734fd612536ea372
7d76ee0d94d761471dd3cce3c6daedb425d64125
describe
'5226' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRE' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
05f19596859cd6e881b9430d163295ee
6c1c3b04144c336bc753bdff46de6a4ca8bf1a15
'2011-11-17T00:33:30-05:00'
describe
'945009' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRF' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
142acbfe2f4213b4393fe198f83c56a1
9c21734584c2f5ea7c478194f7579375397ee58b
describe
'90641' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRG' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
950c230366ee2c402eae4052aa59a955
30d3a4ca9f9457ad352d846e90372b637abc751b
'2011-11-17T00:40:00-05:00'
describe
'13975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRH' 'sip-files00080.pro'
c335323e02eb296dd06520857b25cb97
863e3afe08f1e8472d551b39b42485ffe23370b9
'2011-11-17T00:33:18-05:00'
describe
'28104' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRI' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
938b7a3b16bc5950985b3020fdaefaac
26b379bd7557103e25acf0c38409c28644de5523
describe
'7569401' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRJ' 'sip-files00080.tif'
d60adc7512343a9bec5512749e4fdd39
932e31eae04af120f22d80526123b9ea7ba41f29
'2011-11-17T00:38:04-05:00'
describe
'662' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRK' 'sip-files00080.txt'
2b76341a0db1b3db6289373dbf67adea
706d34008cebccea9cc910b494d2657ac374e773
'2011-11-17T00:38:54-05:00'
describe
'8437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRL' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
4595281944c9001363ee4cf8c6ce6e2d
888c9038b22b79b22991e8885062f31bbe2ef337
'2011-11-17T00:30:34-05:00'
describe
'941915' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRM' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
67256f99bec43af4957850626f34b21f
4cd5f53870a8c3736b31338e1d47afe8eafe33cd
describe
'130849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRN' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
377f7aa35cff6c4ef57d2d5c2138d40b
928c2fdde6d062869a54d7235d390caee43e3ee6
'2011-11-17T00:33:26-05:00'
describe
'51352' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRO' 'sip-files00081.pro'
58c10efb6d9a9f28ade734a6e37f0a35
6d2334c6d285e7d89ea6910c41d722adad45731c
'2011-11-17T00:36:48-05:00'
describe
'43695' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRP' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
4c6153d757e08dcff8e401a92ac65ccd
05eed47329b1746f64639552011abbdcc457e88e
'2011-11-17T00:31:24-05:00'
describe
'7544509' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRQ' 'sip-files00081.tif'
fbde60d60ffe7a7a838a314978d32c02
6563a3737958d6210e8822f39ff4c93ed6a02b0c
'2011-11-17T00:38:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRR' 'sip-files00081.txt'
a2af547a46330794c4aa0e30ce35ff38
ace71db94a5a3387a93dbf3107c1c0e6d084421b
'2011-11-17T00:38:57-05:00'
describe
'11954' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRS' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
3d83e26f669c69b2e3d17049fff837ce
5aaa0fc30c6e37d73be4ee0aa35295113f45e058
'2011-11-17T00:33:03-05:00'
describe
'930832' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRT' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
e17357cf16dd46988a05aa92d8dea42d
f031b25f343baae937bd8b9a99cf702cabc785ca
'2011-11-17T00:33:31-05:00'
describe
'127381' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRU' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
5cfda996ef746273d81b845320e78a46
678a6e77188634317278577bf54219553a2d7919
'2011-11-17T00:31:43-05:00'
describe
'50550' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRV' 'sip-files00082.pro'
96656790305bb8836d348474db049098
57f87337a5cab3ccb371f699022156edbcfcfb51
describe
'42503' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRW' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
9e481491ec59c1560da5fae420e47e8c
8f351317e7ba39cef8e47239cf33007d2d27653a
describe
'7455895' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRX' 'sip-files00082.tif'
7850ddd09ceb8a974ee59a9bfbf886c9
d666e7e8e83a69714871f8ec77eeec71159e4971
describe
'2104' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRY' 'sip-files00082.txt'
5b38c6f5a4e95af84bcdd88160ada9d0
fb10a521652f13b23b18424c4c87180479f9579f
describe
'12181' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYRZ' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
23f7f437714d5832c18e404cbc50f997
fc99e87124d0b03b874c154f75861a3ab941637f
'2011-11-17T00:30:19-05:00'
describe
'966999' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSA' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
d7201887c37642be4479528481fa29c3
34ac90ee1b7a6c9a9b611708f7bbf67f41d4a210
describe
'89941' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSB' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
4ab0d50fe84f9b01ea6b6065b5763ff5
318ab4de093e98bf13debf315b33e13b10f22d37
'2011-11-17T00:29:59-05:00'
describe
'23679' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSC' 'sip-files00083.pro'
f55d1040522b696491c00364a7a7c882
c1065d59b69b925a05d2b68fc46faee7eb4b02f1
describe
'29854' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSD' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
448b2f972b8f225b31fdd79afac75000
4f6d40c945a3393249a8ec598b5349caa7147c2f
'2011-11-17T00:36:37-05:00'
describe
'7745289' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSE' 'sip-files00083.tif'
04bfc550b18317b6d498d68b3a08d930
8221abd84bbe36e83d9b3551bafb196c0b7ea3c1
describe
'1006' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSF' 'sip-files00083.txt'
7cd6ea4a40f9d4560c90250470ec836d
994dcf61908de969e3f904194e4ed1d7d3c69356
describe
'8849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSG' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
d5be055efcc52b6ef64655b3774906ab
e2812fd2427ec972840e1a8a0e51ea66ed8a06e9
'2011-11-17T00:36:17-05:00'
describe
'947863' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSH' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
e78f351b3a9be478a959fd0afbb7b50c
ccd141c05f5e43b10cd714cdd988f4fbcfccc004
describe
'121029' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSI' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
14b97bd0907ee105aae0d8da3dbaba0f
155b8738f3c77ad9150bd8aacf4f350c31070565
describe
'50473' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSJ' 'sip-files00084.pro'
bbbdce0414d5b169b5a277fc5f8a445a
73c109688e50792c237f5fb08bae49ce855f5034
'2011-11-17T00:39:32-05:00'
describe
'39698' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSK' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
5e398dd0c591789a36a28064751a7553
e7160fff939473117889d16ffe5b0722cc0d2648
'2011-11-17T00:35:34-05:00'
describe
'7592699' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSL' 'sip-files00084.tif'
740dc15f96e7598db333026050771438
1eb405c53efd77a508564333ca6ee9265226b1de
'2011-11-17T00:34:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSM' 'sip-files00084.txt'
5ba664aca1cbc965559ab09b0832872b
fa9a97dcbaeb5b62d895a3b239bda34795c7549d
describe
'11558' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSN' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
bc765ed166f97023e767325d6119f88a
46a66941977a26d0b563540bbed26b8ee263bf00
'2011-11-17T00:31:34-05:00'
describe
'984350' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSO' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
ec3ac96592dee4016507b2e889c010a4
24b9e8b0c570c013623ce9b530df6c7d0c688285
describe
'127393' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSP' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
ce4dd326ae1592d2f2ec15188aed6c07
4c908b1307d2e3a9617cdc7d851fe8d56bba547b
describe
'51945' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSQ' 'sip-files00085.pro'
b20b30354e80f06715cfb9e024b9b90b
2434acfa9d21b8cfd719c32e2e85e967f4de1d9b
describe
'42242' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSR' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
1048cbb2b5eba5c4f0cfad0ba53b681f
5de76ce5701d9859091f886a102ac85b0180090f
'2011-11-17T00:39:37-05:00'
describe
'7884331' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSS' 'sip-files00085.tif'
087448da930a11dc3f907e92c7c3ed62
8b03d6e6c4bfc9578d523f02ee5a650f1609eada
'2011-11-17T00:35:42-05:00'
describe
'2163' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYST' 'sip-files00085.txt'
07b388de616cab071d72b070aa9d1490
f4a38998b89a6f51dd50875112a27f6ccb328d65
'2011-11-17T00:38:18-05:00'
describe
'11301' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSU' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
8b0cede736d4f9aeef15a0f7c2016c5e
2fcff32f2a1f352bf0f36dc3245f3d386988f0f3
describe
'923682' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSV' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
af99203f77da3893e85fa594954b1e96
c9ac25432c24d2b84a2d564f1bcc112eef9d3079
'2011-11-17T00:37:36-05:00'
describe
'129116' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSW' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
6cdbad9011895a32bed073316f932498
0b04183d63f074616352fe748cf6c800a64991a1
'2011-11-17T00:30:55-05:00'
describe
'50914' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSX' 'sip-files00086.pro'
b4c5090bf5daebbf3601129138f57215
8dec082a7396f5fad854c3c94cdb96fa4527a088
'2011-11-17T00:37:39-05:00'
describe
'42975' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSY' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
8a785e47eb9976bf0e7dfd8984ac3595
03ec53d2ce040d3334a35ca2dbf7696dcd46e6a9
describe
'7396311' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYSZ' 'sip-files00086.tif'
108f0e8cb74e4bab27684ef6733625da
6ae6fda7d5ccb325dcc6062c92410b3c83477287
describe
'2166' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTA' 'sip-files00086.txt'
59ec8e2f58bb19e5e0c6b1a1c2448a1d
cce67b6793a80a446a91306582d2c7473b3363e7
'2011-11-17T00:31:10-05:00'
describe
'12288' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTB' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
10320c4924df6ffc7755b4d895247b5d
d6986468cef9b6173de0877c03610bf0aadb2b12
describe
'970285' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTC' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
f940c43c675de443b18e1e1f71fb2ec1
8d3a916a584d8a1d4db7b5f93c554b50070db91e
describe
'106856' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTD' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
6a73bc0ae355594c7e050f98aeb84d2b
2603548af1e9fb493198067babb6ae39c1a06fae
describe
'34590' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTE' 'sip-files00087.pro'
32ffe13c567af40890850d31e42ea58b
6180e54bcf86c2c1c7edcb0838a6c951e8eade9e
'2011-11-17T00:34:24-05:00'
describe
'34551' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTF' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
8b047fae7ee2ea69e65a676e96f43786
cd44746767dfbe6ba6bc24cdd13a8134438d42e8
'2011-11-17T00:39:58-05:00'
describe
'7771883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTG' 'sip-files00087.tif'
61de0f37ad3fd32de6765b51239e9ada
ff83af4339c39d265aae9276b7e8d2d932ef37eb
describe
'2223' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTH' 'sip-files00087.txt'
53ac1a6511b629e8113107bd869693c2
7998b5bbc95aebdf4bdf926397d99f634b929adb
'2011-11-17T00:30:38-05:00'
describe
'10023' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTI' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
c6c7afa38742cf8e673b5c6bc94972e1
89f98cec3348a8cc0ae4fd3bd2165ad3941e050c
'2011-11-17T00:36:08-05:00'
describe
'910285' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTJ' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
4a29a80b5f0520319e7cc49d622c6f37
fc0be47f9ff6f13ef623bba108050f0769939bbd
describe
'129887' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTK' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
a585b904f4214534b8acb3bd4f33b69b
7f988f604d4049b5412a819b8da1dfd5339d152a
'2011-11-17T00:37:42-05:00'
describe
'51611' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTL' 'sip-files00088.pro'
bb0d355a2e470fe6fe2b9c301dbb875f
65bc604d60a1ae0e395844b61ddf9a5ea4f8f67d
describe
'43322' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTM' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
56fc4bafa5947654aaada2e40d704f96
83069b0b8adcdd00a1746b91c99a69fe9bd2d409
describe
'7289495' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTN' 'sip-files00088.tif'
e7ef90e504f48033247c7aaefec82b14
36223bd8cfdc80d0e88cb411135a3a3bb9e653d1
'2011-11-17T00:30:20-05:00'
describe
'2181' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTO' 'sip-files00088.txt'
d9a56ef65f2cea255082e1ed7ab11581
44dcbc1e98a7187adc0504d09525e919abe35708
describe
'12338' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTP' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
8f52a9e7b22f3b4031f5877ebbdb8374
38a12adaa2e51e3a53f2d5b959124fc2a4011307
describe
'982805' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTQ' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
245a65fa05e2cef66b18f2f1dd65a1df
943ba32e23ad06a73516236d8fdb456b2e134aaf
describe
'110268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTR' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
69b6394791c95ab0af9e2df92029e95a
e8afa7688f99d2dec0ca906a2c1f9957df9fe1e2
'2011-11-17T00:30:06-05:00'
describe
'36971' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTS' 'sip-files00089.pro'
8e17f2eadab05f542d8e1815d77073ce
860f42c79a7f57f53d82d28d834f1f5170830a79
'2011-11-17T00:31:21-05:00'
describe
'36298' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTT' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
dbe3f3da1c07bae5ff99f71fe601a43d
f68a86cc7b91b15da6537e6eb2bfd45c325ab361
describe
'7871717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTU' 'sip-files00089.tif'
c6f802f93b0a1b5aaaea77c3e38e5e9c
8d4e4e9fc54c8b99af4e79706d1d9662f6ae5325
'2011-11-17T00:32:24-05:00'
describe
'1594' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTV' 'sip-files00089.txt'
1df5b447c65ac8548c29f6268d36469d
bf22ae2f2ec6bb77d5eefaba926af4854914f7a3
describe
'9918' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTW' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
73e0bbb3c7ea8e40b595e7e5d677229b
1b8dcb0a64c89c2b093b01bf969636144254c042
describe
'957185' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTX' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
a0d2da3235a9f2a2efbb5f69cacbaaea
eb6ee0ca96f20b740a5ae7a0f194f31b5a721b7a
'2011-11-17T00:38:26-05:00'
describe
'112859' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTY' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
6eb8426e80ae4dbb673f1f0424a51486
5ce60aadf2578c25935c9653ee72bc8afc690c1c
describe
'42952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYTZ' 'sip-files00090.pro'
5f745d78c7531d10508766aa2bdc5d3f
ebb6acaf5630709a0059d23b8183ba49b2f1446c
'2011-11-17T00:33:47-05:00'
describe
'38099' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUA' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
681619b11923381ab4e20cf08194bc58
7dfb6efcb4108b7b2ccf3803fa59491ee46e58c2
'2011-11-17T00:38:51-05:00'
describe
'7666937' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUB' 'sip-files00090.tif'
512359c664b3ac38cf72076a168d0701
9ea2f700faaae7b8263c62b88b4e30e1d4e3909d
describe
'1836' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUC' 'sip-files00090.txt'
341c0ed470943998c685e5c34cc4d5c1
f7afb35158bba0bf44ca065e3feae91f38e21936
describe
'10720' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUD' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
6ee686f1d3884bf8a8efafe2fdf31b10
f49ea0e5b47b850248ded657612ab237e96fd3ea
'2011-11-17T00:36:40-05:00'
describe
'980949' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUE' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
e7dc1cad6b62c99504f5e4b4a415f73a
76121de4f8fc01d59ff76fe1f460bd181c22c29a
describe
'111770' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUF' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
96218c57acf8b2b55557908ed01aca6a
792cb009507e6abbef6600a035db224f630cb944
describe
'48072' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUG' 'sip-files00091.pro'
e313026e996234b34bfff077d0dfc1bf
f7964245be016d369346c06128bd99276aac8f14
'2011-11-17T00:39:16-05:00'
describe
'37627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUH' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
754fe12dc16d49d28521296ddaa42162
58536e4df59514736c6a0f7bc17c134149bd2919
describe
'7856945' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUI' 'sip-files00091.tif'
20bb067ab410cd2aa3eb32cce4c14bfa
d04fe4057d0a76b7aed8375e999efef6173b4399
describe
'2106' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUJ' 'sip-files00091.txt'
28cfbe2c44259e0646a1b8d378d2eab2
001f30c3f38cd572a8c20d71d382ff7ad41d8d3c
describe
'10481' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUK' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
168b8947df51120b58c6ab1df209faae
4ff2899ea7a5dd9db70eb6c06bdc40800e758407
'2011-11-17T00:33:45-05:00'
describe
'925275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUL' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
ceeae6b6539978958d36fe99d066ad50
94e1f678fd07f08b28af7a424a8dd162f09c67e1
describe
'97476' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUM' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
9773213a481b49564e7e714fea21c09a
8ab3834e1eb7160715c3da4af44e6356440519aa
'2011-11-17T00:32:45-05:00'
describe
'31836' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUN' 'sip-files00092.pro'
03a0d9f4040fdb9ddb6810b4eccf61fe
167ea75fdd3a7e8cc28706f8a348ad98b6979a01
describe
'32288' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUO' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
b6a9ea9da2acb200368869ad1b37fc95
376f0339eb65bb84b97d708967139f6fe14d8f5d
describe
'7411591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUP' 'sip-files00092.tif'
ada37ffb29444d0e1e7116b6932933e3
67807f0176af8912ed05513538d719e8185e7e4a
'2011-11-17T00:39:26-05:00'
describe
'1416' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUQ' 'sip-files00092.txt'
6a01f9209761e742ecd96b5863df76ae
c5131357048ea6f755e347769152391d241a765f
describe
'9689' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUR' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
71507a663aee907f91cf83cbfeecf05d
e606a46fc4276b65972ec906b4422b083415a142
'2011-11-17T00:37:51-05:00'
describe
'963580' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUS' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
6565e2eb859bff5a6f84556a8a639867
2ad5c6734a4ddbb8b8bf0a8ffe66cc055afe1b14
'2011-11-17T00:30:03-05:00'
describe
'124897' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUT' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
116b96111b5550f170738da48e7b0d38
6627b99b6e9cbb2db717b80ec38a4627eda397d2
'2011-11-17T00:32:58-05:00'
describe
'49707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUU' 'sip-files00093.pro'
cfd775b960515f8a0ab8008aa70451cb
f7c837aa40a0431e51642e33fc5c1d2fabf7310b
describe
'42613' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUV' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
48c0fe91211be27d5ea6a8c6f82872f5
8dcd78000986202a5108217b6429d9f70f4c98f5
describe
'7718419' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUW' 'sip-files00093.tif'
96b677823aca2e39587905529bf109b4
96797a5b6ba09dc4fc3dac154d401bed9d009a7b
'2011-11-17T00:31:51-05:00'
describe
'2053' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUX' 'sip-files00093.txt'
22becec090ae3e973adf992d08fa8563
6349a10edeae68be963000ba5fdd94e8729e97a1
'2011-11-17T00:31:32-05:00'
describe
'10935' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUY' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
023e816a3727b6359e6539e60497dc86
e8325840bde7125134e89bdd832e729fdeefd6a7
'2011-11-17T00:35:32-05:00'
describe
'914081' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYUZ' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
7e19638a60c7eabc8a97710fd63e823e
c66bc9f9082c4e115de868221ef15f97781883e7
describe
'128721' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVA' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
c71caf9e320055d5e1134663108f40a1
460fbfb8b68c43cf7518d129903598afeb0842cc
'2011-11-17T00:34:30-05:00'
describe
'51466' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVB' 'sip-files00094.pro'
bffce146b1f2fb49f9870c4bf09ef5dc
f5805ec4283e6b2440f8235c11368af25125bbcf
'2011-11-17T00:29:50-05:00'
describe
'42839' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVC' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
9012c95095153b1f548e67497ce912df
12930d35b978127219b13b2c4d70cecd8f2790a7
'2011-11-17T00:32:53-05:00'
describe
'7319671' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVD' 'sip-files00094.tif'
c9455073e49c137cd46dd16b75ecdb1f
7ef472c66e45bc35c127e32db9047c5b89ec240c
describe
'2143' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVE' 'sip-files00094.txt'
ee14dc4a0986da797597b24c659bdb0a
dd5aa2da022ac92d1af60788d91c92dd34972052
describe
'12352' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVF' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
2f452c540309d1908f1bfd92aab544a6
c29cff6dce65dda2eb103fa8dec91a7978dd6bf4
'2011-11-17T00:36:39-05:00'
describe
'935827' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVG' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
37c56f0c6f14ffa3eec6c722739e58d3
8aecf8476901357b8198bf680a5b430d6c6daa45
describe
'97021' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVH' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
5fdedee624238fe604bc6dd2f3994517
9f673ba9a4ce7979aaa3187e9501cf8a5cbde111
describe
'33024' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVI' 'sip-files00095.pro'
76d7a5d0373aa14d5408f17b2a3e6cf2
19c74733ded26fc62333230ae98af28fddadffaa
describe
'32126' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVJ' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
30a400848d332aa03829283bb0d08cca
546a8da3e03ea54d8e9bcb62993c8ed716d2fa31
describe
'7496489' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVK' 'sip-files00095.tif'
9fd66ae2214225cb502873e58d02be55
6fc8f452f6d2064674a812dfa169aa6061051236
'2011-11-17T00:30:45-05:00'
describe
'2237' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVL' 'sip-files00095.txt'
2f85398a4014aacfbb54ba11dcd58435
cb49549bae120741da03934549b4ed0d520e56ec
'2011-11-17T00:36:44-05:00'
describe
'9818' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVM' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
22102e5df38ceaed531f22b8669387bc
efae46bae04c59cf4c7380be6ec8b4cc156794e5
'2011-11-17T00:32:29-05:00'
describe
'924506' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVN' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
7bc8697a5a15733c314416be4ec3e72d
3b5784ce304852ddea07e30d4b854d89e90c9f0a
describe
'132164' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVO' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
a252c95c5c8dffd4d9ef41a09b770771
d26d3522fed2b9cd326a1177091c9a8a8c6ee1b8
describe
'52307' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVP' 'sip-files00096.pro'
3d837c3675da870ade88d767f3e9cfae
bcaf9b29bc5b4b0b97e3d38f14ef176ca6c412c9
describe
'43457' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVQ' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
29a99c9ed71e6910669ecc21f9f1f0fc
7f5916bf08a23618da75dff48997057cc4122539
'2011-11-17T00:31:11-05:00'
describe
'7402835' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVR' 'sip-files00096.tif'
eb31d0d6b11d6592252756fd66e3d69b
112e14411fdf84cd549d12a12ce55d2c58a6cb1f
'2011-11-17T00:32:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVS' 'sip-files00096.txt'
fdddd98e5f5bee9ec59d542bb28761f1
0d9a032bad263675207b6102b575045018c88276
describe
'12564' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVT' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
3ab70afac642db7b998578b3e83cbc94
5a4f2b3317d3c4b0ac8c9156f0de71d83b7a5b59
describe
'940698' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVU' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
0f74fce9a1691622b85b0194f63a4e19
b35deaa681168cf1d2fba6ce2be0b12c8a9f9d4d
describe
'120847' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVV' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
1de1ec9aaff8798ef07cbd2edea329ca
4221a71b28c071d374353c1eb4100b68d584dbe2
'2011-11-17T00:38:53-05:00'
describe
'48437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVW' 'sip-files00097.pro'
77806b19b29ec420aac07b5d6df0de62
58b4cbc853c37cee4c3ca04ba6f2965a24688b43
'2011-11-17T00:37:15-05:00'
describe
'40355' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVX' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
1ba9b3745b119f8f764e5a8726a13da2
4a0165426f8acccff102ede73ab42ff30c1e2993
'2011-11-17T00:38:20-05:00'
describe
'7535491' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVY' 'sip-files00097.tif'
ff076531b98b0a1ef83d20229fb90853
190f7e0eac900cc270160fde343d862de6e025e9
describe
'2072' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYVZ' 'sip-files00097.txt'
59dc0cc62000b61f99349eaa960e1790
60c1b7741f1a798c5d2e9812d1c8a04f7c1947f0
'2011-11-17T00:30:48-05:00'
describe
'11758' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWA' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
887a5ccd593e5a36b45446387559ee02
88ed4a9e3cdb722f435dbc7b13b3263a3e0a212a
describe
'921375' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWB' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
ef95f8a444021bc2a167e7fb2d10dded
c340a95c90ce9c37e5e98857eedffac7e67a29ef
describe
'123648' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWC' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
2ae17ce53cf0a3e6fdac6d4bc2fe8b9f
77479a0af3412e9486da4b5e179b13c08b4f37c0
'2011-11-17T00:32:55-05:00'
describe
'50860' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWD' 'sip-files00098.pro'
99a637f021092461fde797679bb8c40f
b8ee222b70b2a4514b84c89c1cc719bd355f496f
describe
'40534' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWE' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
5f95752f777412712d78b1d69e9a46c8
d227acecd2deeea53b2b548e28e01387854d9b07
describe
'7378283' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWF' 'sip-files00098.tif'
67445e2a1cd273e1987692bde3f1ca38
cf2b12f181e9ca7336ecf091cafaeacb10e1b89c
'2011-11-17T00:39:25-05:00'
describe
'2247' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWG' 'sip-files00098.txt'
17344bf05cd6e46df9fe166ec51fd819
0160fab656c422cc8ff2d239ba7151493782eeb8
describe
'11838' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWH' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
f85eb8e5bb3381c9e51db1bb4710d22f
532cdd70d14f4c8d4f919628a9f606d18e6b050e
'2011-11-17T00:36:32-05:00'
describe
'955915' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWI' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
a50df85e4b619e4ad58e5f8556eb23f9
bb767a9d73bc25ef2296cfadffc80712d55ba6e4
'2011-11-17T00:34:07-05:00'
describe
'131680' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWJ' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
4068793bc548d268dfe6a367a6e5aa52
4233ff36f366952f431cc33616495eb441cd48c5
describe
'52249' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWK' 'sip-files00099.pro'
8cd243f8975f89fd60e401363aa3b1e5
325a3909f7533f313bb6bf7e3533c38215d15470
'2011-11-17T00:32:03-05:00'
describe
'43496' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWL' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
c39370ab55948e37ab29db82ed3a651b
5ab1ab2f2d01e22dd74071c9a0ce87c041e34028
describe
'7656707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWM' 'sip-files00099.tif'
a5a0cd5e0fd50e013bfb7f318389c93c
a61a1129b54cf1f8703c82d90e1ea1717d9b3dad
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWN' 'sip-files00099.txt'
549fc8f4bbe06c77cdff65e04c47d1be
6eca165cadab2d3ba45c4b0bfbaedc4fe5b45841
describe
'11728' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWO' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
eedf06f4d95c84d7e96bb80934cd6054
cd2ed138ab151ead4654c0fd121c83d769f864ea
describe
'923868' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWP' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
d9fa4ef38d925e910df9c0a02b779330
f687411e84409786fb85affb7726339ae5c44c95
'2011-11-17T00:36:11-05:00'
describe
'129573' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWQ' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
934ad466e311d84abdf872cde17f267e
a281c0176abdc9bb9b15b38d14320c560119f7ed
describe
'51485' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWR' 'sip-files00100.pro'
01690e04768003902633899fdafef49f
a370be1bf076992e43cc49bd65a5297c494c988a
describe
'42897' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWS' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
157c3f667477212db6b4ee85b4cb3440
c1a7b6f872ae3595ac4f9e406caf69f788f647e8
'2011-11-17T00:36:29-05:00'
describe
'7398067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWT' 'sip-files00100.tif'
f68a024519faaff372c9db95e8217808
76be82acfd5ced3d2b0dadbd18686b6bcba5c069
describe
'2161' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWU' 'sip-files00100.txt'
51b891f4c2d204466bec492f1afe78fb
cae1e375630f458b9c6b181a8bfdf61a811598d7
describe
'12710' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWV' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
30c59de8c591dae05446390b5e9aefa3
7f68a4dd7bfb8d4fbcd663ceadaeb462466e5386
describe
'934874' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWW' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
23cc10627ad85e40f3c9ef86bdad335b
49556b7b17efff7c7f08be769d2e1148e4415d8b
describe
'96320' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWX' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
2cd3100a14f3da99a2e9a632e235ee08
2e836c9b9e8b07424cd1d13b269c2feaa3122d66
describe
'21978' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWY' 'sip-files00101.pro'
2caa83788bd0f28fb92f8194bdaa5c5a
0a461f15e9edaef93b91d484199abc43eaa0d58f
'2011-11-17T00:38:05-05:00'
describe
'30065' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYWZ' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
1e90ffb1253c7ed09235ff5cc8b0c4ac
c8587cddaeee845a123c08d2387094e3701d778b
describe
'7488457' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXA' 'sip-files00101.tif'
fd7cad5f8adfb0d06088beae5e20a74d
e8e71f26ae325ea571f09b3f07e62c3b6c7b79c8
describe
'917' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXB' 'sip-files00101.txt'
1bc64145fa6b07fcebf9436950b44252
e833a97ddf86eb099c727e615fc5006a5f8b6455
describe
'8799' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXC' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
2708c6b1db2675075fec598e72f0b81b
056af99a4377c751b2c661e1f5eab4c68f422c53
'2011-11-17T00:38:01-05:00'
describe
'948325' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXD' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
f5226cb31115b59da658b4cb1c64ab1c
ea57432b76568db27692507b6baac743bffd66f3
describe
'106570' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXE' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
ab4f41ed615f04fe904e0a7af8776f84
ed9091fb4e02015befe25d3a495de6b2c6ebdc91
'2011-11-17T00:32:35-05:00'
describe
'37330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXF' 'sip-files00102.pro'
27f330a1b9185bade9d78a7726879526
c79002e3264c9bd226893d9e40aafc7a5578408c
describe
'35157' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXG' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
e89ed2214183980ddf41df9eae23d241
3fb4befa77a3d65edb4c65c3e4d8ce71be210278
describe
'7596317' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXH' 'sip-files00102.tif'
88a00c4d2dce07a18990dbbd9c9f90a1
11ebf0e41c95878e3dd1655309e3c48198a813fd
describe
'1610' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXI' 'sip-files00102.txt'
6b8e02a3fbf1e5a54f759fcfd318f366
ed6f41ac45f26c1e9dbd987813fef8182167d3d4
'2011-11-17T00:38:35-05:00'
describe
'10710' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXJ' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
a32117d03333663b83aa6a2b3b99887a
b3fc7d5c6c3abf5782cda996462d60246d7d8de2
'2011-11-17T00:31:49-05:00'
describe
'936532' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXK' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
ee508833ad114eeba1b418adbbf33df1
d295a8ed05d33fbfcbcaefeb1b08a4bef3e5b253
describe
'104638' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXL' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
ae762605bbc81fea5abd1694cec0ca16
4be3c1b2111429fd99f673bf04b781f7e6510a09
describe
'27708' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXM' 'sip-files00103.pro'
8e9b8dabaef475fabe83ded85e5c9127
a03b85dd219a0938767c37c70e4285fb01e35078
'2011-11-17T00:36:27-05:00'
describe
'32634' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXN' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
644991af1500f53676aeb22dda51ee2c
c326be7cc2cd17fddf8897a01e1ace51371542c9
'2011-11-17T00:30:07-05:00'
describe
'7501407' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXO' 'sip-files00103.tif'
895f4a1e8ecb14c0cd9c86a35f688999
e44ce53acc0c73edeec6273a2d923fa2f182f887
describe
'1203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXP' 'sip-files00103.txt'
9c33cd6dbe01d113806eb1f4d65a70bf
25991f3c0dee568183ea02826f458a2f688c1b21
describe
'9359' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXQ' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
d5d80ec6478a1926f1f30a48377e8227
c3da040cb230e1e9390fd9fc4c8975428bba44a5
'2011-11-17T00:34:34-05:00'
describe
'925103' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXR' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
110192ebd737efb3d515bdfa013ebd1c
5dad24b76415b61b2b569899ad24f11b0e43670d
describe
'114245' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXS' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
6d799603e9c20c8a1d278b7f4e62ae89
b8087bd03b050387b7e44c96ee499686518e660f
describe
'25737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXT' 'sip-files00104.pro'
80100f9f1ed3644bf4fe560bf91c4417
de1b9e465b8ad08263bf5ab265cc17e0ece7762c
'2011-11-17T00:31:06-05:00'
describe
'34726' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXU' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
dc1ac421377a8e1b4e48c51579ed030d
623afc1819c9d892b3ba4b4c2998ecb3f8ff1fc5
describe
'7407645' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXV' 'sip-files00104.tif'
2e2a5bf88587b4e6ef7f0b800da22464
4730f6206a5e9adf11f48e681ca602a87833d51d
'2011-11-17T00:32:05-05:00'
describe
'1100' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXW' 'sip-files00104.txt'
3710cebd207ea15deba8ccff4bd0f44b
4d67ad1b8cc8e3d423811044313bf2f1374a16d4
describe
'10546' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXX' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
de04476519f96358e818d66871c479d7
866dd47d263beec7736367d213a3bbc0326d684e
describe
'945716' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXY' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
3171f4f78b6f6c45b8b16b7a9d98a590
1d4cf202ae07f1238ddbba611d5b27ef4ac9d0b4
describe
'122841' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYXZ' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
2a44714c8c4c06f5624073347da77b3d
27e1984c3847c774dd4e5663f2c32dbd5086690a
describe
'44309' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYA' 'sip-files00105.pro'
cc1ef06cc3d85fc4d2e9a26a376c6809
249253bc330614daa434773814d19dd2a612519e
describe
'40235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYB' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
a46b4b64704c1f1f198a4b437bc2be3b
0ef435ee6d73231bb29dcef2790536c602d815ef
'2011-11-17T00:39:13-05:00'
describe
'7575067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYC' 'sip-files00105.tif'
6cc5d2f55b497834f86b4076316a81bc
3df779ed6dc3751d86e2204a6faf6e8066936809
describe
'2129' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYD' 'sip-files00105.txt'
090bb9079a4a2c32f32fd7012641d790
4d42979b2ac752c449f2a7c2eaed9dc936ba2180
describe
'11430' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYE' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
61c968eb55165cbd9fdf0420ca58703e
27267d933a5108c542fa18509b55cfc5c40e9aac
'2011-11-17T00:31:47-05:00'
describe
'914830' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYF' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
cacb01ba7ded08da0d2b5f9dff94f5a3
dec40cb6b35672ee94fe155870174060d0191fa3
describe
'129507' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYG' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
8f62f38aafb73b09c1a37fcfd5670f64
21370c66fd1a490621cc703530cfc16ed9f29b4b
describe
'51821' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYH' 'sip-files00106.pro'
99ad5c186e3ba06ece2bd840411fd680
1a2a8e216fcf2346cea7e68dff36ecf0f99f64c2
'2011-11-17T00:30:33-05:00'
describe
'42942' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYI' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
f3ba195282b0350515e55e2ed11273b6
94bc706cd3036a0710cfdc8bb555d0f2a0d2ffba
describe
'7325539' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYJ' 'sip-files00106.tif'
6ee6d2f118e514d24f6d760d9289da89
589ced6aa28ef1eb9be3cdc6693be3cc45c1f580
describe
'2155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYK' 'sip-files00106.txt'
d71f8e7f46b572427750cc3737234ff7
056cdd61e9047e5d630cb9ec28fef56d672d5870
describe
'12503' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYL' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
6a8038e1947b3eaf9bafef7161803192
e97386369418f60334b36affd65cb742e23d79b0
'2011-11-17T00:30:53-05:00'
describe
'948742' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYM' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
c2847096e6f6f071fb6d5ef3c7c3e550
b0ef138371671bb492c9649da15061ce255eb993
describe
'130423' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYN' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
5256966ec83fc6cbad5e6d5d6a60a2d7
0affaeb8dc95ec1aac2efb6b5098d4a2ab532a20
describe
'52264' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYO' 'sip-files00107.pro'
f23b008e51d2742c88b4a150be157354
55c748902eb18ef232cda65fd26de14522bcd89c
describe
'43329' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYP' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
1af886620656253915900cccbb84f146
d1cd11786e57a64867e790bd74da982a0202d3c0
describe
'7599425' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYQ' 'sip-files00107.tif'
68ee589dd5cb3a4d0c4009fd279a0d43
ebec537001a63142e50548425878905a00aff115
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYR' 'sip-files00107.txt'
b000048927faa93934f7d76886a1c510
c35ca0f557b941207a8a7837191e34fc95060a61
describe
'12373' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYS' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
be5eeb71c29e025c91fd24841ef4dd7e
da93cb966a9a4c6788586cddc64927a787d32aa3
describe
'926554' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYT' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
8790f0f67a01e41d49d50761ce698328
e2c6e35c5b086f08227ed16edf26c0d4cd08dff6
'2011-11-17T00:35:19-05:00'
describe
'131138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYU' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
fe63eed401c47c8af206948783f67176
f1596e086753925f69201896fc25ab989c241dcd
'2011-11-17T00:34:28-05:00'
describe
'52295' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYV' 'sip-files00108.pro'
91bb915853eb77243b435ed7bd7e9007
bf711d96552793312be50e86b036fcba84c76f78
describe
'43097' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYW' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
ad6e437132811d25ebdb923da87da650
568df59e77a90b6c5343cc9559a8a459b0c4fd60
'2011-11-17T00:40:12-05:00'
describe
'7419889' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYX' 'sip-files00108.tif'
f628d2fd6a220e4993bb284b308db645
351a13775240b12c6ea72dc052ff42401596f127
describe
'2196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYY' 'sip-files00108.txt'
817d05540d1584190bc6975c46576b3f
065d1136ffe1a6cd66e7e56f3748c77b09eeb969
describe
'12510' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYYZ' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
d1435b17bd9d5dd62ca174cf20e85466
d4ed11db7535e91e59be533e6a59d6bea09d239e
describe
'943804' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZA' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
f5e6f42ec1dee5213c8dbce8252b3931
84709ae2282a3bf2ded2f9e8442e1c4b366419c5
describe
'130426' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZB' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
2b2dd2fcaeb7602c94aacebaeef765cc
e6dd58fa97ee94fa1ad7589eb9a4e54d881ca431
describe
'51686' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZC' 'sip-files00109.pro'
cf641c55f563b66fe58c07b4e95ec131
28ed085ad457a2f054d5968c0b83bb6f357cf1ad
describe
'43410' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZD' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
b8c766590715ead1cb55a4626e2746b1
4511df5c38b2f6d062ef419f5fd5d8137deb38fe
'2011-11-17T00:34:50-05:00'
describe
'7560483' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZE' 'sip-files00109.tif'
d95ecf81dd7a301e0b537251841dfddc
897969eeaa53a1e07c5396d07c3b54c82ef52bea
describe
'2130' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZF' 'sip-files00109.txt'
83b7e82af17e7d90b69c4aa191204f67
63d7c6bb0425db48825e20f8773afcde59342e22
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZG' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
8f2c7e475b8e3e45c4352a1b2bf8d98d
fee2928fff9f30bea18d4f33ca3ae88ed75fbb21
describe
'924135' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZH' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
f98c91b802fd3e188374bfa9bd24f71a
8a58bfb13233c3fa8428d386c48ef354b3c1dece
describe
'111318' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZI' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
7be71f7b18a386e233a940e0993f4fe3
2de1448cbd0eab0d0d81e842a2818ffa145ca302
'2011-11-17T00:39:30-05:00'
describe
'30787' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZJ' 'sip-files00110.pro'
bd6d5a149ef65eb194312e2adf5f4d3e
6c60f8adaf9ef88a617c0a524150a34ab624fb12
'2011-11-17T00:29:43-05:00'
describe
'34902' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZK' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
19519eb9261b37f01d965f37aa1ba8b4
60b8d217622b8e17fa5740240d503be9263e1875
describe
'7402319' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZL' 'sip-files00110.tif'
fa7f79202e5457e0c0b9029bb832bdf1
58258657130722dec768368ee509cebad1e68649
describe
'1378' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZM' 'sip-files00110.txt'
f3c70a42946149a9872ec8d052867ce7
cb5b11452792d06b99a5769fe82883e03045784d
describe
'10264' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZN' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
61ba1d4aa332f6d7c1cba0b65f107414
63ee1fbc772702e4e08490f2cf85aa76ef814d32
'2011-11-17T00:37:49-05:00'
describe
'951631' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZO' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
9ea6a04b7f7495ab7d137d9a00c50f72
92b175fff25e63ff4cc527229ce4f8334fc206c7
describe
'130707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZP' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
115a486e016d23929a35c250d59df548
ccdffd46f78cd4db570703be43df32f2608dcaed
'2011-11-17T00:33:16-05:00'
describe
'51409' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZQ' 'sip-files00111.pro'
a8a5d1711e8a8706f72d445117b9a962
9aded4ebfac979c4ce037e32ec3dd5495bf6e623
'2011-11-17T00:31:55-05:00'
describe
'42877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZR' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
0d63e7318d85ab1097203c2e189b7375
2fbddeb70bf39e6f6fd38d746b598443b1c7977e
describe
'7622323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZS' 'sip-files00111.tif'
4e29da4efed62bbba59964ee85c2ad47
486ecf5963d291b8ca976fcd4e9c1a4afeab5e7f
describe
'2141' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZT' 'sip-files00111.txt'
7defd1325078d629abe71639503196db
7855dda43304b34d1b626f6d179a3b42283958e3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZU' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
828298ff44e03879d3668eb97ff02f6f
2e1b08bbe30106f35b919d74f459b796feb4df40
describe
'909887' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZV' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
e8a7fd834fa8cd08e0b6c9eea46cbe74
e4a47c91793dcc131699ccc6d3e150b99c32e05a
describe
'134967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZW' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
10e3bbe52f1556841b3c489dff55309d
259666d31facd23d9fe157a29266e5447ca496b2
describe
'52336' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZX' 'sip-files00112.pro'
18cc4e8a8877dc932de50a5d8163fba1
dcdccebbe456911a4355b9bb3c529a0ab84af0ba
describe
'45312' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZY' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
0e587a2910015bd0e9e3ef0de0e9e8a5
e4b1e577bf50dcf2ef1ca4e2b641e825f92ae7a0
'2011-11-17T00:39:22-05:00'
describe
'7286195' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAYZZ' 'sip-files00112.tif'
36e0ca3d17c0eeff09526cdfe800409e
8785531dcfbc1522788ef4b6146f918de3228b1c
'2011-11-17T00:38:40-05:00'
describe
'2195' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAA' 'sip-files00112.txt'
fcf51e4d80b85fcb4ceddd3cda5ffc11
55ddc986284cc3e82d12f6b52b46e984deefc1ac
'2011-11-17T00:30:26-05:00'
describe
'12931' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAB' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
b91a959689782a01b734ffcedbbd2d7a
eb30898ce59654853b19f52316006f7b6282a1a9
'2011-11-17T00:33:07-05:00'
describe
'968872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAC' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
7fe7e797c9a7504cbff95d9218032634
d010ee6276d59e86ba6a4a07654066d372fc04f5
describe
'130178' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAD' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
e0db40c32d1614f2a9558e06fcca3679
77d61ddda9690fa6b9cc978ad3a833f94e8fcdfa
describe
'52341' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAE' 'sip-files00113.pro'
6edf735d2277fc700ac3dffc5fc12aaa
ef38e751e42e6226cf1b3220aae9298290cde9cb
describe
'43204' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAF' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
6211def90df4bf8ee1c6e81e5ee6cca0
d16ebcc9fb6c90ba8ef45216ded2ee3fd1a55e84
'2011-11-17T00:33:04-05:00'
describe
'7760509' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAG' 'sip-files00113.tif'
d3205fb1f0048d47c9d93e10a67e5fee
244dabdffb598c1371721ce83b567a7cb7615215
describe
'2209' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAH' 'sip-files00113.txt'
9c11acccdbf58968fbc296b2b8013cb8
1eaa9cf23f818e45194880e8cadaeafa6a60bf9c
describe
'11675' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAI' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
871ab127a8c4f48a233eaa50a7483e5f
fedc46050438423ae54aa67f3585b66a3a5c58b2
describe
'904433' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAJ' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
40b2aacd0ef6300270db8a78e4e09fcf
a815582b36fb4ed26416a3a61fc641b4c24325d7
describe
'127357' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAK' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
ce85c3d7e3f75cf9c8d9c359fc15f487
542d40033ab586ec25291d95ed09b12f5695a7cb
describe
'50222' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAL' 'sip-files00114.pro'
acaad6e191d2bef7cf28bde702564415
9e9376856982fb67d816381b46a24933021413a0
describe
'42755' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAM' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
33eca2744b98098f42a2ef488a05542e
ce32271561e03167ea51864bd589f86cc880efd6
'2011-11-17T00:37:17-05:00'
describe
'7242317' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAN' 'sip-files00114.tif'
76308d669f48a700c4f12ee4cde9fd4c
49ae9ce28333d6e8f80062b573ceda5a33984f59
'2011-11-17T00:35:38-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAO' 'sip-files00114.txt'
43a7029c03ed58624d19b9a615b59ce7
50949683c82dc7ff1dd730495b511b4e1e634b9b
'2011-11-17T00:39:12-05:00'
describe
'12430' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAP' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
afe6f916612829d49620edde50276647
8e0be11ef1ab969a1d81463446bec56fa231bf5d
describe
'919450' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAQ' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
0dc93afa276f52676d8e6ca76e976716
4a5b1e4007224fcecc732de7d3d60567a25e2f74
'2011-11-17T00:40:16-05:00'
describe
'116729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAR' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
8891ca65e5776ba0367ad47638ab99c7
544aa05ddd8b696b5db163bfeb8ebc59fa5ce854
'2011-11-17T00:30:37-05:00'
describe
'39208' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAS' 'sip-files00115.pro'
4721fb35222b49991a9e103128d089aa
3364e6dc6913dd9265470eb427f88a79f0751cf3
describe
'38366' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAT' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
8c74409df46f300ca49a2e76835df6f8
6640abb55fc47f3773867adf8dc9eee679cd7129
describe
'7362403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAU' 'sip-files00115.tif'
f461d3599243b295a8b05af13a09ee9e
d4449987481442de51b77615d4f7a46d5ef4f7f8
'2011-11-17T00:35:48-05:00'
describe
'2019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAV' 'sip-files00115.txt'
cc2eb7e58a98d0f13ce8e57ee1aed197
b7dd1d9225c4918784eeddb8749f03e48a31a9cb
describe
'11490' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAW' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
76bd6fab4e557f1e5127b107d910df52
02084b68a2ca978bdf3376b30967bb880cb63fe1
'2011-11-17T00:32:36-05:00'
describe
'887996' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAX' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
57c7078a22a32110c5b497d683bafc83
653f45e2784dae378b982aa4be650ab49ae11a50
'2011-11-17T00:38:24-05:00'
describe
'129845' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAY' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
f045cdff208edbd6c6ca26787ef6b900
49b509f17eda75a2c865bbfbccd0b20be997b858
describe
'50344' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZAZ' 'sip-files00116.pro'
70de2327b1fe398036d373982a42afc9
40565a95902d6239766994132a0b93fa5a758f5d
describe
'43404' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBA' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
4d44597d653d0ed4d9f452da16fdb467
e2c5d7a71bc266905476b48805b4e1c35a8e5a5e
'2011-11-17T00:30:00-05:00'
describe
'7110677' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBB' 'sip-files00116.tif'
379e1516dcaee8418b2cb8cf9daeae58
1d5b80f95d6f1be0156fe2aad856a07ef804e2b6
'2011-11-17T00:33:49-05:00'
describe
'2103' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBC' 'sip-files00116.txt'
29c0b716faae91c5191b7f668c296af9
748b044bd4ccfab1e2b1e4b9062b8b3c683cb1fc
describe
'13223' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBD' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
913554ab9578bea170e6384a160d2c95
2a132d7cc4ac7039bb3468384c80d9e45683653b
describe
'937149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBE' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
3db9f4e8833be8ad2faf4b4dc8e7554a
886ab0cee5b9ad9fe2f051a6d8ad2adeecd63784
describe
'115092' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBF' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
4860a54076e22dac6ea1e85af6a83e40
ac7f1506fd5cafd4cbb3e4648fbdb0011b5b105f
describe
'44098' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBG' 'sip-files00117.pro'
7d0ed1f4d09593ca7edf0ac3cc055813
b14cd289e2defc9b75c5e9a167a3849ee10eebd0
describe
'37483' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBH' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
10ed1f70b0670c160a2fb990cf438ef9
f9e8a7e37444884ae6ee8be6a2e9a18419543918
describe
'7506459' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBI' 'sip-files00117.tif'
ce782e3e52436f2f2b8cc80007a729dd
869e13fac07e4d4d1000428a467746c41564d349
'2011-11-17T00:32:32-05:00'
describe
'2010' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBJ' 'sip-files00117.txt'
f65c89a2d8dc6149d68792596b634887
70739a38b690ddc4d15199665e827fe18dab69c1
describe
'10300' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBK' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
410ccb765447a54a781a5afd1655d0f0
cece0e6a5175fee539efc5cfaa8dda6db4ef5e88
'2011-11-17T00:37:32-05:00'
describe
'913638' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBL' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
05946649c62daeab6e0dc2d68e1d078d
4583b08e7e707cb04697d621e95b1a2599d3bf09
'2011-11-17T00:37:46-05:00'
describe
'133355' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBM' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
347435bce8b4e197e12d93e98bcde42e
ad55190579e4542c202381186821b1ecab63edac
describe
'51594' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBN' 'sip-files00118.pro'
18102893eb562fa0a6e1d6f5669ccacd
180922019118d8af80c541fbcc078ac04c3fd987
'2011-11-17T00:39:42-05:00'
describe
'44134' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBO' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
28659db486f1095b1252412cc360fc14
2000c9b7d4ad3858979728b9b84b613e938f2718
'2011-11-17T00:35:04-05:00'
describe
'7316003' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBP' 'sip-files00118.tif'
be9250409aad874c2c3a565862bfda48
5341bd67f8eac53ddbf6d3b41afb7a5ba6fe0ecc
'2011-11-17T00:32:01-05:00'
describe
'2167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBQ' 'sip-files00118.txt'
2c84d4c40140bd5331751a7dee1a0eeb
47c833171b10cf1661662d34034fd320c4d53c46
'2011-11-17T00:38:25-05:00'
describe
'13143' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBR' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
49682b91b4eb4521924574e6ad06475d
be98411b99a485fb7bcc2a8043cfcbc5f7659bf4
describe
'923711' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBS' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
fc66b723f72e94c37df09a1918ddf65d
e11f464d88ffe6d239144b843fbf086110254c03
'2011-11-17T00:34:38-05:00'
describe
'124798' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBT' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
fc2fdba3abd7e57e9a19c637d2b91b06
9b49a652c1a8a45ae1298ae7c2fc9c1825c48c77
describe
'52534' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBU' 'sip-files00119.pro'
2225f2a45f2ab2136b0c9e8371209477
b674592ad22797b57ff7a35b5deb801043e1b30b
describe
'40850' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBV' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
cba65297465c1771b1fefa9ed37ecf66
296582648d4b1492e0a6d8b16bab42c5f7fed48e
describe
'7399465' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBW' 'sip-files00119.tif'
a89d2ee94beed8b16c9f5e171c227070
e5b87d755ff89f67dbb586610aa9bebf4e551098
'2011-11-17T00:33:41-05:00'
describe
'2281' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBX' 'sip-files00119.txt'
7f48f200561251b033b32b9e723ea3df
b0086f29baa7dd9c5e25da78b455f786930d9d6a
'2011-11-17T00:33:53-05:00'
describe
'11367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBY' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
c59be53487df55823bb901872ea6fb37
9687d393f698fdb6a712e4c4e767d13c03f5f44b
'2011-11-17T00:34:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZBZ' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
47a0ed326a4ca5451aabf3eda3bc87ab
dffbba27acdff3b15ba30f92e1cd1a23f53e85ef
'2011-11-17T00:29:44-05:00'
describe
'124284' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCA' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
1faf3bc40de58f1580bb31a348ced63f
e38fbb901cedd166a077914b16976b1973cef0cf
describe
'51010' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCB' 'sip-files00120.pro'
6073aa920c9244b4a77cf0cc76cafc83
0ea693bea46a508e98a5b6c07ad1d376ae663ff9
'2011-11-17T00:29:39-05:00'
describe
'41345' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCC' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
338a475d4051b2e10b0bc69c9780222f
70b8e9201e22314dd12d011539c7d721d9243f99
describe
'7426951' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCD' 'sip-files00120.tif'
de8b64748e0480b831e7969e8ace6080
087bcf62abf3d1f5644b8ce5a2449698f989e272
'2011-11-17T00:30:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCE' 'sip-files00120.txt'
126cda3be1451eae750e59710fd07c63
f3ca7a9be03075a7553b4114fb42984e9553965c
describe
'11847' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCF' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
9dea32dd0130f5c1accfd1a366008706
d4be4bdee8d756888d1631b930f2d4563016abd6
describe
'924842' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCG' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
cbdea149a2b45443ff3605eb21cfcfd7
769c7c4798b34ab68f7b73d0d4949f7457ac7aee
describe
'129481' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCH' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
4784c78d4060ca57955a9b487fc8a7a6
6c6892c33ed5d282683c3e2a0139c95077ccac1c
describe
'50612' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCI' 'sip-files00121.pro'
0c3de9f9ae54c7b2f0a43cf6a4e0505d
0c67de600474ec0c4a019fe2e8825f71bdd0f278
describe
'44332' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCJ' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
2316a60041a3017a2f628070c93a980a
f3e86c6bdb0c52128b72c9bdf1cb8431a4eec81a
describe
'7408003' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCK' 'sip-files00121.tif'
1869b4c41af1bdc4010cde2493078c41
5b98b029e54ec9e83c43c1cbb3669a9bc603415e
'2011-11-17T00:40:11-05:00'
describe
'2092' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCL' 'sip-files00121.txt'
037be89f76c158adce20b3f191b0ba46
54a099ab0b346375d0c88522a30765de956a23ec
'2011-11-17T00:38:55-05:00'
describe
'12129' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCM' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
c94e3d19e8776bcb1317ad76af15e2ea
c139f2cc7b3b4473b92a3303798b57a85a0200fe
'2011-11-17T00:37:26-05:00'
describe
'912613' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCN' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
b135df03d4550ffbf2a1585e62e84f70
d533b721a839f7f44a046cb3fa7bad3b0ef375a5
'2011-11-17T00:31:07-05:00'
describe
'131084' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCO' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
4ace5c495207105041c9850b0ffb626a
638817d90459b865f95bb675a055a78864665877
describe
'48757' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCP' 'sip-files00122.pro'
65e259d5387fe2af992053ee9f7db929
fcb3b2012aa6d2b79fe83c119e8b713db0e4ba1f
describe
'43980' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCQ' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
13b37c275d675bac9a22d8b9eef66b7a
4be9422c19ea52a34296c15b1e2406d6ad034355
describe
'7307687' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCR' 'sip-files00122.tif'
3f365f285a0e3a3ad741a69403396597
705a2f94054fc4f3311594c786fa1242a8c81815
'2011-11-17T00:35:52-05:00'
describe
'2082' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCS' 'sip-files00122.txt'
d1434d6f05e9134195ae56c619923160
b715a769d93ff1f8b7be2f35bdc684defea21b35
describe
'12729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCT' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
c81377ffe652cffd63b632d0b25b5749
943d63993572b3e99d0b2810ea0af5ce403cb981
describe
'932947' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCU' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
2fb5abd27e12f878c0e8cb2a7fbf6549
b634332a8190627f65461b37772a659ddfe104e2
'2011-11-17T00:34:11-05:00'
describe
'135021' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCV' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
47f645da91115e9cc8e599253c461396
d3f7f5863412c25263877ffb2e053bf5e07ad330
describe
'52657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCW' 'sip-files00123.pro'
a0e3f561f8226bc50fe21b7f5a5f76f2
91e1abb5fa726e9211b23b6451e9d2d45f8f5e71
'2011-11-17T00:30:22-05:00'
describe
'45428' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCX' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
0a451476a941e031690ffdb633566621
985cf5ab158372a60c2b8687fc61c52241014f5d
describe
'7472803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCY' 'sip-files00123.tif'
ee36031f23d017e2a845f39e1fad42db
256e5089f95baf0ecfe67316870779cd00597b6a
'2011-11-17T00:37:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZCZ' 'sip-files00123.txt'
70fdda3e985059381695ea2459f2cf93
37c21713a94f35d4349b15d37926d97864a3154b
'2011-11-17T00:31:35-05:00'
describe
'12443' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDA' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
59862e1a4926762fa33fbfb6db6c5bdb
a89fa2bac67501239e804d086b220a207397c820
describe
'925729' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDB' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
e22a5de402df2b76d64d59540bc30277
6f26c397937a61b4f25a1f4e6601d4e65f51cd77
'2011-11-17T00:38:07-05:00'
describe
'129717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDC' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
660b218b77ad07b098b4943164e6c201
6e8ce01174b97efc95d50e2e12b72cef5095b6ab
describe
'51665' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDD' 'sip-files00124.pro'
7a5c64a840146926b7b4e38f2af38245
246a475a10899a12b7f337e5a3235765f84755eb
describe
'43273' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDE' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
abf91e43de72d2ff4a4a39d27d061a16
9952e886da89c7ec6588ac74d7cc2af4388ca835
'2011-11-17T00:29:53-05:00'
describe
'7412745' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDF' 'sip-files00124.tif'
eea01a08f18a52362f69ae97f787cfbb
13653f77f6cd08ba7e8fd25171c7844a571cf527
describe
'2165' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDG' 'sip-files00124.txt'
05f878fbd5222d24666254b85b78ad3a
2202dff2e024cfc6bc300bf383ec6557014e6c7e
describe
'12805' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDH' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
3665be875ab6260b18dbdfdad1e41aa6
64171e257a94a1d6a996450d7aba629bd1b00f67
'2011-11-17T00:40:05-05:00'
describe
'918285' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDI' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
195ce56b9176dbd3dcf5a223f860c7c6
faaf2d1a355d8ad8ab5b00c1fe4875f8bd432bc8
describe
'132740' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDJ' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
548ffbb18a72a5e3b28c8227da60956f
f4a1fdaa87f6f361b67a3e9ec48bf22f9fc93191
describe
'52397' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDK' 'sip-files00125.pro'
6fa7ef7814f584cf4c85b79bf48a07e1
38770549387fc41a747b87762bc2e6a21a85c555
describe
'43854' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDL' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
853cdd255859965466fdcd6fccd3a68d
f9c68d6f4ae6f658676cc85af4218f79b668b8aa
describe
'7353041' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDM' 'sip-files00125.tif'
6f4a2837ceacb17a4ebd628c973cc464
18727133e4f6d70325d45e4f1a8216c647dd58ea
'2011-11-17T00:40:08-05:00'
describe
'2194' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDN' 'sip-files00125.txt'
37976332c506beb13e8f72297805e17f
ac283119a3154886689f8e527d3caf296e2fe028
describe
'12644' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDO' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
0ee9c296490f2f79d9babf1d9df5af2b
8448483386cb257d075801711d9104a2d0a5f54e
describe
'915416' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDP' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
d5aa12e1e6b432d149f102b3264472fc
5c026bec98b7e77d6cf6cacd285680a8b6e6a1d5
'2011-11-17T00:36:41-05:00'
describe
'133065' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDQ' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
7fc4d837bcc8a9a079e1b8cfc4e88cbc
09ac0d24d3add866a2f903e69b9ef713ffd36463
describe
'53387' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDR' 'sip-files00126.pro'
253477776e54b1932f231462e171e486
ffacad2842b69545eeed1d6b755f3e70a2e716a1
describe
'44123' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDS' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
fad6a9ae00af333318594cd45502f6c2
15689ab259a7a2498154a1904befabd38f268273
describe
'7330159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDT' 'sip-files00126.tif'
f3dfb31ab40932fc9435176b8af4434b
5b6965a0cdb11281e589f7311279406f503bc257
describe
'2240' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDU' 'sip-files00126.txt'
ef091df953e0a6596c0b5d1f96daee18
3949e144bb7315292c11c74527f5636827358368
describe
'13278' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDV' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
1b9146b9682d36b3ec4b191eb4cd300c
3967a60572014c965ada12441adceaa71ad450e8
describe
'967257' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDW' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
5570b17b299ef914a367fba64517bcf7
847755d17cc4832b4b7fddca79fc634f96bf9a68
'2011-11-17T00:34:43-05:00'
describe
'126522' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDX' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
96044acbb200e2116252a98f2cb07e85
baf58a9225d81994dfe6bcbe95b95ef2bbb47018
describe
'52533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDY' 'sip-files00127.pro'
5292ce5d4efbe8b86cc47cc91638a2b6
e59245e9053e2e3b07437e3ecb00421ca9aa1c41
'2011-11-17T00:29:47-05:00'
describe
'42028' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZDZ' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
8c782c1e96967e0987ff886cacbdf9fa
0f66835df2ac7df09184ac11a15ff24cefe45782
'2011-11-17T00:39:06-05:00'
describe
'7747557' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEA' 'sip-files00127.tif'
5da9e76a22382cd35a75f73ba5e94ecd
92fdd77c6266d3742173bcbfc7d89aaf155649af
describe
'2213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEB' 'sip-files00127.txt'
99fc0b8d964acf515dd5636b5027ef44
3ba0f696663e49d6ba62d2ec0aff3537c8054da2
describe
'11092' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEC' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
3dd8414f478cab9ddfc0f8e939c956b5
88b52bda78c75e3e010f6165de661652627c283f
describe
'935156' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZED' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
645f39a4acd5b889535352b107d01ee4
7b02416532c801de990662dc8a4e595a1b7b9122
'2011-11-17T00:30:14-05:00'
describe
'130998' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEE' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
7324322441fd1b88317349f3ed808d7c
c14835bc296513be3207ece6027c83379ee93027
'2011-11-17T00:36:22-05:00'
describe
'52367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEF' 'sip-files00128.pro'
f3ab10740d0120c4e54661b74203e1ac
7d42ab4ee498b7e92e9261248cf9d14ec9e27eec
describe
'42607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEG' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
1ce9c6531f830fb4e2b23e8e21a4b984
3420a0e8cf1d67e44c01ceda699e7fc831b39647
describe
'7490589' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEH' 'sip-files00128.tif'
b824cf4e70956a95d7ba1271b8e9df13
70ac9b3e913d5b076a9112da66657a65c37a4836
'2011-11-17T00:35:30-05:00'
describe
'2201' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEI' 'sip-files00128.txt'
8f9427f84544d7375fa65e935adb969a
2e4cb3ad6f3952d4eeb8e99a7cd00eaa58261f9f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEJ' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
f74f65dd7b00d065ac2ec03a7a1dc179
a8d5baebb2b1c7fcb0715e25fb774ddf1d45f395
describe
'962514' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEK' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
4d68ba9a6c422e83a4665d66da8ce73f
a5e3bb0eaf5026479b8c59e88f2f8282373675a5
'2011-11-17T00:36:30-05:00'
describe
'132579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEL' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
09221c91ad952725cd40357cd1421f7d
a59fd4d839339760e9870b6f14bd7d702ddde0de
describe
'51802' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEM' 'sip-files00129.pro'
1d7d033699552b236c106f86d43c98db
4db03202531656ad58079f29897467fb013878bd
'2011-11-17T00:34:40-05:00'
describe
'43441' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEN' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
4f96962da99635d1873a53c8fb905101
1428a583214c23dc8fbf5b20d1b3839b7658962b
describe
'7709529' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEO' 'sip-files00129.tif'
50d9d5d7551646e535e308e61ef0e08d
07c10ac5ff00f3b6e78a7759e73215edb6b646f7
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEP' 'sip-files00129.txt'
0a3bc73ece02732c0d0a6dcbc374934b
9cd92dd2a123fac7924761ee3f861ff5f8962981
describe
'11997' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEQ' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
47ffa35ed6ff8bca579becc1d5002133
fc99c92c4561ad5aedd126c339bbc70ece526b99
describe
'946821' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZER' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
5013d56e7a84d9198957720295357724
858225f865cadb27605e50b217638445fbd2941d
describe
'113250' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZES' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
f9992e9756cf639633fc215df368fb97
7f1bb0f3071872b41905ca47e238471567bbed36
describe
'33588' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZET' 'sip-files00130.pro'
882a15ee014823a1c6bdf0edbf60ab67
cb3e8a15932711d2171adf49debee055088b8490
'2011-11-17T00:34:09-05:00'
describe
'36740' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEU' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
e68b9693770f093fa2fc1adb99f61c09
9a421e86a971e81a9f475a520f22321f15e6c83f
describe
'7583929' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEV' 'sip-files00130.tif'
0726b6c0d141a27ab72a0a10e5955da8
61c0a253a3227e67c7190d3353fee92cff90dae1
describe
'1483' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEW' 'sip-files00130.txt'
612a3de7b2fdf2054ff89c90a5461fb3
8410ac16977f1a83535beed350795126af9db732
describe
'11493' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEX' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
bf44dc91b872804cb3c87703ebebb4cc
afc1bd5a0370d6604ba5b107e695e8ca55ee2149
describe
'950477' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEY' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
97414ac8e7f2f4e2d918e040da49f4e0
e611d3f59ef8016c329900f4d02222e47b9598f0
describe
'131153' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZEZ' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
6677c29b2baafefd3cab7c7966ecc8aa
078be01fbeb2b2760ef7587722b7511f9308203c
'2011-11-17T00:35:40-05:00'
describe
'52046' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFA' 'sip-files00131.pro'
c8c51844859cdcc99c9d90bc0e079281
27005aae1a7a19218e04409e058a809b3bc67adf
describe
'43758' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFB' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
00a74e0dadbfab4333901127c3c562cd
50c9ad50a6d537413d77822c8978a8ed1f6c7e1a
describe
'7613219' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFC' 'sip-files00131.tif'
9dfa0da5be6a41a2ccef3f0ffd301a9e
2d68d2e6b56683da3d9cb606d014419b1ed4895f
describe
'2144' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFD' 'sip-files00131.txt'
f878b1e0c53bd94d68ce1bfafc1b6d1f
9299c80697f16d1bba2d9d93d4e69b0324fba235
'2011-11-17T00:33:37-05:00'
describe
'11747' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFE' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
40ea10d643b644322df9f62e32e4bfcc
8afcdfea66ae5a1cca56e2cf650fe8434d6d05d2
describe
'951033' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFF' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
6399e88034c8d7db3a2c8a1591bb8298
a8b47f35894ae1ea932e85f36895e9151319d272
'2011-11-17T00:35:54-05:00'
describe
'95702' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFG' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
e261cb5766b4100f8e22b721b567bf2c
cd8504acdb916a57bf630e17b3ff123b7c8c48bf
describe
'13253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFH' 'sip-files00132.pro'
b6fea9a3355fe6d3b4980007ce7fcef3
e951988ffd47024794b0770ae0827f00daf38ab4
describe
'28113' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFI' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
d82878840e2632aef4ef8d35957ee34a
0fd553d52211483857488824b67d7e2cbdd58151
describe
'7618951' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFJ' 'sip-files00132.tif'
93a150b0db7ded32cae9ace156e365f3
3a869c25be84e6b57fe2fc33b1d652f0b153174d
'2011-11-17T00:38:59-05:00'
describe
'628' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFK' 'sip-files00132.txt'
713bf947bd36764b924b327adb8e3489
7dcf86724f93b21967712e6fc8eb8835ff2302f9
describe
'8202' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFL' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
2a195df9acbf1c986b8973e64c77dcc9
cc7d18544b6520e8db3e6a52c3f9850578931bd3
'2011-11-17T00:35:47-05:00'
describe
'959018' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFM' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
8c780248d31ef4d3a6239908f0684304
028cf36d849989ac510143beb9cb8eeec88996ec
describe
'135841' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFN' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
0b58e3b20db229ff0e77a58d294850ae
cfabdbdd515086668fd91ae764b3df22eafc9497
'2011-11-17T00:36:07-05:00'
describe
'52665' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFO' 'sip-files00133.pro'
2febea57d900beed88d7c6c50d9d21a4
514ed661b2754e00107304a2e32864f455f4a116
'2011-11-17T00:33:28-05:00'
describe
'44549' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFP' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
0aff36213208de8347a4373c1d48e5ef
0a28c691b65115cb96fef0f3964ddfb427168db3
describe
'7681551' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFQ' 'sip-files00133.tif'
844885df44876fe7e1960b974805bf1c
a56a7bfd60ef43831b3d4cb70c244f888ce61571
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFR' 'sip-files00133.txt'
b69a3a134e557fc03d74e42d00aa432c
21c058e9fd5b94785fb3a4767170cd0c3d0cf537
describe
'12242' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFS' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
8709735aff32a39dcb0c0b8e99d0a1b2
5433519c42f6a26f2b31dd9ffdfea5c8e441f765
describe
'903256' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFT' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
93f7f54a3deb5251a984ef25a779e226
370e3fb1fd3ce434c08fb67a54ba8a8c7a29dae0
'2011-11-17T00:33:09-05:00'
describe
'134407' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFU' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
321a833834978125726789cba1818959
91dba95a5dba47cd794a5d8ca42fe1a927f3a660
describe
'51740' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFV' 'sip-files00134.pro'
e68fba6d7af3647b27895fd08b4b94e5
dea1b3ad1b168e6207488cf15ecd2d4037a9bd4a
'2011-11-17T00:35:11-05:00'
describe
'45412' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFW' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
03a0d13904a4a188bcf1e3ca9fb2a798
acadb674d9bb7194b89cb4fadd9fb969635b40fb
describe
'7232803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFX' 'sip-files00134.tif'
e2653480995fc6aab2695129abfb6e88
b3a19628973982434b3f0ed43b5c60c8ef47debf
'2011-11-17T00:40:10-05:00'
describe
'2170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFY' 'sip-files00134.txt'
9167e8efb97f079aa5064e180a323567
fe4720d381d3c812c7200e70f44e4405d12c5879
describe
'13417' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZFZ' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
3c673ba3e90954b983ddd066c8ab18cc
7573f8fc0a2602947c016740af43a4015df18cba
'2011-11-17T00:34:04-05:00'
describe
'958594' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGA' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
c0b18543d7c7b8c8e550c78d72007985
4d8cedab7c074cb1212bba91754e408450d5631c
describe
'137499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGB' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
1415b2a6e9b3120959e39dc45479c3a0
6f65b70a55cdd5ae12a79913530fc0704db99f74
describe
'53991' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGC' 'sip-files00135.pro'
b334312f648656f5fd8f96747b8f4f92
21189febbd0dfac40359d945fd14bd4627956d20
'2011-11-17T00:35:25-05:00'
describe
'45427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGD' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
4de42e9e68b9b15c6889cf9cc29d5061
0b042019aec2c5ceb5dc8651215ecf528715633f
describe
'7678345' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGE' 'sip-files00135.tif'
fd951c6a823d755b8fae918f4d9d8ad1
1a51ef784cb5cff5818ceff3ebfe2407960ab255
'2011-11-17T00:37:38-05:00'
describe
'2221' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGF' 'sip-files00135.txt'
80097795c2db0c10e24f153643d98767
d19f5aa067668f83fcf4979a82933cdb22ad1f81
describe
'12103' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGG' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
b168e3294b085b11d6a352210903cde7
3b811b204001135910da30a2b741db9240b70a5c
describe
'912973' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGH' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
69648cba8542beba2c3b83558a3bf359
b848bd592a6615c3c97f7c2c2c2ca539ed46fedd
describe
'132159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGI' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
e2bd14f7252e2a24ebb85c2924323bcb
c2292aa734e65c129c69e1e7c5200b9c89184572
describe
'51836' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGJ' 'sip-files00136.pro'
c78ee30b7c3933ff681b8332d62fd17c
4cf2cf2e0c0e9fbfc0e827c0135f4d9fe7e57c11
describe
'43468' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGK' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
ccc2187b940aea374cd4d91d554368af
d8f1d9e49ad25c5f80e95bb4f21088b7b3076ab8
'2011-11-17T00:32:41-05:00'
describe
'7310603' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGL' 'sip-files00136.tif'
e6c4d819cd4a88781aeafb9f8b2bbd4b
d6e7777e184359ef7028ebc3eaf02b4f39221eee
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGM' 'sip-files00136.txt'
ee62c6e24b31baf2a4c7590b3a2c713d
9dd8ce93a912a1c169ff07cc1f6cad5e10a8e4e4
describe
'12536' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGN' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
a365e82cbff645d559ff2a310ac4fbb5
1c11027d2f0d6400af4eff8d3d87d60af36a2cdc
'2011-11-17T00:35:46-05:00'
describe
'963349' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGO' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
0a0f49413c5eae351ae5b5e0826c3a6f
e926c219d8a61b38d2706e82280e7dd53693b1e3
describe
'83332' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGP' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
da7cf30aa3ce40d97fc3e2b23fbd2ab1
73c6e16750a52162fd2653ed8aa80def92484185
'2011-11-17T00:31:18-05:00'
describe
'26371' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGQ' 'sip-files00137.pro'
0f4911c1f3c4d90ede2181a95bbd1a1d
17130200124456f8e0b21cf533cd85d679dc9a25
describe
'27367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGR' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
3389330b9aeec16cc2fdcc703862689e
968a095fcd673769d2b8d4e52641e520b5ec7d41
describe
'7716157' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGS' 'sip-files00137.tif'
6db4adb8cf55c1b17540ebc7b916dd7e
d9d56a813e609b6d711958a7251240a1e0b12364
'2011-11-17T00:35:26-05:00'
describe
'1241' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGT' 'sip-files00137.txt'
7505b141c439ce0ccc91ab63f5b70d6d
7d2ec0f1719ff1e571afe74f46df71a3e1302c9a
describe
'8332' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGU' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
08b4c7395db98c8b49fd856af175fb64
1dc4996b0291fd266d086c539d33d4588f12bf18
describe
'939093' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGV' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
181c6d8b85dd4f7dfbf7c78378dfc1ef
435c19e773ef3e46043a6e89f9ad9c2c2019a8f9
describe
'134294' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGW' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
b0c1ec61401c9f90d375215420f92900
505ad57cd5d8a418eb3bdde185cd102f2e171604
describe
'51691' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGX' 'sip-files00138.pro'
cb96bc1ebc18af982f56cb0d53de08b1
4bfb4e26df20876250abc43db1dca2be70a7c3aa
describe
'44319' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGY' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
bcd629e73d2db7e876587aa3bfa227bc
8c8eb1487cf0d840d7eb3d361756b9efb2589b15
describe
'7521989' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZGZ' 'sip-files00138.tif'
813464cf00a82429d056aa710509fa04
58fbbc3e3376c50e7a02f0db30dc8390a3ae7320
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHA' 'sip-files00138.txt'
5bc624a93e68c9d59afd78b7167ca806
5ece50592259879bf2f85aaf98ec8d3453e2f359
describe
'12617' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHB' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
30c471c77055b6246e5035d9607565cf
f2bc72fce4c391d49f8e86c6692f4e49809fc816
describe
'981411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHC' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
0e4639a7decd4ef22ef61b746a80a1c3
ba83ac644d5b0f7cabe939f079daf10a0093ece4
describe
'133796' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHD' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
6cba34d681a02c1776c7d08670b82912
9be422eed2d7fae15a27457fb76f1212becb9543
describe
'53091' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHE' 'sip-files00139.pro'
9930d29199a2ba2fb7a0afffef551e98
300b5cb5d981c4bcb0e13c2489a1bb810b0b7bc8
describe
'44005' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHF' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
34d6f91599c2ce6b429ada0fa8b058f5
5ec99b5cfa92c48c0784714684fddf13b939bea3
'2011-11-17T00:39:53-05:00'
describe
'7861235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHG' 'sip-files00139.tif'
d30d70b77732bce1fd0364be3ce60129
d77be094d05afc81e46ddf27a5e2fe74dc69324c
'2011-11-17T00:33:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHH' 'sip-files00139.txt'
9f06fea59a6b832494cc02ca22c02953
3969ee6d317906079cdbe77f1b5ef74049cd0ddd
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHI' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
be96b68f15cde8d207814883213fc0bc
927dda5760104d7ce766644ce0cc347919420a5a
describe
'956637' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHJ' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
30b9e06e01688225356fd4d24dbc642a
d15e01e5aec49a832bc922a0f70a03d14156a960
'2011-11-17T00:32:50-05:00'
describe
'97918' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHK' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
6a2a45a4d2ea99a55f53581c23523105
a5aca9a02d985ac5ee715850c23c4a60e77a6901
'2011-11-17T00:34:52-05:00'
describe
'27839' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHL' 'sip-files00140.pro'
459713a6e1f0e51babe07add6cb18600
18ed0e4deec80570a1d965b5c59814d02cd848b3
'2011-11-17T00:38:31-05:00'
describe
'31515' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHM' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
c8628f2087ad8173e5925c79c1f83462
9b50cf1d420b354c7c5564d0b2e1554ea6a07536
describe
'7663217' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHN' 'sip-files00140.tif'
26a0084c47348b37904207a6e9826b04
902100071a56bc2ebd359bfc82ba0f6725e2ba1d
describe
'1217' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHO' 'sip-files00140.txt'
d4d0cb483c9a5d0e2337f7af8e62109b
01b2b6e78576d372280f09cd0ef8ba37d6b135c1
describe
'9474' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHP' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
05c40910fb08802c844dd012b9a4bc14
89ab59db668e3a277072b7a0cf311c421026957e
describe
'965265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHQ' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
01bf317793890922ce8e0fdf5262128a
c4c28a3a7f6a8b9611f83422ab8ff481cb274ef4
'2011-11-17T00:32:54-05:00'
describe
'133885' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHR' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
f296d251146fc857d8f1a0d7a4c01f16
dde34b5896886a443980051d7fb93bbf368fd24d
'2011-11-17T00:34:53-05:00'
describe
'51578' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHS' 'sip-files00141.pro'
8d02074eaac461de3c69b28f7547f4f5
edc513dc56a84a1b2177db2fe6b10e9bb464aa60
describe
'44490' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHT' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
3e54d108e16df0e65b842f4a2c52d0cf
90ed5fbb404648aadc993510d88ba2708e796e23
describe
'7731459' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHU' 'sip-files00141.tif'
3ddb84074fde5304085a13b0bc96d9f3
aac90bc25ccd4c932e34a3c21f57e3b9be456092
describe
'2128' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHV' 'sip-files00141.txt'
de2db810e0c66a9dc8306b4923a8c0ba
820e6d2f5a98b611eda9741de253b0e7d9f4a66c
describe
'12022' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHW' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
f1337f11a0633fb1012e31e524b7c1fb
572187fa4a13e75432fb30b15915a6288f7b884f
describe
'929521' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHX' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
8dd7a99264325c07301b82908b6d691d
f27352d0f5d0372f027f9b797bf26e6918dd7f1c
describe
'107344' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHY' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
b8bb825533c8ec436d30a11f4fa82298
7fe414e827b89c6411bffdcf03a547941f117c1f
describe
'28157' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZHZ' 'sip-files00142.pro'
a00c5d41ae701f03ff20dd5edb405d12
a7e1c967f0c1badd3bdcd4a50deef3d41b932a5e
'2011-11-17T00:31:19-05:00'
describe
'34210' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIA' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
20fb5cf7c3eacce516f30f0e999c2b46
154f52f737e155f8e4541880f5924add514b7194
describe
'7445427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIB' 'sip-files00142.tif'
65bfa08be4855fb7b46c28a99ffdcaaf
f1308755cacff043e1400f8d471e2952bf3deaa0
'2011-11-17T00:30:21-05:00'
describe
'1301' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIC' 'sip-files00142.txt'
80140426255a282f5532fbdc864f890a
ab0670e3289d82232dd76529855b135598c405a7
describe
'10007' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZID' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
45abc565e859b6dc7e4226f6401a791d
ab6943021e69d392f9396caa0eb737ee8a6e57af
describe
'983373' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIE' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
349d8debde5138fb1dd4a8a4617c6c91
ad7b70d2ccdda53dc7ff00c8e7790d1a92d923c8
describe
'131944' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIF' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
b0b9129d6341b25dc24889cfdd9f5a82
dfe03347b58cf17f55352739ac7d973efc011b37
'2011-11-17T00:30:15-05:00'
describe
'52501' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIG' 'sip-files00143.pro'
5b48144b1109e957f7918f893ec3afb9
2f59b525689532e5aa30d85a4430fbd77c5103e2
'2011-11-17T00:36:59-05:00'
describe
'42828' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIH' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
60b46c6826d5f42f2f17200be650743f
01618dce318e7c76369e475ff04f6707456f9c3f
describe
'7877415' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZII' 'sip-files00143.tif'
6498f7b4c2c055713be82f611f70c05f
35200231be47b0995851c0bc4ead728143bceeec
'2011-11-17T00:30:23-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIJ' 'sip-files00143.txt'
b753979eba10f1abb3bf878977aeabd7
47a8d600d6bd3ac4565badac7354e52e02282ff5
describe
'11384' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIK' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
5563bc59871295ddc8bd2add97477475
6c270f3eeb67cd2639d8dfc8e7a4d0344a19e8dc
'2011-11-17T00:31:08-05:00'
describe
'925701' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIL' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
154dd0b6a9828ef79ddeb0a7e36cdff8
2531f1e256083c99e14619293b02ea5c62729b7f
describe
'105341' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIM' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
94065be18396f23a73e5927ccc3cf4cd
4fb2a0f1a8cb19b450cfdca859cfb15deec23206
describe
'26546' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIN' 'sip-files00144.pro'
1b11eff7e47643cd2995f25fe7b3d1bd
e1c46c167acd1b9ade17dbbf82d8ee7cfd247b3b
'2011-11-17T00:33:54-05:00'
describe
'33390' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIO' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
9a4daf0dcfc59d7b2bae6e0473a0e40a
5e60d58edee5aee76a9f10ef34852f4673b6f75f
describe
'7412407' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIP' 'sip-files00144.tif'
f3f3fab5d58a29f7c01b6df1d973e0c6
284ffbab71ae93f56a0aaffdb2e0bfe0f0c47ee4
describe
'1179' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIQ' 'sip-files00144.txt'
8dbf5b138209aa06f3a416da32e69c0e
74a471ec1c37fcb49ce2c93c5c72a5e2c4f1eb47
describe
'10497' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIR' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
6f76f63e09b3060396d26b5b4a8c2e3f
57a55e5f8a67f780d6a67b0d112d2d974ee8ddf8
describe
'964714' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIS' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
0864abb13d679fb0b0256287478e51ca
6f51d0ddb8083b72d03c30ed4849ef0baa751fec
'2011-11-17T00:34:59-05:00'
describe
'131324' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIT' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
7a523330f9cce59f47ddad3adaaf0f7a
5ca37792cafbd964a96737465620c2dfc65fe4f3
'2011-11-17T00:29:49-05:00'
describe
'46517' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIU' 'sip-files00145.pro'
855872b11b87f126e68cfcac7ca52cf9
361f12af8aa8c7649e7b79eeaa96f9deed89c7da
describe
'43286' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIV' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
4e0d65475a261d2b4e9366d877dd92af
6d5196f5104eb5b51ebcda4bbaa7d422f405c99d
describe
'7726995' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIW' 'sip-files00145.tif'
3e8acd1d5692679a3fc308ffd1cb78d6
0a6976081435eebffb22474caa7b82f8c9b3ce88
'2011-11-17T00:36:06-05:00'
describe
'2182' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIX' 'sip-files00145.txt'
014f6d929ec073fe3b7264c53f857080
f1c98f6fb1920ca1ed17fd1355663c9feed87ca7
describe
'12000' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIY' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
90c224f1680be3673de381370fcaa388
f895d5b2f3603cf80aee542b060da1dbc3e4fe04
'2011-11-17T00:36:33-05:00'
describe
'946352' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZIZ' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
a940a902eacaa33aa7fae9ea048cdde2
f25a99a8bfc515f61a442e0b3bae170efc2dd7aa
describe
'133168' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJA' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
bc91c1d4ccad1f660fcd1735dac0156a
41fb8f8683b4ae09df520f24ad72fd3673b5524e
describe
'52761' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJB' 'sip-files00146.pro'
3af6b98a22f6a9f65e0113e3f847aa9c
1174d6b32efc64999c6fa87ecc0d8fc8759bfdeb
describe
'43809' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJC' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
1a8358cf713d4dd54c9449b79dcc9ec9
753e2d889354a792d5a61b8e8d36a7c1bb1ed598
describe
'7580145' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJD' 'sip-files00146.tif'
375357fd8db6316e8b28620403ad2006
0c064de0d3042f69d2194ef213101d3eef9eeb2d
describe
'2268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJE' 'sip-files00146.txt'
76c8356a916c7dbf9be57c5f6d4ed959
25e080a8e01003d3612517e0fce994077a870a9c
describe
'12507' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJF' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
f3b577b2671b8b22ec59995eee5d97db
26a19203bfcfe81569ac841056a39b9a9dc769e8
'2011-11-17T00:37:25-05:00'
describe
'928000' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJG' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
85b5e596b166dffc7e9f8fe6db9784f1
3582faf2e3ed4b0449621ede6f00eac9cbd14dc9
describe
'139114' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJH' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
65b8237c97618cfa99898491eabff84a
795e8b33c14febaccd58e17fc796522ad85e6126
'2011-11-17T00:30:11-05:00'
describe
'54111' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJI' 'sip-files00147.pro'
4ab8a6b0ec7e0383f9801509eeb76c4c
0d1e011fb0c87dddac0cade342ead7f30026d244
'2011-11-17T00:38:39-05:00'
describe
'46389' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJJ' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
721bc5a5f589b42f75b925c512660bc3
5c335b74151b30c0465c03e4c2e7297870c18fb7
describe
'7433125' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJK' 'sip-files00147.tif'
a8d6d5d5e6ef79afd1555d6496dc8935
6886825084313a9c0ea331e8e51fd900d55bd7a6
'2011-11-17T00:37:21-05:00'
describe
'2246' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJL' 'sip-files00147.txt'
d280b57ea3c54e734607a43d71a00a8b
b4bfdbaaae0538ce30f1bea19c3dd4a0993cba6f
describe
'12917' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJM' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
503014f018d044ee79302f2340f7bde5
1df4621998ae14bba9ded8d914eaf5fe03618ae4
describe
'917189' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJN' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
3f63b8102f90b299b42776bbe617e787
17e7d13e1d896c8fc8b1245bd71a5208ee65ed89
describe
'132342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJO' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
9fe6f99ee24cf80c9ea370739a74535f
c4c0d65a32cdff6c0ce853e902acfcf50c2ad577
describe
'50263' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJP' 'sip-files00148.pro'
159caba9d89523b2c7b17b5a03bfa624
247067c1395cf3049392f854cc8a202bacea5dbf
'2011-11-17T00:39:11-05:00'
describe
'44500' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJQ' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
2dffbed3f33e5861a7eb1c0cfc61de36
a6612c7c6448317f8aa403fb6fe139f622ead7db
describe
'7344257' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJR' 'sip-files00148.tif'
10465211e485b789afadad43c7acd46f
f4e15b0cbfd0566417c1093ff49f98bbabbfc88e
'2011-11-17T00:33:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJS' 'sip-files00148.txt'
4a95d919668d808c2e1716c5fd445138
e491521fd72bd471bf61f1084e791df287c5b4ab
describe
'13012' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJT' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
9613331b5bd833c3eb04638e350ac5c8
870a7769bbeb935383ba65a03c46db0dcb0227df
describe
'942624' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJU' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
ef6dbbbfae7df6eee59e41947eef92d0
6928de1855d2697e33e2a9637ca738ad9e40e05c
describe
'130646' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJV' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
17e99c9c0bc1805a5563c92b4cc4ec50
0d352cd6943a3efafdde2e31390393e0d97e6710
describe
'50769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJW' 'sip-files00149.pro'
6f5d804cdd9003146406c2faece75fad
06342857f2b1444b8008df95c920f7310ce0eb2e
describe
'43679' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJX' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
cfd851a65262b3d7c90e2ce25b6267d6
07c746567dca90315a31e71c6fcc708d52b958f2
describe
'7550075' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJY' 'sip-files00149.tif'
7c332116b2ba1c3f6822c0907bec51c1
e55809df5c68fb5f3f034a987ab2f3a3b9955515
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZJZ' 'sip-files00149.txt'
abf9195bc54a67bf6562d22d45837284
5ff7143127a7b0867391664657b7b1593a71ac72
describe
'12621' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKA' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
b81a7f14efffcd167bb85cdd4e148599
87801dd7d6cfd01c88ef2d149631488309923200
describe
'901730' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKB' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
262190cdcae923ea32a34998675ade91
94dc49521bea3f6212c4454b6dd9b39a1530ad29
describe
'135653' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKC' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
eb752258c9107b48b86bc2c1fd7a78df
8cfe101642b06033c93fea158377c75fd71af20d
describe
'52278' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKD' 'sip-files00150.pro'
60af10c7015586860f497540979e5fb3
a2c0146022ac3e74b4a4db93bd1adf864541ef8f
describe
'45031' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKE' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
a79d37a1228682d8516717c8b2112f48
3a52637127116107194096de68172dc745f3b100
describe
'7220599' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKF' 'sip-files00150.tif'
5a75c04f316ddeed7dab78b5e6262651
8b2b43fa5d7ad665308e9a4aef47cb20ee022b3a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKG' 'sip-files00150.txt'
3989af44cb1bdd924187d7c8696f4679
167c281a5093eca3fc05dc1e97010ed5cc2a442d
'2011-11-17T00:35:44-05:00'
describe
'12905' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKH' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
419cf972ac431923b9811c85d5d2521d
19a4be712ff0ef45d876cee66453a2ab22485be0
describe
'956465' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKI' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
dc751eaf210db126bedab9ff825d369c
66f76622fd2ce610e17f03ec91bc7760b3d3c2d0
describe
'129404' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKJ' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
4ecfcd8df4456c71d235053735bf1d15
10914d8b9342eacd11f6416897fe4e636a9c833a
'2011-11-17T00:35:03-05:00'
describe
'51752' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKK' 'sip-files00151.pro'
11cdf641a82e10a36d1177624b2e2e40
237835f8e53224924ff940834f9f12bc3d59efac
describe
'43021' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKL' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
24d645648cda69f3ab0f0aa40d8ac6c2
205641e2872cb77cbe31bf5fd3b5c7ca4f01c2a9
describe
'7661121' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKM' 'sip-files00151.tif'
6069cf2d82902d95d21af2dc13fd46f4
61ba2ce622065472ef2d6ae3b2636cf2049bc9bf
'2011-11-17T00:35:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKN' 'sip-files00151.txt'
0c2822818731bce4a3bccfa1a2a6a474
badc507307292d3f080a4e7290268942aa7fc006
describe
'12336' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKO' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
728e1ea7a746f6cdc3afd8244b5e6478
5eba83e1333e22e9613283d8cee9a4b98a5e63e9
describe
'917870' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKP' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
d59cd3205fd9a3a50ec2f72cc7625611
34e06496ff2ae3e551dd0d8a41cd6a951b313b02
'2011-11-17T00:39:07-05:00'
describe
'133661' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKQ' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
4a06f6b0d79927f2e2e35fa5c102bec9
ce6198778bf87330abb024f35f287dca61a37372
'2011-11-17T00:31:40-05:00'
describe
'51898' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKR' 'sip-files00152.pro'
d96e0a9763f06065fe515fc9e8a2b2b7
0b81ec4e9ad015f69728a4b427c0b07e5f168d01
describe
'44296' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKS' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
9835a2be39fafc3b0cdf454e0f8626a8
d9f54c924c55a0023677ed113cac0a442d580199
'2011-11-17T00:33:22-05:00'
describe
'7349659' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKT' 'sip-files00152.tif'
0b6561ba0c973e814478680d459f0158
9a204d6b1562bc55dde23692b02f321ac50de115
'2011-11-17T00:30:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKU' 'sip-files00152.txt'
8ba251767ee89bf24e066185d9b2f6a4
ac332a9cc43df3423306b02095a69a972f52e5d4
describe
'12427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKV' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
986c9e143a68c6aeb9eaafbcf684e7cb
f77bce1f53adb36d50fd649a88cc18f3ffb8fa0f
'2011-11-17T00:39:48-05:00'
describe
'979723' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKW' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
547972317847e02bb7997fa9e8ec228c
fd6c8ec9ca8f1b6a6ca090ef95d99873918438c2
describe
'135276' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKX' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
a098699ca1fd3ac82455f43f536e15eb
39e73d10baa78478e9d70651d84f14599585308a
describe
'52733' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKY' 'sip-files00153.pro'
78d82e25fbd09c221b671ebf026b9fcf
ec82462d1cd6741dce07bd9e30b798c581781119
'2011-11-17T00:33:27-05:00'
describe
'44948' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZKZ' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
3ac62d9b72a47dd55b8d78fc0031bd76
a115470015e3478f454073c014f01b49e6276cc7
'2011-11-17T00:37:14-05:00'
describe
'7847339' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLA' 'sip-files00153.tif'
e1712e8303aa6da0a72f46665ddbc049
38cbe56f971c3503c89d609d7fe381c200505cfe
'2011-11-17T00:34:19-05:00'
describe
'2208' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLB' 'sip-files00153.txt'
a1257019f813159eb156e213b6959525
e0422baa691c4ac7a7619c916509fe2b705f101f
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLC' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
da580a4b76cbabd38b66b89b9ce6d256
f89d67ccff18a518ff56df8df0a9e17974023dd7
describe
'917167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLD' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
f7be7efb1aa3f5f7795f788ff9e0a22e
4e3efcc72a3bce66f980675fb49cd77094d21b23
describe
'136602' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLE' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
514b12e686a02ce3b5e9732c598be917
32aa00e5664edca8cfe0a28877163f7b2737a1f0
describe
'52463' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLF' 'sip-files00154.pro'
58d41fc6c153e74517bd7d83adc984d3
34b0a636641c3ec392805889a686c033f4488f15
describe
'45138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLG' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
1b8a12ccc5f0d7d24f47e19a3a51f5f5
09b768322f18410f5e77815049ce03a58f6ac457
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLH' 'sip-files00154.tif'
2c09392073a5e2cd808dbc96556077a4
0940cdd8b5ec9d2c477f2afbedbf383c0b6703a5
describe
'2199' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLI' 'sip-files00154.txt'
125de846c2c64cffc2e02d75ce3473d1
92a8f760c10007dfe25bd4a4fdc92228a4f29292
describe
'12967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLJ' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
0f26205086f1e7a83bb250c3a716dcca
34d00e6e95e9b8a3effaf1089074dac45ecbc26a
describe
'978911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLK' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
539ffed6b6f34b691923d3cef9f4a01f
b100c22680b4d18b89f2e0c2943bae8b4041bbc4
describe
'131010' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLL' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
608ced4bb6144a67b9707bcfdf9c117b
8266b4e9198901d4e21c60cba3708d329c322bc3
describe
'51929' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLM' 'sip-files00155.pro'
0d07d98c55a9f6c9b6faa00da6ce8561
4062374eb49c80aff7c7114fd86e598c11911da8
describe
'44275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLN' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
a6b7c3e9ab880d965666f246c897e7cf
a3c2c78596674372a6d656c1c553a28e981fad32
describe
'7840569' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLO' 'sip-files00155.tif'
a373c955322113c2793d4a57a57cfcd1
3ce53f9b0c16c163179819a4440d00c96fb828a9
'2011-11-17T00:36:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLP' 'sip-files00155.txt'
f1cbfb183dec7197233575042cdb09ea
3e7ae6753f5015ab1a5c1cf7fb01346145a26f41
'2011-11-17T00:33:57-05:00'
describe
'11830' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLQ' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
aa33f3c01276ee9b7325d6563b2a53e5
351292f2cafa463aa1218ed808bb412f8b3773d9
describe
'924990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLR' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
5c4dc506b74c3380fe994694fa6b94da
66c8a1a7ecae4749d109ddcf65c6256a36b8c3f6
describe
'131496' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLS' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
cfadd4c07eb3d3613282af308c8990ce
5a18476e1c14817253e403841fa14581f30b7eef
describe
'51122' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLT' 'sip-files00156.pro'
fc16fced261d5562ce0cad200f66dd39
82319aa55cb423d41328f5544047ce710b9e4c72
describe
'44181' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLU' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
e6104544537f577cb3c7a84065a22395
128c26074e0adc815b337ffb499c8a5eaaa3f774
describe
'7409547' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLV' 'sip-files00156.tif'
215574b670db39af95037e4142082212
ca34de3ffe71b01b5160a106a3b08406d9cc1832
describe
'2137' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLW' 'sip-files00156.txt'
bbec63fcaccd4ef5baac0bed81e0040f
4af79bb4a600cde0882e3fef8b073c2f9da50ccf
describe
'12717' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLX' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
c1db75c613c5a0d674b6f8a8968ef804
858691c147765f5a464f7fab42d466db0724d53c
describe
'980788' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLY' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
54be1563ef082e31422e214c1e184c5a
f9958a3062e28ec043f29017f32f69f405dd3475
describe
'96036' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZLZ' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
ecb69258fb90f77e14e9cbd5df161d2a
0026e226b973601e507fd3a477b0110257ca6801
describe
'16867' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMA' 'sip-files00157.pro'
5d5ad3be83735b718eb042fa45e06a09
19959279a8def4ac285a458f7a0877407247cdd9
'2011-11-17T00:36:52-05:00'
describe
'28772' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMB' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
a83d210556e093f27c86a54295633536
e69daae49d0b1974a9d6fa3b3d10c00d7148f6f5
describe
'7855655' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMC' 'sip-files00157.tif'
9c406771ea89d3df0ff23495bd4ee674
113f45a9860b92eade65e6089b01eaef43fefa2b
describe
'782' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMD' 'sip-files00157.txt'
10b073b2d8042676e14bde5f64bb700f
d555276e1013b09e8aa9fae49f822ebde466c88c
describe
'8272' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZME' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
0f0531cbbb20bd91c2831dfc604a87fb
5b641f363dcf4c2d36f305ab466bc142bdc72618
'2011-11-17T00:29:57-05:00'
describe
'950917' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMF' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
60be86fa30681e7f8592d6da046a41e0
1bf6697af87eb656d0e13253dd2b45d0184ade28
describe
'135230' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMG' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
cf3437e9a94a3035a86b21556341ff09
5a23b64c457ab22a1a0851f20a589b7790bf151d
describe
'53103' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMH' 'sip-files00158.pro'
dfa8de855b9d8b90b8fb7e8187bb2d94
6a6412b7c9f9afae7ad2f9f3e61107e796687f27
describe
'44233' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMI' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
e841fbd587883e10583b3970d83d2bd4
1ab8c2f31928f814266aee07a08c7715b80ad1ee
'2011-11-17T00:36:56-05:00'
describe
'7616611' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMJ' 'sip-files00158.tif'
208f97a33b34d8d7416368e3f90d5680
33057d385adf65435360fe3c2980c0d070e1b6c1
describe
'2259' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMK' 'sip-files00158.txt'
e4134b573e4c105dd46b93b84075efb9
d05d8bc7306e87d750135ff2d0651768abd2baa2
describe
'12381' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZML' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
ccf11a84742ed7114cdc83e690663886
270b7e9ccd856a4addd59ef71711704c9420f2cb
describe
'974668' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMM' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
591431183a31ed27590fd64bfd97d01d
64be60183944b348c1d16d3392bf25b5c6bd963c
describe
'132616' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMN' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
a028d56dd4fea095d75e9148f5fe89e1
54fa947fd42d4936a4d84c5b1ef0d22fb97a6b07
'2011-11-17T00:33:21-05:00'
describe
'53089' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMO' 'sip-files00159.pro'
d26c27307243e1a30f3617fef7e0bcba
00c8eb249cc68167a529074100598dd02861f98a
describe
'43467' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMP' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
c1abda67a074f30c18c9320994357f07
a1a625d9964645a29ecb3f2a6dc9eb912e43bffc
describe
'7807493' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMQ' 'sip-files00159.tif'
a32ad8f46ef897e7876531c35274861d
049029adc0f411f020e13d242c193f0657a643b3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMR' 'sip-files00159.txt'
2530d6eb84342dcbdf4eb1ad19e8c5c5
4fac06331d471dcaa45032c2d47d07d743997719
describe
'12068' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMS' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
a9f1786c451dec2c4378fda1eba90f2f
b2d2319b0a1cce97ff07b779abf185e0b15335fe
describe
'932061' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMT' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
6251786f16c71b82d8e18bfc70a9dcbe
24c255d10d8a400891b68f7a946915838f959a4f
describe
'134200' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMU' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
feaa463969e76ea41310e8d3b4a75ef6
4777f6a367afc2b5068017428a3f8d25c19d79c1
describe
'53093' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMV' 'sip-files00160.pro'
4d3199df1e93596af63cf02cdf6400a6
e90039acc80d3591636a6a2f31abbb0c2e1cfdbf
describe
'44207' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMW' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
7a16ac2a21460656f88538c2b7fab404
e55031e93c574cbadebc1b56fdf2e5dc352a017a
describe
'7465725' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMX' 'sip-files00160.tif'
a01df16068cb33a58b8b915b6ca0589d
595b2940fb18681210e50a3fa9351f86cd7ffad7
'2011-11-17T00:38:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMY' 'sip-files00160.txt'
20ca3e09b1a87b54820f24ed7f078f7d
781bbb61d9b78255916454d1bd87b1a191743275
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZMZ' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
88626aa1e6a6d2888a2ef564c11d1eae
f62f2e942aaac5fd8a2ed07954147257e3b6cd63
describe
'979282' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNA' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
bd3f8462eefb2eb338011595469e319f
fb3253fdd8478080eda0c76339ca4266fbdc6213
describe
'138334' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNB' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
8e6b99bf43667932865a2838e6d9a980
b246578cea8088aa449e01390e33092207d41f08
describe
'53767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNC' 'sip-files00161.pro'
36803b7c50a368bac042448d56b46b15
9f2d41fdc2fda55f1a4eaeba9d5c5d7cdf0154d3
'2011-11-17T00:37:02-05:00'
describe
'46294' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZND' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
33684e5d250d342f4b15104f67e88293
7f50aa0c7a8babcd0314e8ad167a917deda64961
'2011-11-17T00:39:28-05:00'
describe
'7843749' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNE' 'sip-files00161.tif'
76f3661bf5bfeff751e0bcf7dba3dc03
9980eb93597e2064a68eacd1769c159ce839c534
describe
'2242' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNF' 'sip-files00161.txt'
b2ee4b25bd2b1355c72eef38180ff5b3
8b7bca75db685c1dcb724c3194f42668c49fa60e
'2011-11-17T00:32:27-05:00'
describe
'12609' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNG' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
e1bdd1c9b094bf2a3522d8f115512011
2dc3ca4f5fee1781ea974fcbac6f0d6ae7e85480
describe
'949534' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNH' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
1ebc37455b1081509095018c26fa74eb
b9e1b679fd54c80ab08aee87b7ea216579be4e86
describe
'131121' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNI' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
608df92976f4f0a499fc59b8695d39ca
1859d3ecb8143a13073401a2bf5bac7061246502
describe
'51967' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNJ' 'sip-files00162.pro'
14b5ad1c6f553268a71a903abb9b547a
c7f5713840bee48116ebf70c4b374e061ef0a521
'2011-11-17T00:33:24-05:00'
describe
'43451' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNK' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
4c18750dc97d2cd87422c4e0c2ff46c1
a2d52466a6a158b9a79a68a812ae662eca5d9030
describe
'7605745' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNL' 'sip-files00162.tif'
caea7314642e659cd4d8610ae6e16737
ce640fc725dbc7f4b26d7425d18fc403a521d635
'2011-11-17T00:39:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNM' 'sip-files00162.txt'
f474f971c517aa2ea1f67438e6fbdb36
201a82b9b1805ebc63c2d24be0fde377c2c1e9b4
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNN' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
95fb52136e2bb6df12aa468bb3740c15
49a82790771ed5e06c1021c0d80f6bb4d07d3e8e
describe
'998623' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNO' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
867e03081f2ae17757b939723727fc48
132073bb88e68e075249e7cdd7dbaad1cf95e588
describe
'136610' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNP' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
d0671a373ae39c036080d1f760042429
3566a532ac22d774670d3fd9ad0ebf1954c77a09
describe
'54007' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNQ' 'sip-files00163.pro'
0ce3ed6e218e8e5572dac5d4f46f1e18
2b13abfe54b68708842bdf1265b845fb2a4be5f7
describe
'44375' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNR' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
d907e5d499fb76eb404b28cd85c883a8
ac1f1c4a51064dd7b186f2961752ed5604214b3a
describe
'7998979' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNS' 'sip-files00163.tif'
33e15bdaac49ff8ac7088c4519e9f1f9
a9d975f71d26b98bb2e8d6a7a8a28ff2c900ec60
'2011-11-17T00:32:30-05:00'
describe
'2279' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNT' 'sip-files00163.txt'
3ae9a398fb203b98147c015b28d9d4b6
8d09c00c63ba81e0954864e4c8d87c96be0e4c4d
describe
'11642' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNU' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
e69c8788f497f46d495bc151e7ca3da8
325b7f79b0f3b24321da7f9f15d66cb28ae87a4d
describe
'935678' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNV' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
badf8ade9a0fe6860e25882f25488182
3c3f7153e8040f63f5efa18edebb8f77f9efd38c
describe
'71874' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNW' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
3c53fd3a7af87e0c00506ecd26d58256
3baec596472863ccb477a4d537a47a52ed48be3b
describe
'17596' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNX' 'sip-files00164.pro'
a2376597e19f662421dc210f0a12cd61
6fb38299b3564e60794c3e19401916b76950f365
describe
'23650' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNY' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
27e31c799aca77d0581e161a48b8bb82
325f3986253196b818ea7ab68583294a6b417366
describe
'7494647' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZNZ' 'sip-files00164.tif'
ee1c01348af0d89d1c102bf6850dea51
ce81b6438ca2eb0bafc5d69936d63a8b07ecb063
describe
'747' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOA' 'sip-files00164.txt'
255d1de96dc031dfb52b06033cc217e1
db16f56aaf146f8d3841c281a2dd90d239629643
describe
'8017' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOB' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
e54d220c54465d0fb9f8feda48bfd6e7
01598a82e52ec353a3b1d13795bcd821c9fdb102
describe
'997251' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOC' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
194862e9659c2bb7d8bacf2037730053
a2feb8ccf3d15123a8a296716f171f57350e0530
describe
'98450' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOD' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
e0db6089396bd2512f06f15753132bf1
a80ade14c36cd2e668650be14ada88bd6a7ed2f4
describe
'28380' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOE' 'sip-files00165.pro'
8d9523f0ba67091e7720f418166001b7
d82ac7ba30ecf1cf9dfe878040e8b3f4c2af5a88
describe
'32219' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOF' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
db6c46cc540000f8b0eb2c895da9ca89
08fc9b9f415ecaeff1a7e636f21df75067fdcd10
describe
'7987315' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOG' 'sip-files00165.tif'
213431c331314a690906d32445642c32
969ccbbfc6817e8f84b5e8a97a31b3e9207db2cf
'2011-11-17T00:39:54-05:00'
describe
'1236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOH' 'sip-files00165.txt'
f1b8e42007ba8e3bbde29a9f2bfedcac
be9b1c11cf862666e308085497883b60b023fb37
describe
'8952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOI' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
a2b1c2bc7eebebf800e35fade3d51f68
d439e3afe2812ae2d7ab03cce194b18b217224a3
describe
'913369' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOJ' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
2d2aff3841720b2a5c3daa0c8e8ff2e5
a83ad71dfcf7d7079a5bad7b561c709e829215d4
describe
'136469' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOK' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
93760a02850d06a213342153a4d76bca
9ae010a73ec642db629f80b6b7c22f2cddd1a333
describe
'52236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOL' 'sip-files00166.pro'
1a53d5b3789b99db466b97e4534c3aff
beca902dfd000ba6e26e4e1c671df5e8ccd4dfe5
describe
'45230' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOM' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
d9c2196542da404c2803dc67e6a3c76c
10b28469cfa186083193ab3a81835512b9a90026
describe
'7313715' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZON' 'sip-files00166.tif'
3e693f1e32c974b630f2f58a64c3f108
fad0ac8962816e3bf955815a41ab01ab4dac8569
'2011-11-17T00:33:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOO' 'sip-files00166.txt'
96e910f6289e05637425781ce624fbf1
a09e8200a986469d0c69fb747e142738cd91da7a
describe
'13075' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOP' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
e38965aebc9886c06d026a14d2b63b4d
865bfeb669cc9ff1579d9366ebc6d13072aaaef8
describe
'923726' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOQ' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
9ce1b73cac97c39672ca04a41575cd6b
d3f290033c21a038af84b194f3f47ac216243460
describe
'134413' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOR' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
699158e1f4750cf1d64fb7a897cb9f56
dce2666edde956402edf8e147f921ff55dcbd748
describe
'52593' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOS' 'sip-files00167.pro'
bea34beb785b855d85d18cc3f2eda16b
e5f2c2d82cd665f3f393397c609fc5dd85434897
describe
'44980' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOT' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
e45675c86af67b908bcc4d030de2ffdc
f90682fe7e1928688c04f6ff6723d930687f2fd8
describe
'7396695' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOU' 'sip-files00167.tif'
a35cee4a9df11f5f7b30453305dc13c5
f0edc6e1b6af14d08f35c53cf0160d6f3c2d5946
describe
'2178' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOV' 'sip-files00167.txt'
9568182fe97bdc5db772e14a70d2d850
91357a0db8f3b489ab75431672b4355d1ea8fde2
describe
'12810' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOW' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
404e725abc7a490d57d7391ec9f57a4a
3501a34d4b99dea1bba4fbe443afdf318358b470
describe
'899338' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOX' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
30cd0db1db41af5e3db6b042a71ca0b5
c1f8e63cf0a0ea234830abca0fbc55a68f769a64
describe
'136122' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOY' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
7382d27f3bc22c8b313e0ea8cf149c50
fb568f27843f4914c4d107ad19870ae61ec77276
describe
'51663' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZOZ' 'sip-files00168.pro'
9baaeccfd9dd589ea643514fb29803c6
a16e2902a0bc413a525c4676673eab05cd2bbbc6
describe
'45662' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPA' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
c42b425b35b2105d799bba4f35d012da
72df7bbbf81375fb74ece18b72e23e5289acfb41
describe
'7201331' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPB' 'sip-files00168.tif'
0e1d9ae635af9132ba60fe6a52f3481a
7248b471392a505a4e1d34da069b2ed2649a4839
'2011-11-17T00:36:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPC' 'sip-files00168.txt'
0232f013622276e9764ee8efbe60c1ca
9cdc7b614cb0943b4ffd7ddb9aefa32e976ea841
describe
'12891' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPD' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
9909b441c8cf7b37c8397046255446d5
00a56041d7fc68b6ff6f0faaae41ffe3b980a8f6
'2011-11-17T00:38:42-05:00'
describe
'957501' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPE' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
1eafd88cfff29a3534e6bddb6e057e8b
fdc766cd26fcad07ec2d5412671626e63d3bf70e
describe
'112630' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPF' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
4ebaa43b53025e1d50383cc69be3397c
aed0c9d7ce249d63ad68d98a769c2a25650099d1
describe
'35778' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPG' 'sip-files00169.pro'
d9a3e3933cdd38ae46bf29e35021b2c8
9ed86d9f9d7936404d32b08491bd1c7f90ca86c3
describe
'37870' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPH' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
0dd226136f10890eb976aa33ad99915f
10a1879055c9b25a679fbb3e985d6fd181bb1115
'2011-11-17T00:36:10-05:00'
describe
'7669811' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPI' 'sip-files00169.tif'
783af13aca086363353d8e06287860ca
c4ec48177ee8153b91facbd36bb75a282b507347
describe
'2192' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPJ' 'sip-files00169.txt'
d356e1a0a97e0a5b8ee6383062ac8b75
691b820a74ebb3f2ddbb1bf4a716f73521b51a57
describe
'11201' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPK' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
937fec19f616fd84b88eb7a48ec22379
16ecd2f83eb783463c962938145da4440cb29777
describe
'924559' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPL' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
1a951f6df89974a43d9c83666a4c502d
6fb865881908d92d3b9bfa0a860fcc684534bd15
describe
'130672' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPM' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
93e933c3be37c9939aa4b4f7a10c3469
a68d9c87706b5adfed80cfa4ec0562314307056c
describe
'51159' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPN' 'sip-files00170.pro'
44baa0cf7ab5467da3ab028f1eddf370
1e019b82e74e1dad7b9c9f628dcfcc270d018c5d
describe
'43326' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPO' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
2d5b2c60d9aebc1de2fb2d81d463eee0
be324b8965fff4dda249376d72aab56ad8eaed28
describe
'7403299' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPP' 'sip-files00170.tif'
2084641dfe683bb63389c6ac04c81edb
0ae63ba5699b8bbad43b261ad0bb98b02acf2b0e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPQ' 'sip-files00170.txt'
6d97735d2439018c8138a464e5a13f2d
1d6bdc320f49575cebd3d9e73a50e2bd704ae0a5
'2011-11-17T00:37:03-05:00'
describe
'12894' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPR' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
afed5c91d69db71417cdcbb68342f1e2
b93ef94b787b532933091a8129a4fdff26a991fe
'2011-11-17T00:36:34-05:00'
describe
'965166' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPS' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
4a52e0ed466a78a63aa0c5427a319b4b
3eb45c50100701623147d32938eb165e64ee5b58
describe
'79953' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPT' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
2f1faea107c24168e24d6f7024742736
258722cdbff6150f14a9534df66332ca699607b7
describe
'24054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPU' 'sip-files00171.pro'
aef37113732a82e4415fc4460d512e74
f5ff86f5a62ade538b0857382733226a611459b9
describe
'26843' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPV' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
2e7b2a19ed5f54fee54d25bfdd9489b5
6dba57684ad8a3443c1ea0bb596573b183e4d08c
describe
'7730849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPW' 'sip-files00171.tif'
ce45799493aed58832b30852d1fbbecd
106725bcaf4cd9fd01d483af821033c5c7a1ad34
describe
'1019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPX' 'sip-files00171.txt'
c5658d0aea1b4358dfe2827264bc368f
766d3f8ff7969ef4d363cd9dfaebe6490dbbbc6d
describe
'8746' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPY' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
1fcb1a5cbb5ed6ea635fd4596e8105b4
edd606b14fd9ccec420e2889c8736fdc26fadadb
describe
'910236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZPZ' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
e397206082d41edfba84d8a6726d05cc
f78eed6a739e1eb300f7a61e0f42e63427508649
describe
'128540' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQA' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
aa186931097c1fb10705745939003e43
6c7278c1c5e83e093aba3a554ef1bcd6a5c60b0c
describe
'51402' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQB' 'sip-files00172.pro'
cc234d5aa698c36750b54714c742b459
2b51de8bc830bbf2e4b2f36cf71a1e0b9fbed87b
describe
'42534' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQC' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
c0a7f4b480c674a759b798336ccb4479
bd71ba3d2f5f3e8043197bee1993bf1dd3c4653c
describe
'7288811' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQD' 'sip-files00172.tif'
caf25c80be1c8018a74cac7a958ec613
592bcb754058f1c0912f609d3802507f29fa3b78
describe
'2132' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQE' 'sip-files00172.txt'
6ee54cf4ccdcb0f234879727cd0e9596
7987a3c55a8f1ca065c3c0d34ddddae448ce6216
describe
'13055' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQF' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
4060480b0ab5d2d4f8dd724fc878fa99
3b9f359e75c8f4802e6e6a4bb7a8809c4b64c516
describe
'968342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQG' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
052945b052fe51d9b7eb9800f6411400
a183507bbc96f22038996a513dae6cddac1caf41
describe
'132943' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQH' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
998e0ce3c98a23440ba130bb50d17296
b0e853069062f501e6bfeaa9c120cd1d9e322da2
'2011-11-17T00:31:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQI' 'sip-files00173.pro'
50127db69972fc5f6b6dd9dca208fbda
b60e38435bcd9c62b28b1441f6a8f4d83fd51d6b
describe
'44285' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQJ' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
9c97847323ef7c5e6a69bf5ad3face1b
72a07542a9ef0f6f409c1e3d1ebc77c973a5d96b
describe
'7756267' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQK' 'sip-files00173.tif'
b08f902b0baef51554f627cc48cfa06a
53fc88c07f38127baec2a5cd75b30bd2e14a8d97
describe
'2151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQL' 'sip-files00173.txt'
1a52fca505b10c42f9b98df12eededcc
f6acde381f55c57213a8efe210299dcac5a891c8
describe
'12138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQM' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
c59c4907c65ea13a52431164aa0a8efa
67b509df45cf949051753863f4784200dc9fe80f
describe
'876493' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQN' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
a3112a64b71effd6bb14c5225b369e18
5a48dd759d195d30591217bb731e55be88845410
describe
'128816' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQO' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
28ed85075e1684cb73560e0f92278f08
65c411fbf9b6e8e1d465d5eb88a5dbdace0ba947
describe
'50399' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQP' 'sip-files00174.pro'
041c26290b545a9580241eb2354680d0
f0d062ce829b29dcfde676cf8b8b069c84c0ae13
describe
'42690' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQQ' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
0761d53661c79d2ac3954ffcf00a28d5
641dfd373b088f7feb5f024a1f02cbaf761b4ed7
describe
'7018795' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQR' 'sip-files00174.tif'
33a68d46ead39d96363189a9595b867f
6ba736479503c8d83b43465df0bc51d4a78eb7da
describe
'2111' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQS' 'sip-files00174.txt'
89ec2dcdbd3b60a889aa5e02e266053d
2c6b44ca58917bd2e34b21c3bcdeef350912e54e
describe
'13573' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQT' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
0f784776e54ec6dc8fa898f26ab531da
a95ad779b9f9cd6b1ac66663e3c9211978e77190
describe
'972042' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQU' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
33a2f2bffb7fd3a997455e75a000e24a
b1f276d702c89d9d52c33a10ce0bd2a5ad4ba22c
describe
'103050' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQV' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
76dc6b36a8d7baf4326f085a872cceec
ffe90741e9c7a15daa2303b5474ba5ca3a9cbf20
describe
'32757' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQW' 'sip-files00175.pro'
ead6fa8521324727973360be918f8e51
37c265a01546bf35b7148b4fc67f52d07368fb1c
describe
'33919' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQX' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
e4900abfefe6da5545364606f631da3e
4aa83c2899e98b449e9120d99a820f3c7b13ef0c
describe
'7786013' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQY' 'sip-files00175.tif'
2659c5fc952412112529f443c72b4266
21bdc98c21ecacc4b9d939e470d1318e4bc97e85
describe
'1398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZQZ' 'sip-files00175.txt'
a73fedf9d1b904a3f8e85351b1e5ca03
62baec6ad288b20c7e1a0573e7df9de2329ba0ba
describe
'9795' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRA' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
110c5cc1a1d0d94805e6013ac5880a92
99940219a63470b4a5bcf9d4bdde94dfc46aaa90
describe
'911693' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRB' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
15f1aaffd90853c041ae1669354b871c
03c0bf3a19adf6a8937dff77894bc35316e1b749
describe
'130079' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRC' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
b03b086b29971130cd4cded482956e28
868dd77e82c65a8b0a114a8987a7b1aebd066e42
describe
'50976' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRD' 'sip-files00176.pro'
28fe54f8b244ab5e372e1432322b410e
56e8529792df41dacb7fda343693a86ee986676f
describe
'43284' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRE' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
71c146cb65b368254dc58598d24dc6c3
a357f165ad3ce6d4d6a10a543a085eb17b3d90f9
describe
'7300407' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRF' 'sip-files00176.tif'
6cb17fb5e1c67f2d043e6dea964fbd1a
6997dc1173e9c7d4cf469ed844019ed859850435
'2011-11-17T00:34:58-05:00'
describe
'2146' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRG' 'sip-files00176.txt'
d5b0740b174aaf807d750efdd074b606
316b909f58bd0e315839c9f01bb1ce8dfa66dcf5
describe
'13161' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRH' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
e0b2e3f120e4be6e0c449922017fc33c
7032150777a2a9aa4c1cf55da07b992b355e874d
describe
'927086' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRI' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
403b5819b31d5a1afd989c89f9b5fedd
dab3287cfd6e87251acf28b7e1e8a6c2a708cb49
'2011-11-17T00:30:51-05:00'
describe
'129689' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRJ' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
4b12a922ef0a7994c664f9acb31bf823
661db036bbaad146cf164757628a7a6cec3676d1
'2011-11-17T00:38:15-05:00'
describe
'52317' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRK' 'sip-files00177.pro'
98065c0bc23318e60d70ed03cd47710d
7aab5febbfe66fd06bb322f3ae1bd45042f4845b
'2011-11-17T00:32:26-05:00'
describe
'42738' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRL' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
75406d3f9ef1e9bd3ea12cf224b66690
52e96c2992912e1a2c7b8dbd8715e16bd07f2c64
describe
'7423661' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRM' 'sip-files00177.tif'
23af4f6cec421415d2ebeedc8e2ce3fc
ece44f7096f32de3193cdd8757bd08af1fd0fd9c
describe
'2197' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRN' 'sip-files00177.txt'
c8221ed6f2035ef4506283be6b50ffa6
26e6b7d0904586115f21b3d9d6079afcbcca33ff
describe
'13221' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRO' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
34fb59ed7e6434d8779b44d74651623e
2b05e83be24dc0235eff8dd49c3e1ef2625639f5
describe
'885594' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRP' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
50e52f38fa9a6ec6f09999d0a9b47c2e
c95c19177ad9585c9ff64b2edb3fbe9a3a5c1620
describe
'135501' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRQ' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
947ba790e1530daf8f0df3852b82695e
e6117c1abe9119e78567b2ec5fa584bfd4250f9c
describe
'52373' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRR' 'sip-files00178.pro'
465fc813f4f3e371abcb05fbc4ff0967
c6d0286380eff0f4f9169d321cfed801e91ab737
describe
'45291' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRS' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
ae4a42a9348b8d3510a523ebf891b648
ea2e21c9cb665f29d0613f303bc56d42d5a57135
describe
'7091539' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRT' 'sip-files00178.tif'
1663ca6048222c0417a64ba22ed1cbc2
f94b15f26a3204431758be200f19ac86e285597f
describe
'2211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRU' 'sip-files00178.txt'
48c57328cf19735e3d738458e8c71eda
d1612ce3981a374f231e63164ef516bf2da3e6d6
describe
'13705' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRV' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
42e74077f4a961a26af9c9bba0bedfa5
5e8637dacacfc4314ea2abc4ba3c5ad7f0a6490d
describe
'940592' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRW' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
bc4021b24e200af859acaf2d23aa33dc
7f984ae4731b4a968d509de77288c4e4a826f2c2
'2011-11-17T00:38:33-05:00'
describe
'144494' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRX' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
26667a4140f58af82ff09e8d0d4e78e4
46dbf825141504a2453041efb6f5990c7aa3d49d
describe
'53425' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRY' 'sip-files00179.pro'
95bfe327000879701f4ea2e15f0f6c25
bd6162e12d06c30d6274468ed4c8da7acb2a8ba3
describe
'48670' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZRZ' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
1eff083f96cecfa2913960ca5617db81
168ae91385a91bbc864d06fa06dd9e44640fd372
describe
'7533631' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSA' 'sip-files00179.tif'
d62fcf16d92caf13b93b3ee9cab05e06
3d3cadea2a7f2ad68aa8f501f7451833cace21ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSB' 'sip-files00179.txt'
5d67ec5175ea8f9f422c704ee72ecf8b
e5f6ecd50a378480dd3fe0b9847bd67de9270f53
'2011-11-17T00:37:52-05:00'
describe
'12056' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSC' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
cec8a419655b2420d7c1a684e4acfa60
9a372f61966288b6235077c3a18836fcf1120eac
describe
'906522' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSD' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
5e5c6d8de21c6a18f472b2a1dd5c6eaa
b544d481c836c48cad8c9bf2d6c2b126c69f1a60
describe
'98981' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSE' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
cbfd06c1b2b5e32f9be148e6c9f2c9b8
5acff5123ead1691d2f04605cdef72ac22d9319b
describe
'23546' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSF' 'sip-files00180.pro'
cd064d16e15f119f84e53b0e4d9f87cf
b2a90de8841818efb01c67b5d0cf2ef1ad774f00
describe
'31325' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSG' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
3dd63e2a87cf7056e5910c4e5979f713
c14c0ef9beeb07d23f6f3ca11fb659f261887e7f
'2011-11-17T00:37:31-05:00'
describe
'7261323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSH' 'sip-files00180.tif'
097782830b2a921d2e9fe285c5489d5e
065168d46a48dabec072707640d04acd630233de
describe
'1007' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSI' 'sip-files00180.txt'
7ff7387087cd722f8a0e003c2fb11a8a
f45241ce0d8c3ca4918b62559e017b87354e5b0a
describe
'9303' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSJ' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
ca7136a68cadfdb9c4277480a3d1cf1e
ac94ef3d8477df853089196e3c48398df10ff817
describe
'967618' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSK' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
10a1bfc847354d97d2e55b74bf18d668
c11de66b17b1e43a66ddb61dae68a1752475ca27
describe
'133580' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSL' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
f658ca59d8ffc2eda6147dda5b013ace
639f56fdbce7cd1a590aefb2b7442d5b01218c1a
describe
'51054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSM' 'sip-files00181.pro'
1d27fb83cac605d7b931917dd727979f
8f627599f1418094b7f0981ab486ee5ca55b773c
describe
'45196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSN' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
a1dafc747dcf411080c3cfcd42d79852
87216f66ccd34dda90181894a499ff42317b7cd5
describe
'7750455' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSO' 'sip-files00181.tif'
3bc8eac7c775ef47da09b47711a4b909
df85d5092605fae306b98e965bcf47078f064e0a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSP' 'sip-files00181.txt'
ed56d08cb9968b961a235c359abeb265
b41b306d81752e745d79583363bf64572533e344
describe
'11503' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSQ' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
bf2c8f10e7313a6374bb10be2b2cc220
8d480c7ee9a86fa17b54fb8c0941d40d3d46ddda
'2011-11-17T00:37:23-05:00'
describe
'886049' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSR' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
a8efaaa295cd46e8d37e7e9bdb60de34
06dab56645f552514fa04c520cd4764aac2a2a28
describe
'97983' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSS' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
88de6990bea0143b455b95b298f8e5ac
89f35aad7b2df1316d1d361a0a2f145f3b9235d9
describe
'25429' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZST' 'sip-files00182.pro'
584398707b85fa361183ec41230a229d
ec36d26967e0cb943335b85eeb8e6e0a57ca7eb3
'2011-11-17T00:36:51-05:00'
describe
'31860' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSU' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
6337a33f159a9c0a93769639f49d5999
3e6bbe22503da7f36ae9e3856ba651c1312787de
describe
'7095151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSV' 'sip-files00182.tif'
246d098b7ed598bb5e2bbaa1c1e8c113
4730e4ea665cecf2636ba75799964a47ce1fa784
describe
'1156' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSW' 'sip-files00182.txt'
9f08e5e3af1de00f63db927ebc344855
f1c461999fb292daefa5f30f907a8247718fed3c
describe
'9926' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSX' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
a8aef299ab05000dc803297dfe5c784e
5ddb749e35d3e21e3ded0ec83026a9b204c5233d
describe
'972993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSY' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
c94dbc90b1b7c52d3e56fe459b97e0a5
5a725ce95870bb2d9154b796c67dc5da5f717fcd
describe
'134629' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZSZ' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
f25c78b69d98ff4f53cb703cfb9f5cf4
6cbe05aa2c80c5ab238efe526fb63d34d7fb13de
describe
'51764' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTA' 'sip-files00183.pro'
45d7c17e581ac6aa84b25f9e2664eea3
f42c8e441d96a88a45eed4ea585f9044cb2712e8
describe
'44652' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTB' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
dd593b201bdbe3718b04065acb432d7d
520c5efb27ff3c33a5f8bbbb094dd235747d4a80
describe
'7793139' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTC' 'sip-files00183.tif'
25ccda281577866f7e9ef212e442a9f9
9e720b907f01fb2a432683837a8add07e8bd4537
describe
'2156' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTD' 'sip-files00183.txt'
3266c186ed3db0f5e7feaae1521c39b9
28571d4074c8ca50f567e6c26bb9d01694cc9241
describe
'11635' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTE' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
2d4ba62b08b647b75e5996f4faf4218c
51931e71814e66561416315a2f593f5688a14960
describe
'895809' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTF' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
837db2d55b62b518d87bc3fd3403cc36
e178af0c5aee3df7e0f50eed834edc6163726875
describe
'125793' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTG' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
8264ea7bf7e4f703774f3901e5f0b15a
68aaed5e3f0f40c76c7a3d5ca4e739e461cbde68
describe
'54841' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTH' 'sip-files00184.pro'
6998ced5ff92089e598876096e30595e
9a8e715ecec6ac54729300686c1c587d709793ec
describe
'40765' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTI' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
6dc81cbf4c3e825105a250c81280f9a4
9a6ac61b8734fb698af4f0f233be5d461e5e4383
describe
'7173213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTJ' 'sip-files00184.tif'
3ca165feda7294c87a1672e48d2ff448
a74a885faf7be9b548cdb965a6c31f613e80eb2c
describe
'2427' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTK' 'sip-files00184.txt'
c2ff4deeca3107a48ccabc060fff6b24
b7d8374105ae24fc8f881a45a2f1daa7a6577b8f
'2011-11-17T00:36:01-05:00'
describe
'12286' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTL' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
e2840364b7729ba2e97d39b0189fd409
eac17c73fcfecd37d5aa7d4514d4b0aca941c3bd
'2011-11-17T00:34:55-05:00'
describe
'991163' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTM' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
d9709850a977feb6378123a457010d6a
c371eac6d81905fb281a61d3d9196f01724cc053
describe
'91575' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTN' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
ee47e2462f92f754b9da892d4216f19a
d80883546cfed0e5486781feaccfd0599397f919
describe
'22672' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTO' 'sip-files00185.pro'
894f9f17380fd56e1800e075f6c78250
9b445acc98df3856586e0e7897f37a4269fbdc17
describe
'30760' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTP' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
b76c83001e0fa2c98887cd614fe7c20b
6014c0809456e149de2548447c5bd9b66fa5a812
describe
'7938617' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTQ' 'sip-files00185.tif'
a11ff2e58de8e2411938a8b92e94cc43
3455128fd75664787e4e9f5a6789df1a581c9069
describe
'952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTR' 'sip-files00185.txt'
adaa111f6d4ba42ada542da7fe7691a3
f500da98233e9610b20e9c643664648c9d1bb91e
describe
Invalid character
'8517' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTS' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
4ab2d4887be75ab042b10e4858ad8440
2d4a10cc49e4f1a8f143820a330f7e48d65a1b1f
'2011-11-17T00:39:46-05:00'
describe
'879810' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTT' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
acf397766d41f7123a193a6e888ecb78
60e0cd443700738e81722c5a7c32337bc018a6e7
describe
'87629' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTU' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
f698c51eeed5ad5bebf7417604a6caba
35f42fc7ef5795d1de69bfbd8113e00a062da3d2
describe
'26051' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTV' 'sip-files00186.pro'
58b62d9feb9f874e42f1ab9f448b9238
1502ae3d64cd337af5f82b370ea61c36536f1982
describe
'29222' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTW' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
fd2bb79c406f323d527b70b781eadc7d
748338f03377d1e4e0efe2686c28b04f14164b39
describe
'7045175' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTX' 'sip-files00186.tif'
5a287a480a0204e2769a81f931f97d3e
5f19decb2aa1541695fc2901d2eea44375d8a492
'2011-11-17T00:32:23-05:00'
describe
'1114' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTY' 'sip-files00186.txt'
702209162a26344baccc0286973c6f70
a2ec2afd5ed059ee4d9f5e7dfe2db0c8e7988cfc
describe
'9156' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZTZ' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
8b59def05dc15ce7f4c7e70776c83d6d
6ced00b789421e5db2e508fb8d646cdf7815d65b
describe
'961156' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUA' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
bbec8935e725185681cf2f2402643e9e
8681bd64668412091154be96f07ae44065a43842
describe
'136176' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUB' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
045a82e8628af94da7ce5b0803a868df
fbfa245ed50aba40bbf5048e674a4ccf7158b638
describe
'51873' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUC' 'sip-files00187.pro'
35b788df35d93e65ec50606a3597233f
2360e4a83a28eba7ac7c4ed568a8d852c0d1c999
describe
'45663' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUD' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
a27a398054d37c8545216088c9d0dc44
8b94777b340095442b9fe48b6ec5f640cbbe4654
describe
'7698675' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUE' 'sip-files00187.tif'
d2fa2ac8a933bd4cbc4498659a2f43a2
82aa2cbf476106e406f373a286c22ae8e7c9938a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUF' 'sip-files00187.txt'
311c6f63458e103180682340e84d4a4c
adf638481f2a8db0ab9e6263421a2c20fe1cc452
describe
'12136' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUG' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
178193e1eca090e8b828bcf23d54aff2
55efd36a0a9601f854562a3b30a44975c60c991e
describe
'899965' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUH' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
6d48f97df024d413e3d54efc407e7aba
75e8dc69aff145755b30cc24916d87056b3b842b
'2011-11-17T00:35:31-05:00'
describe
'133763' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUI' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
da1c50a9ed22332d3ff6d4fb6cd86e7b
63b809d8ec73ecb41e7fc39efe95f3e028ed1733
describe
'50527' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUJ' 'sip-files00188.pro'
c9ac761b64d18d54e4760129ec5f0ba0
a698becbb91f08c4a90f03fa32e2de69a0570ffc
'2011-11-17T00:38:14-05:00'
describe
'44844' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUK' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
0d482cf70c972c72310cdfc41343b0c8
97a62b7f564e5239f9dda73a45ec7c6f3462a245
describe
'7206499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUL' 'sip-files00188.tif'
c433c574be67ca60f3b8516ab23cfcc6
0ca52c09cfa3bb6cb6b06eb9b796b104e196c30b
'2011-11-17T00:35:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUM' 'sip-files00188.txt'
84e9894bc22b11b1cd0d7e00f858caf7
8d752e9a7cc76615afa400170e2f3eed6a818d8a
describe
'13250' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUN' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
b7f1472929943509d8324b417393cd1e
b8e49abac87d14e3d79404c4c5a3fdddef236501
describe
'983986' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUO' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
91e8badddfada20ecca6d532f99b0379
0d39872456e5351b380c0985915e7f7cbb1c427d
describe
'110858' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUP' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
327d48cd7c56df23efe2e6e79ed696d8
ab66a562f7a6e28e1c70c40d2ecaf6d46cee059d
describe
'30872' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUQ' 'sip-files00189.pro'
de7c835f52e65d167d138e4782d8e97e
5e4a678dad9ee47e6f27d7eff55b6db6ac4b9b4a
describe
'36034' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUR' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
b62753a38b3f352775e085f2e9f64f1e
8a0e8c45aa052ff83e7015b916e830a4c7df17a1
describe
'7881163' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUS' 'sip-files00189.tif'
cdd4b8c9d15a0675bc703da2304d1404
0bb5df70b539c78507e54ccb507fe741ce227667
describe
'1334' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUT' 'sip-files00189.txt'
c94b6005b385c999eb7257d5b8c7540d
370b48d02451d5f9f28317531e18d8f119b57502
describe
'10075' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUU' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
bbe2428b3ef4262be3d519d835f04890
ac4a76124843fbffb19915750416bcd44268dea0
describe
'883831' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUV' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
a13c72a60cf41b959c6bba52a684f354
19f6a0f3ca1a2325ef5ae4497741ad0427f487d0
describe
'112197' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUW' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
dd2a7d43536a0d26ce4ddc78303e80aa
997b0ff3e81fb12fbcd340ed62813a8f33bfc5d4
describe
'27500' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUX' 'sip-files00190.pro'
63bc65f92d7a5554932cac8d777f7550
2a069aa4ea955896987c45b113c8daf8308b09ea
describe
'35528' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUY' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
9e7ce565c82af5afcba243fb5288f475
636298f6e87e3de7ec32cdf40e84906ae7a38f17
describe
'7077691' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZUZ' 'sip-files00190.tif'
61fb0e2b73e2bb31f84996c7f2deedc4
3e211bf82a328ba4a372b2c19ad4141255ed649f
'2011-11-17T00:34:56-05:00'
describe
'1211' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVA' 'sip-files00190.txt'
d168516a4521d7f3227a9f7649536333
e4eb7efee43f2e92456d2a00ad336a5c94ef0fed
describe
'11630' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVB' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
904da8202c39dcdf5f6ee3acec781ca5
3fd3a3ccca9c29a2e06541bdf99e2478c37e6244
describe
'941167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVC' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
7e4a54037fafdd84066d83a675cb3572
abb420a6d087a76bc3dd30c285897dd04d8d9364
describe
'108838' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVD' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
77ef536b7084dc8a723e9341009ad2ef
3dff12f44899c4d1ff0338d1283284158980f857
'2011-11-17T00:32:25-05:00'
describe
'36791' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVE' 'sip-files00191.pro'
0c9427d88f8b5f921acacd38f2e8ebb7
9bcbe9e727e2c05c29f2e0d78a62db502f36ec2c
describe
'37269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVF' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
7c469346f0870affb6d58c39acb84023
177d6029c7ee4e37cfa9778ead53e1d7f2742f15
describe
'7538627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVG' 'sip-files00191.tif'
8d45cc9224bd51234a9bab92e8b9d71a
9f0b0af4e26ef5ec67b78f3796121913da14fcf3
'2011-11-17T00:32:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVH' 'sip-files00191.txt'
ad9f82d6d7ac2fcd540bd7a6ea871151
761e188522e91fcb6dda6f4d90c0f47e8a8c95d5
describe
'11453' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVI' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
79f522222ae2cd8ecb9ba795dfe217aa
244f1a5099f16420beb04f7d2af7042424fa7fa3
describe
'871652' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVJ' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
a04882c2c26d2dd5ef869086f3100b22
a07ae9138e6a2cdd5b5a7a6d66a758c539267a94
describe
'127803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVK' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
c983e81cca03a0a5d5551b84b2b9e81d
38dbfc65e9d91b1fb7685b54cabb75e4ecbe1e72
describe
'50268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVL' 'sip-files00192.pro'
374cd964087fcb73b644c7ada1d90078
b0b16d9cb3c094adab7693aba4e39f1badd8415b
describe
'42795' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVM' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
ccfd13555a9d809ac4c5ef7d92fef758
254a1d26c120de6380fdec70ce56a1061c48401b
'2011-11-17T00:31:17-05:00'
describe
'6979951' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVN' 'sip-files00192.tif'
767fb4cdcb59f31642104892af1660da
adcdc9610ee6d9c416c94bd7968dd1991d70c047
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVO' 'sip-files00192.txt'
312e79bf6fec86a04e04f9b230ed7ad4
c960323c58d0cc8acbe90824b7021393e0c6435d
describe
'13527' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVP' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
7e3b12f79eb446a202b07422ccddad83
0b82b055e2cbe0a85c5ff57e69daaad90b7ee203
describe
'929899' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVQ' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
bfb3c5a5899fa6c22ee261fb60d5dd1f
a02f5217183737c158ba38228f1017d1c34a2e97
'2011-11-17T00:31:29-05:00'
describe
'129570' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVR' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
383d4ab67cd1a766a5fa8fad8cfa4f77
88e88423014e3ebcbcb9eea3bbe2e940710de054
describe
'52007' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVS' 'sip-files00193.pro'
4681ba65766224ca69be256f07381d68
529b3d9eeeef10530c9de63e4014251052c4e44f
describe
'42739' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVT' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
09177c4a9d7ab18a5800738fab25a485
9079b0607ffb5867c5ef0f4ce3ebfa3c4d70a1e6
describe
'7446053' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVU' 'sip-files00193.tif'
3b99d689882e59961d9bbe566861dddb
152781eba28798947198e9d0efaf5cbb886ad702
describe
'2207' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVV' 'sip-files00193.txt'
70f9ad79b33167e8ebe7f9412e93f04b
62793d2e1ee5301e22f8f22794004c97d47584f6
'2011-11-17T00:30:17-05:00'
describe
'12888' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVW' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
37e3322afbe5adbbd37ff56c7f1c06e2
239b6b2fa7a07233635c74eaa0874941050d29c3
describe
'873932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVX' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
4eeb0d21fde389c37be1e57a21ffa433
ecec05b88784b57bfc36d10a0e15e983af0cd680
describe
'130535' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVY' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
28e0ea245fb4b01df9009e735c8c8f8e
55d477e4c0710fa677f5d5d2c463853e15cc6a88
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZVZ' 'sip-files00194.pro'
498e0e9594df14e0a973a6bf37aac87d
4aa5499eef9834d5c1f3cc7e4747a855393ccf70
describe
'44479' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWA' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
78d6a47e7bc2b42aa8f18e77450c032b
ec693ed256587ebdf7276a9db209094f835bdc80
describe
'6998137' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWB' 'sip-files00194.tif'
4866da7d84bbe4eff1b50fdc9414814c
cc51a9d57e166372f04d385dd9a71b2dd3365b2b
describe
'2127' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWC' 'sip-files00194.txt'
e5c5042d50f0a73d0c3d2a7546efb1d4
966cc6cdbacd5c57dfe43c9328596331d1012343
describe
'13203' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWD' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
b4e490a07d3a5ac56798e91167afd178
12325e1849041715ef0d9173cea358e6b12edb3a
'2011-11-17T00:33:36-05:00'
describe
'907597' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWE' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
fe6885484c227d9a5c848706a4abeb9f
e9702d6fcb29886226d6d5b0738c17fda7687628
describe
'130478' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWF' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
ed1c44cc69a18488d865f12a78af9eca
26e62cca866d77c44c5c42c7fce16b08213a2763
'2011-11-17T00:32:51-05:00'
describe
'51868' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWG' 'sip-files00195.pro'
cd6e1ae2663105a29452e02ad8f21b0f
8c62dac1f34cfbf2c826989cb6bd7a3fcb6659c6
describe
'42921' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWH' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
b4bba52234b6a2f6617c223384c4bfa6
488ab86ae0c56ae87ee13db37d7c04d66f7dab28
describe
'7267757' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWI' 'sip-files00195.tif'
e8747dd2f621dd28eaf4790f4ac3e40b
0bef461199ddb95451195b1e704749d27d3707b2
'2011-11-17T00:37:20-05:00'
describe
'2176' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWJ' 'sip-files00195.txt'
34122f5a8f04fa06d1e2729f2594acc5
7e58e634f590f19933a980ee4006c4400fafeeb4
describe
'12754' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWK' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
f5a416f03f6766c8f601cc552b29366c
fa007bc831ede6b7b6192f168e557b19806585ed
describe
'953323' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWL' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
1be8a5c15fb41f2d491f4a78f4f0dc93
0660b3fbbf78fd7e8cb491237fcfec4fd412273a
describe
'100899' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWM' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
cbb79c37d71966f551772e679554afd8
aa501486dd5879e3e67d954cb8e8299079b7d581
describe
'27911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWN' 'sip-files00196.pro'
f822c8fdfc821210544bb50c3bbef187
aef5ac37147b6ecfb3db0099af514fcd5a033577
describe
'31559' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWO' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
3b80293bcfe61e6cc508c55cc3371441
bfd8722393f556263c10e793efc72893168e85db
describe
'7637263' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWP' 'sip-files00196.tif'
ef3bcd043c5b0ab3d3fd76218058dc7d
318cb4a9e8666b7fb31383ad6add8263ba722486
describe
'1244' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWQ' 'sip-files00196.txt'
1a05cf59ea90766a64b229074bb5f285
a6d236d0d96fbb229f799ab3e21754eff48ded69
describe
'8792' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWR' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
14dba7e095c3450adb128b38f37bd03a
e0dc01e93a989b0dccb237b966c5610d76fc2edc
describe
'935448' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWS' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
759fb86c6503a495b16b640d2922d79d
2c6afdb1f8a19264d005e839ef764f5b79a7bd50
describe
'130488' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWT' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
7f6818a3df26ca2827b1339a9e1d767f
922b90377ae4100fdb220605194f0933a1840d18
describe
'52378' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWU' 'sip-files00197.pro'
471ff047d154461b73426abb8eed14dd
b38144c5b4eb7d42e8276c0fc53ee2cb0dc3c9da
describe
'43910' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWV' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
f8e51bf9bc67ee23a207e7e33ce13e3f
0e8c96001fb933c4f81b1c54f09fde866c593479
describe
'7492987' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWW' 'sip-files00197.tif'
b2b83b8e8246cb0297f2cc2057dba3af
8d2156e86940d6bd875f054eaaf30b8bc8872629
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWX' 'sip-files00197.txt'
914e8399cb888f364032fa786dc47646
d6d4b4accccb0c6780653a40e45e7f7d0d327510
describe
'12526' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWY' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
553f1874c20e32e4ee9db34cbb3e7928
43eb4349d996ac5b42f478fbe54a81a1cc35a129
describe
'948637' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZWZ' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
3c853e117b7987296b04e0fd6948d0e7
e1d9c7a2aaf7fa8b1d5c77a56089cf04db778083
describe
'130223' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXA' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
4a2ae432edf272facd6110cbdb351ffe
cc7ba409d5cc1bf745276012129acdbcb4c358d0
'2011-11-17T00:29:37-05:00'
describe
'52061' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXB' 'sip-files00198.pro'
8097dba27eeddd9a0a5a33a062bf57f9
ef0e1eacf299b5594a4d469f5079865a04e78466
'2011-11-17T00:34:37-05:00'
describe
'42851' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXC' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
6340980e8137f5a4bf07d162f2faccd3
6061e7c74384884452bd7e1b3ece94a921191129
describe
'7598431' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXD' 'sip-files00198.tif'
1b2211e7add93a9cdc2d52fbfe85b368
877c9a191a8820efa1a4e9ed4cae18d8dc3d6e69
describe
'2198' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXE' 'sip-files00198.txt'
4c7cb3a470d98b16c8b03ca5854b85b5
191d5cbc2cbcca62590d3c597fea9a754a0cd477
describe
'12287' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXF' 'sip-files00198thm.jpg'
ba6cf4b19d26e7757f3bd2b4004c9467
4156af7fc17816203b067b03de5379cc7610562f
describe
'947193' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXG' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
a6c27e12095de8f23f5389eb8b146000
26a8aeb946b74893d02645706f8152a7c5926ec3
describe
'132161' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXH' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
796e915ced4a8a6c4d7bb4d206883e65
c2f8bcc9ca4ead8e2b48954d747844f70f4717de
describe
'52470' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXI' 'sip-files00199.pro'
68a3eec621070a1cb738c8b2f4948b71
84b4286c5dceb36053faf207452e8b57a0eff804
describe
'43680' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXJ' 'sip-files00199.QC.jpg'
5de4160b5560afa33e6a77cee0085352
e43f312c5eac3caf20e3a86c13142a91cce39f6d
describe
'7587563' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXK' 'sip-files00199.tif'
a71ff57350e9dc4727f8f16d5640f1d5
0bae4ae3975a697aee537d11cde7d8aa956bd619
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXL' 'sip-files00199.txt'
ed3924cb0cca8ef965c0a751ac0d4ec9
6ba4bbdc1afed59e4255eb06154211cff129f112
describe
'12144' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXM' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
6de7d2aae915ebc8a0eb91fd8a5ff958
1f67bb918814346431fbb7c3241e35be426a0189
describe
'923347' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXN' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
c76fb817164f1c5aa206a76a00bbecc9
9d9f806a9ccb1ae8887f6ee7db3440e236efa52c
describe
'136972' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXO' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
3ef90d7f32edcc266f759c9ac70030c0
b6329712b6610b60d4c961adcdfd879498f82c75
'2011-11-17T00:39:38-05:00'
describe
'51543' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXP' 'sip-files00200.pro'
84004babd2dee86d6ca7521c2772a678
d3ec6c908520a69defe2b45ab50e1b82dbcc2fba
describe
'46095' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXQ' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
47c2f0b882498aab3481940e9e8374da
58758115ed51db5d52bac2bb5349506ab064fe0e
describe
'7395737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXR' 'sip-files00200.tif'
fcbf87f8a3b302a6be84eb1cc54a3bfe
666d169bd0249071fdda337b6e66a4ff62e8c1e2
describe
'2185' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXS' 'sip-files00200.txt'
f81cfb55bf373895a40a2c7fe2b13d79
74141fbc178e02657ecade52fd0178aeecf6b2fb
describe
'12392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXT' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
8a7482fdc12c4fd825e44ac4626173d2
c9dce1e64fea90f31d8eb337f78e01352d69f538
describe
'887704' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXU' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
34d57757d11cfab97b101a9a8c3bc8a5
92fa54702495f6ec73d4a09380c0f586f15567df
describe
'73392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXV' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
f7f82ecc6a8ce762a9b4e81afe809013
f9055ec01e8230ab22b0998dca35ccdea615e979
describe
'11173' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXW' 'sip-files00201.pro'
8cf505342b20796c686bbdadd7d57287
bd9fb66db0ecad0b9b46504204bca444a04412ac
describe
'21111' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXX' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
d1fa54eb68f53adc911587c5db58a803
6c23222731e6bf5da9b5b04123719d1241d10795
describe
'7108783' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXY' 'sip-files00201.tif'
d00b46bae4dfcd662dfd2d0959a196b1
fb2718dbd959246b46b03b0750f5e5d75ece9b81
describe
'476' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZXZ' 'sip-files00201.txt'
ed1fa5096816ac2b67013e7ff64c5cd3
1db9e344b7f224873dd6659bdd4b93aebab2bdce
describe
'7161' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYA' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
07563444e32548e4e9c2030a7ca2b839
951e52efdcdbead9629e610e14f20abf0d68b9d5
describe
'953419' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYB' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
c3a7190d92460b228f5b7ade9fe9676a
44e37f247303f86e01127d414c0964580a7178d5
describe
'95421' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYC' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
eabb5d7d8be32f19876e2c5880f20a7e
022c283179eb5614d669fbe075e3359b716a98e6
describe
'12253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYD' 'sip-files00202.pro'
08d8b2f9bdc775c0d76e8cfe2d33cff2
f634844cfc3075909c7a198f22bd7be95a6d08a3
describe
'26488' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYE' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
c5d6cd808a3310b42350002823a0122c
6ca6108133490c1636c108430c23cb8c4b9a3eac
describe
'7637251' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYF' 'sip-files00202.tif'
5d7e87bff2c3783a11f1eb46d95cb39e
de8b317aa2957fc5f2db4835a77f7810062e933f
describe
'646' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYG' 'sip-files00202.txt'
afe76e42d3061dcd7878d63c66099593
46bcfdf402b371721f635fc6197d6165424fc4a3
describe
'8196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYH' 'sip-files00202thm.jpg'
8e8179b7bac089c42b73d37b3fc6947d
2bd2cc59dc89079eebdba5a1e3f9a8ac83912c17
describe
'943184' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYI' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
1baad5198faf4a2309f3565ad591f1a2
086a996e3e137d67b26433ad89f2a91841a0b4b9
describe
'134927' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYJ' 'sip-files00203.jpg'
fd62726c71874881a83eb0d0f9efba86
4c8e81e7ecec580cf6b55527957931f1a5667702
'2011-11-17T00:39:43-05:00'
describe
'52935' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYK' 'sip-files00203.pro'
eb7af8117694b28320ab570ae7b63109
afadc94f70326990ef604209d0be3f1629a37e8a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYL' 'sip-files00203.QC.jpg'
c852c9cbe3132d259d00abf5138aa9c2
1c7ae3b0baf8482f415fecdd58f2b33b0d51d2c9
describe
'7554807' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYM' 'sip-files00203.tif'
e66ed651d15cef0a142259547229c18c
76af929ec5d946ee8a88e3aac118ba02874461ee
describe
'2235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYN' 'sip-files00203.txt'
d9c154f3ce678ba5e7d8948d04ac358d
d9001bbddb16006da93e22db6cee6ec4eed1bde3
describe
'12853' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYO' 'sip-files00203thm.jpg'
a6d53abbec750838b6c9ba0ac00c5ec1
c422d6671051e54c8ec9e3698b4887c5fcded43e
describe
'927881' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYP' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
50dac68dc9940f24cf12423eed5c299b
d6a449fd92a953cdb34503f717aec79e166a7de6
describe
'135848' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYQ' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
6453e7d182482da1e957e0d68157007a
1c9deae79963d468c36489fb33ec424db27f740c
'2011-11-17T00:29:32-05:00'
describe
'51201' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYR' 'sip-files00204.pro'
a94e414c44c7f7573de3d319c530bc87
5ec6c4eb525cb27a163035d7c0b0d218ee5ee129
describe
'45403' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYS' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
72f08252637445a0ba0ce162c21e20a5
af60f918ebac749d0fd3836c6a3716f194c8cdfb
describe
'7431981' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYT' 'sip-files00204.tif'
82d093414ed47eee84a938ecb5f86a2e
e3438f11633819925f46aeb7ca609262fdbdfa79
'2011-11-17T00:34:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYU' 'sip-files00204.txt'
bad1d32545e5b3dd08232993962481a4
3960d78c4384f640c5be1838366111eaee7fab4e
describe
'12050' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYV' 'sip-files00204thm.jpg'
c23b2c6732c64a2f336941134dfcbcab
456f449648b43bf6339c6e8992b8bba70ee7aca5
describe
'945187' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYW' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
93cee7ce3871774f391d25e08eb37359
a39084f9c5b661b8922832659df6e17a34d4205e
describe
'116264' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYX' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
1df89043ee8c01d01f901b0a1a052afd
02e83184818a5e8bcdc6da05521537c9ac7ef0d3
describe
'23666' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYY' 'sip-files00205.pro'
902846f18e1f0508829ef70251ede9e4
1989699d2152d70655eb05c0d06462021c9cf3e7
describe
'34845' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZYZ' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
21a79d972c15a0bc7771c749ce9dcf62
17b5b3ba7b6834f7af4ed030a915e8a2d2d10984
'2011-11-17T00:33:50-05:00'
describe
'7570707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZA' 'sip-files00205.tif'
359c17614c94d34800116dd63cc573a6
2bb62d5c4d958f3f69732e4fcc2a54bab4074d0b
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZB' 'sip-files00205.txt'
78a0ed3300229ea290158a4df15ad3a2
802a0c7d004335874b1a969e740a5582e8d91d40
'2011-11-17T00:32:18-05:00'
describe
'10168' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZC' 'sip-files00205thm.jpg'
214abdaef24775070a38741bf0725d82
b12e92d61ac4aa0b00a18b216cf2d0850f98602d
describe
'930861' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZD' 'sip-files00206.jp2'
ddab82246945ddd0f0f93cc13da11d1b
7a7b5328247e43d678f675b58df2bcb4e901518a
describe
'134095' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZE' 'sip-files00206.jpg'
c5e79630c057f0f3d24dccd022c16dce
b4d67c70a89a40016e278a81012b7d013e3ed782
describe
'51151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZF' 'sip-files00206.pro'
c17b8be834bf670b1edfb4b7d37c6504
adbc27a21e318ebda26ea5e50fdc96f52f8de0f7
describe
'44557' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZG' 'sip-files00206.QC.jpg'
e680f8e8dfb93f618c4bd5a593236465
9079f8770562c135e0c26ca6566fe953a6bc0d22
describe
'7456409' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZH' 'sip-files00206.tif'
d5e3b1b40b5bd5a92544d7671112f057
bb8c7119584c4d594f65769882b83c2524594a8b
describe
'2183' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZI' 'sip-files00206.txt'
1e3762e1cd80de009d889cb9dbd7c0d1
e4cf0160bd71b51af5d07c3f8fdd14612786d710
describe
'12619' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZJ' 'sip-files00206thm.jpg'
369b15f1b37aa3785587b301caa3408b
33c2b7c1f4194174617086cf9592022f69983398
describe
'927533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZK' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
90691e0ab7da9353576847c09a3e1270
0b8edd1647de21b5f8d6d8cac1cc237a2a2f50ba
describe
'106110' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZL' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
ece056eb15277a25b9f71e643ee5b19c
ea7657cf4f191f7ce7ce743a208e2ec87d9d3b13
describe
'35462' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZM' 'sip-files00207.pro'
d97ee6a4e5c401d18d2263e40a81a922
556ea6549350d72e68a6df0eedf111d2681cf6eb
describe
'34586' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZN' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
59ef793a12da97cb2c0777d14eb4f11a
75b869665522371b9fdcfe8d51da08329f709745
describe
'7427215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZO' 'sip-files00207.tif'
808ea0b2f3f0154b6c0bb4de515e3873
1fbdc75ed8cd27d152495c18b81ba2f2cb3160e8
describe
'1576' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZP' 'sip-files00207.txt'
3950e2df97cca8256f40cc067d13afda
e64413a31d228f025d9912c7a83fa46c2c4b245e
describe
'10601' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZQ' 'sip-files00207thm.jpg'
8c9fa1af65cf0723167acf9c332c01e2
845ab84e5bc39d0ff4ebea8bec1dbcb6ff4f5249
describe
'932956' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZR' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
9eab8c2f8a6e2118ff9bbc016e4b8062
05d8ae9113f721f4c301cdc57369f2ee0e011b8e
describe
'114397' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZS' 'sip-files00208.jpg'
ac644a02c50a4214fc60b1433ba5c25b
ad299e8f7e78d53846a9882a6281195081967328
describe
'51043' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZT' 'sip-files00208.pro'
d2d8e45d3ea4dd1ee4b059b2b246d5e5
bae82c798ace6c351477e7ff88a7fb52b92983eb
'2011-11-17T00:34:39-05:00'
describe
'37369' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZU' 'sip-files00208.QC.jpg'
ba0fdfbde77f02eb25db1850bdf3d3ac
774fb6b4ed5c18c0fcdfb84c8ad12f1a217307ff
describe
'7473051' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZV' 'sip-files00208.tif'
f24a64741b4a4e28f6670cf479b8aa64
084320a4660ec57f3272cca04dea468ab276fc00
describe
'2453' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZW' 'sip-files00208.txt'
db64f09f2e17ef7fa8ede8e67de879fc
9120c47c5bec05ed096dbb8a6e50d1d93a6a66a6
describe
'10331' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZX' 'sip-files00208thm.jpg'
c2bb0cb59ba1db94f1d40f3b2bd5f129
0463febc551c11ce66ccbff96fc87165d13c5904
describe
'930371' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZY' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
279d4738b470bceeef521ac227dda738
06e21552859c3d5b6611eb164d5668cd4706c8f9
describe
'119411' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AAAZZZ' 'sip-files00209.jpg'
a8d4b1b1536fd9cf72b86c55e0ea65cd
a9211704ff68892a69f13cb3a45197cb4a7384c0
describe
'50405' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAA' 'sip-files00209.pro'
73dfb17bcbed5516075f7590f93fa025
26a336f3defaace371a71ec056c5938748355704
describe
'39047' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAB' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
e49aeb2d0d1ab69ea9eba6d1dd737ef8
7d2712c9d817144f00b41637d7201fecf19a1ba8
describe
'7450341' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAC' 'sip-files00209.tif'
cf44afb581dadc44b48a05978ce01582
81487b35dc04d55540267942f209b3159ed87dfd
describe
'2205' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAD' 'sip-files00209.txt'
ccb87bd8481c5bca80e0ffca2fb41e01
cce2d9e1af02ec4770b164e9b707092c22a7e617
describe
'11557' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAE' 'sip-files00209thm.jpg'
c17c596f19e1205564104ef09ec55810
2758eac3749887aac6346f16818b71132cc74bcf
describe
'939750' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAF' 'sip-files00210.jp2'
9503b0d9d53ab5ffa7f36e646299e597
e73b77617a3445565f41e1248fff9ac7c424b445
describe
'130783' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAG' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
c3dbe2631d93363c8fafdcbdbe75a71d
b1285db35e96ce465e72c5615f87ea5cc1f49e3d
describe
'51731' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAH' 'sip-files00210.pro'
d6abb73177f9727d8864dda76ae73407
ebf1117e992ae02e8fd3e61728b975f909287d04
describe
'43583' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAI' 'sip-files00210.QC.jpg'
b0d74e5fb65259a2162a27b1edd460e6
c385eafa0b450e90466c519fded4f6aba867c875
describe
'7527299' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAJ' 'sip-files00210.tif'
07dc7179663ea7f000c7de08141a2c37
572930a8825e36a4fa1fc43615e60c5854454801
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAK' 'sip-files00210.txt'
c373f5ad560581549a83c3e387d62bbb
eb89addb49dd7afadef45d025442dd0af57077cd
describe
'12149' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAL' 'sip-files00210thm.jpg'
9cf0cb66192cacbff95bd59e4ac9e42e
54addcf3661b5bd1825715118265161016c7b972
describe
'928091' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAM' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
13bfc0605ebe3859b7b7a8bf03970902
a55c06b051062ee7429d44c1385c2c9929277191
describe
'122253' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAN' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
ffdf0a9d059942e3be1a748582f636dc
9c3025a9d5b21fa413070613fd5d753371167b6c
describe
'49653' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAO' 'sip-files00211.pro'
73367d58bd7feab8d0d398003dc3e8fb
67c3490c69d87797de6ae06f4ec1fa012d546966
describe
'40606' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAP' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
f2aa4d674d70dbba4a174c73746f32ed
eb15bac430cb0b9bf560c5e7605fe1675cb388aa
describe
'7432327' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAQ' 'sip-files00211.tif'
89a646caebda1b176515e6ba573f338b
6d7d4839b782b1420357753405578a5c5df89ea7
'2011-11-17T00:36:14-05:00'
describe
'2067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAR' 'sip-files00211.txt'
6a212c456486167718c2a7ee69bc5096
59eda220c1aa09b758907a1f92e5c1400ddcd08c
describe
'12130' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAS' 'sip-files00211thm.jpg'
ded1102a7f2b25cdad495391d3c002d9
e3bf28c1fc46fa95299df6fb174e9c8de33fa0c4
describe
'965394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAT' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
ff7f300c5ef9d1d95ab2a57ba914f50f
8a28a89bc109a9d59bc808bd42b90d60fc7ffd67
describe
'124127' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAU' 'sip-files00212.jpg'
61d14f69579583e53b55aef2b9ec8ecc
ec66e301208b8e925d9d8138b0c101c21ef8d75e
describe
'53895' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAV' 'sip-files00212.pro'
bca35ac82781d30e935f19257b407101
52a7b023aaddc6382e37e4af1a00c32c795af5b5
describe
'39705' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAW' 'sip-files00212.QC.jpg'
85485a1cef3f62df56ca971d2eb416e0
65a60223bc0d72c97dbe90ac18ee1b21531cd370
describe
'7732963' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAX' 'sip-files00212.tif'
93ef5fb8cf4eab490a1d3c21df853926
0d0b40952d61718cb2d9bf740075a624f3051e60
describe
'2408' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAY' 'sip-files00212.txt'
3481674242a0b1ee64ae30ecf163566f
0060b9864b24d87925ea55954b6891c65a70119e
describe
'10570' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAAZ' 'sip-files00212thm.jpg'
80973057549d36773dbf34e6102264fd
5adf7d9af5158226e55c060caff3c8eae2d4d497
describe
'931208' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABA' 'sip-files00213.jp2'
223a8898721e80e5a7ca7b0b008f4aec
a8c558082bfa32bc515bcf08872b9f911370e928
describe
'130835' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABB' 'sip-files00213.jpg'
ad76228896969873583ba05f62c4e0d0
ee85173f66aca3cf92dbbf3e41c9815fc32c244c
describe
'53110' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABC' 'sip-files00213.pro'
2c90011856f1716cdbff58ff6f987def
f2584ce0956ac67573f4037a0fb85e8da21f3b79
describe
'42891' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABD' 'sip-files00213.QC.jpg'
8834962dd27da32cf6bf165fd99deb93
1bcb7cfd0578541162c4e2cdc5103640d1055861
describe
'7456599' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABE' 'sip-files00213.tif'
f12413878722748eb2c5fb70bc7d0009
a8118f6b21343442f2605393c0cf09bbdfbfb449
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABF' 'sip-files00213.txt'
90dcbe8fb37af6767bbf41d5b28f1d84
78b0cd56f8c9d1a204ae3b6c1867a8e30312fe1a
describe
'12962' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABG' 'sip-files00213thm.jpg'
30b5432decadac7f39477a54e30f5ad4
7a4598b0997011e0c3cb5dd37ad8c87648097b23
describe
'967326' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABH' 'sip-files00214.jp2'
e7cd7819c1761894317714ac525eb3ba
3ba4f1c9be0c853142ff784a1865506859e123a6
describe
'136147' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABI' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
468d07e9a458019541e50040d6fa4819
8335bd775607a84141c15dea25fcce9702920d28
describe
'54000' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABJ' 'sip-files00214.pro'
d1863302983af22ef394f270240b1127
275a2cf17357048a8372c48e5fbf07cde0473905
describe
'44571' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABK' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
139312fecda2bc479d9201ad08d580ed
6ac7c51d3d277a64d68c6022314b4942886aea24
describe
'7747855' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABL' 'sip-files00214.tif'
f485ae73a24b8e3479c3206eabbaaea7
0d4d14c425275d11e66efc7e1129253f4f4eb6cd
describe
'2283' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABM' 'sip-files00214.txt'
ffe679a86b222209268c8e85ba0d6027
530a98e91c0cf771c2a7ae7b58d9da75a0540425
describe
'12175' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABN' 'sip-files00214thm.jpg'
033fa0b93822b23a322ae05eb06a73be
e148b2abc99918c6d74a000e260c774390232298
describe
'932468' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABO' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
7ac6674834cdc1e646ac211e0ca75958
fa3cfce1b4f434b9f8f30a59198e25a77ae4beec
describe
'123273' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABP' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
6d5c2f0c926f2a978ef5ab6f80ee24f8
a1da7495e9f07cfa706c9db9aecec10e97272738
describe
'48061' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABQ' 'sip-files00215.pro'
01ff6e2953488d633825e531062bbf9c
3c6404268a0ad0efeee903f39a6517f255d058b7
describe
'40627' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABR' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
83d7aead37f21eee176e5c7f86a18aaf
6cd36426b078f332baa065ceb7f743dd5e983e2e
describe
'7466701' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABS' 'sip-files00215.tif'
1ddb8fec9a1834e2cbeb3d929331aa09
ee6769da80364a45260f77a34f84a09708a94163
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABT' 'sip-files00215.txt'
f34bfd84e49ef32590c27efb7158ce4c
9898dc79de66995ce85dd8515003dbf3bb22594a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABU' 'sip-files00215thm.jpg'
9f4286e129b960b19e3a0bd872c0c262
54fd94993cc4a2e553692e6dfdb12fd9e5076112
describe
'944440' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABV' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
835d048348f9c298eacd403aa1ba5801
42934e2b31b3c83d9b0c49304e2ce2eba9074645
describe
'134781' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABW' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
c21d9db4fddf4f5fa680bc9929f762ac
7acf9743faa0e9ae403cc007ba35fab91b3620ee
describe
'52013' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABX' 'sip-files00216.pro'
7f6fc18dbb89c41c35a53cc0983bc50c
29d18ce55885766bd798eab704b1b924cebda777
describe
'44508' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABY' 'sip-files00216.QC.jpg'
48c7f9e935a5794b1bf219c41ce68b7d
917d014895c79e73b2bdb0c73c64ce8bd077d03a
'2011-11-17T00:36:20-05:00'
describe
'7564827' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABABZ' 'sip-files00216.tif'
5ad89f51e3f5c6f33d790abb5eea6928
f9ba859b7f4b56fdc11acee79e8595dfce50fedf
describe
'2154' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACA' 'sip-files00216.txt'
197862190de968d374ef8f3ab09e2aba
1b4b2e140b64307a4cac02817851beec4abbabfc
describe
'12111' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACB' 'sip-files00216thm.jpg'
e0e5903c61ff2ac465720d5163eba1a5
d427d3fe53394ef9c7daed66a0e0d9265d4f1e15
describe
'923031' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACC' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
751bc509c90a4175bd9f52792b4d5e2a
ba19da92f735b9c2215e231e55a77fe3c8b2abce
describe
'135138' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACD' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
cfb72530a46df54ebd30ba351b19b287
3735f702084b5fc437d4a52acaca02970412448d
describe
'52608' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACE' 'sip-files00217.pro'
37f46ac7d80419c1cbb91eaefaedf088
10d2fd5b6c49b2d3143856ea2aba441c8bfe6c12
describe
'44727' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACF' 'sip-files00217.QC.jpg'
49dbdc0228e9fcf511c0bdf5e38426de
5d3f18cdaeba944bd6d6f2cd40c585454d1b0eef
describe
'7393603' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACG' 'sip-files00217.tif'
7bbd68bb2d903d31aff26c7fc3fad636
31c8fbdbd44dee76347a44d9ff4ff15616dd6889
'2011-11-17T00:37:06-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACH' 'sip-files00217.txt'
4bc1edeaf163b3172c7bd882411f697d
f4e882a094dd9f92f5b714866747a6c8ecf3385c
describe
'12544' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACI' 'sip-files00217thm.jpg'
b6a88bf5a0c07f27f05b0225f754eb52
d1d3fa2ac5e41464089925d6ad4c38944d6ed343
describe
'963978' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACJ' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
2fc50028ddf30073f1ac023957b629d8
141ac17cd52c44793f979a41a3e0527f0d4c1198
describe
'124371' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACK' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
bf520245e7380cc30cdf8a30380468a9
4c368775a5d1b839db1b304a0a7a19e741d895e3
describe
'43954' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACL' 'sip-files00218.pro'
b4d99e156e560a76835d3a40dfffb4ae
3b6c78a61874159ed32dfb8ea8e06d0de277b807
describe
'40400' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACM' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
d58d1ae0be551728597fdda45c9a1dc3
2e7585f2e0f2df4138c69fbe923ee234c742a244
'2011-11-17T00:35:00-05:00'
describe
'7721077' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACN' 'sip-files00218.tif'
55b154fd38b1dc2a7cd8642fa11e28b7
2d7aa7d111b9728474f72e9d906593d7054d15a1
describe
'1884' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACO' 'sip-files00218.txt'
8d3b6d334e2066fc4eef5f1bde7dc933
0da5a52443edee888d3a5ab1b069a5033f8ca8df
describe
'10992' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACP' 'sip-files00218thm.jpg'
a607aee7651183c36f6df2cbed69c681
30ee83c81479722338e67b5dcf310cf0d80740ae
describe
'916901' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACQ' 'sip-files00219.jp2'
f3ca80e470f83f9330111229ce3ac8aa
c495c98add93b9cae2c4477952b1650d05e2bc30
describe
'134054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACR' 'sip-files00219.jpg'
e7f9424bf0cda9c95521363ac5368458
7f73524a12e7c00b7030b0dd46f1ff26e1001855
describe
'53733' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACS' 'sip-files00219.pro'
5e7e77ee482ae128285629706fb8e1c9
ebfcdb7af55fd273c4d37fe515a89c41500f8f33
describe
'43965' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACT' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
8f9f1c6378ee1b3565ca33a2fc72544d
63403270d1271cccef5342fb468e6fa18b3a85d3
'2011-11-17T00:30:39-05:00'
describe
'7342025' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACU' 'sip-files00219.tif'
60540b15749e3cab935910bafbe5ba66
3ed5f3cff6a6149f0bc2f4107ea8e3f5bbb0ec2a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACV' 'sip-files00219.txt'
7568d09189b2d56f6d0554e8cb939498
4d88143ab1150218bd11e8c885a8f9efc948d229
describe
'12690' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACW' 'sip-files00219thm.jpg'
e509c1fdb7fe1476aec0f235fd38e3da
c8d11cddbff530729e1bf814c500e3fcc025d3f1
describe
'956272' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACX' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
0ed5a7a84ca1ef5178d3443519c598a4
b818abaf2c57c99b1181236f9458bdef5c4a8d87
'2011-11-17T00:32:19-05:00'
describe
'117280' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACY' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
e5ca1b6781b426166f7e4a6e375d0e84
6b597a4d8782e3aad9cf88f87daa5c96a932fef2
describe
'24665' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABACZ' 'sip-files00220.pro'
eefa3c6597968852ab1bf386d166cfcd
b8cc1913992223d477c7d3707f87dc067e5773f2
describe
'34314' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADA' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
656df685055bd20b994f3324be91ce3a
59469028ad7dc52f26ae4992195a970f2e447169
describe
'7659669' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADB' 'sip-files00220.tif'
aa0203e85285477efaea6b57a4f146ae
3655964d2512c77cdb64623f81c55d135e9cac36
describe
'1078' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADC' 'sip-files00220.txt'
13a4d4b696102ee06d6cd715334a71cb
24bd08fc3c6440384a882180f9521bc36aff7b35
describe
'9583' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADD' 'sip-files00220thm.jpg'
5f3d935ff7f79b4956ab1ecbaed1eac0
d4a3968c0479d49ab6fafadef922b520a82b483d
describe
'924580' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADE' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
8966892a930cb8f3f5b76762bf1dd6a2
0de71ad0c74cacdfd9006926d5b546b821a472cd
describe
'131001' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADF' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
0ed5889c0965c51e8071ff83e7d27420
f9e37833240be975faa4ef8a6eb8efcde0ae9a94
'2011-11-17T00:30:02-05:00'
describe
'52951' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADG' 'sip-files00221.pro'
7dea9ef81debfe24aa39e76851957b9c
bde0d5d4633e800cc52c27b05c02359cdc14e960
describe
'42932' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADH' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
a17d110ba4f9cf4ea230873ac133304b
ca3feb252fb896c728e9fa21afd27b886b9149c7
describe
'7405925' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADI' 'sip-files00221.tif'
fd029ba96c1c02f7c4dcb7d1bd2acd54
2545c9988d04e37c9ae016f888c9f7cc872312d5
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADJ' 'sip-files00221.txt'
498795666196cade7a5f799d60a20af7
f295c96bf03b38452c06d8fac953b573cd809884
describe
'12482' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADK' 'sip-files00221thm.jpg'
278d7680318191fd92668d14f9bdee00
2badfb9a7f7cfbcbf4cdf77b9b675c34dd30d476
describe
'910264' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADL' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
0559052e5948dffaa954d4ccd53806dd
a268adc1118f3ad0f1f01be6dee0fff688552ee1
describe
'132806' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADM' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
627ed84102168a8330c1304b0744d407
d6bc0abbb9fab53ba07367087781a81292748dc7
describe
'52591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADN' 'sip-files00222.pro'
6449de389d72fc94cc5919dbd8f88adb
f20c3b4a1a29e3c0752f7b2deedbd0f92da322f3
describe
'44537' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADO' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
37c90e46dc62a2ebd03b990f28be670b
ce54346d028545de76bdeaf0edb947e5eea6b50b
describe
'7288793' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADP' 'sip-files00222.tif'
641a46c9b02cf9bad6c82de563321217
0519da1443b0046be6a47a76a705316226bcd4e3
describe
'2229' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADQ' 'sip-files00222.txt'
dd86fd60ad745a384ea77862bdaaa122
75e4cbd7e931a72a4541fd416d0f31d7603a1aed
describe
'12280' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADR' 'sip-files00222thm.jpg'
f2a36b12550bdd47aadfad21b5148359
fa672dd48c99e56a6e8f8f157175fd8c61a6c7ac
describe
'941736' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADS' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
894ebf3ee0b87fc554c37c3b830c3d9b
873f513407737aee3bc48c179e7d8502b19ea67d
describe
'129145' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADT' 'sip-files00223.jpg'
d27f25ffcce0a476e256c6eb858d2b62
ff3f0471bc59875afc1b176662043469678c12ab
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADU' 'sip-files00223.pro'
fbef01cea0cdaa44aa35de026fba7504
70e6497abfd6bc9a3b15bbb4ce13df0f7d61822b
describe
'42500' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADV' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
8b04ad5acd420bc9286ed003891d17b2
0d696ed0a68a809273981f68064020072869d2c8
describe
'7543251' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADW' 'sip-files00223.tif'
e379b8350e6d9591cf5d27d12577e5cf
f5836665248efc9df93afbd993565c81ebd436b8
describe
'2214' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADX' 'sip-files00223.txt'
574371a2771a727fd5f5918e7d06743d
283060a27d8fe3f2729c8bd4377cba2ab379c633
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADY' 'sip-files00223thm.jpg'
4b0be6fbb39c0c03b0b127a7372daf50
1055014de583826322512538ca6538d0a8fe701a
describe
'969020' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABADZ' 'sip-files00224.jp2'
970f201628e1c14c804e858119ca3ca5
35fb911af169a9faebacf59f11dc946a4b3dbd4d
describe
'108845' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEA' 'sip-files00224.jpg'
fab42163857b0f8349470eac372049a5
731e0b546cbfcb7c2198fa33979dd9bf7dd39d18
describe
'29360' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEB' 'sip-files00224.pro'
f691ba311d57dd8f34140192971e795c
0b1ac13abab3d3530edef3bf30822a7e404c35ee
describe
'32075' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEC' 'sip-files00224.QC.jpg'
424b9843316095330aa20f3533345d5c
5f3d03770c1b6a54f4b7a661cfcef824bdf5f22e
describe
'7761421' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAED' 'sip-files00224.tif'
3da432cd399508d8987b85808449f4fe
9f69479c393bacbf11dc61f982b461875b4b161a
'2011-11-17T00:37:54-05:00'
describe
'1447' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEE' 'sip-files00224.txt'
634c0606b29360ba379308b822a4d3ae
5af6c50e2e6b5a66dda438a0a281c2fcd3956e0d
'2011-11-17T00:32:38-05:00'
describe
'9150' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEF' 'sip-files00224thm.jpg'
ad4ac40064c3e578edf1d78eaaf78b46
c26f92b6368a517d486c199829e50638a45222b6
describe
'945824' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEG' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
53a0341fcddb1c24ce9f97f2b5d4563d
71a60eccef2e5dd2c60b5b7b04a30b5b3b069ad3
describe
'132276' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEH' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
83d825b99f5d3f221589e33317dc3a6f
08894304f895d200c7164b5c4abfade74d394478
describe
'53410' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEI' 'sip-files00225.pro'
9a5fad91beb5f38f4197723917c986c4
5ce86cf568ac84b62310e63479e6012d6e7330c0
describe
'44067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEJ' 'sip-files00225.QC.jpg'
e2b9fb39bb15b92ddd76ea0d0af0388a
80ec8310839c51cb7f254bf28116e1bd14121a90
describe
'7575997' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEK' 'sip-files00225.tif'
ff4d5b69f95c1b2843a81b65262598e5
f3a953ba930db804dda81f43e20844f7cb066e40
describe
'2232' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEL' 'sip-files00225.txt'
a92386aab30aa17a8edba837efad53ff
e33681a1f28396fee3394be880278134a9799919
describe
'12216' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEM' 'sip-files00225thm.jpg'
fcbf5aaf05386e43202c89a13c9f628e
386a97927f87c2c7ab9e95a8ac5de4cd01ba40eb
describe
'942851' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEN' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
c29b06f3678a40de80eb447827b59000
2b588a08eaee8cf43677797cd6a6d761e3c0c3f9
describe
'137985' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEO' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
27525385b1d27d2e926f50c6cd68b5d6
ad6e7969da703fe29a70e7e9ffde75233870ab08
describe
'52332' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEP' 'sip-files00226.pro'
034c1bd57c1a131741c3d73a02ef7300
95ecf9dbd0e1045a76e6da9c46d8b669a9dc78c4
describe
'46445' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEQ' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
4a138a225ad5fa7e6e702904da17e1db
b5dd9d3df253db35c14cd3ce70d14c635f976c30
describe
'7551883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAER' 'sip-files00226.tif'
a3abfd12451687d4d07840056006eefe
3345f7ecf4444d6ce1c00cbb7d18d66b3dc14ee4
'2011-11-17T00:39:18-05:00'
describe
'2215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAES' 'sip-files00226.txt'
e16f0d44c488738aa86c91bdfeb64b44
d2d865fbddf8e51e90e0702e53284fa40b73c5e6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAET' 'sip-files00226thm.jpg'
12b2c094f947e4c7f4435805418dc68d
8fc31f1ef47639e7db9b9e3b0f70678213686e1c
describe
'920057' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEU' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
6c03aacbe46c432225c803d2d967f489
e8910fe28caa590a47584e7819da485e50899f75
describe
'131976' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEV' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
87d0b0bb94062814396f36d8b3bf7f40
4e670942e6b1ea6e611d4b386d2f6da572fa85cb
describe
'52456' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEW' 'sip-files00227.pro'
06d4fd17c3803a6a15c8aaaeaa97d2e2
fbb0fa10672e47dff615cb1a0c17fe9a101465ab
describe
'43714' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEX' 'sip-files00227.QC.jpg'
d7bccf82f4b69373028711c931c83d65
4e8514072a5185d76beb9355de0dfbd62e00e3e4
describe
'7367317' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEY' 'sip-files00227.tif'
c1156cea692a86ea895d2d12ec641e4a
090e5cc5b77ad1c48de3bbc116c523aa7a6fde6b
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAEZ' 'sip-files00227.txt'
8e9571dcc36bf4495bb61e7296fa170d
d44ed6235f5e0760aa3bf3af4dcb71a8c77152e6
describe
'12433' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFA' 'sip-files00227thm.jpg'
046f13a6c2092c09d5ffc856241a9826
0ffc25b1592c2005c8f0f3db98fe8f2f86619679
describe
'924181' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFB' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
05564cfe6157eb91e5323492692afcce
63ce0a8f39c52537d5bb4a5ab780d966131192e6
'2011-11-17T00:35:14-05:00'
describe
'124868' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFC' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
e8bc510cbfbc2b3776b7e607d2b694f6
c810528a39bc987af1818249907f8b3111fbf799
'2011-11-17T00:34:46-05:00'
describe
'47583' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFD' 'sip-files00228.pro'
b6dfc22c42687b3b448f30ffd3be755b
5e44e5945dcd386350ab002bc439d99d9801c0ce
describe
'42337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFE' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
0cd7e791df7d295e280bd5bdb7627c1f
ab54212ef6d4e8a245fa527db113b8c52c28b7c2
describe
'7403611' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFF' 'sip-files00228.tif'
d872fd0129fb0a97966b5f4d39042691
d4a89d74ce112267d88645b98c05de3f8c5659be
describe
'2003' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFG' 'sip-files00228.txt'
9d8ca7636c2f1349d7d99a1a66d469ac
343982e027310a3f115dd31a24e0a4e9068a8489
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFH' 'sip-files00228thm.jpg'
96808aadc14357e71f460b5f4588b20a
d16c29e8ea191413df195f61e83918ebec87ac58
describe
'982727' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFI' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
1e710be678d2e7c22822068b8034df03
10444ddcffebab80058648bc17d7843cd27edceb
describe
'117112' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFJ' 'sip-files00229.jpg'
64b4d679e4eafe23e5738fd00d7301f9
0aa7ee5a8bd244ef17808deee2cafa842a9a08d4
describe
'53078' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFK' 'sip-files00229.pro'
40d099e2e970eb278fdbe941b70dfc77
9da51f8722cfc5f97fa3320f498caf84f173d66f
'2011-11-17T00:29:58-05:00'
describe
'37408' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFL' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
1fe1a7e50d8d743fcd6410fe520d4dff
7d2e4d89105e85155ba4ad1e2b38a9c7285cee23
describe
'7871931' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFM' 'sip-files00229.tif'
234fddbf60e4cd8ca04855a6b461941e
23b01e3aa2cdbc463848d02eb74d593fb9b51882
describe
'2437' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFN' 'sip-files00229.txt'
1b95a71c57b7b4bbc4a74b21921ded24
c3b26fe92a88ae40d47153c8df5b505a300bd1cf
describe
'9781' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFO' 'sip-files00229thm.jpg'
f3770a343cbf1def15b5c90d6698dd1d
8eef27da824043ae9949fcd75ea9a1474f9fa148
describe
'944113' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFP' 'sip-files00230.jp2'
0aed9ed61ea4eba4f3b2643f4037e231
1c23a4bc489f2b65583cba02d0c0e3b778800563
describe
'120389' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFQ' 'sip-files00230.jpg'
1f6ee1811bbb464b5694911baff9f7b8
d1eef4efdfd7af193e0985e937431c899d49dcc2
describe
'51240' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFR' 'sip-files00230.pro'
434e97111032d37e1a3f563b01bffbdc
0a3d08fcde94d76d5a1ebd1331987291e56e8c63
describe
'39578' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFS' 'sip-files00230.QC.jpg'
2c72f2551466cd4f87c8d83220da535e
d88666d2dbcbf0c9de50762c23c1fb84dfc33ab9
describe
'7562023' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFT' 'sip-files00230.tif'
a2ef8aa15cb971876fd1081f6f829870
b8dcd0596339b7179f2a20f55388ef8e6783a77e
describe
'2337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFU' 'sip-files00230.txt'
396424034daed75c21d5872b6f75cce1
583dd156075b89bd5a312c84d563fa35368ec726
describe
'10291' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFV' 'sip-files00230thm.jpg'
eb3863d75e1c4052fa2e3287926d6ddd
4a2f78c7e2f80faf6a576a3a468731928bd567a7
describe
'940067' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFW' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
f8ff55dd80c155e1dd5d00b4412462e4
67110e0289c2c3fc5f0bb9d31bdb11a7cfd9cf94
describe
'112957' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFX' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
8ce44d3cb45ea0e3ba11023aecb4a40f
c3b43e5c5f249b0f1058d4c9eabcfe2a9a41fa75
describe
'39493' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFY' 'sip-files00231.pro'
d8dabc0f84efcd6830345a037395cc49
82e8df32716d95aefd6392ac26ea57702d5a1b64
describe
'37662' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAFZ' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
9717c2f41ff1247c30793ae2c1f47cd1
988a268a7f776b1c9b220abc01e4c9f376300318
describe
'7530137' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGA' 'sip-files00231.tif'
5f0d1fc89e2da97f26fb5786d67f4f1d
0c04065227b171ba51b0b778cb742bbbfc1db9e4
'2011-11-17T00:39:23-05:00'
describe
'1638' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGB' 'sip-files00231.txt'
8e58e8a3429989c4c7f021f0bd482bcc
6002bbd05664e1059ce06ad8a02bd3ad90ba50f1
describe
'10454' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGC' 'sip-files00231thm.jpg'
f89dcaf97d505d8df5f2aabcbfe0fc04
b7022a983ceb6816035f6610f2ef15b78812dd2e
describe
'964096' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGD' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
9d82841942b47e07174f3c53883f08c4
e44ec6294dbd8ae62f0010a4ec10ac92dad4b667
describe
'104058' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGE' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
eec3ca15859f68823c35f827d17c640a
24206889be58f65cf360bb32974b9ba8c390b61f
describe
'22563' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGF' 'sip-files00232.pro'
a402cf262bc523e3c1f1fd8f1313d920
d040ffe9b12e9ae43bcd1eeb9012bd11d86715d2
describe
'32210' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGG' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
304685b9bc6e06162491901c17eeffd5
fb886499ca3446866e0d0376ae1df697b4084a54
describe
'7722011' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGH' 'sip-files00232.tif'
d7752b193399007282ea165e595ab69b
7ebc2d8728e26e808ccfbb161f83fecd258fce31
describe
'1004' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGI' 'sip-files00232.txt'
5b71d6c3462b3e7562af56f161b64310
9270304923c172cf5e8497cff66aa160c0ef5f83
describe
'8680' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGJ' 'sip-files00232thm.jpg'
a580dedf6863f0c14e57ff5e7ba98c68
25cd153806704f623e53cb49ef53ff295addfd43
describe
'953552' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGK' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
bfd6fd5b754f06e57b127071f5cb4547
900aaaf6e736fc5c532e3b3fa8291dfde9acd6f2
describe
'109006' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGL' 'sip-files00233.jpg'
77988ae12fccaf31173504b4be69ab21
f87558126ede6ca97401970ebb1d2f014c848bf9
describe
'35032' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGM' 'sip-files00233.pro'
822b5dc9f450b460cfd7cd8c08f34e35
b3ca4b3716dfdd1822cdfc55dcd744f5b21ada97
describe
'34900' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGN' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
802758f70a32e40f379af00f4415ed8d
bd22d870fa2069b29806fb68490a3b448bcde689
describe
'7638039' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGO' 'sip-files00233.tif'
f34d7f473e659ae260964d08808f222e
709830c2d2349c5b63e54961611bd66c49e6457b
describe
'1488' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGP' 'sip-files00233.txt'
12a89b52074886570d9b87521cc8bc76
566fbdf936ff705652695db390febbc370124d89
describe
'10531' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGQ' 'sip-files00233thm.jpg'
6505381e15cd9446d66e4a8f734a6334
0ee47ddde00525dcc84540e65887ec669a130312
describe
'950228' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGR' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
1d8c724c10f1f7ea3994f481f92dfb30
91c194236f16db2f4b9232a683b83c794392f6d2
describe
'136383' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGS' 'sip-files00234.jpg'
23031f64a6cde79ad1b537255868bfa7
5a5bd87d32eece595c2036872afa3cd75fed17e4
describe
'52168' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGT' 'sip-files00234.pro'
30861f445695ad3c12de398d9889c575
f28bd566e6c0b6e566b150b862df8769ae5603da
describe
'45314' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGU' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
527d29d8abdf700ad962c7ad6ef1e4f7
f72f0569c4b0ad78363a1b6967e778f2a4335207
describe
'7611091' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGV' 'sip-files00234.tif'
9d516ec354741ec047f83e16c597022a
2147949300755aabe62ea7321285e213ee498f56
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGW' 'sip-files00234.txt'
7e2b981abcc4140d77a162fb9341cc2c
f03c0164dfb152f05697fc852fcd2e1cef4aca4e
describe
'12069' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGX' 'sip-files00234thm.jpg'
074f1aaa75945edb6bd158a4aaade7ca
01404e6b86ce73058af6652399915c3affdb89e3
describe
'942501' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGY' 'sip-files00235.jp2'
4f253d415e726121ecdbffab64d0f702
907db7c524508fbae4decd44926c04d027ead737
describe
'125755' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAGZ' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
645b43ae65309872180f4807ad86c38b
5ee694c56fe11bd966e87b961983de74937ad751
describe
'51726' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHA' 'sip-files00235.pro'
6dbeaed137aaf926e20b1bfd8c38e2c5
5075a9231c742a341faa0995b9e8cc65f5beae85
describe
'41298' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHB' 'sip-files00235.QC.jpg'
eeff76610cf85ad980b7c3c096cf1669
cdbda4d94cd85aa369e96e4c37af3c9844cd0c73
describe
'7549687' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHC' 'sip-files00235.tif'
6937674b6a3998427e8bea63b2a8fe2c
ae88f8c4690a92249905c0101e26ed8d1af5dcec
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHD' 'sip-files00235.txt'
c058bcb1130a627e0b56637020e1371a
665139b352bca32ed3469db0efbfa95b17450ccc
describe
'12467' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHE' 'sip-files00235thm.jpg'
4ceefb236344bb5613798fc69d25ced7
faea6afa46e1d5b0845016a91c20eafa7ca27b5b
describe
'959657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHF' 'sip-files00236.jp2'
1ebbf76bb5c2fb3b304ca965f136a63a
70095003adf5968923db11bb9c279f30f6f49f63
describe
'132916' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHG' 'sip-files00236.jpg'
121a28a941814dff315f58ca1531c8c7
d3176faa8ac56d13b0bb1489ed17f1f366e7fada
describe
'52806' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHH' 'sip-files00236.pro'
55599bafe9407f7700d244f851ecc996
5501c8b3e0e38abfb05fd6b979cf3825a0409cbe
describe
'43677' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHI' 'sip-files00236.QC.jpg'
d6376679eb679c0926aa58b580b696f8
fbc05862a14fc38dba1a222c2361c035623ebb1d
describe
'7686671' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHJ' 'sip-files00236.tif'
7eb991ca3bafdb2176eff51e7b94dd6f
325c0b41705dc83e47f6ebef435e681c161cd4e6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHK' 'sip-files00236.txt'
e8106acc3c67abe12051e7eeed6ec1be
edb999aec0094616225f390f33a3ec58fa9334f7
describe
'11215' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHL' 'sip-files00236thm.jpg'
f11148908c6183503deac5aa742a378f
120cfe9337f2cff0f0f9ce1deb5511f8bd02ddd7
describe
'938952' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHM' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
67dc9506f3a1c02b05edcbfc3cf6e26d
d1a55033cc67fbe673aeb6e602464427d3e7f9f1
describe
'103767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHN' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
321d70b5655b002504376a92faf26197
d80bcba9bc49db6450aca78f9ba246b637b988dd
describe
'33336' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHO' 'sip-files00237.pro'
c8c0bcf2fb4c4cc3c25f5f3e5be2166d
439abaa51ce694f17af616134851994b2cb11be8
describe
'35063' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHP' 'sip-files00237.QC.jpg'
355b03a1c19a37abb5d7aea3b8ef4d37
0d6545b7134b9dbb44637c6287cc3e11bc802ad3
describe
'7520933' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHQ' 'sip-files00237.tif'
186aff43e2f93f35a8f1ea543f9ada8f
4464c50c21a81b8ce16c72076a9f1abeb670c5e5
describe
'1441' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHR' 'sip-files00237.txt'
63518f00a6de86559692e4df201ede81
948d790edb17629e4026b2040809ab9dbe0daa41
describe
'10449' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHS' 'sip-files00237thm.jpg'
2a20f63b59b72196f67fde912c273f38
2046d39194bd820603593656def8ab68c94d87bc
describe
'959464' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHT' 'sip-files00238.jp2'
10b8058554e372513f9e55254ded6567
9128b504bc076544ab45762642953198e85691bf
describe
'106994' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHU' 'sip-files00238.jpg'
4fa2aa3ea8e6262d7a3cbf94299558c7
3e0d5755b0a28216c987f493a821458ffe50919f
describe
'38361' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHV' 'sip-files00238.pro'
7209399b3700a95266a46cb85e8ffd95
d46ab1fd8aee0186c98a058be474a2e076db404c
describe
'35924' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHW' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
991804d84ffae99a714f3134832a8f5b
b5bb32c67a78b2fa497e23c3a231a8318b911c7e
describe
'7685107' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHX' 'sip-files00238.tif'
be2605ab829641858f32d32e2d072f54
284577ed8b9630686faa5bfbc308e0ecef4d015b
describe
'1629' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHY' 'sip-files00238.txt'
a0650a07f119a8519c5b63b31e8c5819
f0d814c425da2c8944472f057fc5e73a7c91a3c1
describe
'10554' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAHZ' 'sip-files00238thm.jpg'
695574bfd5ae47dbfbdb6bfb978fa1f8
ba03a578d4ec6a62386b1f9c387fbda33fbee616
describe
'931334' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIA' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
9dfd3c0f6366f65e7af4aaf73da55909
a79e459969cf0dd44da4a31d38580a747835f379
describe
'135342' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIB' 'sip-files00239.jpg'
472909c49a1167a18ec44a483e8e399d
277e485336d21223afcbfc389aa54aa3f9206276
describe
'54275' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIC' 'sip-files00239.pro'
3c1dbe601c3ccbe8bd0d7592e16388e9
99c88175e072f041a74d0bb04c27082aa4863649
describe
'44997' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAID' 'sip-files00239.QC.jpg'
03a624bbe3e6f4d001b6abf77349d668
a746bc6589b031d9257c5d7ad1899513bda60619
describe
'7460019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIE' 'sip-files00239.tif'
093b0309c52ab3188470b5606fee292c
64a93006e5925a09b46a9fa1af02894ab0c8f1dc
describe
'2255' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIF' 'sip-files00239.txt'
b438cd91aba9f4c83350ef872e56c1f2
40f253dcc67e3946f7aeda4d45ab5e576a34eea7
describe
'12579' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIG' 'sip-files00239thm.jpg'
bf9c9765d24874561bbc659ba6770a6f
5dc1f0ede20d5fcee7a8acb4f70063b0aef15567
describe
'943911' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIH' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
3430b2d2436103631fe7d61ca0e7f68b
a258597233d38825390c4be5041e40b87313e0a3
describe
'130661' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAII' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
5e968802e102b4e4caf61d2f196a6a67
3b205176f3e73ab102199f2d8d2866085718348a
describe
'51613' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIJ' 'sip-files00240.pro'
0573ea794607ad305217d0d69e19a90f
50e1fe083a4d7918e5b3dbc3d9411f11593a11a4
describe
'43219' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIK' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
41081c94517417f602da75357210f3c6
d909368af2c6faf08ab6f70b5eb69e9667a39c5d
describe
'7560705' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIL' 'sip-files00240.tif'
d14cecb93069711206ddf0123c1240c4
f0dc56a29b72226ebc594550ceafc8ca5f6ef38c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIM' 'sip-files00240.txt'
72bc2255f880b5642484432d2ebb93ac
ece3dd48429e08891fd88c6e499192aae611770c
describe
'11813' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIN' 'sip-files00240thm.jpg'
a6613d879f9fe81f3aa921d511c31cec
d6eb3714d99c348276082ce883a80e5b0e515a7c
describe
'942560' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIO' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
54b70bf52ab093f08cb4dddde3f6a357
c546358debb75d1fb35c29a9fc6bc34b2e9de1ce
describe
'131170' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIP' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
954c278b73d5671c3755ad936f8666e8
12a9fa66b063707280198fd151c61dd345a9f14f
describe
'51571' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIQ' 'sip-files00241.pro'
6db2b5dacb22d06ee0265b047474cea3
7d1e98ac62997685ff46c7dbd54c2599d465e8bb
describe
'44674' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIR' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
0580f8eb496d7c63d3a48d3f2c21741f
b25e73cf2bbaec6fe8463da92110049b8768cdd3
describe
'7550609' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIS' 'sip-files00241.tif'
ef0b9639e2465441f92ea3d3c6f6c105
bb2b1a705f5973c895804168a6d5359eae820ef0
'2011-11-17T00:32:14-05:00'
describe
'2152' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIT' 'sip-files00241.txt'
22d2c80e166017ba98ab2d80e74198e0
e8a922b12cf70706f1e4fe487f9b012013a1560d
describe
'12586' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIU' 'sip-files00241thm.jpg'
8a245d6223feba746265e6e8dc2f1ab5
db02e981aca2b797c033ba6befc1e428e1eb953c
describe
'920471' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIV' 'sip-files00242.jp2'
5bb4ae9f38e7218b1b9b209d637ccea4
7e19d2325db3b521a23f43e76f47b74e3bc08ba1
describe
'136362' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIW' 'sip-files00242.jpg'
1d257de3c0e1d1340274bfd8b39f46c8
130a0d208a5fe926c04c3085d8968385ccd3673e
describe
'52084' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIX' 'sip-files00242.pro'
5b1f7dfa204214d872707b0380e7ce18
2c07cc13603b802700b373afda368e00202043e4
describe
'45985' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIY' 'sip-files00242.QC.jpg'
173f26e01243ceb7b143d3b04209226d
522a72d31c210d8435cbf6a6bcac46abf1286127
describe
'7372881' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAIZ' 'sip-files00242.tif'
ed2b8fdd3577be39bec76f0c6534ea24
628b246e8768ad747a09702b33ddace3d01b1b2e
'2011-11-17T00:32:44-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJA' 'sip-files00242.txt'
9443af99a6b2a837359aeeb36531a44e
3c6418e0bef25f595c8d553449f80bafaec4c101
describe
'12498' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJB' 'sip-files00242thm.jpg'
4b711befdfd2a4d7f71290ccc8143e58
f7c68278c73e368b0ffeb489ceb1a1485f677018
describe
'934613' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJC' 'sip-files00243.jp2'
ba3e22ca885c3b3730c983ffc895d1a9
79e6dafdd0552f059c93884e5c0d93af379bdc69
describe
'133398' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJD' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
834f31f4d66b5e68999ff47e70cb59a2
9a30d9b05f4f2d7c976d83e25bccb4133a06b23b
describe
'52947' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJE' 'sip-files00243.pro'
a8ae70feb8a22d7fb288802290789f76
b742fbb1dc1a57cdeb81d5b5f176b32dc99a300f
describe
'44266' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJF' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
fe52d7ef962922e7b8f28b3fa7fd08b5
5ecab93cfa18d50f467357a17a1f727393298577
describe
'7484261' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJG' 'sip-files00243.tif'
b8a54490165c6b448969ed67dbecc9fc
c1c26b2580e931b25f8212b795c546e7a2915f74
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJH' 'sip-files00243.txt'
bbd70c275e13ef2e1f995c172cf76081
5a9d1eda4031d8aee2ac70d3bbc6760327685035
describe
'13394' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJI' 'sip-files00243thm.jpg'
21e9a0432c1ebbb9b9f20baa896e17df
546ecd55bd4da9a72887adf6eed4f1e1b1b2cfda
describe
'952808' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJJ' 'sip-files00244.jp2'
2468162562be3d76dc2b1217947b2fe1
0192906a834751787b1edf61baf14e2763bc90c9
describe
'137514' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJK' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
6f3e510034dba648c391cf6e7aa9b4f0
9f1b4afc05b4603409fc2a638d44c9f3e4d8aee0
describe
'52338' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJL' 'sip-files00244.pro'
18f00f4bef3b1c6fe0161a454885f715
3062f77bfbdb36f6cacf42843e8c520f15b2337e
describe
'46330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJM' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
f7bffeafe7277537565e8c835db31da7
c7319535c198d3534cc0a66110a305215a4428fc
describe
'7631673' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJN' 'sip-files00244.tif'
bf1faed02bf33e7c9d655492254d0801
a4c0c2766ddf6be5d61f61ffe8de5b9ff6dba1ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJO' 'sip-files00244.txt'
82d9fa524133f1a712ba112ecee0366b
96f0d92ca198a6459168105e5ba48fd96051db23
describe
'11896' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJP' 'sip-files00244thm.jpg'
8a62387f1d00c6a0225b7a3a23fc7bf8
e242a18a36fb07b2e46d637e6355b79045926d4a
describe
'926807' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJQ' 'sip-files00245.jp2'
dab9598fd9f28c2a652169069f464c17
d9d20af91f889e37e3d67f56572f54d351e87523
describe
'132708' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJR' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
20df6fc920c564e7301a04d5cf3be9ed
13d4d235376ae2e5eff865a1e85772c6bd006ebd
describe
'52664' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJS' 'sip-files00245.pro'
8f26e869ec0def08ce1c1f630a19b0e1
ed85c1120556a7fc22a9e0366ae8156d867d0723
describe
'44346' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJT' 'sip-files00245.QC.jpg'
10c24f1f21867af7a440be9f20c9adc3
96111109e1f2752f072b18449e3f57ceae17cf23
describe
'7421247' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJU' 'sip-files00245.tif'
b2c9dbceae048a289acdc0a98bc0a8b7
7b23f8ff37c57f8e80bc3ebe1919e0c76fefbacb
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJV' 'sip-files00245.txt'
a2d7216917f6a721d46e3806c59cc5f8
0d6a142fbb958501b7f35cda2ac1086f5ed28671
describe
'12684' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJW' 'sip-files00245thm.jpg'
4c6bdd58db3efb754d77bef8a6198098
00cebbe9eb449b534e205eaad54168d5344cbecb
describe
'948107' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJX' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
ab4879bdd1babf60806ddee3bddbbc4c
2913310d0f434055a40e720f1ae8eb2ec2ec9600
describe
'136077' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJY' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
dd559596f3fcb2b3c7c781aac9da27ba
ee336e470f90697adb1999e27f7c8228bf8ebeeb
describe
'53904' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAJZ' 'sip-files00246.pro'
19bcac948ba4704361433f08fff2ade3
3ca3983932b91087773d186b1290ee2547deb48c
describe
'44913' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKA' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
15f3aed6cd6d7ea396ca41ccc9374b6e
b0b6c7b82a74ef02c95948da6bae11dd88f8fd3e
describe
'7594133' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKB' 'sip-files00246.tif'
e5cdf82495e3a291d36d656877164d5d
9aa9e94ea8fccf99db9976909187135726072f8d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKC' 'sip-files00246.txt'
e06bac4c499a6e68828cb368d5038c28
55a15fef191c23a3dd326893175111dd3b7f0db9
describe
'12163' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKD' 'sip-files00246thm.jpg'
074785413d62538ac80ca509a90ff735
f911f91001e6d933ff0a052456725baf2d12cbef
describe
'940703' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKE' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
4119e785c646d349a662e29eaadd493a
0f2a149051aa56ae2a6f9dea895789ccf07a1850
describe
'124607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKF' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
28efd96403a3410ffb3c39cc0c53caeb
5965649b8b715bfafb0c887683b94bdca4bbc7df
describe
'49265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKG' 'sip-files00247.pro'
4a4a913c72fb57820dc0107a0e983c0a
8bb68ba7693d9af788ce8c28446aba8d8b611392
describe
'41055' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKH' 'sip-files00247.QC.jpg'
8dbad4af36a164c59fa01cc89a6aabfe
4aae8d37c273bd2e2071dcacf1dbdf92503d7ec6
describe
'7535307' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKI' 'sip-files00247.tif'
dd48986d25622ac7e476716db7ef2e25
d00e9f4804a2abbdd74ad3a0282d94bab364af0a
describe
'2054' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKJ' 'sip-files00247.txt'
8abb93fde33da847851b00d989c711e5
8c909965de313566e816d292a374cba76efcf319
describe
'11969' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKK' 'sip-files00247thm.jpg'
fbb38636b6d8f679185800973cfa3bd5
76a2d0d476e893ee362dbf8b705b95ad20ee5beb
describe
'933158' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKL' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
b12de6d628a0155e2798b8e36ff62992
fb25163c7c5e64106209736665c2c0ae22a706b0
describe
'95141' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKM' 'sip-files00248.jpg'
63798b93f1cd7c0781344aa302f6898d
2500e427b66815db1b626e305c49021bb79bf3ff
describe
'14833' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKN' 'sip-files00248.pro'
4053f5312218d42c81e43cf483d77671
281cff778b4bbe262632c1123cf31779c57955a3
describe
'28030' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKO' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
4168fb7d233fb961b24bdc82eb2f0111
a333d3a749e4afa5f06aed2b2ea3bae7b27e5bee
describe
'7474439' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKP' 'sip-files00248.tif'
9441ffcbffbc2e3a5f34b0f303d3bcb9
5fa2593c60ed559dbe7ab99a78ef56c495e7ff3f
describe
'720' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKQ' 'sip-files00248.txt'
1516d49cd1ada698b3a24073fde6adb0
60093e251874b499a0821f38cac37c7bb9bbea18
describe
'8608' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKR' 'sip-files00248thm.jpg'
582f3f12c596d74eb127e3fb3663a169
77ae0e82f31e3fed35313874851a44b69ab57759
describe
'890871' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKS' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
d877c1adbb1f7591c76726c745422017
ab736cbe75ee5cfe9b0b4a733be4f001f85b8459
describe
'139148' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKT' 'sip-files00249.jpg'
1f19a6cee8d88258e335c11e417e5cea
373497e6da16cddbfdd626151b8110d6f49436a0
describe
'52802' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKU' 'sip-files00249.pro'
e2dff39e88839a0de325c729327d9dc4
ae80c8552ebf8ae38a263af80725d07f234810f8
'2011-11-17T00:30:27-05:00'
describe
'46953' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKV' 'sip-files00249.QC.jpg'
f947e22ba7268ef37820aa600dd4c682
3a2ed44f7f41ec23c9a510e64419d2c1b3acfa88
describe
'7133687' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKW' 'sip-files00249.tif'
5254922b9a68624a33e91440e85a7006
518551761f9925fdbc92dc9fa8e6954307b51163
describe
'2236' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKX' 'sip-files00249.txt'
14c3f1ab56bba7e1622aa3aab29d6164
3643a29ed57bede243bfe6a41062ccb74f2c30d9
describe
'13812' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKY' 'sip-files00249thm.jpg'
3cd2672d8e3a96eb3bf778ebcb3c93cd
2ff87309e2f154dd3a610ec0e4f538eb7202affc
describe
'951540' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAKZ' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
8d4dfe70309cc087d8c1f34791ca4c56
705a4ae7429a064cf517a60b2b69b5e8ab208de3
describe
'117838' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALA' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
b140a3decb01380709971897ceaf9b4a
aa49105b63465dea55487792b527cfbc7ed3d828
'2011-11-17T00:36:28-05:00'
describe
'28450' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALB' 'sip-files00250.pro'
c33f06acc5a60d367253939360be17ee
d70609fce6df1da9a4ad07f268b832b8ac5ac453
describe
'36833' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALC' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
45354e5c2f6501a94eeb9f4929641d74
c28fb5b63a4f594628f57f7019472417b4420c1c
describe
'7621435' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALD' 'sip-files00250.tif'
e3c886863bc084ce5db58347a830b609
11cf4ef8b754d626cb0fb36bbf72604e8f4f60cc
describe
'1235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALE' 'sip-files00250.txt'
ea33c086aba10ab79e103331d0a76611
3cc3bc06c1af7db7543f81fd55ad8d92702af32f
describe
'10444' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALF' 'sip-files00250thm.jpg'
0301d161e78a449b937a6b60728f27dc
dbd4deeae5edfd5f2f99b675e09be4e57fa558c3
describe
'929953' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALG' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
c36de015f7c1be2e2360e91e89bd0e5b
775c3a541a0342e2d28f78abbcd497a9f80ceafd
describe
'129196' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALH' 'sip-files00251.jpg'
c00fcca20f0337e3e9f01ebd96b2fa9b
141ce680afb8b8403d727e90be91a78ea2e3bb30
describe
'51523' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALI' 'sip-files00251.pro'
90e766cd3a0cd5e9898115d1a99bbf3b
b0cf4ca8c3b527fb163d59d131937851bd614965
describe
'43037' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALJ' 'sip-files00251.QC.jpg'
2874031780ff7f90f434102bdf246168
ebd75b886efb120b34970772dd1a1ce501febbae
describe
'7449053' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALK' 'sip-files00251.tif'
89fa15911bcf1e88de93a08287fd5c87
415ecd1bc4ec6f4c99d9babbe4d3f07e1d2e8fc9
describe
'2179' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALL' 'sip-files00251.txt'
4c88ca33307c45e18c5ce3386f7d0550
f7d08071e8f4e50c38ad64baa390d6cf281bc2a4
'2011-11-17T00:36:49-05:00'
describe
'12513' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALM' 'sip-files00251thm.jpg'
bf57d79c74534fff685634e3d854581e
bbade21360f29ee68615daba25c0d5f165ba38b7
describe
'947091' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALN' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
59425ce9c2cf242a86b99353142bc31f
8cc22bf75e066f7a57d8d6ad293b7a33c29ac55f
describe
'134328' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALO' 'sip-files00252.jpg'
9f7bd0d8e6364c04c33aafc374effc0d
b67bd35cfb769ae238af8237ec0608fe8475f6c8
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALP' 'sip-files00252.pro'
8a7bab6142fd1bf22ad362e953c99ecb
c6513c4ab26f708884e83d70944a7f67201c8f04
describe
'44352' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALQ' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
3e797967d3bc4f0410c5908e36f3007f
dce02e3cab291e00f4e5cf35ee3f83484f7c63d8
describe
'7585899' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALR' 'sip-files00252.tif'
2f4d86afdddc06bfe24ab6c4212aaa18
2b1f2195f0bf65f676498bf3c0b45917782f931a
'2011-11-17T00:39:59-05:00'
describe
'2188' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALS' 'sip-files00252.txt'
73125d8e0bc720176fa87ee10df1f4b8
09822e93ac8034abac69148e745bb4a0f1ca7a0e
describe
'11880' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALT' 'sip-files00252thm.jpg'
3367279aba9d6dc6248194b1876c9d61
693eaada594f0fac4f650c53920fb5dbb5ba5cea
describe
'940506' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALU' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
f33b83878e3303940d5c114e26457f75
f93fa934849285791fa508f0c4a48b859023bc93
describe
'138748' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALV' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
d7345a0bdd4c8e7e22f42e1cd88cb50d
15ffd724000eb4666d7183860c8392d0af231d42
describe
'51762' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALW' 'sip-files00253.pro'
c6803d00dd59a37e2bfa303a5a78e630
bf7d8b0e262fbf387ef356d28465c98e10a8e166
describe
'47472' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALX' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
d897ba833392ddc324bdca7f0cc68cce
cb8c009e4aa984faaeb6f9509acee54871ff234c
describe
'7533035' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALY' 'sip-files00253.tif'
4e7eac29f3a17bcf43beb236649cab13
8fc3761f7dd9f2fd86c5404a630ba350b189abbc
describe
'2224' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABALZ' 'sip-files00253.txt'
8ee41a61cffeef8950c8e4282028a496
18499778bca82e7e1b83763f0b329f391b39650b
describe
'12232' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMA' 'sip-files00253thm.jpg'
c4f67526a07cd7ba3df1641aa815cd93
3b526030df475b4e5ea13193e8afd80bf926106b
describe
'928639' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMB' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
1ce5677adab8678e1abcfdb03dc7a3d9
8eee85e39266b067e048d702967b0eedc8b3dcfb
describe
'133981' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMC' 'sip-files00254.jpg'
5a0035747310040fb169e848a770400d
15a0168de09ab427c5d70cc28a17ffa5fbff309f
describe
'53061' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMD' 'sip-files00254.pro'
d6eded580512d8cba458e6c292d373c5
9b2f33b23ce88887cfb79fa92b02052a383c8bdb
describe
'44241' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAME' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
a665bb2b2a5787b9db445761f0690b65
a8e932c17bd2b711fa05127f2b0af45b548766f4
describe
'7438371' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMF' 'sip-files00254.tif'
6eb2183ae91784a74107556daa12be08
8fcfe1debc689055054876137c4d1623ba221d02
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMG' 'sip-files00254.txt'
a6cc49cec4eea24607dc1481a1b865eb
642e537bafec6032c6285c3f425a9ee2b48d9d7d
describe
'12502' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMH' 'sip-files00254thm.jpg'
868e80ee662b3d706801490e20760053
547885e870510c4240ea0fa439933fc201058b7f
describe
'929625' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMI' 'sip-files00255.jp2'
633dfc27b14c2a297e201c443383a090
7d1b7dfff0b6b4ee0ac283a84226d3a5198c45f7
describe
'138973' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMJ' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
f67ee9684817fb06f66b7c55282cd80e
76f32c8677fa8f9b763d98696a9b6492c8f0bff9
describe
'52188' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMK' 'sip-files00255.pro'
4d1d0fff75db3a61ba82834be54c169c
7e0b37249f905d22b5014a0863283eabad9e476f
describe
'47012' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAML' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
dfbd9f9796968f1f328cab111ab097b4
ee4d7cac3575d3bd43680d50a210426c28a02f38
describe
'7446505' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMM' 'sip-files00255.tif'
7c3ae6249a0da16915182cb5b5bce81c
d3df6ea4a8c618563085e59fc1e5b3ceaab37dd8
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMN' 'sip-files00255.txt'
865a3b8235d076c0350771dcc8bcd0f7
ac28f47d1e85cfcaf0dab74809a61b8acdb24ae5
describe
'12866' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMO' 'sip-files00255thm.jpg'
331ec3adacbcd3e1f294ec3fcba066bd
ee910a55e9b9264ae21cea726bb9e5cf4bb643d5
describe
'924588' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMP' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
e2dfda295890052ec46c33f802df5722
99932a72b6936e9cf7d85c868e987a560dfda201
describe
'131997' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMQ' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
0f87372f76283cf4edbc26cc6a9c8ea0
922f002e47e67af17c2514f2fac6f7f7599fc24e
describe
'50943' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMR' 'sip-files00256.pro'
511eec04124218d9e966f9d9f8387d4b
6a87300dcff1ef34cee24e91e55389365f622957
'2011-11-17T00:33:12-05:00'
describe
'44655' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMS' 'sip-files00256.QC.jpg'
6d91da5bd20ca5d09be465d9b62046f3
ec935f722771127b98c943627b96b67176813343
describe
'7405819' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMT' 'sip-files00256.tif'
e70537a2450b4f7fc298b443a042639b
0bba41e8f4970824fa1a5ebd08ca3448fc494fbd
'2011-11-17T00:34:48-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMU' 'sip-files00256.txt'
944258842fcdfdfde393c3b6ff96b7b7
519fae8cc1e18b8c340a666169091f998e81eb93
describe
'12654' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMV' 'sip-files00256thm.jpg'
791d66cc9f93b65ff5261f0bc5efdd46
609a75b277946f0639bf25ddf82caa122750bdac
'2011-11-17T00:33:05-05:00'
describe
'905547' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMW' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
08734a6541fb300cb5a9a110121cbae4
9488d256714ac5118d4fd4732c52ba6edf149250
describe
'132498' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMX' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
e4232088220c93c5a6853db25b501118
bdc70760a029a7b5a22c8a72b4a4a9d5e87c8e68
describe
'51648' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMY' 'sip-files00257.pro'
3a97e0572380adb1232487a9857ef50f
732a7cf06a127ca88cd1ffd5f6c3ee291d728a85
describe
'44722' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAMZ' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
4cdea863da95eeda4821f6056fb6aed7
f0303629cb34f9e79bd16ba08f26d7c29baaf71e
describe
'7251083' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANA' 'sip-files00257.tif'
310c399ee7d73ec81f269f92ea999814
86913dcdc3b6fc6bd2bdc66de8547e524aa0af0a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANB' 'sip-files00257.txt'
70a42f41d0a3ca5a66957d880f69b6f7
2732f1dc543dab15eb9b9353bf3ccc91aa7d29a7
describe
'13258' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANC' 'sip-files00257thm.jpg'
0f44696b290538baaa808dc745d077aa
88dd404c6e2402b0d0a3db99164b33138904237e
describe
'939024' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAND' 'sip-files00258.jp2'
c146367973db9a497f86f1a86b28f4df
e072eef14a4322e2eefea5297c160f3a3790e3d3
describe
'132862' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANE' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
793724112df7bbd8dcd7f95155449140
ae8e697f4ebc327c9ee3b5d5c89e8e50db73026b
describe
'52052' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANF' 'sip-files00258.pro'
ba10c419193467238efc515883e62fb3
006868c49fddee614485d242f057bc08ffe251da
describe
'44271' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANG' 'sip-files00258.QC.jpg'
23761b62cc4e2e96f2d0cbc1bfd764c6
0cb6f13a80e6df6d8f3e1cfb69965e97d0837819
describe
'7521499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANH' 'sip-files00258.tif'
8f70ae60337a2d43a604f37c877f46c1
f01c8c047c8fa9a97c89b7c5bb9c7030d1b7438c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANI' 'sip-files00258.txt'
b5180e0bd78996ace770e20b10e61395
f25a09ef1fa3ff233225d54f113c250f5aeae76b
describe
'12727' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANJ' 'sip-files00258thm.jpg'
77ce14e27ff287cf36b21f36c3c36591
87160b900cf2351245efb2d60df148a25055a3ad
describe
'907844' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANK' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
756828e6812c965123413b30838098ba
958287fcecf86a90b1795265a55c5256e71a80f5
describe
'134013' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANL' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
a636ff07c1fe32cceb555ad3eb6eec71
0eaf22c92497c2a27086d6a941551d54c4f23e92
describe
'51250' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANM' 'sip-files00259.pro'
7e9e023808ef0fa456d16d50703c03c4
b79bf78e345c0cee619142ddc14e116dd5809837
describe
'45187' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANN' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
907ed23b703ada6e094d91925a0101d5
5669056e26daea3e906a6d14ecbb7f4b4c200cc8
describe
'7269445' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANO' 'sip-files00259.tif'
9bc25ea2c1d8fc7319c4eb7c630d3639
2d8cba9579afd86fcf1be05f80f4c988c2d0410d
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANP' 'sip-files00259.txt'
dbccbecaab8186e9438012e015961643
1cdafa0df41b848a5fb08d9c1c31289e6c20db23
describe
'12978' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANQ' 'sip-files00259thm.jpg'
c08763fd806d5352ef62c50d00afb698
09dfef7bd6635687d934c9eb7a03e13d39fd9be9
describe
'925876' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANR' 'sip-files00260.jp2'
be03e4e1e25fbc962a1c472260da0f7f
f90d9630987ec69dde5611e0ae3cce4c71e5adaa
describe
'127276' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANS' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
d1db2728c0bbcf8ca90e344a1f60dcb8
df3f8457968f76f3050066356e064d9086af96b2
describe
'51019' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANT' 'sip-files00260.pro'
5fd443f01eb512781cfd6c3643622aee
378e9243a7699a80273f5986901684280832adc0
describe
'42235' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANU' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
16ccb312e2324b1ef4f75e2d267da852
21f6bea4aca0c32f2c6f38d6eab7a155c8affbc6
describe
'7413993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANV' 'sip-files00260.tif'
8379390f76c836433e6eb2b052f3a4ff
af7470e32f90abe356e1ed071d743aef1e2171e9
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANW' 'sip-files00260.txt'
bb494f0309df717446e4a5c3d54f7c28
a131ad36fc43efeb6e8c0aac07f44dcc3b3880fd
describe
'12351' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANX' 'sip-files00260thm.jpg'
25c7ee3ab60ef2ec9117076edec9b88b
5a503256315f68931b2dfa02057de2475ce69ce8
'2011-11-17T00:35:12-05:00'
describe
'918657' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANY' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
0df1cc5fba29403045db574bc1e79083
cf7e8e2575bcc90ffe8f5ba451b37a9816436fcf
describe
'135264' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABANZ' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
7b4561bb477a4165d7cd9948dbbe14f9
d68f4ba4fd918e92e6bd0fc260be2a6d5b0c23b3
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOA' 'sip-files00261.pro'
6b5df824e68ce3c156af100257a6e877
e1f6e4084998a20c4e6867d6070abbb290b7ebe2
describe
'45128' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOB' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
898ba6c88aafa3aef8425f4fe527dd8a
cfb6b0dc4ac52eee4f2c17d997c4da698f797805
describe
'7356243' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOC' 'sip-files00261.tif'
c8921c4b9fcb7e71559d448857e7524d
ccf1bb065d3af64693c7e357e8eb883cdb673169
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOD' 'sip-files00261.txt'
32b28aa98ab91210f6515693cbbca148
a87a55b64af870cccd22de92530d2fce5e0ace90
describe
'13178' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOE' 'sip-files00261thm.jpg'
30cb8935a10f457ed63d2ca39b78e352
dcaa9d68d3b0eb1c6d7eab9cc9f6ec2f1eb0026b
describe
'960939' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOF' 'sip-files00262.jp2'
8d2df879853fee907c4815e141f0b553
e4300ba26a510999db7749bed87db47a65283224
describe
'90537' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOG' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
d32dd4027c258efa9fc2a9308dc31b37
3bc75ff4be8d4c0a5d989eec28f0902d31d740b4
describe
'23649' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOH' 'sip-files00262.pro'
605011197e3d8c370a745fb2485dcd8a
d479d01a843d7239baef156738460879604550d6
describe
'28376' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOI' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
dc0a4146dc84e569cb58397390249865
0808b154b520f6c225ff14b4152f296e499f662f
describe
'7696867' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOJ' 'sip-files00262.tif'
2fbaaf0ba70d7df67bd59c1923f72598
a8825d216f5d4f34d380003b0005a0f3e71d800c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOK' 'sip-files00262.txt'
ed9bf5d0521e7f81500fbc903c5ae0e0
bb7ea4166b309484bcaade73aab95284cdd39c6f
describe
'8109' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOL' 'sip-files00262thm.jpg'
1896e17a5f532d5900d5c5be5586ceab
fec4d5b77db1af759ce0f983cdd6bf3b35b0c8e0
describe
'900600' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOM' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
28641b5188df4c425aec1c61158a4ca6
01527fa449a3fe5b80e759f9d9a2051c65181ea1
describe
'121492' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAON' 'sip-files00263.jpg'
9b30254c46c08d72dee53cc057561d72
0cca0b1e540e18c889c65c9f4c166b4300acd734
describe
'41058' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOO' 'sip-files00263.pro'
0634684092f4d2696fb968ff7828c8ec
b2362de444f128608f6b2554fd5a4909f05b418c
describe
'40544' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOP' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
81dd658f7449fc5260ea8de663105423
cd921d792663c96bd32a53fc823518b63ee7daa2
describe
'7211853' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOQ' 'sip-files00263.tif'
cc083889cd0e165cd32e7ed7b0e26c41
a51a7c1bf83339dc023753115db3d9814286d694
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOR' 'sip-files00263.txt'
b48ec5569e782157b621f60cd0a7afef
fa1d9be46fd396683cbbb87388223038c5dbcb84
describe
'12449' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOS' 'sip-files00263thm.jpg'
0e211c52404687d87fad2e99e1eb02cd
4b955d19b70b28748881c432b4e8bcd0f714b173
describe
'935422' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOT' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
d883b3e87d62f57952d7450cdc23712e
c5ca51784b928ebba5adaa71416b0c4867eb2828
describe
'58519' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOU' 'sip-files00264.jpg'
c09da58a70b0cf074210b9ee8b8fae59
00d124ebc95b380cebb06d92cd1941093c599a05
describe
'3010' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOV' 'sip-files00264.pro'
a2f761ceae4af2bf6e3d5198935c102d
2025f27a8be8a9b968040aced42895c8f006708d
describe
'17308' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOW' 'sip-files00264.QC.jpg'
1be5151da71395aedb0236cdc30c85e9
e908e2818e75688007e02b3dfb7ebbf8b02962ee
describe
'7492577' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOX' 'sip-files00264.tif'
679225973f318acc71128073ec799d6b
cdd5756aed1dce54cf4d4c31ca6e84d888eaa128
describe
'150' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOY' 'sip-files00264.txt'
44b549cbe040c0cfc12d3c36dc9934fc
d69627759287ae4223ec251787f1c9e3f3b29400
describe
'5877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAOZ' 'sip-files00264thm.jpg'
d94d65eed5bf5c51cae4e315c9301bb3
5127e96d7fb441cc47b015451a3f51d38be05699
describe
'923189' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPA' 'sip-files00265.jp2'
391d547c6c4ec04ad8fd9d340f333ff9
363c4b7940cbf9a04a1ec8179499046d68dfc426
describe
'124076' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPB' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
dbdebbb4cd191f803c7cb4e9b4b0f464
d6c423e2cff76168cc855b966ee1a1c417e2bfee
describe
'50969' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPC' 'sip-files00265.pro'
901a020d2b76f8be3dc6fb270291fe0d
96b69e19810dd92e9cdef4619c4baf02dba1bbc0
describe
'41965' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPD' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
9bcc06b18ca6706e69d685d92a7ed6f7
bed802a625e04c5a0e1f9b25256eff7cc5c33b38
describe
'7392607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPE' 'sip-files00265.tif'
40dab723a76a0769f1f5024e70658ef7
8efccb730bf19e8bd5dbd0e35458c5ce57d52c39
describe
'2245' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPF' 'sip-files00265.txt'
fc2d672a8614fd8cf935216f4c880713
16081b9691e4b2421364eac59b4296b70a8b892b
describe
'12265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPG' 'sip-files00265thm.jpg'
03408d5ff646b5a5add722238ed7ff08
df63a80e673a8c8738f55a797d333a732c0782cf
describe
'951756' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPH' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
9c4c466a8899592d810268385702b782
f9a1cf126fc8c771b032ef20ea0c3df497e3fb06
describe
'108988' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPI' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
0af52137aa9700995b7cf15a27b43cf7
68de4fdb9b80550f94bfeca605fceb3c9315d320
describe
'35607' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPJ' 'sip-files00266.pro'
422dd635d3554173d9f300c5a119d985
e5018e240c20dcb762ef328ae5e6a66a8610bb3c
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPK' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
c109175dd20303e6c061776a3a9945f8
fbfc33dfdab2d35ef160f46fdc63fdc741d30c4b
describe
'7623447' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPL' 'sip-files00266.tif'
89b39ba718c9faeabd1e3a7d59ace49b
2f612ec51df20fc766bd5235415452551472d4b9
describe
'1588' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPM' 'sip-files00266.txt'
8e182a1ee7e253fd84ed67347a922a4b
45fa664eb0067c5792fa79ebc4e959afba6a6306
describe
'10337' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPN' 'sip-files00266thm.jpg'
e46bbb35f1809d1fd05f33e71b89e6cc
1ee74fce94ee828026a0219c9d30403554a389fa
describe
'920769' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPO' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
4a7269957229e3b4b9487ca03a5a796b
96d3295771a0afc5adbdd660077e1d2070c77807
describe
'90660' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPP' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
909621f1851cc9c4b60c676c6bcc7507
ee40ad286250cb1babd1e2bc5b9466ab1354d65e
describe
'24005' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPQ' 'sip-files00267.pro'
2d036042ff68362eaab6e8c36af4e18a
c3e1c8ce7407d867a6b296fd466b2f7ee17eeb8a
'2011-11-17T00:39:39-05:00'
describe
'30134' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPR' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
e94365f0a9641fcb50783c392bf44591
de7fd1aa9c6c0bf4a2b29a529d8a8d5b1c2ea079
describe
'7375529' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPS' 'sip-files00267.tif'
fd2ac5784478846f12659c596da5b19a
5133ed8c38c21cc8724cd21b72aa2a8d474fdc6e
'2011-11-17T00:34:51-05:00'
describe
'1020' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPT' 'sip-files00267.txt'
cb5d0aea64a77a85d813c54259736b1c
116fbca9706dab944c95d51618230d3ed7165555
describe
'9496' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPU' 'sip-files00267thm.jpg'
82f3871c08250aeac04b817724040d5d
919697e2966d62e1f95f82ac764d128431bd5fc3
describe
'899549' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPV' 'sip-files00268.jp2'
a2b42a1f5b25f56aa2118af16ba9a48a
4cb1a9b1b0f47bc8bd67d1c7c0e9f2f80e1a78f7
describe
'133313' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPW' 'sip-files00268.jpg'
3aaabd0904330859bc2cbcc94ebf3d2d
b1da01998a858b0dcd601e1cd82b9070c2c97266
describe
'50692' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPX' 'sip-files00268.pro'
71edc7dae14f6f54318dec15124cb535
e441429924c8e07293e818c0a2f97b9d2eb9efb8
describe
'44650' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPY' 'sip-files00268.QC.jpg'
8f6ac12f1472625db8e133901d31677a
f4a4571da7e10fb659dc9f8889c7f08ca6510cf8
describe
'7203113' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAPZ' 'sip-files00268.tif'
3b760cb9340e4d814feac3f0baa27f75
f76dd83a92985402400bb5c86d582cc639f1f949
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQA' 'sip-files00268.txt'
ed8f572791959dbb4007ee0115cdcfb9
8ad90bbf919da53b7608f361270818ae525a13c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQB' 'sip-files00268thm.jpg'
1c8513bf50a1be689635c8b4785931e1
fd2d1c844134b27c7b00dcb7fc0bc7a33c33c8e7
describe
'910583' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQC' 'sip-files00269.jp2'
99401629283f1cacc735e3e8a2b82f48
00a906f9ee95da74c951d8aa37bc109b05f314cb
describe
'134077' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQD' 'sip-files00269.jpg'
099489d480f5af877b2232d1647a1ccb
f8f8c7af41b8e7b86be37902ed4fd1277ce3579a
describe
'52538' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQE' 'sip-files00269.pro'
17721d307bf4f16287eb2d94113e9a3a
b60a7c7609e3dd5379ec923c218bc0da60f25266
describe
'44099' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQF' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
2dc27b06c9b73fdf8c08a83c796f3f90
2252e8fd522539e6aca5e7bcecc9308c81c07895
describe
'7291443' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQG' 'sip-files00269.tif'
da88459bca6660db91941443b29c9ecc
95e57c65f1c74a1fdb176be577fddf3a1fac55ea
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQH' 'sip-files00269.txt'
c84b4c0b1b434025c5180c06c88cc946
331f36a5ea8f42064a03674dd089034f1bf360ec
describe
'13010' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQI' 'sip-files00269thm.jpg'
1527f89464c5880188ad4be59ec9d6ba
6b0e5a2e5117508bfa197c4b518554c4e8facd6b
describe
'911896' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQJ' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
e2e8d5cacbbb9323740010a34cc57968
f306548fbed85c9f604b9a46a5ed3a4b4de80043
describe
'130959' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQK' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
f7b49be09c5fc33dfd2193249e6cc4ef
4e2b765f75e6c255d27322077744508b7dddac78
describe
'50946' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQL' 'sip-files00270.pro'
7ab99d7ed0a2c3e1a6b256ef78c749ef
d3dd61bf14176dd51dcf80c1abbe40495e87828b
describe
'43767' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQM' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
fbe4df285a3eefd69a1843f5cd95aab4
275ade309ff6c26aba649526bcada785d1f66a78
describe
'7301943' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQN' 'sip-files00270.tif'
556508d53f13c0f6ca3b258959699df9
d2a4a43c74e8f8209a5d39ac089af2c8dc692261
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQO' 'sip-files00270.txt'
ad67374ecc1575699e6b773c312c2aab
98fc9339cb3f9d36ed8e0c9068ad4cb1b7880add
describe
'12855' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQP' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
97e2f8768a6d12eac80308a745ececc0
8985690bebf45ac1162c59a32f442089c45f9e69
describe
'938129' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQQ' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
f352545e35dffeba0a7e9dfe598759c5
807d5284d1e8f7b77b17a5b4689440918f94e403
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQR' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
108447448a4b40bbda53954808b37bdd
d2b3d97918c856cc5f10b69ec30b351e09a026e4
describe
'52907' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQS' 'sip-files00271.pro'
bef8532b7642644c6602d5256f58e633
e19eab334d0181603bf41b74e79b0e90dee17542
'2011-11-17T00:31:12-05:00'
describe
'44751' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQT' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
57e13916a2d49d01084c42404e1af58d
0cd2a0bec6f264201b49f0faf1aa6aada5bc8686
describe
'7514309' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQU' 'sip-files00271.tif'
ba2e3ea16c4230020bb1222248628378
b22deee8d019879a7adb5adc164f91085848519f
describe
'2273' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQV' 'sip-files00271.txt'
2bd5604f203f0a2a6a00f53cccb38727
d697440f0de9997d1191be46cde4ff4f67381150
describe
'12737' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQW' 'sip-files00271thm.jpg'
41cf42c6e0cd7fd592d03151028da82e
8dacdce0dcd5354150bf50a35165bdc3a41b069c
describe
'945404' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQX' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
a4d8da11902bd06e9b88528ed04a32eb
8b4c8f86f5cb0b86f00fde8ffad3f0cb615417ce
describe
'122077' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQY' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
80ea419c61fafe042ed33fa70e632b55
a20bd292590e876855d448a9f0cab81f7f87048b
describe
'39949' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAQZ' 'sip-files00272.pro'
d341971c3e4f85e9324c1d7819878669
557e616ecb5c639d369a817916e636a8d74037f9
describe
'39671' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARA' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
dce3e851006eb9d632e44dc244f3f233
d8ee236f5013c48c2daa65f373c21d8593014c26
describe
'7572473' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARB' 'sip-files00272.tif'
a92d7f9dcf74bd1346a1bb23c3322f34
cb4d7be78672cc1957df5c0dce7a9dbc251f9bde
describe
'1687' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARC' 'sip-files00272.txt'
53111f1325341ea299a9d89166c30087
5b75375ee63008b8677691a6df87073e20d9a522
describe
'11602' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARD' 'sip-files00272thm.jpg'
3c48256bb16e9ed8c65fc143e7244ead
f75e8f7dad164a12918773f0c72c5f597a1d9ba6
describe
'922193' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARE' 'sip-files00273.jp2'
702044ccf5899efc63e4ce54cf75b21e
8b3891cc3930c431ff051ac4dbb4a24d2ada23e2
describe
'124180' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARF' 'sip-files00273.jpg'
58134719c51b282cb84ebedd02679129
627c2bb7eea16ab1ee1408744518f99c5bc3d30c
describe
'39822' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARG' 'sip-files00273.pro'
c57c2bc318860a290da2d79d9e973c0b
caa448e4654f96394889aa6bc427e7f7a7ab398f
describe
'40883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARH' 'sip-files00273.QC.jpg'
9a1eb54f9fcce4f9f30f140d15605216
75429adba0e06d8055837491e65127525b0322f7
describe
'7384695' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARI' 'sip-files00273.tif'
37b47059ed81283382d84aa7475002c2
55197e88cb6733b46e4c1cc178f552250992f9bd
'2011-11-17T00:33:17-05:00'
describe
'2200' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARJ' 'sip-files00273.txt'
4daac5dbcad9577bdf84cc5ebb3b658a
58a47209fd277560c36bdd543d941d274b10c8a7
describe
'12781' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARK' 'sip-files00273thm.jpg'
0cd3e20e3dfa50aaa218c1983e42b399
71e42f09aa5c6da506317d7b5760ab858dbdb050
describe
'905322' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARL' 'sip-files00274.jp2'
bc9951d6b63a1fb618765a4c3cb5f837
c99a23ee6c5c4af529bac876acc40af5bf88839e
describe
'131389' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARM' 'sip-files00274.jpg'
1780d018a126159c907406bd98454c48
9619b59fb04931450d37b5bc9163314fc11b3925
describe
'48910' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARN' 'sip-files00274.pro'
60557f478d850355cb590797e4d7b914
8bde4d92e001f4755e35de7ae04c3e76d5d0a1d8
describe
'44649' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARO' 'sip-files00274.QC.jpg'
9e8ab2cde20cda41769a98502e345246
e220b039e0f717149af3c5055b481d0fb10f951c
describe
'7249535' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARP' 'sip-files00274.tif'
560035988c21ac17c1a0b03e2c7afa10
fcef0dd476cd3dfd7c748373d2fbbca5d7709141
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARQ' 'sip-files00274.txt'
84a3df8c8717badab794ae58e3a97334
6d207cb20da15963b969aaf32658fe6e349daace
describe
'12763' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARR' 'sip-files00274thm.jpg'
8c2a43fbc7d8e67f7b3cc5b9f77d046a
c3b4f3a7dee18b257eb3f5524f722d1868ba46f1
describe
'925254' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARS' 'sip-files00275.jp2'
c6533faf02602e3460f63bde6d2908b9
038e0cb7a0c9184e4d50d5cdfdb558fd24cc4564
describe
'134244' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABART' 'sip-files00275.jpg'
97ab157dd0976056c7c2c8fddf2821aa
70824426991d4655f1ae8f7fc6eb66033c618490
describe
'51083' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARU' 'sip-files00275.pro'
59d0bb79e459e4b08ca27bdf0ef750e4
7a2351243268f156beeee0908b402fa28cc12e3a
describe
'45198' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARV' 'sip-files00275.QC.jpg'
83a25379f5b39bb6c8e04780f4fb64ea
d66cfd60112131fb73f02073086ff914ad17e484
describe
'7411115' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARW' 'sip-files00275.tif'
f49f425f8aba64f61848096e10d599ee
53725ea992e99a1b21760d55acc4fb08f5d35ffd
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARX' 'sip-files00275.txt'
6c4a9466952d003118f31c367f50111d
5de9481873891916deb02cd0d9e2cfb0b8560f0a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARY' 'sip-files00275thm.jpg'
beffb6b94a7150aff788a2287b814289
37a5aae532525e66792b620b733f191feac1fe21
describe
'946765' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABARZ' 'sip-files00276.jp2'
5f4618a4b6aab9cfc0c3918d2642de2e
b77171d967f49910baa9bedc9586a80d5d37df92
describe
'127889' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASA' 'sip-files00276.jpg'
eaf5efd32a139080ba38bc0624985879
7891fdd2b39975f08cf150111ddbdde4fe1abb15
describe
'49102' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASB' 'sip-files00276.pro'
aaa66f2b403cd10cb3cd6b583bdaec1b
3113f0869d67233c4b37ff418d6764d6313db1e3
describe
'42175' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASC' 'sip-files00276.QC.jpg'
049e1781d2801f0b503d9c6adf153693
3ac49b94f6dfe67ab1c35041f81c5ecbc945502b
describe
'7583355' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASD' 'sip-files00276.tif'
e4fdb812461cc47024f625e3639a5610
469afb098ab83247a572ddf558d6cd25f04331ce
'2011-11-17T00:35:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASE' 'sip-files00276.txt'
5aba7bddb42e101761da46e94d92c705
5bcdc3c015ea613c96bb5ce3232425ce3527cc5d
describe
'11849' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASF' 'sip-files00276thm.jpg'
ae4c66641f6a4891cf9885242acd5cca
8bee36dad9cc0a02ac1392d94e7ec1b2f6d59644
describe
'933330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASG' 'sip-files00277.jp2'
f8646d3a4314576b68a257f8501e2498
f52f64d4258f9ba75d2262d771e648bfe26a3c69
describe
'133969' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASH' 'sip-files00277.jpg'
8b4195a102f5f940cfce1c04d56ffa82
285d337f1976be7de41f8786be403a8be08495d2
describe
'50520' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASI' 'sip-files00277.pro'
d298f32bc2988c2beb85f10a59f24faf
9499fbeb0d89d268438f242f915c5197d7fc1b55
describe
'44993' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASJ' 'sip-files00277.QC.jpg'
e2b4189547c3c98a882bd6a62318ae75
7495061a54d8eae5ca9d44ad69d54471976be235
describe
'7475741' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASK' 'sip-files00277.tif'
97ddbee43dcf8f7d24e4239cfc208afe
ab6700aaf9d68c3b1e48a655a550b7b2855d8a4e
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASL' 'sip-files00277.txt'
69629e2c814f10cead23ac644172fb12
061f2e88109e2bbe386c8615001a48afc3ecd7e9
describe
'12413' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASM' 'sip-files00277thm.jpg'
c88ba60a15f78fd50d34d84b505d125d
21d5a49bd76d8aa5038953da9ca61130b95f6226
describe
'940392' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASN' 'sip-files00278.jp2'
7b9e1acf94e50efc625058dc57deda76
969100a019440457d30d8aff45977afbea18708d
describe
'108237' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASO' 'sip-files00278.jpg'
35c30dfe53bb6b094e3a658b7fd9433f
69fbe4486437966410b4b3a21bd0de85dd304c66
describe
'34754' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASP' 'sip-files00278.pro'
3ec66dcbaffa6eddf8fac03662e14d3b
20cc270fe90463882a1ec7c050d14a0407b0be51
describe
'34608' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASQ' 'sip-files00278.QC.jpg'
a0f923bff0e5c5b1d0bedef974684b9c
e9d71f07d3409463287217b72b378f0b9efd9443
describe
'7532479' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASR' 'sip-files00278.tif'
d4a5323a38c17e5d3f8381a2122e2cb6
8fe85b9fb2db95d0ec3cf43a46f30ed73694addf
describe
'1510' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASS' 'sip-files00278.txt'
5e5754ed0247939424684c5fb33678b2
4f30c01b2047683c5996ec04135b8100b7f448fe
describe
'10141' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAST' 'sip-files00278thm.jpg'
68abbe9dc251e7285e7a04376633becf
ce2dc0d4cfcb42d61388ec3dd336d00949ff2e27
describe
'900230' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASU' 'sip-files00279.jp2'
688f0d2a7d0ab593e594ae293c50cf5e
4a440d797034396f70535e3853d3c70249f62353
describe
'93707' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASV' 'sip-files00279.jpg'
e52472c90b969e330b0a4fb1fdf1aa6e
39f5d0e51aecea57d314d713a0c4e436883bd5e3
describe
'28492' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASW' 'sip-files00279.pro'
704c5ffa80a5131779e05ac847ab5a3f
6f96edf6fa1e96d76d8d0ac9eb1546ed619f9510
describe
'30550' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASX' 'sip-files00279.QC.jpg'
4e1dc43860cc458229014013d1d6852a
ac8c1473037f2919264ad583e70c436a8d457f5c
describe
'7208699' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASY' 'sip-files00279.tif'
a7e7fb3a08c23a36b85ff6869ef2ab9c
f76b5c02246147076c89f28056cfca5d87938cf0
describe
'1205' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABASZ' 'sip-files00279.txt'
5303799641abde105846dca7a82df299
e3518b6461d4f2fd96e51bbe9fc1559f7c4c6ee4
describe
'9090' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATA' 'sip-files00279thm.jpg'
41321b2e5a1c9cf301a128cd7da36e5a
be4ad387c9b5396338fb38d53691ed18a32b225c
describe
'958897' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATB' 'sip-files00280.jp2'
62091bbd02e745835e8dddd0aeb4beee
9dfd76c36e7591a0062feaaef1d00f3e9847de0e
describe
'66474' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATC' 'sip-files00280.jpg'
86b8aa15b9261cd980cf6946275b645e
7ca2a9ca6a4772a23cd16737c10f3ca38679baca
describe
'33316' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATD' 'sip-files00280.pro'
547248d1b7712430fa9d8fdff6afdf89
3f8c23707a54afe30a931b92418927a61c28adaf
describe
'20333' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATE' 'sip-files00280.QC.jpg'
cd16d59b5653eb9e4239b687e13b92ab
5c9e4acb39254ae289976ffe79202c95bebfcb7d
describe
'7680839' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATF' 'sip-files00280.tif'
dc04ebe549278f6c2a5f5ce3537431ff
801bca587072a69a0a3c38ecf0f107107fb7063a
describe
'1536' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATG' 'sip-files00280.txt'
f8e3bee0a037916e2dafc056e68bdd3a
fab81466f2f7e371f86aa31fe286d41670e0ddab
describe
'6008' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATH' 'sip-files00280thm.jpg'
bb794bb91cca4aeaf4ffcdc5c15511b1
89565f8834392b7123d502cd4cd0d05c30ffdc9f
describe
'931977' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATI' 'sip-files00281.jp2'
5720c60af319e7b9c2c5f2b4ebf504dc
dc4a19da6b0c53e4c9c8c9d710454e90270d6a8d
describe
'91540' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATJ' 'sip-files00281.jpg'
e455934ae413e2d48d310b093b3148e7
7080d0bfe30bea6a8606c69376c9a1de27ee0950
describe
'49942' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATK' 'sip-files00281.pro'
539976f1c3ad65f26dd6f68c338fcf3e
cb31a1c68b700a9cd0cfa951e4f65dca5730c1b0
describe
'28478' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATL' 'sip-files00281.QC.jpg'
6622b83c9329db38b8ce5dc8b1ffaf45
564b69ac481f91edb3a72d94dfb6df40208f6eed
describe
'7465265' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATM' 'sip-files00281.tif'
932a565c24bd3f44590ec90750ad2ba2
18230d31010c837d75a75c76f023b27e2b16a583
describe
'2495' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATN' 'sip-files00281.txt'
943b99c54a140c3ec92c42be8078f309
ce61c01d67e74d7a43b7654c79ce1262f977ce11
describe
'8522' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATO' 'sip-files00281thm.jpg'
bdb1951e5d666434d3cd3f8ee3e9c904
7f6e87171aa617b9a7e31ad6d3a446ebf5bc0354
describe
'963893' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATP' 'sip-files00282.jp2'
4c5e86ae3c0cdacdeac0d252de2e702b
42c44779e57594e9e583fc04ed0f06f00580623a
describe
'86626' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATQ' 'sip-files00282.jpg'
8d695aec47552a20dd18df35a744a233
b7c4436533aff80ec9aee3e3944d59f90873fa8f
describe
'46883' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATR' 'sip-files00282.pro'
932f3d8d15f7fa2b9b83585cf133d698
cb02c40e2a88323d26b65f230dbe48be3cee9e6a
describe
'27177' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATS' 'sip-files00282.QC.jpg'
1b6e158cff11dd902337ee2008fa7960
05d9f5badf8d50c15f5d51984baa06265aaa1109
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATT' 'sip-files00282.tif'
148f4cd88ec618255f9a76350807bae2
8af9903ee3e790f592955365712423709216ffbe
describe
'2286' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATU' 'sip-files00282.txt'
40cc5350b5da6cc805e156658d5c9cef
9d490aa372698bd034e9cea473850616ffa7e034
describe
'8093' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATV' 'sip-files00282thm.jpg'
925003cbf91c8307405bd1f53eab867d
10b916b06ed9439cb1d409c8db0d07cd7b9f7cbf
describe
'942269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATW' 'sip-files00283.jp2'
04cfa868fc9285c95274a1406bafecf1
5911af094659e847445021c63b4e3a7c81a65396
describe
'99012' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATX' 'sip-files00283.jpg'
f629eafd57ea72ef801b0fe8cac7acc2
c8a0b5bf2ddf5047f6e8c95d526d049fc4a9a5df
describe
'52840' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATY' 'sip-files00283.pro'
051d60b8b0228a510874363023c44cf1
24cced8b75b7c172777865a00773de4e1ea835b4
describe
'30419' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABATZ' 'sip-files00283.QC.jpg'
c0d76801dd5a606f5d5c61794e137322
1cde93796ff063293717cb0535cacb63e7dce876
describe
'7547321' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUA' 'sip-files00283.tif'
1f6fd492ffffeefa117f83820658ef7c
a84ba2c60e72f8acc453fe7335be143a3f33f908
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUB' 'sip-files00283.txt'
a14bbbd93f4e1bd53a7f5061083120c3
b1018a6cb482dafadc4883d2ea02c50abf0bbec5
describe
'8634' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUC' 'sip-files00283thm.jpg'
63d6cb1af9aa7e2a46f6258b097f05c7
3f23d02106543278b272328ebf8e0b54b1e6587c
describe
'959758' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUD' 'sip-files00284.jp2'
2bfa8752e61d26e4bb8c1e857b805c08
0cb7e348aebeb997b6064f804bab8f10844bf22f
describe
'79367' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUE' 'sip-files00284.jpg'
fedc95d5a7f90341c1955263ca4a393a
77b8a498614814c8001ede01f7515118ee9fe01d
describe
'38126' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUF' 'sip-files00284.pro'
f29bbd022553bb81b87384fc208fbdc1
aafd970f7618e5ba4e85a60374293c61aafc3aac
describe
'24954' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUG' 'sip-files00284.QC.jpg'
1634f6d9ffbd37d1b6429ddf09199eb2
9e2645dd67a072a2f32c5cb0e352a4a3cbdc88e1
describe
'7687533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUH' 'sip-files00284.tif'
f045240e4f1260ea3998bf6c65e32e11
6d6e124e66c08826b70d62f9aa4ddb7c8c6ac238
describe
'1857' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUI' 'sip-files00284.txt'
814c0d68a90acf9af6acb44de13e8c3a
728800ffad114376b33705c6cb13a03faef3cf4e
describe
'7028' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUJ' 'sip-files00284thm.jpg'
bc85fae9a82288686a9ff8f42e9a1204
0c6d0afc410a4b25f7b64abd55c68cfd3145e811
describe
'519990' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUK' 'sip-files00285.jp2'
c3ebd9b5072c2f2978e97e7936eb4d8b
25b3237193c2726dc5186222756151e8b6d5420d
describe
'13351' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUL' 'sip-files00285.jpg'
11a3283bd6c94fc0229d27719135e97e
f2b3ba98ee34433a670274c7c2764b02e6b3ce0a
describe
'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUM' 'sip-files00285.pro'
4b0bfc2643e31952caddf969748f17de
f67ccd348fea749c691784d34a13fd1058050926
describe
'3876' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUN' 'sip-files00285.QC.jpg'
b5276a95cbd20bc04641129aafb198a2
6ee4217862a792308c224495cedcc3e24def9a4f
describe
'7431167' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUO' 'sip-files00285.tif'
a767da8254f6b00d242c7c8c6eb392bf
e968ad24653ce59f75c960f6959c7cfff8ca0edc
describe
'1492' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUP' 'sip-files00285thm.jpg'
a05c67532283be52cfb745c7562759e0
10de5db20438443e5bf523150334c479e74d7e0a
describe
'949097' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUQ' 'sip-files00286.jp2'
c67c950e3d9674bc81a6cf2310004d8e
735ce0e9ec5b51adc872e88dabae306208e12c36
describe
'69533' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUR' 'sip-files00286.jpg'
cd43dd5c5a3c4082c8e1bd10ec0704f1
eab23f67e0c065a0a3612f64bb1470f3057f58b4
describe
'23824' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUS' 'sip-files00286.pro'
4da13df17b4cb09d79149d8b1085bdb2
5cd083fd82f4800f25884c064722e56837a55448
describe
'23495' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUT' 'sip-files00286.QC.jpg'
326c80c2e60af3feaf78a8b7d9997b0c
6ac22a83678e9e813370d889aca42f148eefe0b3
describe
'7601877' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUU' 'sip-files00286.tif'
a4858efb520bad69d0375a612be39f70
155885936d666237af102c67e75a50dd7aba3fbe
'2011-11-17T00:36:25-05:00'
describe
'1119' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUV' 'sip-files00286.txt'
7d9ab5643dbffa8aea48cceffd670198
f82a7c502a95c75e2e4a45f8093dbcc966636fab
describe
'7118' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUW' 'sip-files00286thm.jpg'
970977891c925138e79869bd26c50555
187ab9bf81d4f6e9aaa47586b0bf48c6c5261e19
describe
'987268' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUX' 'sip-files00287.jp2'
2784443789394c1cbfba4b19e9544105
c774a9c30ba4bef5f6891b9ade5bfea1ed0283a5
describe
'101812' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUY' 'sip-files00287.jpg'
22e837283e92400f4e513d5e54b3b9f7
95605f39980e65cb958892caaf44bf3bd112b29a
describe
'40775' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAUZ' 'sip-files00287.pro'
aca7863ecfd61bc5b983c8c405cb5998
7c6fdf560c90a44a5f70e8a60ac7bc77d6de0d88
describe
'34485' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVA' 'sip-files00287.QC.jpg'
de4de74a836056e699cf07d5f1f6ab3b
827df09c806eee9ced0b4c500a78f72831af8c20
describe
'7907445' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVB' 'sip-files00287.tif'
e6606a3c774e6d6a81e43e8834fce694
6081ad479b81f98df13e13ae7d671ed529f4ae6e
describe
'1828' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVC' 'sip-files00287.txt'
468733b171a716d6a2d1016c9896fe39
8acb38f6255ccdb74324066f9c2bf1c7b13cebb2
describe
'9803' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVD' 'sip-files00287thm.jpg'
3ed5f35b5c6c92be0daf6ea9c1aa6597
f600f20c51087f3c6eb2f0a3a94137efae5e1f78
describe
'925900' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVE' 'sip-files00288.jp2'
7cba54e582b46045ffaaa3d39a721acc
e832e44695377e6d5ea941ff53def72b3d9586c3
describe
'110843' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVF' 'sip-files00288.jpg'
f950569fb38d223b09a1a99e58c633ad
3ce140cf69ae2852b10f8636fa098a369ed567ad
describe
'43213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVG' 'sip-files00288.pro'
8e79b83f93dac704405ef65ac599f0c2
b224d2c47d3aa4ea40a0dd2dba789f9e6fa32587
'2011-11-17T00:36:36-05:00'
describe
'37033' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVH' 'sip-files00288.QC.jpg'
d66a4d8c91db2b3ddf42469daef1713d
f535530de62dd942cf32d6efd16c8141ccc4cfe7
describe
'7416407' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVI' 'sip-files00288.tif'
66c6649a9010efdf198628277c8894a8
90bf0deacc2960b024ae6787ce8fcaac65165735
describe
'1880' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVJ' 'sip-files00288.txt'
377eeb93770c737f4b2edc14e4c9ca7b
ef95fc1fcf1c61a4a4e1dfce76d7b0d0772c9ad0
describe
'11028' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVK' 'sip-files00288thm.jpg'
8d2ebf57935cff5899aaa22abac085a5
8d86fd95f57e182cac3a21402c6482709aed82dc
describe
'916164' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVL' 'sip-files00289.jp2'
153aed7fc7c2919f711a08068d99fc65
42a47bdbe7ccdb7557dfaf2f03e8b9e99c214ab2
describe
'103553' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVM' 'sip-files00289.jpg'
885c3f7e612d25c30795daf6c800c627
20989345a1aaf205a9cb921366d8c51529cf69c6
describe
'37500' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVN' 'sip-files00289.pro'
695b944b81fc95d5c8d017d7f18c49e6
1ca7ddec56b7df2c09fd514fc773ae9d3de7ce09
describe
'34980' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVO' 'sip-files00289.QC.jpg'
666c36d4dc2b27cce3f3441e39c0e3a1
915fdf5fb159610d9a7c46eb7a486e451db2b694
'2011-11-17T00:32:20-05:00'
describe
'7338499' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVP' 'sip-files00289.tif'
4bbcbd860c6a33043d36194b953eb5df
18d2fe65861929d9f43b5c17bfb358cd5358d278
'2011-11-17T00:32:12-05:00'
describe
'1694' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVQ' 'sip-files00289.txt'
ee744bd735012cb1c1d06816d87c706c
82312343a7584887041825dcb7f66a48b48917cc
describe
'10465' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVR' 'sip-files00289thm.jpg'
f6ab09deb44f8a69f1cf6dc75953066d
8fce3bb9427155436b88b0c52e536d166e14b781
describe
'772418' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVS' 'sip-files00290.jp2'
8adca0b2a91e69fe810b82d297f22042
867aa5ec77cac966e76d19aea39ebab9965a7271
describe
'25168' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVT' 'sip-files00290.jpg'
2a40e386291993beb9689c1d7e22a2a5
70a4d6f110a0cbc475483fbef7f017f4fdedd14a
describe
'330' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVU' 'sip-files00290.pro'
a1817a0ede1d7e0134ee018571d5b1f5
30ce61bc5ac240d52590fbadaf1a7d449f98f595
describe
'6986' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVV' 'sip-files00290.QC.jpg'
fc299e17108ceffa914b80587668fbfc
44dfffe89afc321e23ead3459bf1a1e5c14dd7a5
describe
'7333525' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVW' 'sip-files00290.tif'
542b9d49dbd18ea8c076ad59f0f79d7a
4be16e8d9657548c4009991323267e80e9dcdd01
describe
'10' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVX' 'sip-files00290.txt'
c613d3abd0ee27f4ce65085ef5d86ac6
f0dd6752ac7ebd1356bea4aa04bc426ffc6e6dfd
describe
'2395' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVY' 'sip-files00290thm.jpg'
442b8ec921c82918238dd7c316e9015f
ab1e987b00133dcb2caca5c4fb22749aea941e4a
describe
'1252591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAVZ' 'sip-filesback4.jp2'
d47da7f1dfeb9af7d385de26db48bf3e
0a77c0c42c041ac41a36fc67459217c148c1bc00
describe
'175003' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWA' 'sip-filesback4.jpg'
16fe41dca32c6c53eb3facaab1967622
ffbee9b901f0726b34afbf99092203c319879a30
describe
'3371' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWB' 'sip-filesback4.pro'
68b51f78dbeea54199e254dcbdb5844a
15e62e9ef8bc03b42aee3ee722f79f356dfb3948
describe
'35649' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWC' 'sip-filesback4.QC.jpg'
0050e7edf65db2a8edb3863cf7dd903b
51a1e8099469390ef56795733e263a1adf158b34
describe
'30063876' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWD' 'sip-filesback4.tif'
8516e7db94fae63069ef4261476d1e04
0559db86cb0131126788ccc0165dd7641b47a1fd
describe
'379' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWE' 'sip-filesback4.txt'
7d9d871b9486b605ca4f1627ec041d82
25bd1033d14d6d91c099a13ac561a0b741f2369b
describe
Invalid character
'8811' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWF' 'sip-filesback4thm.jpg'
fd896bfbadc9b33c0f13881863761a80
ebee3f6c2295333fcc0190af4aef64cfe125444f
describe
'1315804' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWG' 'sip-filescover1.jp2'
d08a79dc39e46fcb7ea0ca598f8ef685
f0b101597d27e03906512173b7bc489191993cfe
describe
'150628' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWH' 'sip-filescover1.jpg'
c3659910f831a77055f50341ced176af
4c762df5135e663c53aeb75f4d5c0d3d2e01236b
describe
'591' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWI' 'sip-filescover1.pro'
8267eba0f8c2bc7a4868f4ec2f7a41fa
ae1746863589636b5994fc45e51efc65825bbd90
describe
'33377' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWJ' 'sip-filescover1.QC.jpg'
f1decf7fa08f4315323418c98bfed856
26f31bb0f143c3ec56c4a9d96df5c66fa8c8361e
describe
'31584508' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWK' 'sip-filescover1.tif'
796a1e1c3d8d78871e290f6d80c44158
33f2f30fbb44f49c03e825c544cef26886bfe1a8
describe
'155' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWL' 'sip-filescover1.txt'
4fa02b5af982ec1f3942a55fe4f84f79
c406c6cac68d255462669a1f9234e1b5ddeb685d
describe
'8151' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWM' 'sip-filescover1thm.jpg'
37c0c2804ae4ddab1d12877c946b7468
0308abade1ebc5b2ba8b50a910a01b421f50df1f
describe
'367578' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWN' 'sip-filesspine.jp2'
d7a3a20e3035a83607b4485524340646
a79a049dfedb4d10f622dbc7283093efff0b7545
describe
'59445' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWO' 'sip-filesspine.jpg'
b72d5c2765068c85f90ab1186efcc60e
dcf858072e75a14d07ba34b5fe7cf99b52c57ed4
describe
'439' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWP' 'sip-filesspine.pro'
c74fcdd30dec049f153e122cc1821c68
ce53b2dd24dee9625e64403ab23432d40dedd0f1
describe
'13946' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWQ' 'sip-filesspine.QC.jpg'
e3d7a7fe85a88dc50b962728514d531a
2c901d66c62bebf8b3d767b8be6be4c6724249e6
describe
'8827636' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWR' 'sip-filesspine.tif'
1497a9c3b10b017422921cb5e82aa404
731f2e6bf62d1bb20b86302ecee951fb3423a58c
describe
'213' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWS' 'sip-filesspine.txt'
efbb20f3bf8b6ee956a93ecf7774e6db
688b8de936d66e18e51e48984d65e519f67ac77d
describe
'5064' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWT' 'sip-filesspinethm.jpg'
91bb177b290b8bd71187a25df6d139fa
70dfd520b6f2037538fda7eaed2337e9854274c8
describe
'475269' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWU' 'sip-filesUF00002247_00001.mets'
70f459ccaa3cb26a37441c95b8e32d44
e78c86a68395892c753aaba2af9eee860fa64e3a
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2014-01-08T21:40:56-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'614879' 'info:fdaE20080922_AAAAEUfileF20080923_AABAWX' 'sip-filesUF00002247_00001.xml'
5fdc4e58a1aceaf61d9e9fa6eb77aa98
08561f8b85f9c8e276ce4912a9b30855d31856df
describe
'2014-01-08T21:40:50-05:00'
xml resolution










Package Processing Log















Package Processing Log







12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM Error Log for UF00002247_00001 processed at: 12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM cover1.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM cover1.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00001.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00001.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00002.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00002.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00003.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00003.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00004.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00004.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00005.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00005.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00006.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00006.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00007.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00007.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00008.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00008.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00009.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00009.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00010.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00010.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00011.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00011.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00012.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00012.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00013.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00013.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00014.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00014.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00015.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00015.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00016.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00016.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00017.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00017.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00018.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00018.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00019.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00019.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00020.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00020.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00021.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00021.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00022.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:21 PM 00022.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00023.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00023.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00024.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00024.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00025.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00025.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00026.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00026.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00027.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00027.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00028.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00028.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00029.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00029.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00030.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00030.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00031.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00031.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00032.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00032.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00033.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00033.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00034.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00034.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00035.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00035.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00036.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00036.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00037.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00037.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00038.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00038.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00039.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00039.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00040.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00040.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00041.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00041.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00042.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00042.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00043.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00043.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00044.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00044.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00045.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00045.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00046.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00046.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00047.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00047.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00048.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00048.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00049.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00049.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00050.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00050.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00051.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00051.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00059.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00059.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00060.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00060.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00061.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00061.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00062.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00062.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00063.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00063.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00064.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00064.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00065.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00065.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00066.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00066.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00067.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00067.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00068.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00068.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00069.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00069.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00070.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00070.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00071.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00071.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00072.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00072.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00073.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00073.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00074.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00074.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00075.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:22 PM 00075.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00076.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00076.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00077.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00077.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00078.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00078.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00079.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00079.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00080.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00080.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00081.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00081.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00082.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00082.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00083.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00083.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00084.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00084.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00085.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00085.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00086.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00086.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00087.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00087.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00088.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00088.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00089.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00089.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00090.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00090.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00091.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00091.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00092.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00092.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00093.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00093.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00094.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00094.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00095.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00095.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00096.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00096.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00097.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00097.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00098.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00098.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00099.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00099.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00100.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00100.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00101.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00101.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00102.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00102.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00103.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00103.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00104.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00104.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00105.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00105.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00106.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00106.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00107.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00107.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00108.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00108.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00109.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00109.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00110.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00110.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00111.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00111.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00112.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00112.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00113.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00113.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00114.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00114.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00115.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00115.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00116.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00116.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00117.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00117.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00118.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00118.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00119.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00119.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00120.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:23 PM 00120.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00121.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00121.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00122.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00122.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00123.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00123.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00124.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00124.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00125.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00125.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00126.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00126.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00127.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00127.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00128.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00128.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00129.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00129.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00130.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00130.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00131.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00131.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00132.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00132.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00133.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00133.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00134.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00134.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00135.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00135.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00136.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00136.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00137.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00137.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00138.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00138.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00139.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00139.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00140.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00140.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00141.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00141.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00142.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00142.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00143.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00143.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00144.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00144.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00145.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00145.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00146.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00146.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00147.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00147.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00148.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00148.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00149.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00149.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00150.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00150.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00151.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00151.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00152.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00152.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00153.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00153.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00154.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00154.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00155.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00155.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00156.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00156.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00157.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00157.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00158.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00158.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00159.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00159.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00160.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00160.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00161.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00161.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00162.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00162.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00163.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00163.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00164.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00164.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00165.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00165.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00166.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00166.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:24 PM 00167.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00167.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00168.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00168.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00169.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00169.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00170.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00170.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00171.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00171.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00172.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00172.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00173.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00173.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00174.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00174.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00175.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00175.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00176.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00176.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00177.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00177.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00178.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00178.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00179.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00179.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00180.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00180.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00181.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00181.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00182.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00182.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00183.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00183.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00184.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00184.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00185.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00185.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00186.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00186.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00187.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00187.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00188.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00188.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00189.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00189.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00190.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00190.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00191.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00191.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00192.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00192.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00193.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00193.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00194.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00194.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00195.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00195.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00196.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00196.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00197.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00197.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00198.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00198.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00199.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00199.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00200.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00200.jp2 is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

12/15/2014 12:54:25 PM 00201.jpg is specified in the METS file but not included in the submission package!

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12/15/2014 12:54:27 PM












Stead Matter reece
Letty oa Ba S48?




The Baldwin Library

RmB via






_
te



.
Ss

q

wt

*

ioe
sa
Wy)

Yi) LE
Vn



MARGATE,


BOOK FOR THE SKA-SIDE.

Beautiful, sublime, and glorious ;
Mild, majestic, foaming, free ;—
Over time itself victorious,
Image of Eternity.

Such art thou, stupendous Ocean!
But, if overwhelm’d by thee,
Can we think without emotion,

What must thy Creator be ?
BARTON,

With Dumerous Cugranings.

ee LONDON:
THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY;

DEPOSITORY, 56, PATERNOSTER ROW, AND 65, ST. PAUL'S CHURCHYARD;
AND SOLD BY THE BOOKSELLERS.

/

CONTENTS.

CHAPTER I.
PAGE
nn Or CCR. og kg Se A ee ee 1
CHAPTER IL.
Deeeen Gp mum Came . ww ke ee tt 8 ee
CHAPTER Il.
gg sw 0 ek eee eee) a
CHAPTER IV.
Tur Bracu—1tTs Stones AND FLowers, Mottuscous ANIMALS,
ree . . 4 kOe eee ee ee ee
CHAPTER V.
Sanp AND SAND-RIPPLES, PLANTS OF SANDS AND MARSHEs,
STAR-FISHES, SEA-URCHINS, SEA-JELLIES, PHOSPHORESCENCE
ab een fess kek we ee se Se

CHAPTER VI.

a gk Rg See eae e |p hak ee

jhe
ae
oan Saal
vi CONTENTS.

CHAPTER VII,

SEA-BIRDS .

CHAPTER VIII.

SEA-MOUSE AND OTHER ANNELIDES—VARIOUS CRUSTACEANS

CHAPTER IX.

SEA-ANEMONES, CORALLINES, AND OTHER ZOOPHYTES.- .

PAGE

193

223

239
ENGRAVINGS.

Margate ( Frontispiece).
Sea View ... ice
Terebratula Diciets
Section of an Ammonite
Belemnite .

Dover

Samphire

Sea-cabbage

Tamarisk

Fishermen . .

Heads of the Yering
Mackerel Midge .

The Father Lasher

The Fishing-frog, or ~~
The Wolf-fish . . .
The John Dory . .
Head of the Sucker-fish .
The Sun-fish

The Beach .
Yellow-horned —
The Ascidia

Botryllus

Teredo Navalis

Pholas Dactylus .

PAGE

PAGE

The Barnacle . . . .. . 86
Solen Ensis . .... ~~ 92
Psammobia Ferroensis . . . 93
Tellna Tennis. s8i53. . BW

Group of Mactra. . . . . 95
Donax Trunculus. . . . . 96
Pinne . . ie
Pecten Ricnaints ae
Anomia Ephippium . . . . 108
Muddy red Trochus. . . . 118
Octopus Vulgaris. . . . . 121
Pevensey Bay. . . . . . 128
Convolvulus Soldanella. . . 128

Comatula Rosacea . . . . 131
Uraster Rubens . . . . . 133
Ophiura Texturata . . . . 135
Shell of Globular Echinus . . 136
Crickieth Castle, Wales. . . 148
Fucus Nodosus ... . . 155
Fucus Vesiculosus . . . . 156
Cysosteira Ericoides. . . . 160
Halidrys Siliquosa . . . . 162
Chorda Fium. ... . . 166
Delesseria Sinuosa . . . . 171
Vili

ENGRAVINGS.

PAGE PAGE
Rhodymenia Palmata . 173 | Prickly Sea-mouse . 224
Laurencia Pinnatifida . 176 | Terebella Varidbilis . . 228
Chondrus Crispus . . 177 | Terebella Medusa . 229
Griffithsia Setacea . 180 | Scarborough . 239
The Hair-flag . . 181 | Sea-anemones and other rom
Corallina Officinalis . . 182 tinize : . 241
Ulva Latissima . . . 167 | Sear 2. . . 253
The Needles, Isle of Wight . 192 | Magnified portion of the Sea-fir 254,
Fishing off Yarmouth . 193 | Sea-hair . : . 255
Sea-gulls aa . 196 | Magnified portion of Sea-hair . 255
Larus Ridibundus . 198 | Sickle-beard i . 257
Head of Guillemot - 206 | Magnified portion of Sickle-
Head of Razor-bill Auk . 209 beard . 258
Head of Puffin - 209 | Flustra Carbacea . . 263
The Cormorant . 211 | Magnified portion of the Sea-
The Stormy Petrel . . 215 WR. aie he ee
Brading Harbour, Isleof Wight 223 Action of a Living Sponge . 269
A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.



CHAPTER I.

THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS.

Tun noonday sun is shining out upon the sea in all
its lustre, and the small waves come rippling up on the
pebbles so peacefully, that the melody of their motion
is heard only’ by those who wander in silence on the
shore. The old cliffs towering up so boldly are gleam-
ing in its light, and contrasting beautifully with that
B *

)
2 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

deep blue sky above them, and with the golden flowers
whose seeds were scattered there by the wild wind,
making each crevice a spot of fertility and brightness.

That great and wide sea! With what earnest and
solemn thoughts did the psalmist look upon it, as he
pondered on the things innumerable, both small and
great, which dwell among its depths ; as he saw the
white sails of the ships, and mused on the stormy
wind which lifteth up the waters ; and remembered,
with solemn confidence and joy, that word of power
which “maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves
thereof are still !”

The old ocean rolls on yet, as mightily and as musi-
cally as it did then, bearing to us all the same recollec-
tions as it brought to Israel of old ; fraught, too, with
other associations of power and sweetness. We look
on its waves, to remember how the Saviour himself
walked upon the waters, in the calm majesty of the
Godhead, and with the loving spirit of human sympa-
thy. For us are written the words of pity and en-
couragement which he spoke, when, though the disciples
had but little faith, he could yet save and cheer them
with the assurance, “It is I; be not afraid.” For us,
too, is recorded a description of that haven of rest upon
which the believer shall one day enter, where no storm
shall terrify, no wave shall roll its sorrow; for there
shall be “no more sea.”

That sea told, to by-gone ages, of the “ Eternal Power
and Godhead ;” and the greater revelations still which it
bas made to the men of modern days, have taught us
this as impressively as the waves themselves could
utter it, had they voices to tell the truth. Suc-
ceeding generations have learned more thoroughly to
read the handwriting of God on the page of nature, as
one thoughtful mind has bequeathed to another some-
thing of the results of its own researches ; and the
flowers of the fields, and the stars of the sky, and the
wonders of the deep, are now so much better known
and understood, that nature should bear to us a still
THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 3

more impressive lesson of Deity than it conveyed to
our fathers. .

That deep, independently of its vast stores of life, is
in itself a wonder, and has a wonderful influence on the
earth and its inhabitants. Three-fifths of the entire
surface of our globe are surrounded with water,—a
proportion so absolutely necessary for maintaining the
productive powers of the land, that were any change to
take place in these relations, a barren and withered
condition would quickly succeed to its present fer-
tility. It is by means of the vapours perpetually
arising from so vast a body of water, that the atmo-
sphere is rendered sufficiently moist for the use both of
animals and vegetables. The presence of this moisture
renders the neighbourhood of the sea favourable to a
luxuriant vegetation ; and although on many parts of
our coast this is not to be seen, and the trees on the
shore are few and stunted, it is because the land there
is generally very much exposed to high winds; the
soil is rocky, sandy, or chalky; and the constituents of
sea air, though absolutely necessary to the growth of
many plants, are unfavourable to others. Still, not-
withstanding the aspect of sterility of a large portion of
the coast, there are sheltered places, and better soils,
which are well wooded, and have luxuriant flowers.
The great beauty of the natural productions of the
Channel Islands is often attributed to their lying in the
midst of the waters. The environs and neighbourhood
of the town of St. Helier’s, in Jersey, built immediately
in front of the sea, are remarkable for their fertility,
for their cabbages seven feet high, for their flowering
shrubs down close to the shore, and for their beautiful
myrtles ; while the banks of Guernsey are gay with
their daffodils and primroses, sweet with their woodbine
scents, and tuneful with their singing birds. Ivy grows
about the rocks near the sea, in Jersey, so as to make
the sea-cliffs seem like ruins ; and nowhere are flowers,
both of wood and garden, finer than in the Channel
Isles.
4 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

Even on our own southern shores there is a general
appearance of luxuriance, and many plants of tropical
lands will flourish by the sea, which would not thrive so
well away from its influence. It is a generally acknow-
ledged fact, that the climate of a place on the shore is
‘not so cold as that of an inland district in the same
latitude. The atmosphere near the sea is never heated,
during the day, to the same degree as in a place of that
latitude far from the coast ; but it is, in the same pro-
portion, less cooled through the night; and the result
is, not a colder, but a warmer climate than an inland
place near it. The absence, also, of the extremes of
daily heat and cold diminish the annual extremes of
summer and winter; and thus a climate is produced
which is favourable to the growth of these plants of
warmer countries. The myrtle thrives in Ireland,
almost as well as in Portugal ; and so, too, on the coast
of Devonshire,

“The meek unshelter’d myrtle sweetly blooms.”

At Salcombe, this plant and the aloe attain remarkable
perfection. Several houses in Mary Church, and, in-
deed, of almost every village on the southern coast of
Devon, are profusely adorned with the former plant.
Even on more exposed and colder coasts, as at Dover,
in gardens sheltered by the cliffs, may be seen the
rich orange fruits of the common passion-flower, look-
ing, as they hang from the green bough, scarcely less
beautiful than the starry blossoms which hung among
those festoons in the summer.

That this sea air, with its peculiarities, is favourable
to the health of man, and exceedingly beneficial in
many cases of disease, all experience has proved. Most
of our sea-side towns are the gathering places of thou-
sands during summer ; while others afford a sheltered
asylum to the invalid in the cold of winter. There the
patient breathes an atmosphere impregnated with a
profusion of common salt, and a lesser degree of bromine
and iodine; substances which, if inhaled into the system,
THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 5

have a singular and restorative power. So favourable
to the health of the lungs is the salt air, that in Alex-
andria, which is at all times damp, but the atmosphere
of which is surcharged with muriate of ammonia and
muriate of soda, disease of the lungs is unknown. The
saline particles are so abundant there, that it is quite
impossible to keep iron from rust, and they condense on
the walls and furniture of the houses in small crystals.
The constant agitation of the waves has also a most
important influence on the neighbourhood of the ocean.
It is by means of their incessant ‘motion that the air
is purified. Those deep waters contain, not only the
living, but the dead. Vast masses of decomposing
animal and vegetable matters, the refuse of the sea
itself, and the refuse also of the land, lie beneath the
waves. The mineral ingredients of the waters them-
selves possess a foetid, slimy matter, of which we are
made conscious by their bitter and nauseous flavour,
which is probably induced by the decomposition going
on in the ocean. So great is the amount of this,
that if sea-water remain long without agitation, it
passes into a state of putrefaction ; and on some low
tropical coasts, where long calms are experienced, it
exhales very unpleasant odours, which are noxious also
in their effects on the health of man. Much of the
decomposing matter is devoured by living creatures, to
whom God has given a voracious appetite, that they
may prey on dead things ; much is assimilated to the
nutrition of the sea-weeds ; and the brine preserves
much from decay: yet, after all, we need those ever-
rolling waves to render the air perfectly healthful,
Besides the physical influences of the sea air on the
visitors to our shores, there are various mental ones,
which go to aid in the restoration of lost health. We
live in days of peculiar mental excitement, in days of
great contrasts of religious opinions, of great competi-
tion in all departments of the business of life, and
when even the hours of recreation are but too often
occupied with pleasures of an exciting nature. The
B3
6 “, BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

very facilities of travelling afforded to the men of our
times, and the various other methods of dispatch so
general now, have given to the present age a restless
activity, which, favourable as it is to progress, is, doubt-
less, often unfavourable to bodily health. Never was
there a time when repose of mind was more desirable,
and when the occasional relaxation of a sea-side visit
was more commonly needed. Here, free alike from the
cares of life and from household anxieties, from the
stimulating pleasures of fashion, and even from the
more reasonable restraints of society, the wanderer by
the shore may find repose ; while, if he have a mind at
leisure to contemplate nature, he may behold himself
surrounded by all that is sublime and soothing. Here
are no temptations to linger within doors. The shining
sun, and the rolling sea, and the fresh pure breezes,
encourage him to bodily exercise. Even the mind of
the listless or idle can find some amusement in watching
the coming and going of the vessels, the mirth of the
glad companies of children, and the playful merriment
of older people, who, in the glad buoyancy inspired by
the air, are wisely forgetting that they are no longer
children, as they play with the advancing waves. ‘To
the reflective mind, however,—to the lover of nature
and of knowledge,—what a field is here for thought
and interest! Those who already know something of
marine productions, and are longing to know more,
have only to wander on with observing eyes, and proofs
of the skill and power of God shall be brought by the
waters to their very hand. Even those, who without
thinking further of these things, but who have a love
of beauty and grace, find their gratification here among
the most common objects around them ; while the sea
itself, in its grandeur of storm or its smoothness of
calm, amidst the glowing hues of the rising or setting
sun, or by the light of the silver moon and the stars, is
a never-failing source of admiration.

_ The fitness of those waters for the purposes of civi-
lization and of moral and religious progress, cannot fail
THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFYS. ° :

to interest the considering man. To cast the eye on
a map of the world, and see how islands, continents, and
other portions of land are separated by the sea, one
might think that it would prove a barrier to the inter-
course of nations. But the God who spake those seas
into existence gave. to man the skill to traverse them,
and to make them the silent and pathless highway, over
which, in safety and comparative speed, those ships
should be borne which go so often to carry, from land
to land, the necessaries and luxuries of life, and to
awaken to thought and feeling, to light and to devotion,
the people who have long dwelt in moral darkness.

We know but little of the depths of seas. Our En-
glish Channel, at the east of the Eddystone lighthouse,
is not more than fifty fathoms deep, and its depth in-
creases but slowly to the west. The Irish Channel is
some thirty or forty fathoms deeper than this, but the
depth of the main body of the sea is far greater ; and
in some parts of the Atlantic no bottom was found in
soundings which reached 300 fathoms, while in sound-
ings made in several places between Spitzbergen and
Greenland, with from 780 to 1200 fathoms, no base
was reached. |

As we walk on the shore, looking on the sea, we re-
mark how variously it seems coloured at different parts.
Here a long line of darkly tinted sea-weeds, growing on
rocks just covered with water, and which at low tide
form a margin to the shore, gives to the waters above
them a blackish hue. Now a passing cloud tinges the
surface with a bright sea-green, or a line glitters like
gold in the sunlight. It is not, however, till we have
quitted the shore and sailed away into greater depths,
that we come into what the sailor terms blue water, and
see the beautiful ultramarine tint of the sea. This
was long supposed to be caused by reflection from the
atmosphere ; but as it is often of a far deeper blue
than the sky itself, and as it is blue still when murky
clouds obscure the azure, its cause must yet be sought.
Some changes occur in this blue colour owing to the
8 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

material and hue of the soil beneath the waves, and it
is modified by the presence of shoals. The Greenland
sea has long been known to vary more than most others,
changing its tint from ultramarine to olive-green, and
passing from the most perfect clearness to deep opacity.
Mr. Scoresby ascertained that in this case the green
colour and opaqueness were caused by innumerable
animals of the tribe of jelly-fishes, which, when ex-
amined, seemed like little crystal drops or air-bubbles,
being semi-transparent globular substances, about one-
twentieth or one-thirtieth part of an inch in diameter.
These exist, but in far less quantity, in the bluish-
ereen water ; but so innumerable are they im the olive-
ereen part of the sea, that Mr. Scoresby calculated that
a cubic fathom of this water would contain twenty-three
millions eight hundred and eighty-seven thousand eight
hundred and seventy-two individuals. :

How regular are many of the operations of nature !
We lie down at night after seeing the sun apparently
sink in the waves of the west, knowing confidently that
it will again to-morrow gild the eastern gates of the
heavens. So it is with the flowers and fruits in their
appointed seasons : S80 it is with death itself ; for however
human life may be prolonged, we know that the threescore
years and ten shall have few to succeed them. Constant
as any law of nature, ;3 that which regulates the rise
and ebb of the tide. Every mariner can calculate upon
it ; yet as we daily mark this regularity, we know not
how it is to be accounted for. We are aware of the
fact that the alternate ebb and flow are caused by the
attraction of the sun and moon ; but when the philo-
sopher is asked to explain that attraction, he declares it
to be inexplicable—he only knows it by its results.
Like electricity, like life itself, like the eternity revealed
by the Scripture, it cannot be explained ; and the mind
of the Christian, while contemplating such subjects, 18
compelled, amidst the feeling of his own finite under-
standing, to think on the infinite nature of God.

The difference made by the winds in the surface of
THE SEA AND SBA-CLIFFS. 9

the sea is not only useful in changing all the air about
us, but it gives it its various aspects of beauty or sub-
limity. Now the margin of the ocean 1s scarcely
rippled into a wave, and is falling gently on the shore.
Now it is somewhat rougher, and far away over the blue
distance we see those breaking surges, which the sailor
calls white heads or white horses. Again the wind
sweeps sullenly over the sea, and rising higher and
higher, strikes the face of the water in an oblique
direction, driving a portion on the surface over that
which is near; and, raising it thus so far above the ordi-
nary level, accumulates so much water as that the
wind cannot maintain it in that position, and thus again
it dashes downwards. Every wave presents to the
windward a gently ascending surface, and to the lee-
ward a nearly perpendicular descent ; while the size of
the wave is greatly determined by the strength of the
wind which raises it, though varying in some measure
according to the depth and extent of the sea. The
waves on our own shores seldom rise to a height of more
than six or eight feet above the level of the water ; but
stronger gales and deeper seas have waves far more
terrible to the sailor. Nor do the waves subside
always immediately as the wind lowers ; for when the
gale is over they still keep raging on awhile, bring-
ing up to us as we wander by them many a treasure
which winds and waters have torn from the deep.
below. =
Amidst all the changes effected by winds and waves,
few thoughtful persons look upon the sea without
feeling the truth of the words of the poet, who, in
describing the tide, says—

“Its everlasting changes bring no change ;”
and who refers to
‘‘'The ocean’s face immutable as heaven’s.”

Something like these are the thoughts which arise
within us as we look upon the cliffs. Numerous ages
10 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

have rolled away since they were in the course of
formation. Even since the period when our land re-
ceived its name from the white cliffs about our shore, -
more than sixty generations have lived and died.
Could the men of those times revisit earth, how great
would be the alterations which they would see in things
around! Nothing, perhaps, would seem familiar to
them save that unchanging sea and those everlasting
hills. “One generation passeth away, and another
generation cometh ; but the earth abideth for ever.”
What revelations of older ages lie embedded among
the mass of which our cliffs are composed! The chalk
is entirely a marine deposit. . That white substance 1s
composed of lime and carbonic acid, and may have been
precipitated from water holding lime in solution, from
which an excess of carbonic acid was expelled. Buta
large proportion of our purest chalk is evidently chiefly,
if not wholly, composed of the remains of corals,
zoophytes, shells, star-fishes, and other animal sub-
stances ; and in some portions of chalk, relics of sea-
weeds appear in great abundance. We can at any
time find remains of large shells in the chalk ; but
never till the microscope was brought to bear upon the
crushed or perfect shells which form the grains of this
material, could we imagine how many myriads of these
lay hidden to the human eye. Ehrenberg ascertained
the wonderful fact, that a cubic inch of chalk contains
upwards of a million of the fossil remains of perfect
shells and corals. Little does the thoughtless wan-
derer on the shore think to what small animals he is
indebted for the portion of earth on which he is walking.
That chalk too will, if burned, make as good lime as the
hardest marble. Many buildings have been made of
chalk. Thus the abbey of Hurley, in Berkshire, and its
parish church, anciently a chapel, are said to be made of
chalk, and the remains of these are as fresh and unim-
paired as if the builders had been men of the last century.
The same may be said of the abbey at St. Omer’s, which
was ruined during the French Revolution, but which still
THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. | ll

retains its beautiful Gothic ornaments in great per-
fection. Many other deposits besides the chalk consist
largely of marine remains, and, like these hills, some-
times stand far away from the present boundaries of
ocean, containing still traditions of the sea. But the
extensive and magnificent range of chalk cliffs along our
southern coasts, and the remarkable features and per-
fectly distinctive characters of this rock, render it more
especially a fitting subject for our remarks.

Among those patriarchal cliffs some of the commonest
fossils may be found at any time, but we may chance
too to find some of the rarest; for however carefully
any portion of cliffs may have been examined, the fre-
quent fracture, and constant wearing of the surface,
leave fresh parts yet unstudied. The shells contained
in the chalk are often somewhat similar to those which
are now washed up by the waves, and are at once
recognised as resembling familiar things ; but they are
found to be different species from those now in our seas.
Oysters, scallops, tellens, and various other common
genera abound there ; while there are also many, which
even at a glance we know to be different from the
shells of the present times. The shells found in the
chalk are chiefly two-valved species. The most nu-
merous kinds of shells which we shall
find are the different species of tere-
bratula, which are two-valved shells,
sometimes quite smooth, in other
kinds furrowed ; various shells belong
to the oyster tribe, one of which is ex-
ceedingly similar to owr oyster, and Siemans
several scallop-shells, well known by
the ridges, which run like rays from the top of the
shell to the base. But perhaps the shells most easily
described to a reader unacquainted with these ob-
jects, are those of the nautilus and ammonite. The
ammonite is altogether extinct in our seas, yet it
must once have abounded there, for in some lime-
stone districts the marble is almost wholly composed


a

* 7

12 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

of its shells; and at low water on some parts of
the Sussex coast, where the chalk forms the basis,
enormous specimens are often seen embedded. ‘The



SECTION O# AN AMMONITE.

ammonite (Cornu Ammonis,) was 80 named from its
fancied resemblance to the horn of Jupiter Ammon,
and it varies in size from a most minute shell to one of
twelve, or even fourteen fect in circumference. ‘This
coiled shell is well known in geological collections by
the name of snake-stone. Old superstitions relate
that—

“Of a thousand snakes each one
Was turn’d into a coil of stone
When holy Hilda pray’d.”

And some similar traditions yet linger in the north of
England, where these shells abound. The species of
the nautilus found in chalk will be easily distinguished
from other shells, because although the exact forms are
extinct, yet the nautilus still spreads its gauzy sail to
the zephyrs of tropical seas, and its clear and beauti-
fully formed shell is so commonly used as an ornament
that we are all familiar with it. The nautilus and its
congeners are among the earliest traces of the animal
kingdom, and must once have been very numerous.
Mrs. Howitt’s lines to this fossil shell are very appro-
priate :—

“Thou didst laugh at sun and breeze,
In the new-created seas;
Thou wast with the reptile broods
In the old sea solitudes ;
THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 13

Sailing in the new-made light

With the curl’d-up ammonite.

Thou survivd’st the awful shock

Which turn’d the ocean-bed to rock,
And changed the myriad living swarms
To the marble’s veinéd forms.”

It is not always the shells themselves which we find as
fossil relics, sometimes it is but the cast of the am-
monite or the nautilus. The same may be said of those
spiral species, the tower shells, (Z’wrrilites,) which occur
in the chalk in great abundance, and the largest speci-
mens of which are found in the cliffs of Dover, and in
the chalk marl at Ringmer, near Lewes, in Sussex.

Everybody familiar with chalk cliffs has
seen there those common fossils the belemnites,
which form almost the entire substance of
some limestones on the continent. They are
long cylindrical stones, terminating in a point,
and having at the uppermost and largest end,
a conical cavity. In perfect specimens a shell
is situated in the hollow, but this is rarely
found in the chalk fossil. These belemnites
are commonly called thunder-stones, and the
writer has heard children term them slate-
pencils, and seen them used for writing on
slates. Sometimes they are dark brown, // Mg)
sometimes clear as amber, and though usually Gigi
about the size of a common lead-pencil, yet
they are occasionally twelve inches long. BELEMNITE.

But as chalk cliffs are not found on every shore, we
must not linger over their contents. Star-fishes and
various kinds of sea eggs, or echinites, as the geologist
calls them, are plentiful there; the last equalling in
number all the other shells found in this deposit,
one entire genus being peculiar to it. Helmet-shaped,
conical, heart-shaped, and spheroidal sea eggs may all
be easily distinguished, sometimes having on them the
remains of their spiny covering, sometimes presenting
on their surfaces the traces whence the spines have
been detached.

Perhaps a wanderer, in striking some ledge of that

c


14 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

old chalk cliff, may bring to light a fossil fish, more or
less perfect in form, and lying there as if it had been
moulded in plaster of Paris, with fins, scales, head, teeth,
and sometimes even with the capsule of the eye, all plainly
visible. Each geological formation exhibits groups of
fossil fishes, but those found in the chalk are evidently
the representatives of species which have now no exist-
ence in our seas.

These fossil remains not only reveal absolute facts to
the man of science, but enable him often to deduce
valuable inferences of a less obvious character. We
will adduce one simple mode of reasoning from an
isolated fact, in order to show this to the reader.
Those common fossils, the trilobites, are found to have
the compound eyes belonging to existing insects, and to
animals of the crab and lobster kind—crustaceous, as the
naturalist terms them. This construction proves that
the mutual relations of light to the eye, and of the eye
to light, were the same in the periods when the trilo-
bites flourished as at the present day; and that the con-
dition of the waters of the sea and of the atmosphere,
and the relation of both to light, have undergone no
change during the years which, minute by minute, have
been since then rolling onwards to eternity. This will
show how much may be learned of the past by thought-
ful inquiry into its relics. The steps in the progress in
any department of science may be slow, but when once
made, the knowledge becomes, as has been well ob-
served, “a mighty instrument of thought, enabling us
to link together the phenomena of past and future
times, and gives the mind a domination over many
parts of the natural world, by teaching it to comprehend
the laws by which the Creator has ordained that the
actions of material things shall be governed.”s

Beds of flint in the upper chalk are too obvious not to
be seen by all; and often, embedded in the chalk, or lying
at its base, or mingling with the pebbles of the beach,
we may find masses of iron pyrites. This is sometimes
called copperas, and round pieces of it are known on
THE SEA AND SEA-CLIFFS. 15

some parts of our coast by the name of potatoe-stones or
thunderbolts, and are common articles of sale among
the fossils in sea-side places. These masses are often
bronzed on the surface, but in some cases they have
glittering small knobs. Many of them are no larger
than a pea, occurring from that size to pieces several
inches in diameter. They are mostly crystalline, and
on being broken generally exhibit a fibrous and diverg-
ing structure of glittering rays. Beautiful little
crystals of this mineral are often found filling the
cavities of shells. Sometimes the chalk is stained of
rich rust colour by this iron, thus contrasting with its
pure whiteness. Fossil fish, too, are often marked with
most brilliant tints, their bones, scales, etc. having a
rich bronzed hue. This is owing to the circumstance
that during the process of their decomposition they
emitted sulphuretted hydrogen, and this sulphur enter-
ing into combination with the surrounding water,
sulphuret of iron was formed by the chemical action.


=

EU
\ AC
Hl og gate



DOVER.

CHAPTER II.

PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS.

Or whatever geological formation our cliffs may be,
they contain hidden objects of great interest. But
this is not all. There is an outward beauty con-
ferred on many; and soft green grasses, and flowering
shrubs, and blossoms of the richest hue, are studding
their slopes and summits. The wild sea-bird looks
down on many a lovely floweret, blooming far from the
eye of man; and plants which we should search for in
vain on inland meadows or banks, have their home
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS, © 17

here, and are sending their roots down in that soil,
consolidating it by their fibres. ‘To see how small a
portion of earth is lodged in the crevices, and what
a shallow ridge of land crowns the height—to hear the
roaring gales of winter rushing round the cliffs—one
would think that this was no place for flowers.
But if gales blow there, the high cliff forms on the
other side a shelter, and the sun shines out in all its
glory there as elsewhere; and plants suited to barren
places and sea airs spring up and thrive, and green
leaves wave to the morning gale or sparkle with the
evening dewdrops.
‘¢ Man who, panting, toils

O’er slippery steeps, or, trembling, treads the verge

Of yawning gulfs, o’er which the headlong plunge

Is to eternity, looks shuddering up,

And marks you in your placid loveliness—

Fearless, yet frail.”

Not to tell of white knots of squinancy wort, look-
ing like patches of snow; or blossoms of the eyebright,
almost hidden among the grass; of golden rock-roses
and wallflowers; of clumps of honey-scented bedstraw,
and wide-spread masses of bugloss, blue as the heaven
above—we must describe such flowers, and such only,
as belong to the sea-side; and if found at all away from
the melody of Ocean’s music, are only to be seen clus-
tering on the mountain heights of lands distant from
the sea. Some of them, indeed, are found nowhere
save on the sea-coast.

Such a plant is the samphire (Orithmum maritimum),
whose green tufts hang high up on several of our sea-
side cliffs, always beyond the reach of even the highest
tide, though not so far removed as that a dashing surf
may not sometimes send up its spray upon them.
Sometimes this plant grows within the reach of the
passer-by; but more often the eye of the flower-lover
detects it far away from his grasp, knowing it easily
from all other plants by its clumps of sea-green foliage,
varied in August by clusters of little pale yellow flowers.
The tallest stalks are usually about a foot in length,

c3
18 A BOOK FOR THE SBHA-SIDE.

and it is very succulent in its nature. It belongs to
the umbelliferous tribe of plants, and its clusters grow .
in rays from a central point, like the spokes of an



SAMPHIRE.

umbrella. This is the sampier, or sampire, of our older
writers, mentioned in so many ballads and poems, and
referred to by Shakspeare. It is decidedly the best
fitted of all our wild plants for pickling; for it does not,
like the saltwort, which is often sold as its substitute,
depend wholly for its excellence on vinegar and spices.
It is pungent and agreeable in flavour, though not
often in our days used as a salad, as it was formerly.
It would, however, be no bad addition to this dish ;
and some who have studied various subjects connected
with the diet of past and present times, are of opinion
that the modern salad is very inferior to that served up
two hundred years ago. The samphire is still pickled
at sea-side places, and may, in its season, be procured
in the London market; but were John Evelyn living,
he might complain now, with even more justice than he
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. ° 19

‘did in the days of the second Charles, of the general
neglect of this herb. This writer remarks that, for its
“aromatic and other excellent vertues,” and effects
against the spleen, for sharpening the appetite and
various good purposes, it is “so far preferable to most
of our hotter herbs and sallet ingredients,” that he says,
“T have often wondered it has not been propagated in
the potagére, as it is in France, from whence I have
frequently received the seeds, which have prospered
better and more kindly with me than what comes from
our coasts. It does mot, indeed, pickle so well, as being
of a more tender stalk and leaf; but in all other
respects, for composing sallets, it has nothing like it.”
Gardeners of our days have cultivated it for pickling
with great success; but a large quantity of it dies
ungathered every summer on many of our sea-side
rocks and cliffs, or remains half through the winter, to
enliven them with its greenness. The French call it
creste-marin, or la bacile ; but long before the time
of John Evelyn, it was called by them herbe de St.
Pierre, of which our modern name seems the corrup-
tion. It is the critmo of the Italians, and the meer
fenchel of the Germans. .

Hanging like tresses down the rocky sides, we may
often see the green trailing stalks of that little plant,
the sea spurrey sandwort (Arenaria marina). It is
very succulent, its stems about as thick as twine, its
leaves of semi-cylindrical form, as sharp pointed as a
needle, and scarcely thicker than that little implement.
Small, reddish lilac, star-shaped flowers grow here and
there between the leaf and stem; and when the blossom
is over, seed-vessels hang down on the flower stalks,
and are plucked in autumn by the robin or sparrow,
or any other bird which may wing its way from inland
haunts to take a look at the sea. Nor does our sand-
wort confine itself to the rocky height. It grows on
the sandy shore, among the pebbles of the beach,
beyond the reach of the waves; and spreads its clumps
over the ground of many a yard by the sea, where
20 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

boats and ships are being built and repaired, seeming
to need but the saline air to call it into existence. It
is always, however, a far more elegant plant when
erowing up the cliff than on the ground.

Round about the base of the cliff, where the sand
lies scattered, or is trodden into a firm soil, we may
often gather the prickly saltwort, or sea-grape, (Sa/-
sola kali,) with its prostrate angular stems, bearing a
single flower of pale greenish hue, with three little
leaves, or bracteas, as the botanist calls them, at the
base of each floweret. This genus was named from sal,
salt, because an alkaline salt is obtained from it, and
this exists especially in our British species. The soda
contained in some of them was in former times of so
much value, that large quantities were cultivated in the
south of Europe.

A much prettier plant than the saltwort is the
common thrift (Statice armeria), often called sea-pink,
or sea-gilliflower, and which is not only ornamental to
the maritime cliffs, but also to the marshes at some
distance from the sea. During winter, its foliage seems
like tufts of grass among the crevices of the slopes; but
in some of these quiet nooks, where a projecting ledge
shelters it from the keen north and east winds, it
blooms there even in December, lingering on with many
an autumnal or summer flower, as if it had forgotten
that winter had come. On the marsh, its large round
heads of pale rose-coloured or purple flowers are more
conspicuous, as they form bright patches among the
short grasses and taller rushes, or, in July and August,
are so numerous as to make it seem one sheet of white.
Little gardens, rescued from the beach itself, and en-
closed around with the pale green feathery boughs of
the tamarisk, exhibit richly coloured rows of this
pretty flower around their beds; and high up on the
mountain, far away from the sea-shore, the thrift is
sometimes seen.

Here the wanderer might think of him described by
Mrs. Sigourney, who
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. v1

«¢ Blesses their pencill’d beauty. ’Mid the pomp
Of mountain summits, rushing on the sky,
And charming the rapt soul in breathless awe,
He bows to bind them drooping to his breast ;
Inhales their spirit from the frost-wing’d gale,
And freer dreams of heaven.”

But when the thrift grows on the inland hills,
though no outward change marks it, yet it is changed
in its properties. Here, on our cliffs and marshes, it
contains in some abundance both iodine and soda.
These are greatly lessened in the mountain flower,
while, on the other hand, this increases to quantities
of potash.

It is only of late years that iodine has been proved
to exist in maritime plants, though it has long been
procured from those of the sea itself. Chemical investi-
gation has, however, proved that it occurs in the sea-
side feverfew; in the sea grimmia, a dull-looking
ereen moss, which in spring and autumn grows in
rounded tufts on the rocks about our shores; and in
that yellowish grey lichen, called the ivory ramalina
(Ramalina scopulorum), which often hangs in loose
tufts beside it. A chemical analysis was made of these
three plants, and of the little olive-coloured tuft which,
being washed by the spray at high tide, is by some
writers considered a sea-weed, by others a lichen, and
called the lesser lichina (Lichina conjinis). All these —
were growing near together, and were during storms
occasionally washed by the sea spray; and all except
the lichina were found to contain iodine. As the
specimens were carefully washed previously to analysis,
the iodine could not have been derived from saline
incrustation. All these vegetables were healthy; and
Mr. Brand, who made this experiment, has thence con-
cluded that the marine algee—the sea-weeds—“ are not
the only plants which possess the power of separating
from sea-water the compounds of iodine, and of con-
densing them in their tissues, and this without any
detriment to their healthy functions.”.

Look up, and see how the grass, far above, is speckled
22 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

with yellow flowers of dandelions and hawkweeds, or
with pink tufts of the centaury, while the red sorrel
and the pellitory of the wall stand above them. How
glad are the butterflies of the numerous blossoms which
hang about the spiny boughs of the furze (Ulex Huro-
peus), so plentiful on many banks by the sea, and
bearing well the winds there, and receiving no harm
from an occasional dash of salt spray. Well may the
French call it jone marin—sea-rush—for it seems to
rejoice in saline airs, and to grow quite as well there as
on the inland common. It is not so useful on the cliff
as on the village green, for it is not so accessible to
those who would gather it for domestic purposes. It is
well, however, that it is not, for it is of no small service
in holding together the loose soil, and it gives a beauty
in summer and winter to our shores, which have usually
but few shrubs and trees to grace them.
‘* Mountain gorses, ever golden,
Canker’d not the whole year long;
Do ye teach us to be strong,
Howsoever pinch’d and holden,
Like your thornéd blooms? and so,

Trodden on by rain and snow,
Along the hill-side of this life, as bleak as where ye grow.”

On cliffs and banks by the sea which are not too
precipitous for the peasant boy, we may see him some-
times gathering the furze for fuel, or for heating the
oven, for it burns with rapidity, and with a great
degree of heat. In the olden times, the peasant col-
lected the boughs for burning lime; but improved
roads and canals have brought coals so much more
within reach, that it is less used now. Yet the young
shoots are good food for cattle, and, if rolled, are
greatly relished by horses. Furze is said always to
contain salt, so that it is not only nutritious and
agreeable to cattle, but is a valuable preventive and
remedy for some of their maladies.

But we must turn to a plant to be found on no place
away from the sea, and which is quite peculiar to our
maritime cliffs. This is the seaside or cliff cabbage
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 23

(Brassica oleracea) ; and if we tell our reader that its
young clumps of leaves are very similar to the young
garden cabbage plants, he will know it at once in its

4h

4g

m8
ll
f | yi 9



SEA CABBAGE.

wild state. The flowers, which come in May and June,
-are very large and very handsome, shaped like those of
the wallflower, but of a pale yellow. They make a
very conspicuous figure on the heights, for in favourable
seasons the stem attains two or even three feet in
length, and is branched like a shrub; while in the
winter the woody stems, stripped of flowers, rattle to the
roaring winds, and drop the icicles from their boughs.
Even then, however, the leaves are very pretty. Waved
and lobed, and thicker than those of the garden cab-
bage, they are, like them, of a rich green, with a sea-
green bloom upon them ; and many of them, in autumn
and winter, are most richly tinted with hues of delicate
24 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

lilac or deep violet, and, covered with powdery bloom,
are of the colour of the ripest plum.

This plant is the origin of our garden cabbages, in
all their endless varieties; though we may ask with
Beckmann, “ Who knows how many steps and grada-
tions were necessary before cabbages, savoys, and cauli-
flowers were produced from our common colewort ?”
Yet a similarity is certainly apparent between our cliff
cabbage and the leaves of all those varieties which
furnish our vegetable diet. As this learned author
humorously remarks, “ With a little ingenuity, one
might form a genealogical tree of them, as Buffon has
done of the race of dogs; but a genealogical tree,
without proofs, is of as little value in natural history
as in claims for hereditary titles or estates.”

Some species of cabbage were used by the Romans.
Their brassica very evidently belonged to the cabbage
genus, though which kinds were included under it, it
would now be impossible to define. No doubt, in the
course of ages, some varieties ‘have been lost, as we
know several have been obtained by long-continued
culture. It is therefore probable that the cabbage
which the ancients, to prevent intoxication, ate in a raw
state, like a salad, is not now in existence ; though we
know that our common cabbage is sometimes dressed
in this way. The ancients were in the habit of eating
a curled cabbage, which was probably some kind of
brocoli. But Beckmann observes, that we can nowhere
fnd traces of that “excellent preparation of cabbage,”
called by the Germans sour kraut, though the ancients
dressed turnips in the same manner. He adds, “I
should have been inclined to consider sour kraut as a
German invention, first made in Lower Saxony, which
our neighbours learned from us in modern times, had
not Bellon related that the Turks are accustomed to
pickle cabbage for winter food.”

Sometimes our cliff cabbage is eaten, and even carried
about for sale, in places near the sea; but the little
expense of garden vegetables renders it of slight service
_ PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 25

to us. It requires long washing previously to cooking,
and is then, as the writer knows by experience, as good
as a dish of garden greens. Perhaps, in long remote
periods of our country, it may have been prized by
those who lived among the old hills where it flourishes ;
but it is not likely that it ever was so welcomed as was
the sea-side cabbage of the Kerguelen Island, when it was
gathered from that dreary land by the crews of the
Erebus and Terror. This plant is described by Sir James
Ross as abounding near the sea, ascending to the very
summits of the hills on the shores. The leaves and heads
were of the size of a good cabbage-lettuce, “and,” says
our Antarctic voyager, “the plant possesses all the good
qualities of its English namesake; while, from its
containing a great abundance of essential oil, it never
produces any heartburn, or any of those unpleasant
sensations which some of our vegetables are apt to do.”
The roots have the flavour of horseradish, and the
young leaves or hearts that of mustard-and-cress.
How welcome was this plant to our countrymen in
those inhospitable regions where vegetables are so few,
and after their long confinement to a diet consisting
wholly of salt provisions! For one hundred and thirty
days the crews of the ships required no other vegetable
food than this, and for nine weeks it was regularly
served out with the salt beef and pork of the vessel,
during which time there was no sickness on board.
Nor was this the only service rendered by this mari-
time plant. The ducks of the island fed chiefly on the
seeds, and these birds formed a delicious addition to
the table of the mariners.

Our cliff cabbage is not to be found on all our shores.
On the sea-cliffs of Dover it is very abundant ; it is so
also on many cliffs of Devonshire, Cornwall, Yorkshire,
and other counties ; and it is common on many parts
of the shore of Wales, and on the rocks of the Frith of
Forth. In some seasons it is devoured into shreds,
. during summer, by the caterpillars ; for as the insecti-
vorous birds delight in woods and gardens, and are

D
26 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

singing their songs to the music of silver rivulets, and
not to the loud roar of ocean, these insects revel on,
unpursued by the race which are elsewhere their
destroyers.

The sea-side cabbage grows all up the cliffs, even to
the very summit; but when the sea kale (Crambe
maritima) grows on clifis, as it sometimes does, it is
generally lower down, and is more often seen on the
sandy soils below, or among the beach stones, than on
the cliff itself. No plant, however, is more beautiful
there,—not from its white cross-shaped flowers, but
from its wavy leaves, which vary from sea-green into
all the shades of pinkish purple, down to a deep rich
violet tint. So showy are these leaves, that the writer
once passing some cliffs on which they were abundant,
and going rapidly by in the train, at first thought that
the foliage was a clump of bright flowers, till a better
opportunity of viewing them showed the mistake. The
blossoms have a strong scent of honey; and the seed-
vessels are pouches about the size of black currants.
Country people, at the west of England, watch for the
young shoots and leaf-stalks pushing up through the
sand’ when they cut them off underground, and boil
them. It is often planted in gardens, sometimes for
its beauty, sometimes that it may be blanched under
sand or garden-pots for a culinary vegetable. It is,
indeed, almost as general in our kitchen gardens as
the asparagus, and, like it, may be easily forced ; but
unlike that plant, it yields its produce the first spring
after being raised from seed. Its flavour, when cooked,
is like that of the caulifiower.

On many a cliff, and under the hedges of lanes
a little way from the sea, or scattered in clumps over
the salt marshes, we find the alexander (Smyrniwm
olusatrum), which pleases our eye by its bright foliage,
and its thick cluster of small flowers of yellowish green.
In the seventeenth century, this plant was in common
use for the same purposes for which we now employ
the garden celery, and was boiled with other vegetables
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 27

in soups. Long before that period, it had been used as
salad; and our ancestors were well pleased with their
water cresses, and their winter cresses, and the common
alexanders; while they flavoured their “cool tankard”
with the blue flowers of the borage, and put the mari-
gold petals into their ragouts, and gathered the goose-
foots from the salt marshes, and raised the sprout kales
—which were but a variety of our cliff cabbage—for
their daily dish of greens. It is possible that cultiva-
tion somewhat altered the flavour of this plant; or,
perhaps, in this, as in many cases, the general taste has
changed. Whatever the boiled alexanders may be,
neither the odour nor the flavour of the raw plant is
at all agreeable. Pennant, however, says that it is
boiled and eaten with avidity by sailors who, on their
return from long voyages, happen to land at the south-
western coast of Anglesey; and Dr. Withering, who
remarks that it is the principal produce of the Isle of
Steep Holmes, in the Severn, says that it is well worthy
the attention of mariners.
All up the cliff are

‘* Hill flowers running wild,
In pink and purple chequers.”

There is a pink centaury, scarcely differing from the
common centaury, (Hrythrea centauriwm,) so frequent
in our pastures; and there is a sea carrot (Daucus
maritimus) so like the carrot of field or garden, not
only in its white cluster of flowers and its elegant
feathery leaf, but also in its strongly-scented root, that
we need not stay to describe it. Rising above them,
and bearing as pretty a blossom as either, is the upright
spiked thrift (Statice spathulata), which, on some cliffs
and rocks—as on those near Holyhead, and on the
coast of Dover—is, during August and September,
beautiful with its numerous panicles of small lilac
blooms; while, if we wander by the sea-shore of
Norfolk, we may gather a rarer species, called the
matted thrift (Statice reticulata). But the muddy
28 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

shores about almost all parts of our coasts, and the
salt marshes too, abound with the larger and more
showy kind, the spreading spiked thrift, or sea
lavender, (Statice limonium,) that has flowers which
‘colour are much like the plant of our gardens, whence

it takes its English name; but it is, after all, but

«‘ The sea-lavender, which lacks perfume.”

It is, however, a great addition to the nosegay of wild
flowers gathered in the sea-side walk ; and on summer
evenings, many a visitor from inland places may be
seen wending his way homewards, with bunches of this
and the yellow poppy, and other plants to which his
eye is unaccustomed.

So, too, the hoary shrubby sea stock (Matthiola
incana) 18 a favourite flower with those who can gather
it from the cliffs. It is, however, very rare, and per-
haps after all is not truly wild, though the great sea
stock (Matthiola sinuata), which grows on the sands, is
apparently really so. The former plant is the origin of
the stock gillyflower of our gardens. Both have pur-
ple flowers. Delightful it 1s to wander along the sands
where the great sea stock is growing on a midsummer
evening, when the flowers are sleeping, and the quiet
stars are reflected in the soft blue of the waters, which
are murmuring their gentle welcome to the coming
night ; for sweet ‘ndeed is the scent which this flower
then floats upon the air, delicious as any which we can
inhale, even from those sweetest of inland spots, the
fragrant field of beans, or of flowering hops. These
perfumes are the more cherished because we do not
expect them, and when they mingle, as they sometimes
do, with the night odours of the Nottingham catchfly
(Silene nutans), Which grows on limestone rocks, not
only by the shore, but by the side of inland lanes and
meads, we pause to ask if even the scents of tropical
flowers can be stronger and richer than these.

There is a common species of the catchfly frequent





- PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. » 29

by our sea-shores, both among rocks and also on ‘the
sand, called sea campion (Silene maritima), but which
neither by night nor day delights us with its fragrance.
Any one who knows the common bladder campion of
our hedges, with its clusters of white blossoms, set on
flower-cups inflated like bladders, and veined with a
net-work, will at once recognise the sea-side species ; for,
excepting that it is of humbler growth, it scarcely
differs from it. There is a variety on the shores of
Devonshire, which bears handsome double flowers.
How dark and rich is the green tint of those leaves
which, on their long stalks, lie about the root of the sea
beet (Beta maritima), and how well does the deep
green hue contrast with the pale sea-green leaves of the
perfoliate yellow wort, and of many other plants of the
‘rock! Pull up that strong root and taste it, and you
will find it sweet as sugar itself, for, like all the beets, this
possesses the saccharine principle in great abundance.
The common beet (Beta vulgaris) has been exten~
sively planted in France and Belgium, for making sugar.
Our sea beet, if little fitted for this, may yet be esteemed
a very useful plant, and it is often gathered and sold by
the poor who live near the sea, to be boiled as spinach.
It is quite as good as the cultivated spinach, and is a
most plentiful vegetable, frequently growing all about
the cliffs, and even on the sea-beach and salt marshes,
in great masses ; many of the leaves in winter assuming
a rich purple or crimson hue. The flower is but a tall
spike of pale-green blooms, arrayed in little groups of
two or three together, up the stem, having a small leaf
at the base of each. It appears in August. The leaves
of another species of beet, called the cicla (Beta hor-
tensis), are among the most common cooked vegetables,
used by labourers and small farmers for spinach, in
France and Germany ; while the Swiss have a variety
which they call chard, the succulent leaves of which
are used instead of greens, and the leaf stalk and
middle vein are stripped and boiled as asparagus. It
does not appear that the beet so commonly used as
D3
30 A BOOK FOR THE SHA-SIDE.

spinach on the continent is at all superior to that which
grows on our cliffs, hanging out there sometimes its
long spikes of blossoms two or three feet from the
surface; and Dr. Mackay says, “that the sea beet is
often cultivated on the coast of Cork, as well as in
other places, as an edible vegetable.”

Another plant, whose dark green foliage often con-
trasts beautifully with the surface of the rocky cliff, or
the bank on which it grows, is the common fennel
(Fenicula vulgaris), and, from its size, it also makes a
conspicuous figure on the marshes, or by the road-side,
where some salt river is running onwards to the sea. It
has a hollow stem, often three feet high, numerous leaves
‘which are divided into soft hair-like segments, and its
flowers, which appear in July and August, are large
clusters of small yellow blossoms ; its tender stalks
were formerly much eaten as salad, and the plant had the
old name of finckle. The leaves are still used to form
a garnish for dishes, and, cut up and boiled in butter,
are served up as a sauce for fish. They have a strong
odour, and a sweet flavour. The blanched stalks of a
dwarf variety, called finochio, are eaten with vinegar,
oil, and pepper as a salad, and are also sometimes boiled
in soups. This variety is marked by a tendency in the
stalks to swell to considerable thickness. The thickest
part is then earthed up, and acquires a very pleasant
flavour and a tender substance. It is a good deal culti-
vated in Italy. Our common fennel is a very elegant
plant, when the wind sways its light branches up and
down, and carries afar their sweet scents.

While recounting the plants of our sea rocks and
banks which furnish food to the present generation,
or which have been prized among the vegetables of
olden days, we must not forget the broad-leaved pepper-
wort (Lepidium latifolium), which sometimes grows on
the maritime rocks of our shores, or in the salt marshes
near them. “When pepper was so dear,” says Beck-
mann, “that to promise a saint, yearly, a pound of it,
was considered a liberal bequest ; economical house-
vr,

PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. ° 31

wives seasoned their dishes with the leaves of pepper-
wort, which on this account is called at present, in
England, ‘poor man’s pepper.’” Poor man’s pepper is
also the name of another flower, the yarrow, which has
the Latin name of Achillea, because Achilles is said
to have discovered its healing virtues. This, though
common enough on our cliffs, has no pretensions to be
called a sea-side plant, as it grows everywhere ; though
the annalist of the life of Henri de Larochejaquelin,
who fell in La Vendée, mentions as a remarkable
circumstance, that the flower of Achilles should have
sprung up on the grave of the deceased warrior. There
are few churchyards or other grassy spots in our land
where it could not be found, so that they who wanted
it for seasoning their dishes had not far to seek ; but it
has less pungency than our pepperwort. The flowers
of the latter plant appear in July ; they are small, white,
and numerous, and are crowded in leafy clusters.

Then we have a sea radish (Raphanus maritimus),
and though its roots are too tough to contribute to our
salads, yet its white or straw-coloured flowers, veined
with purple, are very pretty. The wild celery (Apium
graveolens), too, is common on our shores, though nat
peculiar to them. Dr. Hooker, in his Flora Antarctica,
mentions this and some other of our maritime plants,
among those of Tierra del Fuego. “It is always inte-
resting,” says this writer, “ to meet with familiar objects
when they are least expected, and to recognise in the pro-
ductions of a strange land, the same, or similar to those
which we have seen elsewhere. ‘Tierra del Fuego pos-
sesses, in common with Britain, the sea pink, or
thrift, a primrose so like our primula farinosa, that
they are scarcely distinguishable, and the wild celery,
which, though a rank weed when it grows wild in
England, is so mild and wholesome in Fuegia, probably
from the absence of the sun’s direct rays, that it affords
an excellent salad.” In our land, death has been caused
by eating a quantity of this wild plant which grew on
the banks of a salt-water river. The primrose to which
32 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

Dr. Hooker refers, is the bird’s-eye primrose, a lovely lilac-
purple flower of our mountains ; but there is a primrose
often found blooming on the sandy sea-shores of the
Orkney Isles, and which grows too on those of Suther-
land, called the Scottish primrose (Primula Scotica),
a deep bluish purple, so pretty that we lament that it
cannot be found on the southern coast of our island.

A curious plant called the red broom-rape (Orobanche
rubra), belongs to the sea-side flowers, though it is by
no means frequent on our English cliffs, abundant as it
is on the basaltic rocks of the Hebrides. It grows, too,
on the shores of Ireland, and on the magnesian rock of
the Lizard Point, Cornwall. It is, like all the broom-
rapes, truly parasitic, and this particular species seems
to prefer the wild thyme, as the plant on whose roots it
shall affix itself, though any one; to look at the stout
plant which springs from the lowly flower, would hardly
suspect that it was parasitic there.

The broom-rapes are a singular tribe of plants, but
all our native species have a general similarity to each
other—they have stout succulent stems, usually of a
reddish brown hue, with no -leaves, but scales on the
stem ; and this stem, at the .base, swells into a knob,
which is thickly covered with scales. The flowers are
large and dull-looking, often so much so that one might
take them for blossoms scorched into brownness by the
summer sun; the plant altogether resembling, espe-
cially when the flowers are hardly expanded, a head of
asparagus. The blossoms are pale brown or yellowish
lilac, and several of the species grow on cliffs, because
there grow the flowers on which they are parasitic,
such as the furze and bed-straw. But besides the red
broom-rape there is another peculiar, to the shores,
called the blue broom -rape (Orobanche ceerulea), but this
does not grow on the rocks, but on the grassy pastures
near the sea. All the species are acrid, and so de-
structive to the plants to which they attach themselves,
that their name, made of orobus, a vetch, and ancho, to
strangle, is well merited.
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. . 33

A graceful plant, which, when growing in any
quantity, is swept up and down into undulating waves,
is the tamarisk, or sea cypress
(Lamarixz Gallica). The lat-
ter English name it owes to
the shape of its foliage, for it
wears no funereal green, but
in summer and autumn is of
rich verdant hue, and its rich
red stems and branches add
much to the beauty of the
shrub. “This elegant plant,”
says Gerard Edwards Smith,
“ forms the ornament of Sand-
gate, flourishing upon its
sandy banks, and flowering
there twice within the year.
Planted inland, it has many
times succeeded. The elegance
of its beaded flower-buds, and
light feathery blossoms, ac-
companied by delicate foliage,
commends this hardy tempter
of the sea-breezes and spray TAMARISK.
to more general cultivation upon such spots.”

Yes, there are lovely flowers all around our path-
ways,



«* And when the breeze was in the veil
Of verdure on the Tamarisk,
And seemed for very sport to whisk
The wildered boughs, so lithe and frail.

‘I thought how oft the gentle mind
Is fretted sore with cross and care,
And wearied with the restless air,

And bent to snapping in the wind.”

Not less beautiful, though very different in appear-
ance, is the sea tree-mallow (Lavatera arborea), which
grows on maritime, always on insulated rocks, in the
south and west of England, and rears its handsome
shining mallow-like, purplish-pink flowers, on the coasts
34. A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

of Teignmouth, Plymouth, some parts of the Isle of
Wight, the shores of Anglesey, and on various parts of
the Scottish islands and mainland. It is a great orna-
ment to sea-side gardens, even in places where it is not
found wild, and grows too in the inland shrubbery or
flower-bed, where, if it is allowed to scatter its seeds, it
will spring up for many successive years, and frequently
attain a large size. Young plants will occasionally
survive a winter or two, but when once it has blos-
somed it perishes.

This beautiful shrub grows on the island of Steep
Holmes, in the Severn, a spot remarkable for being the
only place of growth of our wild peony.

But there are flowers on the cliff to which our space
will not permit us even a notice, for they do not belong
peculiarly to the sea-shore.

‘* Here and there the bed-straw yellow
Carpets it with goldcn thread.”

Here and there too,

** Along this solitary ridge,—
Where smiles, but rare, the blue campanula,
Among the thistles and grey stones that peep
Through the thin herbage—from the highest point
Of elevation o’er thie vale below.”

Here we may find among ferns, which grow also in
the quiet retreats far away from the sea, one which is
peculiar to its shores. The sea spleenwort (Aspleniwm
marinum) has a very elegant spray, with which to
deck their slope, and to hide the crevices which time
has rent among the rocks; while little dark brown
cushions of the sea grimmia (Grimmia maritima),
grow not only far above on the cliffs, but, fearless of the
tide spray, gather too at its base. Succulent stems of
the pretty yellow stonecrop (Sedum acre), the golden
chain, as country people call it, mingle in tufts with
the species which is much more common on the sea-
rock than on the barren inland soil. This is the
English stonecrop (Sedum Anglicum), with its fleshy
egg-shaped leaves, small, thick, and tinged with red; the
PLANTS OF THE CLIFFS. 35

beautiful clusters of star-like flowers, having white
petals spotted with red and crowned with purple
anthers. During June and July our rocky and sandy
shores have few flowers more lovely and attractive than
this stonecrop.

It is gratifying to the geologist to observe in the
structure of our earth, that nearly all its materials are
such as afford, by their decomposition, a soil fit for the
support of vegetable life. Thus those rocks, formed
either wholly or partly of the remains of animals,
furnish a soil whereon the free winds may scatter the
seeds of shrubs and flowers, whose beauty, and odour,
and utility call for the praise of man to his Maker.
We would not look carelessly at the flower which his
hand has fashioned with skill and beauty. We would
not forget the lilies which our blessed Saviour, when
he dwelt on earth, pointed out as a lesson for hope
and faith. Look only at the structure of that stone-
crop, and you may see how God has cared for the
lowliest things. It belongs to a class of plants growing
in the driest situations ; in some cases, as on the sands
of Southern Africa, where not a blade of grass, not a
tuft of moss could thrive. Some of these plants grow
on naked rocks, on old walls, on sandy plains, exposed
to scorching sunbeams by day, and to heavy dews by
night. What nourishment can they derive by their
roots from a soil so sterile? Scarcely any ; but myriads
of little mouths, in the form of pores, are scattered on
those fleshy leaves and stems, and the dew and moisture
from the atmosphere enter the plant and are’ slowly
evaporated again from the juicy structure. The com-
mon orpine (Sedum telephiwm), or livelong, will grow
for some months if only suspended by a string from the
ceiling of a room, and never supplied with water. An
African species will not only grow under such circum-
stances, but if its leaves be gathered and laid on the
ground, they will send out young shoots from the
notches of their margin, every way resembling their
parent plants.


CHAPTER III.

FISHES.

How interesting is it to remember, as we watch the
magnificent waves, that all that wide-spread ocean is
full of life and enjoyment. It is so in great measure
with earth and air, but the waters are apparently yet
more crowded with living creatures. Room is wanted
on the land for the green fields on which the cattle may
browse, for wide deserts on which the lion may roam,
for forests where birds may sing their songs of praise to
their Creator, and for great cities and small hamlets,
where man should live to his own good and God’s
glory. Even on the land, myriads of insects unseen by
us are living in the air; plants of the fungus tribe, only
to be seen by the microscope, are insinuating them-
selves everywhere ; and living creatures are lurking
near every leaf and flower. But in the waters life seems
even more abundant. This element abounds, too, in the
extremes of minuteness and of bulk, from the monads
FISHES. 37.

which can be seen only by the most powerful micro-
scope, to the whale, which is twenty times larger than
our largest terrestrial animal — that great leviathan,
whom Job describes as making a path to shine after
him, so that one would think the deep to be hoary, and
declares to be a king above all the children of pride.
As the air seems given especially to the birds, which
are fitted to skim through it, and to find much of their
food among its insect multitudes, so the waters are the
domain of the fishes, to whom the smaller living crea-
tures form food, while each in its turn feeds on some
inferior tribe. Comparatively few have the opportunity
of examining the tiniest creatures of the sea, creatures
which teem in myriads in but a drop of that briny
water ; but all can mark the fishes as they glide near
the shore, or in the shallow pools among the rocks,
gleaming with tints which may vie with those of the
richest plumage of the bird, or with the gauzy gold or
silver wing of the gayest insect. The brilliance of
every metal, the splendour of every gem, the tints of
the sky and the rainbow, are there reflected in stripes,
and bands, and angles, and undulations. As the light
falls on the surface we see it, now purple, or green, or
gold, or silver; while some fishes are so brilliant in
colour, that, like the rare band-fish, they deserve the
name of flame and red riband, by which name the
people of Nice call it, from its resemblance to those
objects as it glides through the waters. Take but one
of the scales and place it beneath a microscope, and you
may dream that you are looking at a diamond ; while
without the aid of the instrument you can see it
rivalling the tints which are reflected by the pearl.

‘¢ Full many a gem of purest ray serene
The dark unfathom’d caves of ocean bear ;”

and the words of our poet might refer to the shells,

or the pearls lying within them, to the fishes, or sea-

jellies, or to the sea-weeds, or the coral structures of

beautiful insects, or to those gems of the mine which
E
38 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

lie entombed in the deep with the loved and the lost.
The fishes are eminently beautiful, not only in colour,
but in grace and symmetry, and are fitted by their
structure for their dwellings and purpose in life ; while
their scales form a coat of mail, so that the descrip-
tion of the patriarch is very appropriate to many: “ His
scales are his pride, shut up together as with a close
seal.”

The form of fishes admits of great variety. The most
frequent is that of a cylindrical body, pointed at each
end, and compressed at the sides, as the mackerel.
Some fish, however, are short and round; others
elongated. like the eel, or remarkably compressed, as the
dory ; and some, like the skates and flat-fishes, are quite
flat. The fins, which are useful to them in gliding
through the waters, serve also as characteristics of orders
and families. Fish breathe chiefly by means of their
gills, and are capable of receiving the influence of oxy-
gen, not only from such portions of atmospheric air as
are mixed with the water, but from the atmosphere
itself, They are the very opposite of birds, for as those
joyous creatures were made for air they inhale a vast
amount, and have their whole system full of it ; but
the consumption of the oxygen by the fishes is very
small, and they have but a low degree of respiration.
Such fishes as swim near the bottom of the sea are found
to have this so low, that their temperature rarely ex-
ceeds by more than two or three degrees that of the
water at the surface ; though those which swim nearer
the top have a somewhat higher standard of respiration.
We wonder not therefore that they are, in comparison
with the joyous creatures of air, of a slow and
dull nature.

The gill-flap, which assists in covering the gills, is
movable, like a fin, independently of the gill-lid. On
raising this part we see beneath it the gills, of a
beautiful red colour, composed of arches, varying in
different species, and fringed with a series of fibrils,
set like the plumelets composing the vane of a feather.
FISHES. 39

When these are minutely examined, they appear
covered with a velvet-like membrane, over which
myriads of wonderfully minute blood-vessels are spread



HEAD OF THE HERRING. 4@, the gill-lid; 0, the gill-flap.



HEAD OF THE HERRING, WITH THE GILL-COVER ENTIRELY REMOVED.

a, the gill fringes, on the posterior margin of the arch; 5, the anterior
slender spines directed forwards; c, position of the heart.

like a delicate net-work. There are commonly four
of these fringed arches: they are movable, and allow
the currents of water, driven down by the action of the
mouth, to flow freely through them, so as to lave every
fibril. The concave margin of each arch is always
more or less studded with tooth-like projections; and
these in the herring, and some others, are lengthened
40 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

into slender spines. Their use appears to be to prevent
food taken: into the mouth from being forced out
through the gills with the streams of water sent
through them.*

Every part of the sea has its tribes of fishes; and
there are, besides, flying fish, which can sustain them-
selves for a time in the air; while others, by the
strength of the saw-like serrated bony ray on each
pectoral fin, are enabled to transport themselves even
over the land from one pool to another. Their eyes,
which in different species vary somewhat as to situa-
tion, are always so placed as to meet especially the
conditions of the kind. ‘They are most frequently
placed on the flattened side of the head, but in some
species are higher up. Their structure, adapted as it
is to the dense medium which they inhabit, affords a
good power of vision, at moderate distances, and when
the breeze scarcely ruffles the waves, and the water is
clear, the sight of fish is, as the angler well knows, very
acute. Nor is that beautiful creature of the waves
destitute of the sense of hearing; and violently loud
sounds, as the ringing of bells, or discharge of cannon,
have been known so to terrify the shoals of salmon,
when making their course to the river where they
spend the summer, that they will all turn back and
retreat to the sea which they were leaving.

Those deep waters are almost a world of silence,
save when the wind makes loud music among the
billows. Few of the living creatures have voices to
tell even of their own emotions to their fellows ; yet
there are fishes of our own shores which utter cries
when the fisherman captures them, and some of thie
fishes of other seas give forth loud and continuous
sounds. A large fish, called the drum, is described by
Dr. Mitchell as making a dull hollow sound when
taken out of the water. Various instances of sounds
emitted by fishes are recorded by the editor of
Cuvier's “ Régne Animal.” Mr. White relates, in his

* Wonders of the Waters, p. 16.
FISHES. 4]

voyages in the seas of China, that being at the mouth
of the river Cambodia, his crew and himself were
astonished at sounds heard around the bottom of their
vessel, which he describes as resembling a mingling of
the bass of the organ, the ringing of bells, the
guttural cries of a large frog, and the tones of a
powerful harp. These voices, from a low murmur,
gradually increased, and were heard all over the length
of the vessel and the two sides. As the voyagers
sailed onward the tones diminished, and were gradually
lost in the distance. A man who was their interpreter,
said that these sounds were made by fishes, which he
described. M. Humboldt heard similar sounds in the
South Seas. On February 28, 1803, towards seven in
the evening, “ the whole crew,” says this writer, “were
astonished by an extraordinary noise, which resembled
that of drums beating in the air.” It was at first
attributed to the breakers. Speedily it was heard in
the vessel, and especially towards the poop. It then
seemed like the noise of a boiling, the sound of the
air which escapes from a fluid in the state of ebullition.
The mariners began to fear then that there might be a
leak in the vessel. It was heard unceasingly over
every part of the ship, until about nine o’clock in the
evening, when it ceased altogether.”

Beautiful as fishes are, and useful as they are to man,
yet they are not capable of exciting much individual
attachment ; and were it not that we want them for
food, they would mostly swim on to the end of their
days free from molestation. We can tame the bird of
the air and teach it to love us, sometimes even to’
imitate our language. Its instincts are usually affec-
tionate, and its ways winning and loveable; and the
same may be said of many of the lower animals of the
earth. But fishes are usually unimpressible creatures,
and, save the cravings of a natural voracity, usually
give small evidence of any feeling. But though fishes
in general have little attachment, and no language by
which to express it, yet instances are recorded both im

E3
42 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

ancient and modern times, in which they have exhi-
bited affection towards their young, and have learned
to know and obey those who trained them. Pliny and
Martial believed that they could not only be taught to
recognise their master, but to come at his bidding
when he uttered their names. The Chinese, who keep
large numbers of gold fishes, call them by a whistle to
receive their food. Sir Joseph Banks used to assemble
his fish by ringing a bell : and Carew, the historian of
Cornwall, brought his grey mullets together by striking
two sticks.

Among other instances related by Mr. Yarrell, of the
attachment of fishes to each other, he mentions that a
person who had kept two small fishes in a glass vessel,
gave one of them away: the other refused all food, and
showed evident symptoms of unhappiness, till his com-
panion was restored to him.

The food of the greater number of fishes appears to
be of an animal nature. They prowl the seas as the
beast does the forests, devouring the creatures smaller
than themselves, and apparently to a great extent
feeding on each other indiscriminately, acting on the
principle that might is right. The great Creator, when
he filled that vast world of water so full, gave to his
creatures there a very voracious appetite, that as
numbers are increasing every moment, so too the
means of lessening numbers should be in constant
operation. A war of extermination is perpetually going on
beneath those calm summer waters, or rolling billows ;
while an immense number of fishes are devoted to the
food of man. So constant are the operations of these
two means, that probably few fishes die a natural death..
The inhabitants of our sea-coast towns consume many,
and send many away inland to remote parts of the
country. But there are, in other countries, tribes of
men who live wholly on the produce of the waters.
Many of our fishermen are engaged in procuring for us
the ocean fish, for all are not in season at one period ;
and therefore there is at all times of the year food and
50 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDRE.

the shores of the Orkneys, and forms the grand support
during summer and autumn to the poor. Dr. N eill,
during his tour of the islands of Orkney and Shetland,
saw on almost every projecting rock an old man,
or one or two lads, holding in each hand a wand or
fishing-rod, and catching the young coal-fish as fast as
they could bait their hooks. It is better food when
young than when full grown. They call it by several
names, as sillock, piltock, cooth, and grey lord; and
Mr. Yarrell says this fish has more provincial names
than any other. It dwells in the seas more or less
all round our shores. The ling (Lota molva), though
not so generally distributed, is scarcely less valuable
in the western islands and the Orkneys than the
coal-fish ; and, cut open, salted, and dried in the sun,
forms an article of commerce, which was in former
days more profitable than now. The air bladders, or, as
they are commonly called, the sounds of this fish are
also pickled, and form an article of food ; and the roes
are salted and eaten. The oil taken from the liver
has been found, like the cod liver oil, a useful medicine
in cases of debility and emaciation ; and by the light of
a lamp supplied with it, the Scottish islander sits by
his fireside, mending his nets or reading his Bible. . The
fisheries of the ling occur early in the summer, and the -
prayer of the poor Shetlander, as he returns from them to
his work in the harvest field, is, “God open the mouth of
the gray fish (the sillocks),and haud (hold) his hand about
the corn,” that is, preserve the grain from tempests.
Another important British fishery is that of the
pilchard, or, as the Scotch call it, the gipsey
herring (Clupea pilchardus) ; but the abundance of this
fish is confined to different parts of the coast ; a few
pilchards only rarely visiting any but the south-
western shores of England. Cornwall is the most
celebrated part of our country for the pilchard fisheries,
and on some parts of the Irish coast the fishing stations
are no less important. An immense number of these
fish are sometimes taken; an instance is recorded in
FISHES. Gi:

whivh ten thousand hogsheads have been caught in one
port on a single day: “thus,” says Mr. Yarrell, “ pro-
viding the enormous multitude of twenty-five millions
of living creatures, drawn at once from’ the ocean for
human sustenance.”

The voracity of the pilchard is very great. Mr. Couch
Says that he has found their stomachs crammed, each
with thousands of a minute Species of shrimp, not
larger than a flea. The number of. these minute
creatures must be enormous, if, as Mr. Couch Says, all
the pilchards were as well fed as the one he examined ;
for so numerous are the fishes themselves, that this
valuable writer describes an assemblage of them, when
near the coast, as assuming the arrangement of a mighty
army, with its wings stretching parallel to the land.
“There are,” he says, “three stations assumed by this
great body, that have their separate influence on the
success of the fishery. One is to the eastward of the
Lizard, the most eastern extremity reaching to the Start
Point in Devonshire, beyond which no fishery is carried
on, except that rarely it extends to Dartmouth ; a
Second station is included between the Lizard and
Land’s End, and the third is on the north coast of the
county. It is not an uncommon thing for one of these
districts to be full of pilchards, while in the others
none are to be seen. The length of this fish is nine
or ten inches, and in form it somewhat resembles the
herring. |

The pilchard fishery, though interesting to the
Cornish men, and affording employment to a large
number of people, is not very lucrative. Probably,
in this respect, none are equal to those of the salmon
in value ; but as this fish spends a great part of its life
in rivers, and is little seen by visitors to the sea, we
must not dwell upon it. That common little fish the
sprat (Clupea sprattus) is sure to be seen by those
who are resident near our shores late in the autumn,
or during winter. We have often thought, when seeing
a boat land with its cargo of sprats, that those who
52 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

saw these fish only lying on the fishmonger’s stall had
little idea of their beauty. Glittering in the net in many
a pale and delicate tint, they look like a mags of silver on
which the rainbow is faintly reflected. Cloudy weather
is the time for the fishermen, and after a few days of
this kind we find in our walks on the pier, long rows
of network, hung there to dry. Fine nets of several
yards long are made by the fisherman in the winter’s
evening, or by his wife or children, for the purpose of
catching these fish. This is a very useful species to the
poor of our sea-coast towns, nor is an occasional dish
of sprats unwelcome to the rich, while the fish pickled
in brine is often sold in our inland cities, and is very
good in flavour. Sprats, too, are laid on the fields
for manure, and most of those who have spent some
time near the sea, have seen them borne away in carts
and waggons for this purpose, or perhaps had their
country ramble spoiled by their odour on the land
while they were in the process of decomposition.

But as we watch the contents of the fishing-boats,
we are often delighted by the beauty of some of the
mullets contained in the trawling-net. The striped red
mullet (Mullus swrmuletus) is abundant on our southern
coasts, from Cornwall to Sussex, and is often brought
up in the mackerel net. It is extremely beautiful,
exhibiting every tint of orange, red, and yellow, in
most vivid brilliancy ; though, to see its hues in per-
fection, we should observe it during the summer, for
though caught at all seasons it is not always equally
bright. In some years it is much more plentiful on
our shores than in others, for these fish change their
places, and, swimming miles away from their old haunts,
are sometimes long undiscovered by the fishermen.
The mullets were much prized by the Romans, and
their generic name is said to refer to the scarlet colour
of the sandal or shoe worn by the Roman consuls, and
afterwards by the emperors. ‘They were also consecrated
to Diana, the goddess of hunting ; because they were
believed in those days to pursue and attack large and
FISHES. 53

dangerous fish. The red mullet (Mullus barbatus) ig
not only rare on our shores, but is also a much less
abundant fish in all seas than the striped variety,
and excels it not only in flavour, but in richness of
colour. It is connected with such records of cruelty
and folly, that one blushes for human beings as we
peruse the details; and we are reminded how much
the refinement of arts and of science can exist, while their
cultivators have hearts as hard as those of the untaught
Savage. Poetry, and painting, and sculpture had shed
their influence over the ancients 3 but the mild light of
revelation had not yet dawned upon them ; and thus
their land, with all its advantages, was but as the dark
places of the earth, which are full of the habitations
of cruelty. The beautiful mullet was brought before
the Roman to die ; and as the rich epicures sat around
the table, their luxurious repast acquired a new zest, as
they looked on the fish, and saw its bright red colours
gradually passing into various shades of purple, violet,
bluish, and white ; till one convulsive throb of agony
put an end to its pain. More cruel practices still were
used towards these poor fish ; and the luxurious and
wealthy Roman delighted in exhibiting his ponds or
vivaria containing the mullets, which afforded un-
doubted evidence of the wealth of their owner, since,
according to Martial, a fish of four pounds and a half
cost a ruinous price ; and mullets of extreme size, one
weighing six pounds, are recorded to have been pur-
chased at a sum equal to 48/., while a still larger fish
was paid for at the value of 64/.

The food of the mullet consists of the soft crustaceous
and molluscous animals, and cirrhi are arranged around
the mouth of this, as of some other fish. Mr. Yarrell,
who dissected them, remarks: They are, I have no
doubt, delicate organs of touch, by which all the Species
provided with them are enabled to ascertain, to a
certain extent, the qualities of the various substances
with which they are brought in contact ; and are ana-
logous in function to the beak, with its distribution

F 3
54 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

of nerves, among certain swimming and wading birds
which probe for food beyond their sight ; and may be
considered another instance among the many beautiful
provisions of nature, by which, in the case of fishes
finding at great depths their light deficient, compen-
sation is made for consequent imperfect vision.

The grey mullet is a pretty little fish, with its rich
blue tints ; and several species of gurnard are extremely
beautiful, and are besides useful and delicate articles of
food. . October is their especial season, and to see them

in full beauty, we should look at them when just taken

from the water. The red gurnard (Zrigla cuculus)
is the most frequent of the nine British species, and
though chiefly found in deep water, yet it sometimes
frequents the rocky pools, which we find at low tide
full of beautiful and living creatures, and adorned with
our loveliest sea plants. The red hue of the upper
portion of the fish seems to mingle imperceptibly with
the silver whiteness which distinguishes the lower
portion, and which glitters in the sunshine. Like several
of our fishes, it utters a sound when taken out of the
sea; and this is so similar to that of the bird of our
summer woods, that the fish is familiarly named the
cuckoo gurnard; while the grey gurnard (Lrigla
gurnardus), & common fish, especially on the southern
shores of England, and very abundant on the west of
Scotland, is on the latter shore called crooner, because
of the dull croak or croon which is its lament for
its native sea.

But without waiting till the fishing-boats have
brought their stores for our inspection, we may wander
away to the tide-pools, and find among the rocks,
covered with their dark sprays of olive-green, or
fringed with grass-green leaves and ribands, some of
our common fishes. What a scene of life and anima-
tion is here! 4Here are crabs running along by
thousands ; star-fishes twisting their limbs in strange
contortions ; shrimps darting by as if every motion
were one of gladness’; limpets, and barnacles, and
FISHES. 55

periwinkles holding the rock tightly; and mussels
moored to it safely by their silken threads; and red-
looking worm-like creatures with many feet gliding in
the clear water, and feather-like plumes emerging from
shells, and bending there most gracefully. Many a
pretty fish seems hiding from our view among the
entangling weeds ; and then, perchance, that ill-looking
little fish with its long wide head, the father lasher, or
long-spined cottus (Cottus bubalis), looks up at us with
such unamiable aspect, as if it only wanted strength
to use its threatening spiny head as a weapon of warfare
against us, and to punish us for intruding into its
domain. There are few parts of our coast where it
may not be seen during the greater part of the year, and









THE FATHER LASHER.

if we only touch it with a finger, it distends its gill
covers, and setting out its numerous spines, as if, like
the Scottish thistle, it would claim the motto, “ Nemo
me impune lacessit,” which, Baxter says, means in plain
Scotch, “Ye maunt meddle wi’ me.” This bold and
voracious fish has tints of a beautifully vivid red, green,
56 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE,

and brown. It is not eaten in our country ; but in
Greenland, where it is much larger, it is the chief food
of many people, and the soup made of it is described
by travellers as good in flavour. The N orwegians also
extract oil from the liver of this fish. The Scotch call
it the lucky proach. It is on our shores often termed
toad-fish, and well named, for its large head would
remind one of a toad. Its name of father lasher is
probably given because, in its active darting progress,
it strikes the water with its broad tail fin. Several of
these fish may often be found hid beneath a bed of
Sea-weeds.

Crantz, in his History of Greenland, says of it,
“Next to augmarsett (capelin), the Greenlanders eat
most of the ulkes, what we cal] toad-fish, or in New-
foundland, scolpings ; it lives all the year round in the
little and large bays near the land, yet in deep water.
It is caught, especially in winter, by poor women and
children, with a line of whalebone or bird’s feathers,
thirty or forty fathoms long. At the end, a blue
longish stone is fastened, to sink it. Instead of a bait,
they put on the hook a white bone, a glass bead, or a
bit of red cloth. The fish is commonly a foot long, and
full of bones. The skin is quite smooth, and spotted
with yellow, green, red, and black spots, like a lizard.
It has a very large thick round head, and a wide mouth,
and its fins, especially on its back, are broad and
prickly. Though this fish hath a very ugly look, yet
its flesh and the soup that is made of it taste ex-
tremely agreeable, and are very wholesome, and the sick
may eat of them.”

The short-spined cottus, or sea Scorpion (Cottus scor-
prus), a fish about four or five inches long, often lurks
among the sea-weeds, or swims into our harbours. Like
the father lasher, it is go common all round our
coasts, as that every haul of the dredge will bring up
one or the other, though seldom both, for they do not
frequent the same spots. The body of this fish ig
mottled with dark purple, brown, or reddish brown:
FISHES. 57

the under part being white, and sometimes it is of
bright scarlet.

Some of these pools are at times half filled with
little. fishes left there by the tide. Several Species of
the wrasse glide about among the rocks, glittering in
red, orange, and green ; and here the gilt head or golden
maid (Crenilabrus melops), sometimes finds its way into
‘the crab creels, which the fisherman places there ; eat-
ing the shrimps and little crabs, so numerous among
the sea plants, and giving a decided preference to
such rocks as are only reached at unusually high tides,
and thus only moistened in general by the spray. And
now as we look about among the waters and the rogks,
a little lower down, we may chance to see the spotted
gunnel, or butterfish (Muwreenoides guttata), or the
swordick, as it is often called from its sword-like shape.
But the very sound of our footsteps, or the sight of our
shadow, will send it to hide under the stones or weeds,
and if with some difficulty wesucceed in capturing it, it is
no easy matter to hold it for a minute; for the slimy sub-
stance upon it, from which it takes its name of butter-
fish, as well as its rapid movements, facilitate its escape.
It is generally about five or six inches long. It is only
‘used in our country for bait, but in Greenland it ig
dried and eaten.

It is in these pools also that we shall find a little
fish, well known to all who observe the living creatures
either of sea or river, abounding as it does both in our
salt and fresh waters. Many a time have we, by means
of a gauze net tied to the end of a stick, caught the
stickleback or barnstickle, that tiniest of British fishes,
and kept it for a while in a vase of water. Most per-
Sons accustomed to our sea-side have seen the rough-
tailed stickleback (Gasterosteus trachurus), hiding among
stones or weeds, or darting out and pursuing its prey,
devouring it with voracity, and having nothing to fear,
even from fishes much larger than itself, because it is
so well defended by its spines. We can readily believe
the assertion of Henry Backer, that the sticklebacks
58 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

leap vertically out of the water to the height of more
than a foot ; and that in an oblique direction they will
make springs to a greater distance, where stones or other
obstacles tempt them to try their agility and strength.
They are most fierce little creatures, and a bite from
one of them is by no means to be coveted by the wan-
derer by the sea; while to its companions in the pool
it often proves fatal. A writer in Loudon’s Magazine of
Natural History gives an interesting account of some
of these sticklebacks which he had placed in a large
vessel of water. “ When,” says this writer, “a few are
first turned in, they swim about in a shoal, apparently
exploring their new habitation. Suddenly one will
take possession of a corner of the tub, or, as it will
sometimes happen, of the bottom, and will instantly
commence an attack upon his companions ; and if any
one of them ventures to oppose his sway, a regular and
most furious battle ensues, the two combatants swim
round and round with the greatest rapidity, biting and
endeavouring to pierce each other with their spines,
which on these occasions are projected. I have wit-
nessed a battle of this sort, which lasted several minutes
before either gave way ; and when one does submit,
imagination can hardly conceive the vindictive fury of
the conqueror, who, in the most persevering and unre-
lenting way, chases his rival from one part of the tub
to another, until fairly exhausted with fatigue. They
also use their lateral spines with such fatal effect, that,
incredible as it may appear, I have seen one during a
battle absolutely rip his opponent quite open, so that
he sank to the bottom and died. I have occasionally
known three or four parts of the tub taken possession
of by as many other little tyrants, who guard their
territories with the strictest vigilance, and the slightest
invasion immediately brings on a battle. When a fish is
conquered it loses all its gay colours, as if these depended
on the health and spirits of the wearer, though previ-
ously to death it regains them, but with less clearness
and distinction than when proud and happy.”
FISHES, 59)

Our stickleback is little used as food, but, about
Dantzic, oil has been extracted from these fish ; and
they were, in former days, caught by myriads in the
river Cam, for the purposes of manure. They are
included in the list of fishes of every country of Europe.

Another little fish, which is very common on all
parts of our coast, though not haunting our pools, is
the freckled or spotted goby (Gobius minutus). It is
seldom more than three inches long, has a large head,
and is of a pale yellowish white, freckled and barred
with brown. It very often comes up with the crabs
in the shrimping nets, for it lurks among the sands,
sometimes completely hiding itself in them. Both
this and some others of the goby tribe are said to
deceive their prey by approaching them slowly, while
their bodies are so covered with the sand and mud
which adheres to their slimy surface, that they are not
discovered to be enemies by the smaller marine animals
on which they feed. They, in their turn, supply a
considerable source of food to the larger fishes and sea
birds.

It is in the sandy bay that the less frequent fish, the
gemmeous dragonet, or yellow skulpin (Callionymus
lyra), is to be found. It has a singular appearance,
being shaped like what one would fancy a dragon to be,
and remarkable also for its colours, which glitter like
rubies and emeralds and diamonds, the most conspicu-
ous tint being the yellow. It is, in the north, called
gowdie, from gowd, gold.

One of the most remarkably formed British fishes is
not unfrequent on some coasts, though not universally
distributed. This is the fishing frog, or angler (Lo-
phius piscatorius), that has many ill names among the
fishermen, which we would not repeat. It is generally
about three feet long, and really resembles a frog in its
tadpole condition. It well merits its name of angler,
for it has long thread-like appendages attached to the
head, which serve as its fishing lines) When lying in
the mud or sand, it, by means of its fins, stirs up this
60 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDRE.

so as to becloud the water, and while thus concealed,
it raises its long filaments, and moves them about. The
lesser fishes, probably mistaking them for small worms



THE FISHING FROG, OR ANGLER.

fitted for their food, advance towards it, and are entan-
gled and captured. When in a n-t with other fishes,
this voracious angler seems nothing daunted at its own
danger ; but immediately swallows some of its com-
panions in misfortune, which are afterwards taken alive
from its stomach, so that though its own flesh is not
eaten, it may furnish food to man by this means.
Little intelligence as fishes in general possess, we find
them endowed with instincts fitted to the requirements
of their condition; and when food cannot be provided
easily, several, like the fishing frog, have recourse to
artifices. Thus the lesser weever, sometimes called
the otter pike, or sting fish (Zrachimus vipera), very
ingeniously provides its own meal. This fish, which is
common on all the sandy shores of Scotland, and fre-
quently caught by fishers and shrimpers, feeds on small
crustaceans and insects, and in order to entrap them, it
hides itself in loose sand at the base of the water, leaving
FISHES, 61

only its head above, and here its open mouth serves as a
trap, into which the unheeding animals may glide.

This beautiful and brilliant fish was anciently called
the sea-dragon, for the same reason that we, in modern
times, call it the sting-fish. It has great power for mis-
chief, and can inflict a severe wound with its fin spines,
which will cause considerable inflammation. Pennant
remarks, that the fish knows how to dart its blows with
as much judgment as a fighting cock. The larger
species, called the great weever, or sea-cat (Z'rachimus
draco), is also termed sting-bull by the fishermen of
some of our coasts. It is less frequent than the smaller
kind, living in very deep water, but its sting is no less
severe ; and so injurious is it that the fishermen imme-
diately deprive it of its spiny fin, before it has power to
harm any one. The laws of France and Spain both
enjoin this practice on their fishermen. Unlovely as are
its actions, however, it is eagerly seized, for its flesh is
a great delicacy. It is about twelve inches in length.



THE WOLI-FISH.

The wolf-fish (Anarrhicas lupus) is another fish
marked by a savage character, which may easily be
traced in its physiognomy. It is confined to the

G
62 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

northern parts of our island, but is not unfrequent
there ; and though its flesh is well flavoured, its appear-
ance is so unprepossessing, that few like to eat it. The
people of the Orkney Isles call it swine-fish, but its
name of wolf is very suitable to its voracious and
fierce habits ; while it possesses teeth so formidable
that it can crush the hardest substance. It fights its
enemy with desperate fury. The fisherman’s net stands
no chance from its wild rage, and his hand receives a
severe wound if extended near it, while it battles with
the large fishes, and devours the smaller ones, making
little account of a whole host of crabs and lobsters,
which may be with it in the meshes.

There is a singular looking fish called the gar-fish, or
sea-pike (Belone vulgaris), common on the coasts of
Cornwall, Kent, Sussex, and some other counties. It
is very slender, and about twenty-four inches long, with
very long mandibles, much like the beak of a bird. Its
vivacity is so great that Mr. Couch says it will spring
out of its element, or for a long time play around a
floating straw, leaping over it again and again. As it
is often taken in the mackerel season, our fishermen
call it the mackerel guide : it has, besides, the familiar
names of horn-fish, long-nose, and sea-needle ; and in
Kent is well known by the name of gorebill. Its flesh
is not very well flavoured, but its bones are of a most
beautiful grass-green colour.

The common sea-bream (Pagellus centrodontus) is
a well-known fish on our southern shores, and ladies
living in our sea-coast towns make much use of its
scales for fancy-work. Pearly white roses and other
flowers arrayed on coloured velvet, and formed of these
scales, are exceedingly ornamental and well adapted for
bags, fire-screens, and various other purposes. The
bream is a yellowish red fish, and it is the young
of this species which are so well known as chads, and
which occur so frequently in our rocky pools. Neither
this, nor the equally common black sea-bream, is —
much valued as food.
FISHES. 63

The dory, or john dory as it is commonly called, the
zeus faber of the naturalist, is not one of our common
fishes, though often found, even in profusion, on the
shores of Cornwall or Devon. Yet this flat oval fish is

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THE JOHN DORY.

well known, because many are brought to London from
Plymouth and other parts of the Devonshire coast. It
is remarkable for its high repute among epicures, and
for the absurd legends which are attached to it. The
large- spot which is seen on each side of the fish, is
supposed to have been originated by St. Christopher,
who left the marks of his fingers on its body. Hence
the Greeks call it St. Christopher's fish. In France,
however, it is known as poisson St. Prerre, and in that
country the tradition relates that this dory was the fish
taken up by the apostle Peter, with the money in its
mouth for the payment of the tribute. It is also
commonly known in France as the forgeron, or black-
smith, because of its somewhat smoky appearance ; but
its traditionary names are very general, for the Italians
64 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

call it i janitore, or gatekeeper, in allusion to the
unscriptural notion of the keys which were supposed to
be held by the apostle Peter. The flesh of the fish is
excellent, and its name of John, though of uncertain
origin, is said to have been given by Quin, who has the
not very enviable repute of being one of the best judges
in matters of eating and drinking which some centuries
have produced.

Many a man who is waiting for full employment in
the fishing work, goes down and spends some hours in
catching the fish with a line from some pier head or
jutting rock. The atherine, or sand smelt (Atherina
presbyter), is often taken thus, and is a delicate little
fish of silvery hue, speckled with black. Sometimes the
visitor at the sea-side, who is fond of angling, sits
patiently on the rocks of our southern shores, dreaming
away in the sunshine, while from time to time he takes
from his hook this sand smelt, and is rewarded for his
patience by carrying away a basket full of them.

The grey mullet (/ugil capito) may be seen near
the margin of the shore, revelling in warm sunny
weather, and getting into water so shallow that we
can almost take it with the hand. Mr. Couch observes
of this species: “Carew, the Cornish historian, had a
pond of salt water in which these fish were kept ; and
he says that having been accustomed to feed them at
a certain place every evening, they became so tame,
that a noise like that of chopping wood could certainly
cause them to assemble. The intelligence which this
argues, may be also inferred from the skill and vigilance
which this fish displays in avoiding danger, more espe-
cially in effecting its escape in circumstances of great
peril. When enclosed within a ground-scan, or sweep-
net, as soon as the danger is seen, and before the limits
of its range are straitened, and when even the end of
the net might be passed, it is its common habit to
prefer the shorter course, and throw itself over the
head-line, and so escape: and when one of the
company passes, all immediately follow.”
FISHES. 65

Several fishes, as the cod or keeling, the haddock,
the whiting, and the sole, contribute very largely to
the portion of food yielded by the waters. Those
common and plentiful flat species, the plaice (Platessa
vulgaris), the flounder (Platessa flesus), and the dab
(Platessa limanda), ave also deservedly valued for their
abundance, and good qualities as food. They cannot
be called handsome fishes, but the flat form of these,
and other species, admirably adapts them for inhabiting
low places ; and as they are not furnished, like most of
their race, with air bladders, with which to buoy
themselves up, their destined place is near the ground.
Here on the sandy or muddy shore, the plaice hides
horizontally among the loose soil, with the head slightly
elevated above it. The eyes being both on the upper
surface, the fish has a wide range of view, in which to
secure its prey. Mr. Yarrell notices one of those
adaptations, so observable whenever we look into
nature. Referring to the plaice, he says: “ Light, one
great cause of colour, strikes on the upper surface only ;
the under surface, like that of most other fishes, remains
perfectly colourless. Having little or no means of
defence, had their colour been placed above the lateral
line on each side, in whatever position they moved,
their piebald appearance would have rendered them
conspicuous to all their enemies.” The flounder is
sometimes called flook, or mayock fleuke ; while the
Edinburgh fishermen call it the bull.

The turbot (Rhombus maximus) is common on the
sand-banks, at the east of our island, and considerable
numbers are taken at various parts of our coast.
“Though voracious it is somewhat dainty, and will not
touch a bait that is not quite fresh, being best attracted
by such little fish as the sea-scorpion and father
lasher. The brill (Rhombus vulgaris) is often the
companion of the turbot in sandy places, residing how-
ever not alone in the deep waters, but coming into more
shallow parts. It is abundant on the sandy shores.

There are several species called sucking-fishes, from

a3
66 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

their power of attaching themselves firmly to the
bottoms of vessels, or to their companions in the sea.
This they do by means of a flattened adhesive disk on
the top of the head; but whether they thus attach
themselves for the purpose of the shelter or protection
thus afforded, or whether it is in order that they may be
carried onwards ,without any effort of their own, is not
apparent. The common remora (Lcheneis remora) is the
species known to the ancients, and was the subject of



HEAD OF THE SUCKER-FISH.

many wild fancies in other times. It has been found at
Swansea, adhering to a cod, but is very rare on our
shores. This little fish was once believed to have the
power of stopping the sailing of the largest vessel, by
fastening itself upon it.
‘‘ The sucking-fish beneath, with secret chains

Clung to the keel, the swiftest ship detains ;

Such sudden force the floating captive binds,

Though beat by waves and urged by driving winds.”
None of the sucking-fishes are among those universally
distributed on the shores; but some, as the lump
sucker (Cyclopterus lumpus), a most grotesque looking
figure of a fish, is taken on various parts of our coasts,
especially on the north of our island. It is often ex-
hibited in the fishmongers’ shops in London, and is
looked at with wonder, because of the singular and
FISHES. 67

thick form, and the rich shades of blue, purple, and
orange which appear on its surface. It seems to be
common in the Orkneys, and is there called cock-paidle.
Pennant says of this fish, that on placing one into a
pail of water, it fixed itself so firmly to the bottom,
that in taking it by the tail, the whole pail was lifted
up by that means without removing the fish from its
hold, though it contained some gallons.

If we walk along the upper part of the beach where
the waves have left long lines of the refuse of the
deep, and where sea-weed, corallines, and shells engage
our attention, we are almost sure to find those little
things called fairy purses, or mermaids’ purses, lying
in the heap. There are two kinds of these. The
prettiest are of a pale horn colour, semi-transparent,
having at their four corners a tendril not quite so thick
as that on a grape-vine, but usually much larger, and
with more numerous curls. These tendrils cling about
pieces of wood or the stems of large sea-weeds, or creep
over stones, and hold fast. to them. They are the egg
cases of the small spotted dog-fish (Scidlium canicula),
a fish sometimes called on our coast the robin huss.
It is a species of shark; and though not having the
strength of those formidable monsters of tropical seas,
yet it has the true spirit of a shark in its voracity and
fierceness. The fishermen dislike it exceedingly, and
give to it many a familiar name expressive of: their
disgust ; for it not only devours large numbers of the
smaller fishes, but tears their nets by its determined
fighting, often coming up in numbers only to be
thrown away.

As we might easily infer from the numbers of these
purses lying on our shores, this robin huss is one of
the most common fishes, and still more numerous are
the egg cases deposited by the long-nosed skate, or
ray (Raia mucronata). Durmg winter and spring we
caunot take a walk by the shore without seeing them.
They are oblong horny cases of @ dark olive-green, and
having at each corner a projecting piece which looks
68 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

like a handle ; they resemble in form that very com-
mon object, a butcher’s tray. Sometimes they are
inflated, either by being filled with air or sea-water,
or by enclosing the young fish, but at others are empty
and flattened. Ladies frequently cut this case into
narrow strips, and putting them awhile in warm water,
use them as shields to the forefinger when at needlework,
and they answer the purpose very well, as they clasp
tightly round the finger. Sometimes the lover of sea-
weeds finds some very pretty ones attached to these
purses, making a little silky fringe at both ends, and
various beautiful little corallines cluster on and creep
over them. When the young fish is matured, it glides
through the opening at either end, and is at home in
the world of waters. This long-nosed skate, like some
other species of the genus, is a good fish for the table,
and when taken by the hook shakes itself with so much
violence that it needs care to secure jt. All the skates
are very voracious, and will eat great numbers of
smaller fishes, crushing up the crabs and little shell-fish
with great ease by means of their powerful jaws. They
are all flat and have long tails.

The thornback (Raia clavata) is another of these
flat fishes, and as useful as it is frequent, affording when
salted a good meal for sea-side people. It is a dan-
gerous fish if carelessly handled, for, besides that it is
covered on all the upper part of its body with small rough
points, it has large tubercular spines distributed here
and there among them. Often while examining the
things on the sea-shore we find pieces of the skin of
this common fish, the spines themselves having been
torn away by the action of the waters, but the oval bony.
base from which they sprang left there still, and puzzling
the sea-side visitor to tell what it can be. But the
limits of our little work forbid us to linger longer over
the fishes, or to describe some, which, like the sun-
fish, are so singular in form that few who had seen
them would ever forget them. This strange looking
fish, though occurring but occasionally, “may,” Mr.
FISHES. 69

Yarrell says, “ be said to have been taken from John 0’
Groat’s to the Land’s End. It is almost circular in
shape, and when observed in our seas, seems either
dead or asleep, floating along sideways, and of so in-
sensible and dull a nature that it does not even attempt



THE SUN-FISH.

to escape, but lets the sailor take it in his hand into
the boat. They are said to be phosphorescent.

Isaac Walton quotes an “ ingenious Spaniard,” who
says, “that rivers, and the inhabitants of the watery
element, were made for wise men to contemplate, and
fools to pass by without consideration.” Assuredly the
waters which wash our island might serve as food for
thought, did we even confine our meditations to the
largest of their inhabitants. “These,” said the psalm-
ist, “these all wait upon thee; that thou mayest give
them their meat in due season.” When the great
Creator commanded into being “every living creature
that moveth, which the waters brought forth, after
70 A BOOK FOR THE 8EA-SIDE.

their kind,” he was mercifully providing stores of food,
which we around this island are constantly enjoying,
and by means of which a large number of our commu-
nity subsist. Nor should we forget that from those
hardy men who are now casting out the net or line,
have sprung some of our most able pilots, some of our
bravest seamen, and that even in our own days many of
those who go out to succour the shipwrecked, braving
the storm at the peril of their own lives, and with little
prospect of reward, are men whose early days were
spent on the shores, among its rocks and shallows, its
waters and their inhabitants.


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CHAPTER IV.

THE BEACH—ITS STONES, FLOWERS, MOLLUSCOUS
ANIMALS, AND SHELLS.

TuerE is good exercise in walking, for those who are
strong enough to traverse a few miles of beach. Such
a walk may be tiring, but it has great charms to those
who love to hear all the variety of melody which
nature offers to the listening ear. Now the wave
dashes with force on the mass of stones, drawing up as
it retreats large numbers of them, but to scatter them
again with a music all its own: now it ripples more
softly among the pebbles, so gently that we can close.
72 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE,

our eyes, and dream that we are lying by the borders
of some pebbly rill, till the loud scream of the seagull
above us, so unlike the sweet songs of the minstrel of
the meadow or wood, recalls us to the remembrance
that the ocean is rolling there.

Countless numbers of pebbles, long since rounded
by the action of the water, constitute the shingly mar-
gin on which we are treading. We pick up one or
another, fancying, while wetted by the waves, that it is
a piece of jasper, or agate, or some other treasure, but see,
as it dries, that it is nothing uncommon. Dr. Mantell
has told us that those green false emeralds and aqua-
marines which are sought with such eagerness by
visitors on the Brighton and other coasts, are nothing
but water-worn fragments of common green glass
bottles ; and that the moss-agates, jaspers, and other
stones sold by the lapidaries and jewellers of the Isle
of Wight and of Brighton, are in fact of Scotch or
German origin.

But though the wanderer on our shores may never
find one gem of worth sufficient to encircle with gold for
an ornament, he may find at every step some wonderful
stone, with a history well worth his attention. Those
pebbles, rounded now by the long action of the waters
into shingle, are on many beaches mostly flints. They
were originally moulded in the chalk, and, like that
chalk, contain the remains of marine animals embedded.
among them. They are not, however, like the chalk
itself, entirely composed of an aggregate of fossil bodies.
This pebble, hard as it is now, must have been at one
time soft and fluid, for on the surface we may often
trace the markings of various marine objects, as a
sponge, or the spine of a sea-egg ; and on breaking it,
the scales of fishes, fragments of coral, perhaps a sea —
anemone or tiny shell, are perceptible. ‘These little
objects are the centres around which the flinty material
eradually accumulated, while it was in a fluid condition
in water. In this state it was precipitated into the
chalk before the latter was consolidated, these marine
THE BEACH. 73

objects all the while forming nuclei, around which the
siliceous earth hardened. A great proportion of the
pebble therefore, consisting of the siliceous earth, is
composed of the fossil skeletons of animalcules, “so
minute,” says Dr. Mantell, “as to elude our unassisted
vision, but which the magic power of the microscope
reveals, preserved like flies in amber, in all their
original sharpness of outline and delicacy of struc-
ture.”

It is evident that it was in a deep sea that many of
those pebbles had their origin, or they would not have
enclosed species now unknown, but well ascertained to
have lived in such a sea only. It was then that they
became embedded and hardened in the chalk, till the
chalk bed of ocean was upheaved by volcanic agencies,
and thus the line of sea cliffs was raised above the
waters; then came further elevations of land, bringing
up the fragments gradually worn away from the chalk,
and the sea beach was raised to the place which it now
occupies, several feet above the level of the sea. Mingled
with the pebbles lie pieces of limestone, or cement-
stone, or iron pyrites, while traces of human art and
industry, brought there by the tide, show that our sea
washes a shore inhabited by civilized and intelligent
man.

That sea-side poppy, (Glauciwm lutewm,) or horned
poppy, as we sometimes call it, because of the long seed
vessels, which, being often a foot in length, may be
seen afar off, like a horn, is a great and frequent orna-
ment tothe beach. Every rough wind flutters its golden
petals, but they will not fall for the wind, but will wait
till their time of withering comes. This flower is as
large as the poppy of the corn-field, and as shining in
its gold as is that flower in its scarlet. A large mass of
leaves, of most beautiful sea-green tint, grow around
the root, the upper ones clasping the stem, and the
lower leaves having so many prickles on them, that when
young, or when glittering with dew, they seem as if
silver were sprinkled there. All the winter they may

Ul
74 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

be seen on the beach, washed by the surf which is scat-
tered from the wave, or which, if the wind sets in on
the shore, covers them over as with little heaps of froth,
till the next gust blows it onward again. This yellow
poppy grows too on the base of the cliff, or on the
sand below the beach. It is an acrid plant, and its

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YELLOW-HORNED POPPY.

root, which is of the colour of the carrot, is so much
so, that if the juice is tasted, it long leaves an un-
pleasant and burning sensation on the tongue. Its
name refers to its sea-green or glaucous tint, but like
many a flower whose beauty had been marked by the
ancients, the old fables of the Greek mythology de-
rived it from a fisherman, who jumped into the sea
and became a god; a tale of little worth, save to remind.
us of the advantages which we derive, who have re-
ceived no cunningly devised fables, but have the word
of truth in our hearts and homes.
THE BEACH. , 75

‘« And wandering still beside the wave,
And culling flowers and fancies wild. |
I saw the hornéd poppy gild
The heights with blossoms rich and brave :

‘I saw its pods, like scimeters,
So fiercely battling ’gainst the breeze
That bloweth freshly o’er the seas,
And wafteth songs of mariners.”

Some very pretty trefoils flourish exceedingly well on
our sea-beaches, and tufts of sea-side plantain (Plantago
maritima) help to bind the stones together ; and many
a clump of the buckshorn plantain (Plantago coro-
nopus) is there, though we shall not go out, as the
housewives of old did, to gather it for salads. Starry
sea-side camomile (Anthemis maritimus), with its
cream-coloured rays surrounding a yellow centre, gives
its strong scent to the wind, and, but for its odour,
might, by one who was not a botanist, be confounded
with the sea-side feverfew (Pyrethrum maritimum):
this plant exactly resembles the mayweed of our corn-
fields, and grows all about the cliffs and shingle.
Vetches are there, too, with their tangling stems, and
in some places that pretty and graceful plant, the sea-
pea (Lathyrus pisiformis), creeps about the pebbly
beach. It is common on those of the counties of Lin-
colnshire and Suffolk, and it grows in abundance near
Walmer castle, in Kent, making the spot quite beauti-
ful in the month of July, with its handsome but
scentless flowers. |

But we must wander over these sea-beaches, fearless
of wetting our feet at their margin, if we would see
some of the wonders which the sea is throwing up, We
are no believers in the statement so often made by
people on the coast, that salt water cannot cause cold.
We know it to bea popular fallacy; but with a good
amount of exercise, and by changing the shoes pre-
viously to sitting, we believe we may venture on some
dangers which we could not brave amid the less invi-
gorating air of an inland region. Taking for our
present consideration one tribe of the inhabitants of
the waters, the mollusks and their shells, we have a
76 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

large field for observation and inquiry. A mollusk
may be described as a soft-bodied animal, with no legs,
no jointed members of any kind. These animals either
crawl or swim by means of extended portions of their
skins, which are rarely so enlarged as to deserve the
name of fins. They are sometimes covered with shells,
either composed of one piece or valve, or of two or
more valves ; but some mollusks, like our garden slug,
have no covering; and some, like the ascidians, which
we are about to mention, have only a thick leathery
mantle or tunic.

The greater number of marine mollusks live on sea-
shores, on rocks, on sand, in eddies, or the mouths of
rivers, and are hence called littoral species ; but there
are many kinds which live at great depths, and are
only thrown on the shore by storms. They feed on
animal or vegetable substances, in all conditions,
living or dead ; but the several families confine them-
selves either to one or the other kind of food. Those
which feed on living animals of the larger kind, pierce
holes in their shells by means of a proboscis armed
with hooks, and those which feed on the animalcules so
abundant in the waters, or on the small jelly-fish, or
other microscopic objects suspended in the fluid, can
produce in the water an almost circulatory movement,
by means of which these small creatures are hurried, as
in a whirlpool, within the reach of the mollusk.

The ascidians are shell-less mollusca, some of which
are simple, and others compound. Some of the former
animals are very common among our rocks and weeds
on the shore, adhering at low tide to the under surfaces
of rough stones, and hanging like “bunches of semi-
transparent fruit” to the sea-weeds, clinging with a
tenacity which renders it impossible to shake them off.
So common &re they, that the dredge is rarely brought
up from any sea-bed, without containing some of them.
They are irregularly shaped bodies, fixed at one side to
the rock, weed, or shell, while the other end is free.
Two or more openings are visible, and most persons
THE BEACH. 77

who, while wandering on the shore, have picked up
one of these animals, have been saluted with a shower
of water, which the ascidian ejects with great force
from these apertures on the slightest pressure. They
have not, usually, any beauty of form,—grace and sym-
metry are not their attributes; but the colours of some
species are exquisitely beautiful. Their leathery tunic
is sometimes crowded with small stones, or pretty little
shells, which completely burrow into the substance of
some of them. Often long graceful stems of horn-
coloured corallines hang like waving boughs about
them, or some tuft of sea-weed is like a silky cushion
on their surface.

That inactive apathetic mass, showing no signs of
life, save when it sends up a jet of water into our faces
from a distance of two, or even three feet, — that
apparently lifeless lump, is a creature well fitted by its
organization for its part in life. Its organs of circula-
tion, respiration, etc. are beautifully arranged, and it is
of great value as food to fishes and other marine
animals, while some of the ascidians furnish food for
the human species. Late observations have proved
that some of these, as well as some other living creatures
of the deep, enjoyed, in earlier stages of life, a greater
degree of freedom and activity. The ascidian, while
yet in a tadpole state, is able to swim through the
waters by means of a rapidly vibrating tail. At a
further stage of its existence, however, the tail dis-
appears, the animal affixes itself by its arms to the
stone or sea-weed, the part which appeared to be the
head sends forth roots, the orifices become visible, and
finally the strange tough gelatinous mass seems to have
lost the will and power of motion, and to be de-
pendent for its very existence on the tangle to which it
hangs.

Several of the species, like that common pale-green or
yellow kind, the intestinal ascidia (Ascidia intestinalis),
lie about our shore after a storm, or abound among the
rocks. One species (Molgula oculata) is described by

H3
78 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

professor Forbes as having a space in the midst of its
encrusted tunic, of a bluish or purple tint, mottled with
orange, with similarly coloured orifices, which look like
little dark eyes within a spectacle-formed frame. This was
found adhering to a
scallop-shell. Another
kind resembles at first
a little ball of sand on
a sea-weed, and when
we rub away the sand
we find that this was
merely a crust to an
object resembling a
small globe of ice.
Some are of greyish
white, or ashy red, or
brownish colour; some
of deep crimson, or
brighter scarlet ; ano-
. ther is tawny coloured
—<\ speckled with regular
2}, dashes of purple. One
Ee NN ‘ species taken on an

) oyster by Mr. Alder,























weet 5 ww is described as very
Ps sss ip : °
Cy ae like a raspberry, while
avery common species
THE ASCIDIA. on the sea-weeds, at
most parts of our coast (Cynthia rustica), is white and
smooth. Ascidians coloured like the china rose of our
gardens, or of bright orange and palest straw-colour,
sometimes scarlet within, lie unheeded among our sea-
weeds, and are often so covered with sand that we never
see their colours, while their internal structure is known
only to the anatomist. The most common size of
these animals is about an inch, or an inch and a half,
but many are three inches long.
We have spoken only of the simple form of ascidia,
but various compound species are also among’ the
THE BEACH. 79

common objects of our beaches and rocks. Few things
indeed are more frequent, and we know of none more
beautiful, than some of the larger kinds. If, as we
walk along at low tide, we turn up some of the loose
rough stones at the edges of the pools, or grasp at some
root of sea-weed which has been severed from its hold,
we see them looking like clusters of stars of silver, but
tinted with deep crimson or paler rose colour, with
orange, yellow, blue grey, brightest green or deepest
violet. All hues of beauty are seen on them, as they
are too on some which, instead of stars, seem as if they
were icicles hung on the weed by the hand of winter.
“Tf,” say professor Forbes and Mr. Hanley, “we keep
some of these bodies alive in a vessel of sea water,
we find them lie there as apathetic as sponges, giving
few signs of vitality, beyond the slightly pouting out of
tube-like membranes around apertures which become
visible on their surfaces; though a closer and mi-
croscopic examination will show us currents in active
motion in the water around those apertures, streams
ejected and whirlpools rushing 1n, indicating that how-
ever torpid the creature may externally appear, all the
machinery of life, the respiratory wheels and circulatory
pumps, are hard at work in its inmost recesses. In the
course of our examination, especially if we cut up the
mass, we find that it is not a single animal which hes
before us, but a commonwealth of beings, bound
together by common and vital ties. Each star is a
family, each group of stars a community. Individuals
are linked together in systems, systems combined into
masses. Each member of the commonwealth has its
own peculiar duties, but shares also in operations which
relate to the interest and well-being of the mass. Ana-
tomical investigation shows us the details of these
curious structures and arrangements, beautiful as wise.
Indeed, few bodies among the lower forms of life exhibit
such exquisite and kaleidoscopic figures as those
which are displayed in the combination of the com-
pound ascidians.”
80 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

Several kinds of botryllus are very common on our
weeds, and our engraving will serve to give a general
idea of their structure,—a being the natural size, and
6 a single group magnified. These compound asci-

PP pp neh

i)

HEN
MO ] Wd LLU
S “i Fil VS .
AY pee |
: = rae a /





i
i
‘
A ae =




BOTRYLLUS.

dians, however, vary much in appearance; one is
described as similar to a number of heads of madre-
pore; others are little orange-coloured masses, fixed
by a stalk to the rock. One, which is very common
on all our coasts (Leptoclinum maculosum), is a thin
hard leathery crust, surrounding the root of the
olive-coloured tangle, and is variegated with white
and blue. Our common serrated fucus, a sea-weed
hereafter to be described, has often in abundance a
whitish yellow species investing it. Some of them, as
the species called the sea fig (Aplidium ficus), have a
most disagreeable odour. Some kinds of ascidians are
linked together in chains.

Perhaps while lingering about among jetties, piers,
and other wood-work, the reader may have seen many
of the piles which are at times under water, pierced into
numerous holes, long worm-eaten looking cavities. This
destruction has been all effected by a long worm-like
mollusk, called the teredo, of which we have several
British species. Immense mischief is done by these
worms, undermining as they often do maritime works,
which a few years since have cost much labour and
money, piercing holes in ships, unfitting them for ser-
vice, and sometimes causing them to sink beneath the
THE BEACH. sl

overwhelming billows, while they even make holes in
the roots and stems of submerged living -trees, which
erow on the sea-shore of some of the hotter regions
of the earth.

Mr. Thompson mentions that a piece of pine wood,
nine inches in diameter, after having been for five years
and a half used as a pile, was so reduced by the
perforations of the teredines, as not to contain more



TEREDO NAVALIS.

than an inch of solid timber in any part; while at
several places it was completely bored through. This
pole was placed fifteen feet below high-water mark,
and was only left uncovered during low water at
spring tides. Often before some sea pier or break-
water is finished, the piles are so worm-eaten that
repairs are required for the first portion of the work.
The very existence of Holland was once endangered
by the ravages made by the shipworms in the em-
bankments so industriously and judiciously employed
for the protection of that country, when all at once
they left the spot, without any reason having appeared
for their doing so. Creosote and various kinds of
varnish have been employed to arrest their ravages, but
nothing seems more effectual than placing in the wood
a number of iron-headed nails, which rusting in con-
sequence of the moisture, seem to be unpalatable or
injurious to the teredines, and this drives them away
from the spot. But these shipworms have their uses
too. Every one living near the sea knows how often large
pieces of wood float in the waters, sometimes the
remains of shipwrecks, sometimes washed in from the
trees on the shore, which winds and storms have
brought low. Some of these piles, borne from climes
where vegetation is luxuriant, would hinder the ship in
82 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

its way over thewaters, and cause danger to the mariner,
did not the shipworms break them into small fragments,
and scatter them, leaving the smaller pieces for firewood
to the fisherman and other sailor. Many perhaps,
as well as the poet, have watched the blue flames
which hovered about the salt drift wood,—

« And as their splendour flash’d and fail’d,
Have thought of wrecks upon the main;
Of ships dismasted that were hail’d,
And sent no answer back again ;”

and while winds were blowing without, have lifted up
an anxious and prayerful thought, that He who holdeth
the water in the hollow of his hand would protect the
sailor.

The common shipworm (Zeredo navalis) has a long
tube, generally white and firm as thin porcelain, but
sometimes little more than a film; at times it is
altogether absent. The head is enclosed in a sharp
and hard two-valved shell, and this is the instrument
which, guided by powerful muscles, is employed in its
work. Not only naturalists, but political writers, have
occupied themselves in tracing the history of this
mollusk. Sellius, a native of Dantzic, wrote a book of
three hundred and sixty pages, in which he cited
nearly two hundred authors, and quotes lines of Ovid
alluding to it. Messrs. Forbes and Hanley give an
imitation of the classic lines, adding, that they were
singularly applicable to the history of Sellius himself.

‘“‘ For as the ship by hidden shipworm spoil’d;
Or as the rock by briny wavelet mined;
. Or as the rusted sword by rust is soil’d ;
Or book unused, the tiny moths unb:nd;
So gnaw’d and nibbled, without hope of rest,
By cares unceasing, is my tortured breast.”

But the different species of teredo are not the only
miners, for we have about our shores and lying there
before our eyes, every day, numbers of little excavators,
not only in wood but in stone. We have several
species of pholades, but the one which is most common,
THE BEACH. 83

and is to be seen on all our rocky shores, is the prickly
stone-piercer, or stone pidduck (Pholas dactylus), the
dail commun of the French. The shells of these
piercers are all white, more or less thin and delicate,
and consist of two long valves, of an oval form, which



PHOLAS DACTYLUS.

are open at one end. Several small and curious
valves are placed near the hinge, and just inside each
of the large valves is a little piece shaped like a spoon.
The outside of the valves is marked with ridges of
prickles.

We cannot observe without wonder the caves made
by this little creature, in wood, chalk, limestone, or
other hard substances ; some species of pholas preferring
one, and some another; but all selecting this dark
hiding-place. Not that this shell-fish is quite a hermit.
Apparently, it likes the companionship of its kind, for
the holes often open into one another, like little gal-
leries, unlike the cavities made by the teredo, which
are quite separated, though sometimes by a partition
no thicker than a film. Rocks of chalk, or red sand-
stone, or lias, perforated all over by the common
species, often stand up from the water, at low tide,
and shells then may be seen sometimes five or six
inches in length, and one inch and a half broad, This
84 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

species lives in all the seas of Europe, and in France
is in great request as food, though with us it is only
used for bait. Boys may often be seen searching for
these animals for this purpose. They call them clams.
All the species might be eaten, and one large West
Indian kind is commonly sold in the markets of
Havannah.

The mode by which the pholades make these cavities
has never been satisfactorily explained ; but it seems
probable that they act with the notched edge of the
shell, as with a saw, as they have been observed to
exhibit a rotatory motion while boring. The animal,
too, has, like many of the inhabitants of the sea, small
cilia (so called, because resembling an eyelash), and
these are used for creating currents in the water
around them, which may aid in clearing away the
already loosened particles. Some writers think that
they are aided by a solvent, but as Messrs. Forbes and
Hanley can find no secretion of this kind, they re-
mark, that if the mollusk is assisted by any chemical
action, it must be by the carbonic acid gas set free
during the process of respiration. It is remarkable
that our common snail (Helix nemorosa) has been
known to bore similar cavities in masses of carboniferous
limestone. Some other species of marine sbell-fish
also make the rocks look like honeycomb by their
labours. Such are some of the gastrochzena; but
they are less frequent than the pholades ; and such also
are the saxicavee, some of which, as the rough saxicava
(Saxicava rugosa), are abundant on some parts of the
coast. The shells of these species are not so well
adapted for rasping as those of the stone-piercers, and
both these animals and the land snails are thought
to effect their purpose by means of a weak secretion of
acid.

The stone-piercers are remarkably phosphorescent,
especially when fresh, though some remains of the
luminous property are exhibited, even when dried, and
it may be revived by the application of water. A
THE BEACH. 85

solution of sea water always increases its power, while
brandy immediately extinguishes the light. This is
also slightly decreased by sal ammoniac, and entirely
destroyed by acid. The luminous water becomes more
vivid when poured upon fresh calcined gypsum, rock
crystal, or sugar. Milk may be rendered phospho-
rescent by the pholas; but if mixed with sulphuric
acid, it loses its light, acquiring it anew if oil of tartar
be applied. Coloured substances are differently and
actively affected by it. Thus, white appears to receive
and emit the greatest quantity, while yellow and green
doso ina less degree ; red emits a very faint light, and
violet still less. One single pholas will render seven
ounces of milk so beautifully luminous, that all around
is clearly to be seen by its light. If the milk is ex-
cluded from the air, the light disappears, reviving again
on exposure to the atmosphere ; and in the exhausted
receiver of an air-pump the animal loses its light
altogether.

The rocks have their cavities made by mollusks, and
their surface, on the other hand, is often roughened by
the adherence of other tribes. Sometimes one of these
well-pierced rocks has almost every unbroken portion
crowded with barnacles. The sessile barnacle or ba-
lanus, of which there are many kinds, is known to every
one on the shore, for it encrusts our piers as with a
stony covering, crowds on the oyster shells, the scallops,
the rocks, the drift wood, and stones, either. in the sea
or just out of it, often encrusting vessels, especially
about the helm. This is commonly called the sea
acorn, and the shell is composed of several pieces, alto-
gether forming a cone. Our common specimens are
small, but sometimes we find this an inch long. The
other kind of barnacle is not so frequent, though often
covering masses of wood which the storm brings.
It is called the stalked or duck barnacle (Pentelasmis
anatifera), and its shell of five pieces is at the end of a
long stalk of a reddish colour. The shell itself is
very pretty and clear, with a bluish tint. These bar-

I
86 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

nacles are often seen in clusters, not only on floating
wood, but also on the keels of ships. In China, a deli-
cious dish is made of these shell-fish, which in boiling,
turn from red to white. They are described as resem-
bling the lobster in
yer” flavour. The ani-
/ mals which make
/? these shells are very
y: // beautifully formed,
/ and have arms like
little feathers, which
they put out be-
tween the valves of
their shells when
they catch their
food. No one, to
look at any of these
barnacles, could ima-
gine that they were
once active creatures,
swimming vigorously
and freely about in
the waters, instead
of being fixed to wood
or stone. But in
their first period of
existence, they were
4 a covered only with a
i thin crust, and had
limbs and tails which
adapted them for
making their way in the watery world, in which they
were for a period to find their residence.

The shells which we have hitherto described are,
though beautifully formed, almost colourless ; but we
know that shells are often as gaily tinted as the most
glowing flowers, and much do we prize many which
are gathered from far off seas. Shells are secreted by
the mollusks which dwell within them. The little

NS

LN
\ me }

DD

Hu TY
ye y

Wy

mn

SSS

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»



THE BARNACLE.
THE BEACH. 87

animal has, when first hatched, some small beginning of
a shell, quite colourless and simple, which, in the course
of time, it moulds into the shape which all its species
make, and adorns with brilliance like to theirs. The shell
is formed upon a basis of membrane, which, when by a
chemical process it is exposed to view, shows itself to
be either a network of cells, or a series of wrinkled
layers. This membrane is scarcely thicker than such
as the spider would weave ; but it is consolidated by a
mixture of carbonate of lime, which the mollusk secretes
from its food, and which, mingled with a living gelatine,
exudes from the glands of the skin. Doubtless, its life
is pleasantly employed in making this little cell, and
adorning it with pink, or green, or purple, or any other
brilliant tint, or with the various shades of fawn or
brown, which seem those most usually preferred by the
little painter.

Shells, in an early or rude state of society, have
various uses of which, in our age and country, we
know little. We make from them some beautiful gems
of art, and the shell has long formed the substitute for
the hard, flinty stones of which the cameos were formed
by the ancients. Shells are selected which afford the
necessary distinction of colour, and which, while they
are soft enough to be worked with ease, have yet suf-
ficient hardness to resist wear. The shells usually em-
ployed are univalves ; and the bull’s mouth, the black
helmet, the horned helmet, and the queen’s conch,
afford the material in greatest perfection. About twenty
years since, an Italian commenced the manufacture of
these cameos in Paris, and now about three hundred
persons are employed in that city in cutting them. Mr.
Gray, who read to the Society of Arts a paper detailing
the history of the manufacture of cameos, states,—“ The
number of shells used annually thirty years ago, was
about three hundred, the whole of which were sent from
England; the value of each shell in Rome being thirty
shillings.” He adds the prices of various shells used in
1847 in Paris, and observes,—“ The average value of the
88 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

large cameos made there is about six francs each, giving
a sterling value of 32,0004. ; and the value of the small
cameos is about 8,000/—giving a total value of the
cameos produced in Paris for that year of 40,0007. 5
while in England not more than six persons are em-
ployed in this trade.”

Various ornaments and beautiful pieces ofsinlaid work
are made of the nacre, or mother-of-pearl ; and several
bivalve shells furnish us with the pearl for feminineattire.
Some large pearls have been procured from British
species, but no shell of our land yields any to be com-
pared to the oriental pearls, or to that large one called
the globe of light, which is found in the avicula of the
Pacific Ocean.

But in many an island of the distant seas, dishes,
drinking-cups, spoons, knives, razors, and fishing-hooks,
are all furnished by the waters which lave their shores ;
and the very instruments of music are made of the sea-
shell. It has indeed a music of a softer nature for us—
a music which reminds us of rolling waters, and which
tempts us to lay our ear to its cavity, that we may listen
to its sounds.

«« Pleased it remembers its august abode,
And murmurs as the ocean murmurs there.”

But little like to this plaintive tone 1s the loud, sonorous
voice which the shell is made to echo by the savage, or
to the terrible war-cry which sometimes is uttered
through its spiral coils. That old writer, Pietro Martire,
is quoted by Southey as thus describing a custom of the
native Americans :— The doors of their houses and
chambers were full of diverse kindes of shells, hanging
loose by small cordes, that being shaken by the wind
they make a certaine rattelling, and also a whistling
noise, by gathering the winde in their holowe places ;
for herein they have a great delight, and impute this for
a goodly ornament.” In “ Madoc,” the poet describes
a Festival of the Dead, in which he refers to this
practice :-—
THE BEACH. 89

‘‘ Not a sound is heard,
But of the crackling brand, or mouldering fire,
Or when, amid yon pendent string of shells,
The slow wind makes a shrill and feeble sound,
A sound of sorrow to the mind attuned
By sights of woe.”

The negro girl yet decks herself in the nose-jewel and
earring made of the shell ; and so beautifully do some
tribes form their shells into wreaths and bracelets, that
the European traveller looks on them with admiration.
“ Some years ago,” says a writer in the “ Magazine of
Natural History,” “I saw in the museum of Mr. Bullock
a very magnificent piece of dress of this kind. It was
the chief mourning dress of ceremony at the funerals of
Otaheite. The part worn over the face was made of large
plates of mother-of-pearl shell, fastened together with
fibres of the cocoa-nut ; and the elaborate drapery
stretched across the breast was composed of several
thousands of pieces of mother-of-pearl, each separately
drilled and fastened together, in a manner that would be
found difficult for a European artist to copy.” Neck-
laces and other ornaments, made of shells, are also
preserved in the British Museum.

The inner layers of some large flat shells are polished
and used, as glass is for windows, in China and India ; the
flat shells of various species are used to skim milk ; and in
Zetland an elegant lamp is made of the spindle-shell
(Fusus antiquorus), hung horizontally, the cavity being
filled with oil, and the canal serving as a place for the
wick.

Shells are found to form an excellent manure for the
land, and are, even in our country, sometimes used for
this purpose ; and in China, India, and Africa, where
there is no stone for the lime burner, shells are used in-
stead. So pure is the lime procured from them, that
even the ladies in India, who are accustomed to chew
the leaf of the betel and the nut of the areka, commonly
mingle this with them to improve their pungent flavour.

But important as are some of these uses of shells, yet
they are not to be compared to the service which they

I 3
90 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

render in forming extensive portions of land. Chalk,
marl, and limestone are composed of marine relics, in
which shells largely mingle ; and millions and millions,
far beyond our computation, must have gone to make
up the substance of a single cliff. The mollusks die,
and the wave comes, with its broad sweep, and rolls
onward the empty shells, and dashing them against
pieces of rock, or projections of soil, reduces them to
fragments, which gradually become more crushed and
broken as the work is repeated. Then these masses are
drawn along in the direction of currents, and driven in
accumulated heaps along the shores. The strata which
result from this action of the waves are mainly composed
of broken shells, of which the asperities have been rounded
‘nto smoothness. It is also a circumstance worthy of
remark, that in strata of this character the fragments are
usually deposited according to the law of specific gravity,
and that they are scarcely ever mingled with mud or other
foreign matters, such shells as remain unbroken being
filled with shelly sand. Many instances of this increase
of land are to be seen on our coast. Such are the de-
positions, which being in the course of long years
pressed down by superior strata, and having in them-
selves a tendency to crystallize, become more and more
compact, and, finally hardening into solid rocks, leave
fow traces of their origin visible to the naked eye.

But we must return to our account of some of the
shells which the wanderer by the sea may be likely to
find there. Several species belonging to the gaper
tribe are common. ‘They are oblong shells, and some-
what rude in appearance, always more or less gaping
very widely at the two extremities ; both the shell and the
animal within are often covered with a coarse, wrinkled,
thin skin. The species all bury themselves in sand,
mud, or gravel. They have long siphons or tubes, and
when buried they remain in an erect position under
the mud, so that we may discover their retreats by
holes which correspond with the extremities of their
tubes.
THE BEACH. | 91

The truncated mya (Mya truncata) is a very plen-
tiful and widely opened shell, in the wet sand of our
coast. -In Zetland, it is boiled and eaten, and it is
there called smurslin, and several of the species are
good for food. It is abundant on the coast of New-
foundland, and said to be the favourite food of the
codfish.

Some shells which are deemed very rare by natu-
ralists, who seek for them on shores only, are very
common species in the deeper part of the sea. This is
the case with the triangular shell of the gibbous tellina
(Tellina gibba), which is so extremely prevalent as to
be a great annoyance to the habitual dredger. Other
species, which we do not often find on the land, are
brought to us in the stomachs of cods, halibuts, and
other fishes. “The haddock,” says professor Forbes,
“is a great conchologist : in his travels through the
countries of the mermaids, he picks up many curiosities
in the shell way. Not a few rare species have been
discovered by him, and the ungrateful zoologist too
frequently describes novelties without an allusion to the
original discoverer. As haddocks are not in the habit
of writing pamphlets or papers, the fraud remains un-
discovered, greatly to the detriment of science, for had
the describer stated to whom he was indebted for his
specimen, we could form some idea of its habitat and
history.” The cod is also said by this writer to be a great
naturalist in this way, though, apparently, he is not so
much devoted to the study of the mollusca, as to the
‘nhabitant of the sea-eggs, and to the star-fishes.

The razor fishes, though but a small tribe, are im-
portant bivalve mollusks, and are remarkable for their
long narrow shells, which might remind us of a pod
or seed-vessel of a plant. They are longer and narrower
than any other shells, and they and their inmates were
well known to Aristotle, who describes the habits of
one of the species. He says that it buries itself in the
sand at the distance of about two feet; that it does not
leave its hole, though it can sink or raise itself at will ;
92 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

that it is alarmed by noise, and when frightened, buries
itself very rapidly.

This description agrees with the habits of our British
species, two of which are very common, The pod razor
shell (Solen siligua) is a long shell covered with a thin
skin of a light brown or olive green, which when rubbed
off shows the shell beneath to be white, with a few bands
of dull purple. It is the largest British species, varying
in length from three or four to eight inches. The
animal is good for food, and much sought for on various
parts of our coast, but particularly prized in Ireland.
Women and children take many razor fishes by a very
simple process. They have a long wire sharpened at
one end, and bent. Searching in the sand for the holes
made by these animals, they put down the wire and
easily force them out of their hiding-places. The



SOLEN ENSIS.
THE BEACH. 93

French call the solen, manche de couteau, and it is,
indeed, very similar to a knife-handle. On the coast of
Normandy some of the species are very abundant.

The sabre razor shell (Solen ensis) is as plentiful
on sandy places as the other species, and very similar
to it, though more slender. It also inhabits deeper
water.

Much more beautiful in colour are the shells of the
tellen tribe, some of which are strewn upon all our
sandy shores, and occur with the common kinds of
scallop in all the baskets carried about beaches for sale.
They are mostly thin, delicate shells, beautifully sculp-
tured and painted with most rich and glowing hues,
though the little creature which makes the gay dwelling-
place is pale and colourless. The genus psammobia.
belongs to this tribe, and it contains some very ele-
gant and beautiful shells. One of these (Psammobia
vespertina), which, though rather a local species, is
abundant in some parts of the coast, is so beautifully
rayed with rosy hues, that it well deserves its name of
the setting sun. It sometimes is collected in great
numbers on our sands after stormy weather, and it
dwells near the shore, burrowing at a slight depth
beneath the sands at low water.



PSAMMOBIA FERROENSIS.

The faroe psammobia (Psammobia ferroensis) is
well known all round our shores, and is of an oblong
figure, tolerably strong and thick, with the valves
somewhat unequal. When fresh from the water it is
usually covered with a thin olive-coloured skin, and
94 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

when this is rubbed away we find it rayed with white
and delicate rose colour, or marbled with pink on a
whitish ground. Indented lines run closely from the
hinge to the edge, which are crossed by others ex-
tending the whole breadth of the shell, and the edges
are slightly notched. The highly polished interior is
white or purplish lilac.

The tellens are very numerous, not less than two
hundred species of the genus tellina alone being enu-
merated. They are to be found in every sea, though
abounding most in the tropics; and some or other of
them are, like our British kinds, among the most
frequent shells strewn by storms upon shores. The
tropic species are highly coloured and beautiful in form,
and much valued as chimney ornaments. The animals
all burrow in the sand.



TELLiNA TENUIS AND ROCK LIMPETS,.

Shells are so difficult to describe that we cannot
enumerate many species, but one of the very common-
est bivalves all round our coast must be mentioned.
This is the pretty thin tellina (7ellina tenuis), a sub-
oval shell, with a smooth surface, which differs in hue
THE BEACH. 95

in different individuals, being sometimes of pale crim-
son or delicate rose tint, at others, of orange or pale
yellow, or yellowish white. It is often shaded with
darker zones of the same colour, but is never marbled
nor spotted. It is about one inch in length, and five-
eighths of an inch in breadth. The pearly white thin
shell is sometimes iridescent, though now and then
stained with orange or rose colour.

An oval-shaped bivalve shell, called the white mactra
(Mactra alba), is very abundant in most sandy and
muddy places round our coast. It is very thin and



GROUP OF MACTRA,.

brittle, but not clear ; and its white surface is covered
with a thin glossy yellowish skin. It is about two-
thirds of an inch in size. Several other species of mac-
tra are cast ashore by the waves on our sandy margins,
and the solid mactra (Mactra solida) is a thick shell,
covered with an olive-green skin. It is sometimes
deeply furrowed or veined with grey or slate colour,
and sometimes of a dull yellow. A very similar species
96 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

is common on the shores of the isle of Arran, and is
there collected as food for pigs.

The donax is another large family, whose strong
shells are well known and abundant, and scarcely any
bivalve is more general on our shores than the trun-
cated donax (Donax trunculus). It is oblong wedge-
shaped, firm and glossy, one inch and a quarter broad,
and marked both from the hinge to the edge and from
side to side with close
deep lines, banded
_ with purple, and hav-
ing small notches at
the edge. The animal
within is usually of a
dull white, but is
sometimes of pale
orange colour, and the
form of its shell is

DONAX TRUNCULUS. admirably adapted to
its habit of burrowing in the sand. The name of donax
is from the Greek word for reed, and a flying reed is
used by the ancients for an arrow. ‘The shape of the
shell is very similar to the head of a javelin, being thick
at one end, and gradually tapering towards the other.

The truncated mya abounds on the sand, and its
shell looks as if one end had been cut off; and several
species of lutraria are common shells. One of the
many species of Venus, the striated species (Venus
striatula), is more easily described, and is found every-
where on sandy tracts. It is triangular and _ heart-
shaped, often painted with delicate zigzag lines of a
brown or purplish brown colour, nearly an inch and
a half in length. Several of the species are common,
and some are more gaily painted than this, and are
justly admired for their brilliancy and smoothness of
surface. It was the beauty of some of these which led
to the fable that Venus selected one of these shells for
her car, and they are used everywhere as decorations.
The North American Indians cover their dancing shoes


THE BEACH. 97

with them, and their movements produce a tinkling
sound. There are one hundred and fifteen species of
Venus enumerated.

The island cyprina (Cyprina islandica) may claim
a passing notice as being one of our largest native shells.
It is not rare on any part of our coast, though essentially
it is anorthern species. It has been known to measure
four inches and a half in breadth, and more than an
inch in length, but its ordinary size is somewhat less.

A singular and handsome shell is the heart isocardia
([socardia cordata). Its name would enable the reader
to identify it, for it is truly heart-shaped. It is of a
dull white colour, marked with fawn or dingy red.
The animal within appears to be insensible either to
sound or light. It fixes itself, by means of its foot, on
the margin of a sand-bank, at too great a distance to
be disturbed by storms. “There,” says the Rev. Jas.
Bulwer, “the isocardia of our Irish Sea patiently col-
lects its food from the surrounding element, assisted in
its choice by the current which it is capable of creating
by the alternate opening and closing of its valves.” It
is chiefly obtained off the Dublin coast.

The last named shell is better known to those who
are in the habit of examining collections of shells, than
to'the wanderer by the sea-side. Not so the common
cockle (Cardium edule), whose strong ribbed shell is
familiar to everybody, being found all round our coast
wherever there is any sand. The shell is still used in
the Hebrides for skimming milk; and in the feast of
shells in the days of Fingal, that of the cockle was,
according to Macpherson, the heroes’ cup of festivity,
being known by the name of sliga-crechin, or the drink-
ing shell. Large heaps of the empty shells, strewed by
the doors of cottages, often serve to show howagreeable a
food to the labourer are the small globose animals
which once occupied them ; and the cockle is certainly
one of the best flavoured of the mollusca. Though we
cannot agree with those who prefer it to the oyster, as
some do, yet it is no despicable food when roasted or

K
98 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

boiled, serving also for a good fish sauce when prepared
with butter. Many cockles are gathered on the sandy
shore by children, and eaten raw, and in some places
numbers of them are pickled. During a great failure
of the potato crop in the Orkney Islands, many of the
poorer people subsisted almost entirely on these shell-
fish. To the poor of other lands they are more valu-
able than to us. The people of Tierra dei Fuego live
almost entirely on sea eggs and various mollusks ; and
captain Cook remarked in Australia, that wherever
marks of fire were observed, there lay around the empty
shells of oysters, cockles, mussels, and various bivalves,
sometimes in numbers almost incredible.

There is another frequent species of this genus, the
spiny cockle (Cardiwm echinatum), the shell of which
is larger than the common kind, and is even firmer
and more thickly ribbed, the ribs being covered with
numerous short spines. It is a very handsome shell,
varying from whitish to shades of reddish, or yellowish
brown. The animal differs too from the common
cockle in having some bright tints about it. It is of
yellowish white, and some of its minute thread-like
feelers are white with yellow points at their bases ; and
some are dotted with red; while the foot is of pale
rose colour, and deeper red. The foot, in this and other
mollusca, is a fleshy piece somewhat resembling that
part of the human frame. In the common cockle it is
remarkably strong, and the animal can, by its means,
emerge from the sand, re-enter it, raise itself briskly,
or advance or go back as it pleases. If desirous of sink-
ing in the mud or sand, it can lengthen this foot and
hook itself to any object by its extremity ; it can then
shorten it and bring the shell to its point, cutting the
sand with the edge. It can curve it into an arch when
it chooses to spring, then quickly straighten it again,
and thus raise the whole body with much agility.
When above the soil, a similar manceuvre enables it to
jump to a considerable height.

There are many edible species of cockle. Mr. Couch,
THE BEACH. 99

speaking of the large, solid, coarsely wrinkled shell, called
at Torbay the red nose (Cardiwm rusticum), says that
they are much eaten in that neighbourhood. They may
be seen at spring tides with their fringed tubes appear-
ing just above the surface. The people gather them in
baskets and panniers, and after placing them in cold
spring water for a few hours, they fry the mollusks ina
batter made of crumbs of bread, “ producing,” as this
naturalist observes, “a wholesome and savoury dish.”
The loose valves lie in considerable numbers on the
Cornish shore, but the species is rather a local than a
general one.

The common mussel (Jytilus edulis) is universally
diffused round our shores at the edge of low water, or a
little beyond it, and often cast up by the waves. In
many lands, as well as in ours, these shell-fish form a
valuable supply of food. We need not describe at any
length the dark opaque bluish shell, covered with its
thin skin of yellowish brown, or the sand-coloured ani-
mal within, nor tell how the mussel moors itself by
silken cables to the rock, or rides at anchor among the
shallows. The valves of the mussel-shell fit very closely
together, and are opened or closed by means of a red-
dish coloured fleshy protuberance. This is divided into
two lobes, and when the animal chooses to remove from
its station, it gradually opens the shell, and pushing
forth this fleshy foot, it makes a furrow in the sand,
and draws its shell in this in a vertical posture.
Wholesome as the mussel is in general, yet, as is well
known, it seems greatly to disagree with some, causing
eruptions on the skin, swelling of the limbs, difficulty
of swallowing, delirium, and even death, People thus
injured by them, are at sea-coast towns said to be mus-
selled ; but all inquiry has failed to discover the cause
of their occasional poisonous influence. Neither che-
mist nor anatomist can account for it, and all theories
assigning it to the season of the year, the fresh or stale
condition of the fish, to its having fed on poisonous
matters, have in some instance or other proved falla-
100 A BOOK FOR THE S8BA-SIDE.

cious, and have left the quesion as they found it.
Fortunately, however, illness arising from this cause is
very rare, and so valuable a source of food are the mus-
sels, that small portions of the sea-shore between the
tide-marks are, in some places, surrounded by stones,
and called mussel gardens, and carefully watched by
their proprietors. The fishermen of Northumberland
were seen by Mr. Alder employed in piling up stones
among the rocks to secure their mussels.

Professor Forbes and Mr. Hanley quote, in the valu-
able “ History of the British Mollusca,” a communica-
tion made by Dr. Knapp of Edinburgh, as to the
number of these shell-fish consumed in the neighbour-
hood of that city. “As an article of food,” he says,
“there cannot be used fewer than ten bushels per week
in Edinburgh and Leith, say for forty weeks in the
year ; in all, 400 bushels annually. Each bushel of
mussels, when shelled and freed from all refuse, will
probably contain from three to four pints of the
animals, or about 900 or 1,000, according to their size.
Taking the latter number, there will be consumed in
Edinburgh and Leith about 400,000 mussels.” This,
he adds, is a mere trifle compared with the enormous
numbers used in bait for all kinds of fish. At New-
haven alone, he calculates that the annual consumption
of mussels for this purpose only may be reckoned at
4,320,000; and as there are nearly as many used at
Musselburgh, and various other places in the Frith of
Forth, he estimates the annual use of them by the
fishermen of that district, for bait only, to be thirty or
forty millions in each year.

The larger shell of the horse mussel (J/ytilus modiola)
may be picked up at various parts of our coast, and in
some places this shell-fish is collected for food. All
the mussel tribe can spin a strong and silky hair, called
byssus, by which they attach themselves to rocks so
securely that winds and waves cannot rend them from
their moorings. The animal of that common shell, the
discordant crenella (Crenella discors), a species nearly
THE BEACH. 101

allied to the mussel, fastens itself by this silk to the
roots of the tangle, or the stems of corallines. This
mollusk can move with much quickness when it pleases,
but Mr. Alder remarks that it prefers a stationary life,
and so forms for itself a kind of little nest or case, by
fastening together with its silky cables a number of the
smal] sea-weeds and corallines. Here it lies waiting for
such food as the water shall. convey to it. This shell,
which is found at all parts of our coast, is sometimes
to be seen enveloped in nests formed of little pieces of
the hornwrack and small masses of sand glued together
and wound about by these threads.

A considerable number of bivalves are furnished with
this bundle of threads, more or less loosely connected,
and issuing from the base of the foot of their inmate.
This foot is used to direct the threads, and to glue the



PINNE.

extremities to the point of attachment. The largest

two-valved shell that our British seas produce, the

pectinated pinna (Pinna pectinata), which is sometimes

twelve inches long, has a byssus of this kind, consisting

of numerous silky fibres of a dark purplish colour, and

often two or three inches in length. ‘These silky tufts
K 3
102 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

are called by the Sicilian fishermen /ana penna, and the
inhabitants both of Sicily and Calabria prepare the
byssus for making a kind of stuff; but this is expen-
sive, and consequently the manufacture has gradually
dwindled. The threads, when broken away, are sold
to women, who, after washing them in soap and water,
drying them in the shade, and combing them, card the
silk, which by means of these processes is reduced to
about three ounces. The fabric when manufactured is
of a beautiful yellowish brown, resembling bronze, and
it never loses its colour. A manufactory of this stuff
has long been established at Palermo, and there gloves,
stockings, caps, and waistcoats are made of it. In 1754,
a pair of stockings, made of the pinna silk, was pre-
sented to pope Boniface xv., which were so fine that
they were enclosed in a case no larger than a snuff-
box.

The shell of the pinna is thin and horn-coloured,
and is something like a fan in shape. Beds of these
sometimes entangle the line of the Cornish fishermen,
and they can only be removed by forcibly tearing the
byssus, or by breaking up the ground to which they
are fastened; in the latter case a large number of the
shell-fish are brought away. The animal is eaten, but
it needs many hours stewing before it is digestible.
The ancients considered it to be good food.

The two valves of the shell cannot be closed by art,
but the animal can close it; and Mr. Couch, who has
long observed the pinna, is convinced that it is by this
means that it secures its food. The valves stand
upright, with the wider end about an inch above the
surface, and the lower part attached by the moorings.
In its ordinary position, the upper end of the shell is
open about two inches, exposing the animal within,
which seems thus to offer itself a prey to the first
creature that may choose to devour it. “Some fish,”
observes the naturalist referred to, “is thus tempted to
enter it, but the first touch within is a signal for its
destruction. The shell closes, not only at the side
THE BEACH. 103

but the top, the latter action being effected by the
separation of the pointed ends, and the captive is
either crushed to death or soon perishes from the close
confinement.” this shell with the pinna. The friendship between
them will be described in a future page.

But there is an interesting little animal enclosed in
a white shell, which works unseen beneath the waters,
and constructs so beautiful a nest, that not even a
goldfinch could plan a dwelling better fitted for peace
or comfort. Mr. Landsborough, in his “ Excursion to
Arran,” describes how he found the lima tenera in
Lamlash bay, snug in its nest ; and the description is
so graphic, that long as it is we must quote it. “The
coral nest is curiously constructed, and remarkably well
fitted to be a safe residence for this beautiful animal.
The fragile shell does not nearly cover the mollusk, the
most delicate part of it, a beautiful orange fringe-work,
being altogether out of the shell. Had it no extra
protection, the half-exposed animal would be a tempting
mouthful, quite a bonne bouche to some prowling had-
dock or whiting; but He who tempers the wind to the
shorn lamb teaches this little creature, which he has so
elegantly formed, curious arts of self-preservation. It
is not content with hiding itself among the loose coral,
for the first rude wind might lay it naked and bare—
‘+t becomes a marine mason, and builds a place of
abode; it chooses to dwell in a coral grotto, but in
constructing this grotto, it shows that it is not only a
mason, but a rope spinner, and a tapestry weaver, and
a plasterer. Were it merely a mason, it would be no
easy matter to cause the polymorphous coral to cohere.
Cordage then is necessary to bind together the angular
fragments of the coral, and this cordage it spins; but
its mode of spinning is one of the secrets of the deep.
Somehow or another, though it has no hands, it con-
trives to intettwine this yarn which it forms among
the numerous bits of coral, so as firmly to bind a
handful of it together. Externally this habitation is
104 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

rough, and therefore the better fitted to elude or to
ward off enemies; but though rough externally, all is
smooth and lubricous within, for the yarn is woven
into a lining of tapestry, and the interstices are filled
up with fine slime, so that it is smooth plaster work,
not unlike the patent intonaco of my ingenious friend
Mrs. Marshall. Not being intended, however, like her
valuable composition, to keep out damp, or to bid
defiance to fire, while the intertwining cordage keeps
the coral walls together, the fine tapestry, mixed with
smooth and soft plaster, covers all asperities, so that
there is nothing to injure the delicate fringed appen- _
dages of the enclosed animal. Tapestry, as a covering
for walls, was once the proud and costly ornament of
regal apartments; but ancient though the art was, I
shall answer for it that our little marine artisan took
no hint from the Gobelins, or from the workmen of
Arras, or from those of Athens, or even from the
earliest tapissiers of the east. I doubt not that from
the time that Noah’s ark rested on the mountain of
Ararat, the forefathers of these beautiful little limas
have been constructing their coral cottages, and lining
them with well wrought tapestry in the peaceful bay of
Lamlash.

“ When the lima is taken out of its nest, and put
into a jar of sea-water, it is one of the most beautiful
marine animals you can look upon. The shell is ele-
gant, the animal within the shell is beautiful, and the
orange fringe-work outside of the shell is highly orna-
mental. Instead of being sluggish, it swims about with
great vigour. Its mode of Swimming is the same as
that ofthe scallop ; it opens its valves, and suddenly
shutting them, expels the water, so that it is impelled
onwards or upwards, and when the impulse thus given
is spent, it repeats the operation, and thus moves for-
wards by a succession of jerks or jumps. When moving
through the water in this way, the reddish fringe-work
is like the tail of a fiery comet. The filaments of the
fringe may, for anything we know, be useful in catching
THE BEACH. 105

their prey ; they are very easily broken off, and it is
remarkable that they seem to live for many hours after
they are detached, twisting themselves about in a ver-
micular manner.”

Thus beneath the waters the little mollusks work in
silence, building the house with neatness and elegance.
It is comparatively seldom that the structure meets the
eye of man, but God has scattered loveliness every-
where, and the traces of his pencil have wrought rain-
bow tints even in the lowest deeps.

Some of the commonest shells on our coast, and
certainly some of the most beautiful, are the scallops.
Everybody knows them, coloured as they are with
their rich hues of brown and orange. The speckled
scallop (Pecten varius) is so frequent that we can never
walk far over the sand without seeing it. Its tints
vary in different individuals, but they are most fre-
quently of reddish-brown, or deeper orange hue, the
older specimens mottled with white; the valves are
slightly convex, rather more than two inches long, and
marked with about twelve ribs.

The upper valve of the scallops is generally more
vivid than the lower one, as is the case with many bi-
valve shells, which permanently keep the lower valve
downwards. Light acts much in influencing colour, as
we see in our own seas, where all the objects are less
brilliant in tint than in the seas of tropical climates.
So, too, shells which are enveloped in sponges, or which
burrow in the sand, or even live constantly in shady
places, are much paler than those which cover animals
that crawl about, and are exposed to light.

Every sea teems with some of the numerous species
of scallop. One of the most highly-coloured of our own
common kinds is the tiger scallop (Pecten tigrinus),
which is streaked with every variety of markings, of
brownish-red, lilac, chocolate, yellow, and white. It is
a favourite food of flat-fish. The lid-scallop (Pecten
opercularis), which is so abundant among the oyster-
beds, is a handsome shell, well known for its uses In
106 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

making pincushions and watch-pockets, and the mollusk
is often cooked in its shell with bread crumbs, or fried
for the table. So too is the larger shell-fish of the
great scallop (Pecten maximus), while its shell serves
the fisherman also for a lamp. The pilgrims who in
former days travelled to the Holy Land, and

“ Fix'd the scallop in their hats before,”

as a sign of their pilgrimage, appear to have used this
species, atid they found it lying in plenty by the shores
of Palestine.

The French call the shells peignes, but in Scotland
they are often called
clams. The Rey. David
Landsborough, describing
a number of beautiful
corallines and sea-weeds
which grew on some which
he dredged up from the
bay of Lamlash, laments
that the scallops have dis-
appeared from that place.
“The fishermen,” he says,
“finding that they made
excellent bait, had,in their
greed, I suppose, exhausted the bed.”

The same author describes the scallops as dancing so
merrily, that when he first saw them he thought they
were young fishes ; this they did by opening and shut-
ting their valves.

Who that listens to the old proverb, “ As dull as an
oyster,” would imagine that the oyster dances in the
waters too? Yet so it is; the young ones dart about with
the greatest rapidity, and have admirable powers of
swimming quickly, though,as they increase in years, they
seem to do so in sedateness. The oyster, like the
goose, is a misjudged animal ; so far from being stupid,
it shows unusual resources in emergencies. When

i,
Jace ry
eet e)

as
Nes ;
Sa



PECTEN OPERCULARIS.
THE BEAOH. 107

choosing to remove from its place, it can raise itself
up on one side, so as to stand nearly upright,
and thus, awaiting the flowing of the tide, opens
the shell, and is turned over by the force of the
water. The very slightest touch will cause it to close
its valves. When the proboscis of some whelk or other
enemy is attempting to make a hole in its shell, in
order to suck the animal forth, it can dart at it a
quantity of water which it has in reserve between its
valves. Exposed as it is to insects, which pierce its
shell in all directions, it will sometimes thicken its
substance by an addition of nacre, and the pearl which
we prize so much is but the plug which the oyster has
ingeniously wrought to stop the cavity made by the
intruder. ‘True it is, that the poor shell-fish has more
enemies sometimes than even his skill can enable him
to resist ; and besides being pierced all over by living
creatures, a parasitic sponge (Cliona perforata) makes
holes there too. Little forests of corallines spring up
on the surface, and barnacles, and dead men’s fingers,
and sea-weeds, ornamental as they are, yet encumber
the dwelling. The very inside of the cell of our oyster
is not free from the incursions of animalcules and
worms, the former of which are phosphorescent, and
are, perhaps, after all, too small to injure, and may,
indeed, rather serve as a store of food.

Our “native oyster” (Ostrea edulis), reared in an
artificial bed, is a well-known animal. But those who
watch the fishing-boats which are about our coasts are
more familiar with that most handsome variety called
the rock-oyster, the flavour of which is, however, infe-
rior to that of the native, though the animal is larger. |
The rough layers of the shell are usually crowded.
with marine weeds, and other stores from the sea.
This, which is usually about four inches wide, is also
dashed and streaked with lilac or reddish purple.

Most of our coasts produce oysters naturally, and
nowhere do they attain so much perfection as in the
108 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

British seas. The ancient Romans gathered them from
our shores, and placed them in artificial beds in the
Lucrine Lake. The oyster-shells still lie in abundance
about the shores of Richborough in Kent, the Ritu-
pe of the Romans, and the spot whence they fetched
their best kind. To be a good judge of the flavour of
an oyster was the characteristic of the Roman epicure,
and Messrs. Forbes and Hanley thus render the well-
known passage of Juvenal on this subject :—

** Who at first bite each oyster’s birthplace knew;
Whether a Lucrine or Circzean he’d bitten,
Or one from Ritupinian deeps in Britain.”

The native and the rock-oyster are but varieties of the
same species, and the valuable supply of food yielded
by these abundant shell-fish is chiefly furnished by the
beds of Kent and Essex. The beds are made in rivers,
and some care is required in tending and replenishing
them from the sea, as well as in keeping the oysters
clear of the barnacles, sea-weeds, and even fishes, which
would encumber or molest them. The depth of bays is
sometimes somewhat lessened by the great numbers of
oysters. The refuse shells are useful for manure, and
when calcined are of some worth as absorbents. There
is a species of oyster so like a withered leaf, as to
elude, by this resemblance, the pursuit of birds of
prey.

The anomia, or pearly
oyster, as it is called, has a
. thin shell, with unequal

- valves, and is attached to
various bodies, shaping it-
selfupon them. ‘'T'wo kinds
are very commonly thrown
up by the waves on all
parts of the shore, often adhering either to the com-
mon oyster, or the large scallop, and when moulded on
the latter, becoming ribbed like it. The waved anomia



ANOMIA EPHIPPIiUM.
- THE BEACH. 109

(Anomia undulata), and the saddle anomia (Anomia
ephippium), are much alike, having green, purple,
violet, or yellow tints reflected on their changing sur-
faces. One of the valves is usually more flat than the
other, and has often a hole through the base, which was,
when in the sea, occupied by a shelly plug, that adhered
to one of the muscles of the animal, and passed through
the perforation.

There is a very singular mollusk, the three-spined
hyalea (Hyalea trispinosa), the minute frail shell of
which has been found on our shores, and may, per-
haps, have been often wafted there to be broken by the
wave that brings it. The description given of it by
Messrs. Forbes and Hanley is so graphic, that it is
better to quote it for the reader :—“ In warmer seas than
those which encircle our island, the surface of the water,
when the weather is calm, and the sun is shining,
glistens with glassy needles or shelly bubbles. These,
upon close examination, prove to belong to curious
mollusks, which, instead of creeping over submarine
rocks and weeds, or burying in the soft mud and sand
of the sea-bed, aspire to a gayer and more sportive life,
and play the part of Neptune’s bees and butterflies.
From our less congenial waves they are almost alto-
gether absent ; only a few stragglers, and these, with one
exception, of microscopic dimensions, have met even the
scrutinizing eyes of practised naturalists.”

Some very pretty little bivalves belonging to the ark
family, are so called because some of the true ark shells
are much like that curious boat, which has long been
figured as the home of the family who floated on the
waters of the deluge. That common shell, the silvery
ark (Arca nucleus), though an inhabitant of deep
waters, and abundant in dredges, is besides often found
in a broken condition on our shores. It is quite white,
but when fresh from the waters is covered with a thin
olive-coloured skin. In some places we might soon
gather a basketful of these little shells, as they are in
such great numbers. The different species chiefly lie

l.
110 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

among the crevices of rocks, and in the cavities of
other shells, fastening themselves to these objects by
means of their byssus.

But the tide is out, and we may wander among the
wet rocks, slippery with green sea-weeds, and peep into
the salt water rivulets, which are running in among
them. The rocks are so thickly covered with barnacles,
canoe-shells, and limpets, that they have escaped the
injuries of the stone-piercers ; as these could hardly find
an inch of surface unoccupied.

Large numbers of the grey canoe-shell (Chiton cine-
reus) are clinging close to the rocks, some of them of
an orange brown colour, some varieties nearly black,
and most of olive green marked with brown patches.
We turn up a spray of sea-weed, and there lie a number
of canoe-shells richly dressed in crimson, marked with
white; while altogether they so ornament the rock
that it looks as if decorated with mosaic work. The
animal within is, as we can easily see if we detach the
shell from the rock, of a dull flesh colour.

Several of these canoe-shells are common on our rocky
shores. They are oblong, composed of eight transverse
plates, so that the animal resembles the common wood-
louse in its powers of rolling up like a ball. It adheres,
not by any foot or disk, but by means of a clammy fluid
which it exudes from the under surface of its body.

The limpet, crowding these, holds itself so tightly by
another means. If we only give it warning of our in-
tent to take it, its removal becomes almost impossible.
The strong muscles of its foot enable it to cling thus,
while the cavity in which some of the shells are fixed,
is thought to be excavated by means of the action of the
carbonic acid gas which escapes in the process of respl-
ration. Wordsworth has described it :—

“ At distance view’d it seems to lie
On its rough bed so carelessly,
That ’t would an infant’s hand obey,
Stretch’d forth to seize it in its play ;
But let that infant’s hand draw near,
It shrinks with quick instinctive fear,
And clings as close as though the stone
It rests upon, and it, were one:
THE BEACH. 11]

And should the strongest arm endeavour
The limpet from the rock to sever,

*Tis seen its loved support to clasp

With such tenacity of grasp,

We wonder that such strength should dwell
In such a small and simple shell.”

The poet proceeds to draw from this the important les-
son, that we too should cling to Him who is called the
Rock of ages. Surely amidst the changes of time the
Christian may rejoice in the stability of the Saviour,
and turning from the weaknesses of his own heart, may
cling with firm confidence and joyful thanksgiving to
tiim who is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever ;
whom no clouds shall hide, no billow rend from him ;
but on whom the soul may rest either in life, or death,
or eternity.

The shell of our common limpet (Patella vulgata) is
nearly round and conical, and on account of its form
the Latins distinguished the animal by the suitable
name of patella, which was their term for a small deep
dish, used for the purposes of sacrifice. It is usually of
an olive or yellowish colour, but is never white. No
mollusk is more common than this, for no sooner is a
sea-wall reared, which is washed at high tide, than
thousands of limpets come to take possession of it.
Many of us have, in the days of childhood, made a
hearty luncheon of the somewhat tough shell-fish,
and needed no culinary art to deem them agreeable.
They are also eaten by the poor on sea-coast towns,
but their chief value as food is to the savage natives
of distant lands. In the north of Ireland, they are,
however, a common article of food, and the limpet-
gatherers at Larne, in Antrim, thirty in number, are
stated to have earned, in one season of four months, no
less than one hundred pounds sterling, by collecting
them. They are also eaten by birds, and much relished
by poultry ; while, like many other mollusks, they are
of great value as bait. Dr. Johnston, of Berwick,
calculates that there is an annual consumption of
11,880,000 limpets for this purpose; and in conse-
quence of this perpetual demand, the limpets of his
112 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

neighbourhood have so decreased in number, that
the employment of collecting them is now a tedious
work.

The limpet can, when it chooses, crawl over the rocks,
and its long riband-like tongue is provided with a rasp,
with which it probably tears the sea-weeds ; but when
it remains stationary, its food doubtless consists of the
microscopic animals present in every drop of water, and
which are swept into its very mouth. Another species
is called the horse-limpet, and is known to the Berwick
fishermen as the yarod. A beautiful little kind is also
common in the long leaf of the tangle, which is clear
and thin, of dark olive, rayed with brilliant blue. All
sea-weed gatherers know it, for it lives on this plant.
It is the pellucid limpet.

There is a shell found on most of our shores, though
not in great numbers, except on some parts of the
southern coast, which is called the fool’s-cap limpet, or
Torbay bonnet. It is the Pileopsis wngarica of the
conchologist, and it is shaped like a little cap of
liberty. Then there are key-hole limpets, so called
because of an oblong aperture at their summit, which
in some of the species is shaped like a keyhole. The
animal of the netted key-hole limpet is sometimes of a
creamy white colour ; but in other specimens, taken
from the surface of scallops, which were incrusted with
a crimson sponge, it has been found to be of a rich
orange approaching scarlet.

One or two tooth shells are common. The toothed
dentalium (Dentaliwm entalis) is especially so. It is
like a horn, slightly curved and hollow, of white or yel-
lowish colour, about an inch and a half long. The
fluted shell of one of the species is said to have sug-
gested the idea of the shaft of the Doric column.

Among the shells which we use as ornaments, scarcely
any, except the cowries, are more generally prized than
the top shells, which are brought from foreign seas.
Often of most elegant spiral form, somewhat resem-
bling the toy whence they take their name, they exhibit
THE BEACH. 113

the richest hues of pink and emerald and blue upon
their pearly surfaces. Our more soberly tinted species
cannot rival the foreign kinds, though :

some of the common specimens of the
muddy red trochus (Z'rochus ziziphy-
nus) are very pretty shells, sometimes
measuring an inch from the base to
the pointed summit, and marked with
wavy dashes of pinkish red, or dark
claret, or reddish flesh colour, on “UPPY RED TRocHUus.
a ground of reddish or bluish hue. A_ beautiful
creature is the mollusk inhabiting this shell, being of
a bright reddish brown, speckled at various parts with
other bright tints. All the trochus genus have eyes, like
the snail, placed on stalks ; and this common kind has
greenish blue eyes, with a black point in the centre.

Other species are common, but not easily described ;
but that small grey top-shell, of an ash colour, with
grey markings, is well known. It is sometimes called
the dog-periwinkle (Z'rochus cinerarius), and is very
abundant among the sea-weeds near the shore.

But the most beautiful of our native species is the
large top-shell (Zrochus majus), which is found all
round our island, and which is sometimes painted with
most vivid hues. The upper layers are frequently re-
moved, so as to show the mother-of-pearl beneath ; and
very pretty bracelets, brooches, and other ornaments,
are made of this material. Not inferior in brilliance to
the shell itself, is the animal which constructs it.
Bright orange, scarlet, straw colour, white, and purple,
are among the hues which adorn it; and it is besides a
blue-eyed beauty, its eyes being of most vivid azure.
The shell is varied with reddish and _ liver-coloured
tints, on a ground of dull white.

The magnificent cowries from the tropics, which so
often embellish drawing-rooms, have but a homely
representative in our seas ; our only native kinds being
small white-ribbed shells, found on all our sandy coasts,
and known to children as the pig cowries.

L 3


114 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

Among the most frequent shells of our shore is that
large rough covering of the common whelk (Buccinwm
undatum), often called by fishermen whelk-tingle, or
sting-winkle, which is frequently four inches long.
The Latin name is significant of the ancient use of some
species of this shell as a trumpet; though the word
apparently included all shells of the spiral form. A
large species of the shell is still in use in Italy, where’
the herdsmen employ it in making a number of loud
and somewhat musical sounds, by which they direct
their herds. “They are also common,” says Miss
Roberts, “in North Wales, where I have heard their
deep and hollow sounds, breaking on the silence of those
alpine districts, when used by the farmers in calling to
their labourers. Triton, Neptune’s trumpeter, is gene-
rally pictured with a shell of this description in his hand,
with which ancient poets fabled that he convened the
river deities around their monarch. It is wreathed like
those called sikanos, or sea-horn, common to India,
Africa, and the Mediterranean, and still used as trum-
pets for blowing alarms and giving signals.” Shells of
a similar kind are also applied to pastoral purposes in
Muscovy and Lithuania; and no sooner does the
morning sun redden on the hill or valley, than the
long sounding shelly trumpet of the herdsmen awakes
the echoes, and sheep, horses, mules, and goats, attend
to the well-known summons. Then the shepherd heads
his flock, and advancing into such pasturage as he
thinks best suited for them, he guides them on their
way : a further signal is given when he will lead them
to the river ; and another when they are to be taken
homeward. Who could observe the habit of the shep-
herd, or even hear the far-off signal, without thinking
of the words of our Lord—“ My sheep hear my voice,
and I know them, and they follow me?” Who could
fail to appreciate the beauty of that image, addressed
originally to a pastoral people, but designed to guide
and cheer every true believer in Jesus Christ to the end
of time? “The Lord is my shepherd ; I shall not want.

‘
THE BEACH. - ,

He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he lead-.
eth me beside the still waters.” Glorious promise to the
pilgrims through a desert land, who are walking on-
wards to their home, and who, like the sheep of the
wilderness, can only go safely or happily while follow-
ing the guidance of their leader.

Miss Roberts, in her “ Elements of Conchology,” has
recorded a pastoral usage of simple piety. “A sort of
speaking-trumpet,” says this writer, “ made either of
the buccinum or the bark of the cherry-tree, is also in
much request among the inhabitants of alpine districts.
When the last rays of the setting sun appear on the
horizon, the shepherd who dwells highest upon the
mountain blows his horn, and calls aloud, ‘ Praised be
the Lord.’ The neighbouring shepherds then leave their
huts, and repeat the words ; the sound lasts for several
minutes, while every cave and mountain echo repeats
the name of God.” The herdsmen then bend their knees
in prayer ; and thus God is adored in the sublime scenes
of his own workmanship, and “ Glory to God in the
highest ” goes up from the voice of assembled shepherds
now, as it was once proclaimed to shepherds by the
heavenly host, when the angel came to tell the glad
tidings to man of the birth of the Redeemer.

But we must return to our common whelk, whose
spiral shell led to this digression. This animal is a
valuable article of bait, and is also much eaten, but
only by those who cannot procure better food ; for it has
not any excellence of flavour, and is hard and tough.
Large balls of the eggs of the whelk lie everywhere
about the beach, sometimes of the size of an orange, at
others as if two or three balls were clinging together.
The sailors call them bladder-chain, and fisherman’s
soap ; the former name is very appropriate, as the balls
look as if chains of yellow bladders were wound round
and round. At one stage they only contain a white
liquid, but later in the season we may find the little
whelk within. They are used by men about the coast
for washing their hands ; not because of any cleansing
116 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDR.

property which they have in them, but because their
somewhat rough surface may serve to remove the tar
from the hands of toil, as effectually as a coarse rough
towel could do.

Another kind of whelk, almost equally common, is
the stone or dog-whelk (Buccinum lapillus), which has
yellow zones around it, and is interesting as having been
one of the shells which furnished the valuable Tyrian
dye, of which we read in Scripture and in ancient history.
The truncated murex, or rock-shell (/wrex trunculus),
is the other shell-fish from which this costly dye was
procured, and it appears to be the species called the pur-
pura, or purple. Michaelis thinks that Solomon alluded
to the spiral form of these shells, when he says, “ The
hair of their head is like purple,” meaning that the
tresses were tied up in a spiral or pyramidal form on
the top. The royal purple was highly prized for robes
and various decorations. Parchments and vellums were
coloured with this brilliant hue, in order to set off the
golden or silver letters traced upon them. Biblical
manuscripts, copies of the parables of our Lord, and
various religious books, were, in olden days, richly adorned
with this purple. Many of the monks spent great parts
of their lives in writing and illuminating these manu-
scripts ; and half a century was not deemed too long to
devote to the work of copying in beautiful writing the
words either of the apostles or saints, and enriching
their margins and capital letters with devices on a deep
blue or scarlet ground,

The blue which-we find in Seripture so frequently
associated with the purple, is supposed to have been
derived from another shell-fish, which sometimes sails in
considerable numbers into our seas. This is the common
lanthina (Lanthina communis), in shape something like
that of the snail, but looking as if cut out of thin, purplish
porcelain. On such of our shores as are washed by the
Atlantic it is often seen, and the fishermen’s wives call it
the bullhorn. The little mollusk is slightly tinged
with purple, and emits a purple fluid which will stain
THE BEACH. 117

paper. Its fragile bark sails securely in the deepest seas ;
and when the waters are unrippled by winds, it floats
along with its foot upwards, upheld by alittle organ re-
sembling a bubble of foam. It is blown hither and thither,
at the light breath of the summer wind ; but if a rougher
breeze arise, the tiny animal withdraws its head within
its shell, takes in its float of bubbles, and sinks into
the bottom of the sea. This sea-snail is remarkably
phosphorescent. It serves as food to the fishes and
sea-birds.

A deep and rich violet colour is emitted by a very
common naked mollusk of our shores, called the sea-
hare (Aplysia depilans). This liquid will stain a cam-
bric handkerchief of a brilliant tint, but the dye is not
permanent. The water, too, is tinged to a great extent,
if any alarm causes the animal to discharge the colour.
Pliny, and other old writers, described the sea-hare as so
venomous that it was unsafe even to look at it, while
the mere touch of its acrid fluid would cause the hair to
fall off. Our poor little sea-hare, however, is perfectly
inoffensive, save that it has an unpleasant odour ; though
Darwin found that a large species, which he saw on the
shores of St. Domingo, emitted a secretion that stung
the person who touched it rather sharply. This animal
is a purple lump of fleshy substance, but would at once
remind one of a hare, from having two thick feelers,
which are scooped out, and very similar to the ears of
that animal. It does not resemble the fleet creature,
however, in its motion; for on looking down through
the clear water of the rocky pool, we may see it slowly
wending its way over the ground much as a slug would
travel over a cabbage leaf. It eats the small sea-weeds.

The periwinkle (Z'urbo littoreus) is too well known at
our sea-side places to need any description. Though
hanging to the rock, it does not fix itself firmly like the
limpet ; but its light hold is often its means of safety,
for no sooner do we touch it than it rolls down among the
brown sea-weeds, so like itself in colour, that it often thus
escapes us. At low water, the periwinkles may be seen as
118 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

if they were crawling after the waves, anxious to regain
their native element, moving on steadily, though slowly.
The mollusk is little eaten in our land, save by children ;
but it is very valuable to the poor of some countries.

Several species of turbo have very ornamental shells ;
but there is hardly any British shell more beautiful in
colour than the little oblong kind, called the childish
phasianella (Phasianella pullus), spotted and waved, as
its highly polished surface is, with purplish red, crimson,
chocolate, and brown, on a whitish ground. It is plen-
tiful on many parts of our coast, but not so on those of
the north and east of Britain.

Few shells are more similar to those of our land-snails
in form than is the pretty glossy brown species, called
the sea-snail (Vautica monolifera). It is very abundant
on our sandy shores.

The false-wentletrap (Scalaria pretiosa), a very long
spiral shell, of a whitish colour, and thickly ribbed, is
another frequent species. Then there are parasitic
shell-fish, which infest living animals. One of these, the
stylifer, is among mollusks what the ichneumon is
among insects ; dwelling within the fleshy substance of
the star-fish, almost hidden from sight, but, like the
parasitic insect, avoiding the vital parts of its victim.
It is never found except in the rays, and it looks like a
little glass bubble.

But as the thoughts revert to bygone rambles on the
shore, many shells which we have found there recur to
mind, but must be left undescribed. Most of the com-
mon and remarkable species are here mentioned, yet we
feel as Spenser did, when of old he said,—

** Oh what an endlesse work have I in hand,
To count the sea’s abundant progeny!
Whose fruitfulle seede far passeth those on land,
And also those which wonne in the azure sky!”

Some of the eggs of the mollusks frequently attract
our attention on the shore, and often puzzle those un-
acquainted with them. There are those of the sea-snail,
looking much like pieces of dried biscuit ; and the rock-
oyster 1s sometimes covered with crowds of little straw-
THE BEACH. 119

coloured vase-like objects, which are the eggs of the
dog-whelk. Many shell-bearing mollusks place their
eggs in a nidus, something like a sponge, where the
young remain for a time. Some hide them in holes in
the rocks ; some fasten them to sea-weeds; but to all
the Great Creator has appointed some safe means of
depositing them.

One of the most remarkable clusters of eggs is that
of the common cuttle-fish (Sepia officinalis). Lying on
many sandy shores we may find during the summer an
object which looks like a bunch of purple grapes. If
we examine it we see that the covering of these grapes
is tough and leathery. Within is a quantity of white
slime; or perhaps the young cuttle-fish, just ready to
emerge from it, with eyes much larger in proportion
than they are when it is fully grown, lies within the egg.
Perchance, on looking further, we may find the grown
cuttle-fish itself, or we may find its bone in the shape of
a white oblong substance, composed of layers. We all
know this substance, because the white layers are re-
duced to powder for pounce, or given to caged birds, to
supply the absence of such particles of lime or flint as
they would swallow when in their wild state. The animal
itself is about a foot long, of a fleshy nature, white, and
with very large eyes. Like all the sepia tribe, its head
is surrounded with numerous arms, or tentacles, covered
with suckers. It walks with the head downwards, and
by means of these flexible limbs, it can either swim
or crawl, the suckers acting like cupping-glasses, and
enabling it to hold with great tenacity. The long,
white, bony substance is its internal framework ; and
we find it on our shores much more frequently than the
cuttle-fish itself; for though the storm brings the ani-
mal there occasionally, yet it is more often procured by
the dredge, as its home is in the deeper waters. It is
not possible to keep it long alive in a vessel of salt
water, nor is it a pleasing animal to look at; its large
eyes and parrot-like beak indicating that it possesses the
fierce nature which characterizes all the species.
120 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDR.

The cuttle-fishes were described, by the old writers,
as very cunning animals ; and though the accounts were
exaggerated, yet they certainly seem no way deficient in
art. Darwin, in his “ Journal of Researches,” says : “ I
was much amused by the various arts to escape detection
used by one individual which seemed fully aware that I
was watching it. Remaining for some time motionless, it
would then stealthily advance an inch or two, like a cat
after a mouse ; sometimes changing its colour. It thus
proceeded, till having gained a deeper part, it darted
away, leaving its dusky train of ink to hide the hole
into which it had crawled.”

“While looking for marine animals, with my head
about two feet above the rocky shore, I was more than
once saluted by a jet of water, accompanied by a
slightly grating noise. At first I could not think what
it was, but afterwards I found that it was this cuttle-
fish, which, though concealed in a hole, thus often led
me to its discovery. That it possesses the power of
ejecting water there is no doubt, and it appeared to me
that it could take good aim, by directing the tube or
siphon on the under side of its body. From the diffi-
culty which these animals have of carrying their heads,
they cannot crawl with ease when placed on the ground.
I observed that one which I kept in the cabin was
slightly phosphorescent in the dark.”

The inky fluid which some of the species can eject
into the water, was once thought to be the material of
which the Indian ink was composed; but this is
doubtful, though several kinds, like our common cuttle-
fish, yield a brown pigment, used by artists, and well
known as sepia. Unpleasing as is their appearance,
they are in some countries much prized as food, while
they are of great value to fishermen as bait.

The poulpe or preke (Octopus vulgaris), which is
very nearly allied to the common cuttle-fish, is a
much more unpleasing looking animal, with long
limbs around its head, which it twirls about in every
direction. If we put our hand within their reach, we
THE BEACH, 121

are made conscious of the touch by a tingling sensation,
and a redness on the skin. They are thought to eat
many crabs and oysters, and the fishermen, who believe
that they frighten away those which they do not kill



OCTOPUS VULGARIS,

have a great enmity to these poulpes. Pliny, who
relates great marvels of their cunning, tells us that
they place a little stone between the valves of an oyster,
and thus suck it out; adding, “Such is the wonderful
intelligence of animals even the most stupid!” But it
would seem that the oysters of modern days have grown
wiser, or the cuttle-fish cannot so cleverly deposit the
stones, for no one ever finds them now wedging the
shell-fish in his own dwelling.

We have not in our seas any animals which can
properly be called monsters of the deep; but we know
of none which might have so good a claim to this
character, not only by fierceness and voracity, but by
repulsive appearances, as the poulpe. Yet our British
Species is very inferior, both in size and in terrific power,
to the octopi of other seas. Among the islands of the
Meia-co-shimah group, Sir Edward Belcher saw one of
these creatures, which some men were carrying on a
pole, and which he measured. He found that each arm
was two feet in length, thus enabling the animal to
reach over an area of more than twelve feet in circum-

M
122 A BOOK FOR THE SBEA-SIDE.

ference. He saw also both these octopi, and some
of the sepia tribe, walking about so quickly, that it
seemed almost impossible to secure them. They might
be seen down in the clear waters, darting about from
side to side, or holding so tightly to the stones and
large sea-roots, by means of their suckers, that it re-
quired the greatest force to detach them: even when
caught and thrown up on the sandy shore, they shuffled
along quickly over the ground, extending their long
arms, and throwing out sudden streams of ink, staring
about fiercely all the time with their large glaring eyes.
At night these eyes are luminous, and then the creature
has a still more menacing aspect as it turns them round
and round in the same way as the chameleon.

The ancients, whose love of the marvellous is always
evident when they speak of objects of natural history,
related how some of these octopi climbed trees and
palisades, and could only be resisted by the united
efforts of dogsand men. They prized their flesh highly,
and great numbers of octopi are still consumed in the
isles of Greece by sailors; but the flesh is beaten with
sticks for more than half an hour previously to cook-
ing it.

A less indigestible food is yielded by the flesh of the
sea-leaf or calamary (Loligo vulgaris) ; but this, though
used in Greece, is insipid, and is not eaten in our land,
The animal is often found on our shore, as it lives in
the sea at a little distance from it, and it is something
like the cuttle-fish in substance, but narrower in form.
It swims in the sea with great rapidity. The word
calamary is derived from calamarium, which, in low
Latinity, signifies a portable writing desk, with ink,
pens, and a penknife. This was given because the
form of its body is not unlike an escritoire of this kind,
and the long cartilaginous lance in its back, and the
fluid which it ejects, are the pen and ink. The eggs are
in an oval mass, first of a yellowish colour, and finally
dark blue. A zoologist who once counted a cluster of
them, found it to contain 39,760 eggs.
mad! is Se
a = oS

7

" WSynqinain’ *
\



PEVENSEY BAY.

CHAPTER V.

SAND AND SAND-RIPPLES, PLANTS OF SANDS AND MARSHES,
STAR-FISHES, SEA-URCHINS, SEA-JELLIES, PHOSPHOR-
ESCENCE OF THE SEA.

How often we have been struck with the love which
all classes and all ages appear to entertain for the sea-
side! The robust and the sickly, the rich and poor,
the child and the old man, all seem to meet before the
ocean strand as friends and equals; all seem to drink
in deep draughts of enjoyment which the sea, the dear
old ocean of our love, is calculated to inspire. How
124 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

quickly, how kindly an acquaintance is made there—
an acquaintance sometimes ripening into a lasting
friendship! How gently intrusive are our attempts at
conversation deemed—if indeed they are characterized
as intrusive at all—the great ocean rolling placidly
before us, the sea-bird skimming its clear surface, the
smooth stones of the beach shining with light beneath
the little wavelets, and glittering with the sunlit spray
which the friendly rippling intruders sprinkle on them
so prettily; the towering cliff behind us, the shipping,
the fishermen engaged at their pleasant toil, all cast a
spell upon us, all entrance our feelings ; and while they
help us to good humour, tend, too, to weaken the
formalities and conventionalities of society, and make
us feel for a time free and gladsome as the winds and
waters. Our dispositions become more genial, our
thoughts more elevated ; and to the Christian, while
reflecting on the wondrous works of God which lie
hidden in the deep sea, the remembrance is present
that God is not only the Creator, but the Father of all;
that not one of the group assembling here is uninterest-
ing to him; that the humblest there is one for whom
the Saviour died. And as purer and holier thoughts
come crowding on the mind, the Christian heart beats re-
sponsive to them, and the hand, perhaps hitherto kept
bound to a cold breast, is held forth to clasp warmly that
of another, or to give the little succour which the sick
or the friendless may require, or the word of sympathy
or of gentle remonstrance is uttered to any who may
need it. Well! give me these moments—some of the
happiest, perhaps some of the best of our existence, for
it is here, at this place and hour, that the child of God
is often stimulated, under the guidance of the Holy
Spirit, to fulfil the behest of Him who bade us love our
neighbour as ourselves; and it is here, that amidst the
grand and beautiful of God’s works, he is fulfilling the
command and loving his fellow-creatures, because he
has learned to love God.

How smooth is that broad ridge of sand, and how
THE BEACH. 125

does its smoothness enable the invalid to walk over its
length, and yet return untired. Now we come upon a
portion over which the waves have passed, and the sand
is rippled. too, for they have left their markings there.
Who can tell whether the sand-ripples of to-day may
not unfold to men of future ages some of those truths
which the ripples of bygone years reveal to us? Many
an undulating ripple has left its traces on the surface
of some of our marine stratified rocks, and the geologist
finds them still preserving their pristine form. He
walks with eye intent on the sandy margin of the sea
now, and sees that these small ripples leave their mark
on the sand at only a small depth, while larger waves
impress it more deeply. Then when he finds the ripple
mark on the sandstone or other rock but slightly
raised, he readily infers that these deposits were formed
when the shallow waters alone washed over them.
Again, when, as is often the case, they are seen to be
covered by deposits of hundreds or thousands of feet in
thickness, here is clear evidence that on that spot the
ancient sea-shore underwent a great lowering, or the
level of ocean a great rise, since those buried ripple
marks were impressed by the waves on the sand. And
thus, by careful investigation of these tide traces, he
can infer the depth and other circumstances of the
water which made them; and learn how by a gradual
depression the base of that sea was lowered, in relation
to the ocean level, hundreds, perhaps thousands of
feet, so as to admit of the successive accumulation of
new sediments, containing the remains of new races of
marine animals and land plants.

High up from the shore we have, on some parts of
our coast, sand-hills, or levels of a wide extent, and
though, in some measure, they are held down by the
roots of plants, yet on a windy day clouds of light
sand come sweeping into our faces, and almost blind
us. How well can we remember, when a little party
of friends landed on such a shore to search for shells,
how the sand swept upon us so unexpectedly that all

M 3
126 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

the refreshment brought for the day was at once spoiled.
Happily all there had light hearts and good tempers,
and the loss of the dinner did not check the enthusiastic
pursuit of marine curiosities. But this is little com-
pared to the occasional drifting of these sand-hills. In
the county of Norfolk, as well as on others of our shores,
the sand would overwhelm the neighbouring soil, were
not the sea-lyme grass (Hlymus arenarius), and the sea-
reed (Ammophila arundinacea), planted to keep it firm
by their long roots. On many parts of our coast these
plants, especially the sea-reed, grow wild, establishing
themselves on the loose soil, and gradually disappearing
as that soil becomes consolidated; and it is a great
relief to the eye, tired with looking on the wide expanse
of sand, to repose itself on the waves which are made
by the wind-swept grasses. Many a flower of the sandy
_ shore springs up among them, and there the great sharp
sea-rush (Juncus acutus), the noblest of its species, and
the sharpest too, rises in tufts or in solitary grandeur
on the wide waste. Very beautiful are the polished
chestnut capsules which cluster upon it; and many
an eager hand stretched forth to grasp them, has been
drawn back as if pierced by a spear. A little farther
on, where the salt marsh meets the sand, the long flat
leaves of the salt marsh club-rush (Scirpus maritimus)
are waving around its angular stem, while the creeping
knobbed root below is helping to form a firmer soil.
The owner of the marsh land who may wish to send
his cattle for pasture, will not be pleased to find
it there, because it occupies so much room; but it is
relished by the animals, and the roots themselves have
been eaten by man in times of scarcity, when dried and
ground into flour. The marsh has but a lonely appear-
ance, though the little sea-milkwort, Newton’s knot-
grass as it is sometimes called (Glaux maritima), with
its small pink clusters and thick leaves, grows all among
the grass. And the thrift nods to every passing wind ;
and large patches of the different species of orache
glisten as if covered with drops of ice, or redden into
THE BEACH. 127

their summer hue. There is little that is bright on
the moist green sward—little to tempt us to try its
dangerous footing, except the tall Michaelmas daisy
(Aster tripolium) ; the tripoly star, and blue daisy of
older writers, which has lilac clusters of starry blossoms,
and juicy pale-green leaves and stems. How it is that
people who live near these marshes persuade themselves
into the idea that it is the samphire, we know not ; yet
as it is carried about in baskets for sale, it is probably
pickled, and doubtless is quite innoxious, though of
itself tasteless. The glasswort (Salicornia herbacea),
growing in such quantities near it, with its juicy
jointed stems so like a horn, is certainly better adapted
for pickling ; while the soda which its ashes yield made
it valuable in former times to the glass manufacturer.
The white flowers of the scurvy grass (Cochlearia
officinalis) grow on the muddy shore below, and their
pale, pointed, green juicy leaves are gathered there to
make some vegetable drink for the invalid.

But we will leave the marshes, and go down nearer
to the ever musical, ever beautiful sea, and there we
shall find flowers too, though not in great abundance ;
flowers which we can find on the sea-sand only. Such
is the sea-holly (Lryngium maritimum), with its large,
veined, prickly leaf, so like that of the shrub whence
it has its name, that any one may know it. It has a
compact head of blue flowers, which might remind one
of a small teasel. Gerarde said of its roots, that they
were “ good for such as are bitten of any wild beast ;”
the young shoots are eaten as asparagus.

The pretty sea-side convolvulus (Convolvulus solda-
nella) is one of the loveliest flowers of the sand, and,
though not to be found on all parts of our coast, is
very plentiful on some. On the sand-hills of Swansea
it is very abundant, and a friend of the author’s wrote
some lines on the flowers there.

‘** All before me stretcheth ocean,
All behind me, yet not near,
Swelling hills that seem in motion
When thick fogs begin to clear: —
July sunbeams smile before.
128 A BOOK FOR THE SBA-SIDE.

But among these sands of Swansea
Few the pleasant flowers I find,

Wild horse-radish, wormwood, pansy,
Bent-grass rustling in the wind ;

And the pretty pink convolvulus,
That scenteth all the shore.

Ss
SS
ays
iS
\ >:



CONVOLVULUS SOLDANELLA. (Sea Convolvulus.)

Some very beautiful plants of this flower flourish on
the Scottish shores, and one of the finest specimens
which the author ever saw, was gathered near the Cave
of Borrowdale, in the Hebrides, remarkable for having,
on one occasion, sheltered prince Charles Stuart. The
flower is of a purplish pink, with yellow plaits.

Growing there on the sandy mound afar from the
waves, 1s that little thorny shrub called the sallow
thorn, or sea-buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides), with
narrow leaves, which, as the wind blows, “turn up their
silver lining to the light,” and which are far more
conspicuous than its minute flowers. The autumnal
fruits, with their orange tint, are not only lovely to
look upon, but pleasant to taste, though rather acid.
A yellow dye abounds in the whole plant.
THE BEACH. 129

Then, on some of the shores of Cornwall and Dorset- .
shire, we may gather some few plants of wild asparagus ;
the sparrow-grass, as even learned writers called it a few
centuries ago. The conspicuous though dull white
flowers of the mountain garlic (Allium carinatum) also
are to be found on sea-sands, sending their unpleasant
odour on the dews and zephyrs. Old writers said
that no plant would flourish near it. It is of little use
to us, but the Kamschatdales gather and store it for
winter use.

More common than this, and assuredly more welcome
to the rambler on the sands, is the sweet odour of the little
burnet-rose (Rosa spinosissima), and all are glad to see
its dark green spray of small leaflets, and to gather its
cream-coloured flowers, spite of the immense number of
prickles which guard them by crowding every stem and
branch, Who does not love the rose? Who can
wonder that the ancients chose it to deck the tomb
of the departed friend, though we may not enter into
the notion of one of the classic poets, “This is the
amulet whereby no ills their tombs molest.” “The
rose,” says a learned writer, “is the essential part of
all the ornaments of the earlier Christian architecture ;
even the shape of the windows, doors, and towers may
be traced to it, as well as the accompanying decorations
of flowers and leaves.” Another kind of rose, called
the dwarf-fruited rose (Rosa rubella), sometimes shares
with the burnet-leaved species the maritime sands ; and
patches of the sea-side pimpernel (Arenaria peploides)
are often conspicuous there, by their rich green, juicy
leaves, though the small white flowers closing early in
the day are little seen among the mass.

But the tide has left behind it large stores of living
things, some of which are hurrying onwards or creeping
slowly to regain the sea. Many of the common star-
fishes are wonderfully constructed, and any one who
wishes to be acquainted with them should read the
valuable work of professor Forbes on the subject. To
the geologist this tribe of animals is remarkably inte-
130 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

resting, because the stalked star-fishes, crinoides, were
in long past years among the most numerous of the
inhabitants of the seas. “So numerous,” says this
learned writer, “that the remains of their skeletons
constitute great tracts of the dry land as it now appears.
For miles and miles we may walk over the stony
fragments of the crinoidee—fragments which were
once built up in animated forms, encased in living
flesh, and obeying the will of creatures among the
loveliest of the inhabitants of the ocean. Even in their
present disjointed and petrified state, they excite the
admiration, not only of the naturalist, but of the
common gazer ; and the name of stone lily, popularly
applied to them, indicates a popular appreciation of
their beauty.” ‘These lily stars, these graceful waving
creatures, which in all probability passed their lives
fixed to one spot by their stems, in the depths of the
ocean, are now almost gone. Scarcely a dozen kinds of
these beautiful animals are known to exist in modern
seas, and even these, so far as the present knowledge
extends, are only affixed to the stem at an early period
of life, acquiring afterwards their freedom. He there-
fore who would see the old form in its exactness, must
look at the stone-lily, the beautiful encrinite which the
geologist places in his museum, from the encrinite
marble of Derbyshire or of similar districts.

Over the seas where these graceful animals lived and
died, man has come to dwell, and the ancient castle and
cathedral spire rise above the cottage home; or the
mansion, and waving fields, and green meads, and em-
bowering woods catch the gleams of sunshine, or the
shadows of the clouds. But star-fishes dwell in our
seas, which were in the earliest periods of life affixed to
stalks, though they were not known to dwell there until
the year 1823. The rosy feather-star (Comatula rosacea)
is a small animal, having five arms or rays, which being
double, look like ten. It is of a deep rose colour,
dotted with brown, and is about three-fourths of an
inch in height, its stalk being pentangular. The dis-
THE BEACH. 131

covery of this animal was made by Mr. J. V. Thompson,
and zoologists of all nations were greatly interested
about it. It was taken in the Cove of Cork, attached
to the stems of some zoophytes. The young star-fishes
waving on their stalks, have since been found on sea-
weeds in great numbers. They are active little creatures,
even in their fixed condition, and when older are able




7)

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, 7 b 4 AGAK
aM able '=

COMATULA ROSACEA.

to swim with great freedom. When a newly caught
feather-star is put into fresh water, it usually contracts
and dies, and if not killed thus, or by the application
of spirits, it breaks itself into pieces, and dies, giving out,
in its last moments, a rich purple colour, which tinges
the water.

Although this beautiful animal abounds among the
sea-weeds of rocky places, and may be procured by
dredging, yet it is not always to be seen by those who
stray along our shores. Not so, however, is it with
some of the common star-fishes, which we may find
almost anywhere, and at any time, thrown on the
beach, or moving about in the shallow pools with great
rapidity. In many places, especially on the eastern
132 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

coasts of England, numbers of the common brittle star-
fish (Ophiocoma rosula) are twisting their long, slender
arms incessantly; and though we feel little inclination
to touch them, because of the strange contortions of
their limbs, yet the colours of some of them are
very beautiful, the disk being of white or dull rose
colour, marked sometimes with a red or yellow star.
Should we overcome our dislike to its strange attitudes,
and take it up to look at it, one arm after another
separates itself, and we find ourselves holding nothing
but the disk around which they grew.

All the brittle stars have these threatening actions,
and this strange power of breaking themselves up. Of
the more slender and rare species, called the thread-
rayed brittle-star, professor Forbes relates, that when
dredging in the Bay of Rothsay, he found at first one
of the thread-like arms of the animal, winding in the
mud. “Arm after arm,” says this writer, “ occurred,
but no body ; at length the skeleton of a body was
found, and when I had begun almost to despair of
finding anything like a disk, an almost perfect specimen
occurred. A few days after, dredging in similar ground
in the Gair Loch opposite Greenock, I was astonished
by the sight of masses of interlacing arms of the same
animal, as large as a man’s fist, coming up in the dredge.
They were all alive and twisting in every direction ;
yet strange to say, there were no more than seven or
eight disks secured.” In this case the arms being so
easily separated, had been broken away by the dredge.
Another species had arms so thread-like and fragile,
that the only perfect specimens were such as had been
dried in a heap of sand, as it was impossible to kill
them without breaking them into innumerable frag-
ments.

But we must not dwell upon rare species. Common
ones lie on the shores, and deserve our notice, by their
remarkable structure. The common star-fish, or cross-
fish, or five-fingered Jack (Uraster rubens), is known
to all who visit the sea occasionally. It is yellow or
THE BEACH. ; 133

orange, or perhaps of deeper red or purple, and its skin
is tough and leathery; a full-grown specimen being
often about nine inches across, and its rays five or six
in number, tapering to a point. The mouth is on the
under surface of the body, and a deep groove runs from
it, along each arm, to the point. In these grooves are



URASTER RUBENS.

a number of suckers, which are capable of adhering even
to the smoothest surfaces, and by means of which the
animal can walk with great facility. The star-fish should
be kept for a while in a vessel of salt water, if we would
observe its remarkable structure, and the manner in
which its hundreds of little feet can work. Any one
who should look at them, and see them coiling and feel-
ing about would think they were numerous worms, each
independent of the other. Touch one of these suckers,
and immediately several around it draw themselves in,
changing from a little stalk-like organ, to a small knob
of flesh. This cross-fish is so abundant on some shores
as to serve the purpose of manure, and while living it
clears the shore and the sea of various decomposing
N
134 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

matters, eating an immense quantity of food, and
holding it down with its suckers. It is so destructive
to the oyster fisheries by insinuating itself between the
valves of the oyster-shell, and swallowing the animal,
that the fishermen of Newhaven tear these star-fishes
open, when they come up in the net, before returning
them to the sea. On almost all parts of our shores the
people have a superstitious dread of some or other of
the star-fishes, and dislike to touch them. With the
notion common among the superstitious, they think
that several strange-looking creatures are in some alli-
ance with the great enemy of man. Dr. Drummond,
while drying specimens of these star-fishes in his garden
at Bangor, heard children saying on the other side of
the hedge, “ What’s the gentleman doing with the bad
man’shands? Is he ganging to eat the bad man’s hands,
do ye think ?”

Voracious creatures as the star-fishes are, none seems
more so than another common species called the sun-
star, and in former days termed the sun-fish (Solaster
papposa). This being a native of deeper seas than the
cross-fish, is not so general, though sometimes after a
rough wind numbers are thrown on the shore ; and if
we go down to see the fisherman empty his nets, we
shall often observe this among the living things which
he rejects. Its name will serve well to characterize it,
for surrounded by its rays, twelve or thirteen in num-
ber, and bright in its hues of yellow, and especially of
red, it is not unlike those representations of the sun
which beam from the sign-boards of the inn, or which
adorn the children’s books of older times. It is, some-
times, however, of purplish hue. Like all the species
it furnishes food for fishes and other marine animals.

Then there are cushion-stars, and bird’s-foot-stars,
and sand-stars, which last have long worm-like arms,
ever twisting and twirling. These prefer sandy places,
though certainly not for the reason assigned by
Reaumur, that they are too frail to encounter the rough
edges of rocks; for, as professor Forbes remarks,
THE BEACH. 135

had he only walked along the sea-shore he would have
seen plenty of the far more delicate brittle stars, moving
in the midst of rocks with perfect safety. It is quite

near

SNC

LO ge COl lao,



OPHIURA TEXTURATA,

amusing to watch a number of the common sand-stars
(Ophiura texturata), which the receding tide has left
behind. They sometimes seem as if seized with a
unanimous desire to overtake the wave. On they go,
never interfering with each other’s progress, but the
points of their arms touching each other, so as to make
a good representation of a piece of what ladies term
crochet work. They will find their way into the sea
too, if no one hinders them, now ard then leaving be-
hind them an arm, which in coiling about probably
came in the way of a stone, or became entangled in a
mass of sea-weeds.

One of the most elegant of our star-fishes, the
butt-horn (Asteria aurantiaca), is said by Mr. Bean to
owe its name to an odd notion of the fishermen. The
first star-fish of the species which the Cornish fisherman
takes, is carefully made a prisoner, and placed on the
136 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

stern of the boat. When he hooks a halibut, whicli
is here termed a but, he immediately sets the poor star-
fish at liberty; but if the fishery is unsuccessful, he
ignorantly attributes it to this animal, and it is left to
perish far from its native element.

There is a star-fish of a rare kind, which has arms so
branched and curled in among each other, that the
animal looks like a mass of entangling tendrils. This
is called the Shetland argus (Astrophyton scutatum),
and it no sooner perceives its prey, than, stretching out
these arms, it seizes them as ina net. So singular an
animal has long been noticed; and Bradley, in his
Wonders of Nature, well remarks, “So odd a creature
as this is well worth the contemplation of such curious
persons as live near the sea, where every day they have
subjects enow to employ their curiosity, and improve
their understanding.”

The engraving will represent to any one used to the
shore, a crust or shell, which he has often seen rolling
over the sand as the wind stirs the sea-weeds. It will
be known at once as that of
the common sea-egg or ur-
chin (Zchinus ‘sphera), in
m the state in which we often

> find it on the shore, with
all the spines rubbed off, or
' in which we frequently see
similar species extracted
from the chalk or other

SHELL OF GLOBULAR ECHINUS. og]iffs, This shell or box is
of most curious construction, and its parts jointed
together with such marvellous compactness, that the
little ball can remain unbroken when tossed by winds
and waves ; while extinct species are found as perfect
after ages have rolled away, as if they were made but
yesterday by the living urchin. “There are,” says
professor Forbes, “above 200 plates of one kind, and
nearly as many of another, all dove-tailed together with
the greatest nicety, and regularly bearing on their sur-


THE BEACH. 137

faces above 4,000 spines, each spine perfect in itself, and
of a complicated structure, and having a free movement
in its socket.” Have we not here a remarkable evi.
dence of the skill of the great Creator, and shall not
these calcareous crusts, which the rough wind drives
before it, be to us like the stars on which our thought
dwells at eventide, uttering some tidings of God, even
though they have no speech nor language, and though
their voice is not heard 2

The sea-eggs are little eaten in our country, though
the larger kinds of other seas are often a valuable
source of food, and many a mariner stranded on an
inhospitable shore, has gladly fed on this and other
species. It is eaten too by fishermen on some parts of
our own coasts, and the roe, which is of an agreeable
flavour, is esteemed a great delicacy in the southern
countries of Europe. The animal within has a no less
beautiful structure than the shell ; nay, its structure is
higher, for it is endowed too with the mysterious prin-
ciple of life. Without entering into minute anatomical
details, we will notice such only as are obvious to every
one who picks up a sea-egg, and looks at the animal and
its crust. There is a little aperture at the top of the
shell, and without any microscope we may see around
it the five ivory teeth which belong to a most minute
and complicated dental apparatus. Placing the animal
in water, and taking care not to frighten it, we may
offer it a piece of corailine. The teeth soon fasten on
this with so tight a hold, that we may swing the sea-
egg backwards and forwards, and unless our coralline
snap with the weight, the animal will hold on thus
for an hour, and at length, if we will permit it to do
So, will nibble it with great contentment. Then that
little urchin, encased in its sphere, is no bad walker,
and it can not only travel along the bottom of the pool,
but can clamber the sides of the rugged rocky preci-
pices, and anchor itself at will. Even the smooth sides of
a glass vessel form no hindrance to its progress. Hun-
dreds of spines, all jointed on to the animal within, are

N3
138 A BOOK FOR THE SEHA-SIDE.

put in motion as it walks ; and besides these, an im-
mense number of little suckers or feet, just like those
of the common star-fish, come through the pores and
aid in the progress. No wonder that with 4,000 spines,
and more than 1,800 suckers, our little urchin can
wander over the rocks, munching as it goes the tiny
corallines, with all the little polypes which their cells
contain; or can hold on tightly with teeth and suckers,
when it chooses to be still, and to lie in wait till the
crab, with sideways motion, comes near, and is seized
by its suckers, or till the fish, gliding on in the tranquil
water, is pounced on and paralysed by their touch, and
being brought to the mouth and speedily digested,
serves to allay the appetite of the hungry creature.
We have not been made conscious of any stinging power
possessed by this species, but some sea-urchins of other
shores are well known to have the power of giving
severe pain by the touch of their suckers. Instances
are recorded in which the sea-urchin has darted these
spines into the hand, and left them there ; and those
who have been thus wounded have found their presence
as painful, and their removal as difficult, as if they had
filled their hands with thorns by grasping a bramble.
Do not imagine, if you find one of these sea-urchins
clinging to a rock, that it will yield its hold to your
slightest touch—you must use considerable effort to re-
move it. One of the species can actually bore its way into
the rocks, making little circular cavities deep enough to
hold more than two-thirds of the animal ; and in order
to make itself more comfortable, or to gratify its taste,
or perhaps to preserve its spines from injury, it lines
the cavity with corallines. The purple-egg urchin
(Echinus lividus), which has long purple spines, has
been seen thus occupying cliffs where the rock projected
into the sea, so as to make the ledges accessible at low
water, and which were never left entirely dry. These
ledges were full of holes perforated by the animals, and
thousands were lying, each one in a cavity fitted to its
size, the little ones in small holes, and the full-grown
THE BEACH. 139

echini in larger ones. Mr. W. Thompson, who saw a
group of them, says that their purple spines and regular
forms presented a most beautiful appearance, studding
the pools which lay among the grey limestone rocks.

Several other species may be found in abundance
about our coast; there is the green pea-urchin, whose
spines, when the animal is living, are of green and
gold, very frequent among shell-sand; and the pretty
little purple-tipped sea-urchin, which seems to like the
company of oysters and scallops, and is often dredged
up with them, or cast by the wave ashore.

The piper, a large and singular species, is the most
elegant of all, but it is rare, and apparently confined
to the Zetland seas. In museums in sea-coast towns,
we sometimes see it with thick spines, sometimes an
inch and a half long, which the fishermen compare to
the drones of a bagpipe, and it is also called king of the
Sea egos,

But besides the globular sea-eggs, there are some
termed head-urchins, and some flattened species termed
pancake-urchins, which, when the spines are rubbed
away, are seen to have their calcareous shells deeply
indented with a star. The same form is also observable
on the fiddle-urchins, which have this familiar name be-
cause of their form, which resembles that of the musical
instrument. One of these head-urchins, called the
mermaid’s head, is very common on our coast.

It is surely an encouragement to us to love and
cultivate in our own minds a sense of the beautiful,
when we see that beauty marks the works of the great
Creator. He has made everything beautiful in its
season. Not a moment can be spent on the shore
without perceiving it. There are those jelly-fishes,
dancing in the sunny waters. Has mortal man, even
the most gifted, ever made forms, or colours, or motions,
which could at all compare with them? They lie among
those curling waves, pure as crystal, reflecting, as a soap
bubble might do, every brilliant hue of light. We
see them there in numbers ; but only those who have
140 A BOOK FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

examined that world of waters before us, can form any
conception of the multitudes which are never in their
individual forms seen by human eye. There they sail,
beheld only by Him who created them. The larger
living creatures of the waves find their food in their
innumerable multitudes, and though we see them not
individually, they yet in their numbers lend their light
at night to the brilliant phosphorescence of the sea, a
phosphorescence charming with its beauty those who
frequent our shores. The moon shines out on the still
waters, and the gentle ripple of the wave, and the faint
sound of the plashing oar, perhaps the song of the sailor
boy, bids us linger. Wherever that gentle wave falls,
wherever that oar breaks the water, there myriads of
little lights come sparkling up, or a line of green and
silvery light seems left in the train of the boat.

A still brighter light invests the seas of the tropics,
which are

‘* Spangled with phosphoric power,
As though the lightnings there had spent their shafts,
And left the fragments glittering in the field.”

When we think how many marine animals, both
living and dead, are made to emit this phosphorescent
light, we are almost ready to believe that the depths
below must have a light as clear as that we enjoy who
owe our light to the sun. Various crabs, cuttle-fish,
shell-fish, nereides, star-fish, zoophytes, and others,
whose names are unknown to any but zoologists, aid
with jelly-fishes, and innumerable little gelatinous
worms, in giving light, while we know that fishes just
dead also emit phosphorescence. The knowledge of
this latter fact is practically serviceable, sometimes, to
people near the sea ; and the writer knew a body of
workmen who always hung dead fish in a dark passage
through which they had occasionally to pass, that their
gleaming lamp might direct them.

But though larger animals diffuse their light in the
depths, yet that portion which reaches us is doubtless
chiefly caused by microscopic jelly-fishes and infusoria.
THE BEACH. 14]

Dr. Poeppig, in his recent voyage to Chili, thus describes
some of the animals which cause the phosphorescence
of the sea. From the topmast the sea appeared, as far
as the eye could reach, to be of a dark red colour, and
this in a streak the breadth of which was estimated at
six English miles. “As we sailed slowly along,” ob-
serves this writer, “we found that the colour changed
into brilliant purple, so that even the foam which is
seen at the stern of a ship under sail was of a rose
colour. The sight was very striking, because this pur-
ple streak was marked by a very distinct line from the
blue waters of the sea, a circumstance which we the
more easily observed, because our course lay directly
through the midst of this streak, which extended from
south-east to north-west. The water taken up in a
bucket appeared indeed quite transparent; but a faint
tinge of purple was perceptible when a few drops were
placed in a piece of white china in the sunshine. A
moderate magnifying glass showed that these little
red dots, which. only with great attention could be
discerned by the naked eye, consisted of infusoria
which were of a spherical form, entirely destitute of
external organs of motion.” This writer calculates that
the space covered with the colour was about one hun-
dred and sixty-eight square miles ; and as these animals
may have been equally distributed in the upper stra-
tum of water, their numbers must infinitely surpass
all that human calculations can measure.

Some of our writers who have given most attention
to the subject, agree with Dr. Baird in thinking that a
luminous property is given to all the marine animal-
cules, and that the little creatures of various tribes,
each no larger than a grain of sand, possess this faculty
as a defence, and also as a means of procuring their
food in the deep and fathomless waters. That the
meduse, or sea-jellies, give out light, has been proved
beyond all dispute. Several of the hemispherical species
were put in a spoon with a small quantity of sea-water,
and held over a burning candle. As soon as the water
142 A BOOK. FOR THE SEA-SIDE.

was hot they appeared like burning wheels, the spots
at the margins and centres alone emitting light, in
which manner they shone uninterruptedly and vividly
for about twenty seconds, when they shrank and died,
losing their luminousness with their lives. Various
other experiments proved that these minute animals,
like the polypes in the coralline, emit the light chiefly
under irritation.

Sailors, who row us in the boat by the shore to look
at. this phosphorescence, tell how such sights have, in
other days, foretold of storms; but many a billow
rages, and many a wild wind utters its solemn chant,
which were never foretold by this light on the wave.
So far from this, Dr. Baird observed, that these little
animals, with quick perception of the coming storm,
take refuge from the agitation of the sea, in its stiller
depths. From long observation this gentleman believes
that the phosphorescence is more brilliant, and more
generally diffused over the surface of the water, imme-
diately before or during a light rain ; and when, as it
does occasionally happen, the sea is particularly lumi-
nous in bad weather, it is produced by the larger jelly-
fish, and not by these minute creatures.

The study of these medusz is very difficult, because
of their extreme delicacy, and in most cases it 1s im-
possible to preserve them. Until recently a few frag-
mentary accounts of them was all that could be
procured, and even yet much remains to be learned.
To professor Forbes, all who would study the marine
animals are much indebted. Few, like that great
zoologist, will, from among other labours, bestow so much
time in observing them ; few have his extent of knowledge
and power of description, and still fewer that patient and
persevering determination by which alone the minute
can be seen and understood. The form of the greater
number of jelly-fish is that of an umbrella, more or
less convex, and in some cases more like those round
glass-shades which are placed as a protection over
statuettes. 'The margin is usually a little raised, and is
THE BEACH. 143

provided with numerous feelers, the bases of which are
like little knobs, often of a deep colour, or marked
with a brilliant spot; while other jelly-like organs of
variable form and dimensions depend from the centre,
at the extremity of which is the mouth leading to the
stomach beyond.

A beautiful little species, common around the Isle of
Wight, and gleaming there like a scarlet berry, is
described in so simple and interesting a manner by Dr.
J. F. Davis, that we will quote it for our reader from
professor Forbes’s monograph on the naked-eyed me-
dus. This species is called the scarlet cyanea (Cyanea
coccinea). “ Having been discovered,” says the doctor,
“by Mrs. Davis, who had likewise the best opportunity
of watching its motions during several weeks that she
kept it in a glass of sea-water at Tenby, and afterwards
here, (Bath,) whither it was conveyed in a phial of the
same, and lived three weeks after its arrival ; I will state
the history of this thing of life and light in her own
words :—‘One morning while pouring some sea-water
into the vessel containing the sea-anemones, I observed
two small objects, which I took for the young of these
animals, and as quickly as possible raised them in a
spoon out of the basin, and placed them in a tumbler
of clear sea-water. They resembled tiny bell-glasses ;
four transverse rays were perceptible on their sides, and
a minute red body with four white arms forming a
cross was suspended in the water. Around the edge of
the bell or disk appeared a delicate white fringe, which
was lengthened or shortened at the pleasure of the
animal. ‘The contraction was sometimes so great as to
give the fringe the appearance of being knotted up to
the edge of the bell or disk. It was highly interesting
to watch their movements in the water as they ascended
from the bottom, the bell or disk contracting and
dilating alternately, until the animal arrived near the
surface of the water. This motion was particularly
conspicuous at the edge of the disk, and the fringe or
tentacula became shortened as the animal rose in the
144 - 4 BOOK FOR THE S8EA-SIDE.

water; but when they descended again, the tentacula
lengthened sometimes to a great degree, after which the
animal sank gradually without any visible effort.’ This
lady adds that after a fortnight one of her pets turned
itself inside outwards and died, leaving, as all the jelly-
fishes do, only a few particles of fibre ; the other lived
more than two months, and even bore a journey to
Bath in a closed phial of sea-water, when it shrank and
died, though without performing the feat of turning
itself outwards.”

Another very elegant little creature (Oceania eprsco-
palis) has been seen, with multitudes of its companions,
on the great fishing-banks of the sea near the Zetland
Isles, swimming close to the surface of the water, with
» central portion of a rich mulberry colour, hanging
down from its crystal bell ; another is described by
Mr. Landsborough, and as so few of us have had the
opportunity of examining these minute creatures, we
do not hesitate in quoting the description from the
learned work in which they occur. “The transparent
bell,” says this writer, “ which rose above its body, was
so very pellucid that it was a good while before I ob-
served it at all. It rose to a considerable height above
the buff-coloured body of the animal ; and it was
elegantly shaped, like the fine crystalline shades often
placed over stuffed birds or artificial flowers, or mini-
ature figures formed of pure alabaster—the finest
crystal vase was clumsiness itself compared with it.
It was as fine as the transparent soap-bubble blown out
of a pipe ; and we doubt not that, like this bubble, it
would have been iridescent, had it been so placed as
that the sun could have shone upon it. Delicate as
its fabric was, the vigour of the little creature was very
remarkable, and has been well compared to the efforts
of a strong swimmer, as it alternately contracted and
expanded its pellucid organization. The margin of its
mouth had a close fringe of brownish tentacula. By
aid of the lens I could observe that they were drawn in
when the body was contracted, but that at every stroke

~
THE BEACH. 145

they were protruded like forked lightnings, or like
feathered serpents, darting and flashing forth till they
were longer than the body of the animal.”

Such are the minute and exquisite creatures which
contribute to the light upon the waves. Who can think
of their number and their beauty without exclaiming
with one of old, “ Thy way is in the sea, and thy path in
the great waters, and thy footsteps are not known ?”

We may not linger among these interesting creatures,
or stay to describe one like a little balloon, moored by
fine silken cables, or another with black spots on the
little knobs of its fringe, which are conspicuous as it
glides in the water ; or of a third which wears such
countless numbers of these dots, which are supposed to
be organs of sight, that, as professor Forbes says,
“ Argus, the hundred-eyed, must yield to it.” There
are species shaped like a Chinese hat. Many are vividly
coloured with pink, purple, orange, red, lilac, green, or
blue