Citation
Across the common after wild flowers

Material Information

Title:
Across the common after wild flowers
Series Title:
Talks about wild-flowers
Creator:
Cooke, M. C. (Mordecai Cubitt), 1825-1914
Thomas Nelson & Sons ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London ;
Edinburgh ;
New York
Publisher:
T. Nelson and Sons
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
98, 16 p., [2] leaves of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 18 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Children -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Wild flowers -- Juvenile fiction -- Great Britain ( lcsh )
Natural history -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Storytelling -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Uncles -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Bees -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Pollen -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Publishers' catalogues -- 1895 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1895
Genre:
Publishers' catalogues ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Scotland -- Edinburgh
United States -- New York -- New York
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Publisher's catalogue follows text.
General Note:
Includes index.
Statement of Responsibility:
by Uncle Matt.

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:
026652529 ( ALEPH )
ALG4960 ( NOTIS )
18946467 ( OCLC )

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is -: Seo eI i See SNES ete ere eatacet AT pA kod cad tO ened SAS

/ TRLKS ABOUT
| WILD FLOWERS.
OEM, Cc COOKE.



















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)) HAREBELL. 2, PIMPERNEL. 3. HEATHER. 4. BROOM.



ACROSS THE COMMON

AFTER WILD FLOWERS

BY

@Lnucle Geatt



T. NELSON AND SONS
London, Edinburgh, and New York



1895







iE) PAR Gan

DrEar younc Frienps, this is our fourth series of
“Rambles,” and must be taken over whatever of
common, heath, or moorland lies within our reach.
Some of the flowers may be seen growing on dry
banks, but a little bit of heath or common will supply
them all. Hedgerows, woods, and damp marshes
have all of them their wild flowers which love such
places best, and so have sandy heaths; and in the
warm midsummer days we must hunt over such
spots for heather and broom, and such other wild
flowers as we have not met with up to now. Of
course, if you have read and used our first three
“Rambles,” you will have learned a little how to use
your eyes, and how much depends sometimes upon
a very little thing. You must. never forget how so
much depends upon your own powers of seeing.
You must have sharp eyes, and be quick to use
them, believing that every spot and every hair has
its use, and everything its proper place. The most
successful plant-hunter will be the one who can ob-
serve best all the differences between one kind of
plant and another. M. C. COOKE,



CONTEN ES:



HAREBELL,
SCARLET PIMPERNEL,
HEATHER,

YELLOW BROOM,
SILVER-WEED, ....
EYE-BRIGHT,
THISTLES,

THE SUNDEW, ....

19
26
38
47
61

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HAREBELL*

HE “bluebell of Scotland” is

the pretty little blue flower,

so common on heaths and commons,
which is known also as the “hare-
bell ;” but children often call those

flowers bluebells which are found in

* Campanula rotundzfolia.





10 HAREBELL.

woods at spring-time, and should be called “ wild
hyacinth.” The latter have a string of blue
bell-flowers on one side of a flower-stalk, whilst
the former has only one flower at the top of a

very thin wiry flower-stalk.

“ With drooping bells of clearest blue
Thou didst attract my childish view,
Almost resembling
The azure butterfly that flew
Where on the heath thy blossoms grew
So lightly trembling.”
They are called bell-flowers because they are
shaped like a hand-bell, and hang upon a foot-
stalk so thin that they are always trembling
with the least puff of wind. A much larger
kind grows in gardens, and is known as Canter-
bury bells ; but they are all known by the Latin
name of Campanula, which means “a little bell.”
The harebell is shaped like a small thimble
hanging with the mouth downwards, and is
usually blue, but sometimes white. One of its
common names is “ ladies’ thimble ;” only that

name is sometimes given to a stitchwort which



HAREBELL. 1

grows in hedges and has a pretty white flower
that is never blue. The best name for it is
“bluebell” or ‘“harebell,” and by that it is
mostly known.

“ Bluebell! how gaily art thou drest,
How neat and trim art thou, sweet flower;
How silky is thy azure vest,

How fresh to flaunt at morning’s hour !”

The “harebell” is sometimes written “ hairbell,”
because the flowers hang upon a thread so slender
that they seem to be hanging froma hair. Cissy
was not long in picking a handful, and seated
herself on a grassy slope to take her lesson.

“ Now, uncle, tell me about these two kinds
of leaves. Those at the bottom of the stem,
which spread out and lie upon the ground, are
roundish, notched at the edge, and have long
stalks ; but the others are different.”

“They are the root-leaves, and are often
different in other plants from the stem-leaves.
That is one reason why we should always look

at the root-leaves as well as the stem-leaves.”



12 HAREBELL.

“ Well, the stem-leaves are long and narrow,
almost like little grass-leaves, and the edges are
not notched.”

“So far as it goes that is all right, but you
should always notice how the stem-leaves are
placed on the stem. In some plants the leaves
are in pairs, opposite to each other; and in some
they are placed apart, or alternate—one leaf on
one side of the stem, and one on the other side,
but higher up.”

“These are alternate, then, for they are not
in pairs, opposite to each other. And now for
the flowers.”

“Sometimes growing singly, and sometimes
two or three on a stem. ‘There are special
names for the different ways in which flowers
are seated upon the stem, but we need not to
trouble ourselves to-day.”

“ More names to learn, uncle ; but never mind,
let us pull the flower in pieces.”

“Before you do so, Cissy, you must notice
that these are bell-flowers, and all in one piece.

It is a one-petalled corolla.”



HAREBELL. 13

“T see that; and the little green sepals outside
are all joied in one piece, with five teeth—I
forget what to call it.”

“The calyx!”

“ Oh yes, that is the calyx; and the inside blue
flower like a thimble is the corolla, with five
notches at the mouth, and something inside,

“which we must cut it to see. That will do! I
have torn it down the middle, and there are five
stamens, with an ovary at the bottom. Isn’t it
strange that flowers seem so fond of the number
Jjwe?”

“A great many plants have the parts of the
flower in fives, but you will learn one day that
there are also many plants which have the parts
of the flower in threes: such plants as snow-
drops, tulips, crocuses, lilies, and many more.”

“The wild hyacinth, too. And now I can see
how much it is different from the harebell.”

“Have you noticed how the bees have been
buzzing around these flowers since we sat down ?
Those bells on the bank have been Be swing-
ing by the bees.”



14 HAREBELL.

“T saw the bees; but I am afraid of them, so
IT did not look at them very much. They cannot
know one flower from another.”

“ Indeed they do, Cissy ; they know more than
you think. I can tell you that bees know the
colour of flowers, and that humble-bees are very
fond of blue flowers, as well as of red ones, and
that more humble-bees visit red and blue flowers
than those of all other colours together. Honey-
bees are fond of blue flowers, but they like red
ones better, and yellow ones hardly at all.”

“Why do they go to flowers and hover about
them ?”

“O Cissy, what a strange question! Do you

not remember what it is that

‘Gathers honey all the day

1 , a a
From every opening flower’ ?

Bees go to the flowers to gather honey from
them. You can taste the sweet nectar in cow-
slip and primrose and honeysuckle flowers ; and
do you think that bees are more foolish than
you 2”



HAREBELL. 15

“ But do they go for anything else?”

“ Perhaps not on purpose, but they do some-
thing else without knowing it.”

“ And what may that be?”

“When you look at the stamens to count
them, do you never notice that the top, which
is called the anther, is often burst open, and
covered with a yellow powder which we call
pollen? This pollen or fine dust must find its
way from the stamen on to the top of the pistil
or ovary. If no pollen falls on the top of the
ovary, the seeds never ripen.”

“T have read that, but I never thought much
about it.”

“Suppose that a bee puts its head into one
of the bell-flowers, and tries to suck the nectar
from the bottom. In doing so the head of the
insect brushes against the stamens, and the
anthers will burst and sprinkle the pollen dust
over the head of the bee. Then the bee flies
away and goes to another flower of the same
kind, and thrusts its head deeply into the bell.
In this case some of the pollen dust is rubbed



16 HAREBELL.

off from the head of the bee, and falls upon the
top of the ovary, just where it is wanted, and
then the ovules become seeds.”

“Why does it go to the ovary rather than
anywhere else ?”

“Because at the top of the ovary there are
always one, two, three, or more sticky places, .
called the stigma, to which the pollen sticks
firmly ; and the other parts are not sticky. The
~bee cannot reach the bottom of the corolla with-
out brushing its head against the little sticky
stigma on the top of the ovary, and a large bee
cannot thrust its head into a bell-flower without
brushing the pollen out of the anthers on to its
head.”

« And so the bee helps the flower.”

_ “ And the flower helps the bee. There is still
another way in which a bee may help a flower.
I have told you before that there are some plants
which have flowers bearing stamens and no
ovary ; and that there are other plants, or other
flowers on the same plant, which enclose an ovary

and no stamens. The pollen has to travel from
(601)



HAREBELL. 17

the flowers which bear stamens into the flowers
which only bear ovaries; but how is this to be
done? The wind may help a little by blowing
the pollen from one to another, but insects can
do it much better in passing from one flower to
another. So you see that even an insect may
be doing good without knowing it.”

“Yes, uncle. But if a bee flies away from my
bell-flowers with pollen on its head, and then
goes on a visit to a dandelion, the pollen of the
bell-flower will not do any good to the dan-
delion.”

“Certainly not. But the bee does not fly from
a bell-flower to a dandelion—it seldom visits
yellow flowers—but it prefers to go from one
bell-flower to another, or from one blue or red
flower to another. Some insects are very true
to the flowers they visit, and they go from one
flower to another of the same kind as long as
they are in blossom. Insects are able to choose
_ the flowers they like best, sometimes by colour
and sometimes by the smell.”

“Do you think that bees or flies are able to
(501) 2



18 HAREBELL.

know a flower by its smell, and to love it as we
(oko

“Indeed I do, One blow-fly smells stinking
meat and likes it, another loves stinking fish.
One insect, or more, loves the scent of lime
flowers, and another revels in the odour of sweet-
smelling clover. Insects can detect the sweet
scent, or what is to them the pleasant scent, of
flowers, when our noses can scarcely find any
scent at all.”

“Some insects, I suppose, go to certain flowers
because they like their colour; and some insects
go to other flowers because of their scent. That,
I suppose, is what you wish me to know.”

“Yes; and I wish also to tell you that insects
go to flowers for some good purpose, and not
for pastime or mischief. It is their work, and
they do it as if they were at play.”



SCARLET PIMPERNEL.*

SE your eyes, Cissy, to find the little

scarlet pimpernel, and I suppose you

only know it by the common name of ‘ poor
man’s weather-glass.’”

“Yes, uncle ; I know the little red flower that
we call ‘ poor man’s weather-glass,’ but I couldn't
tell you why it has such a funny name.”

“ Perhaps I can help you; and whilst you are
looking for the flower, I will explain it. There
are some plants which open and close their
flowers at certain times of the day : some open
in the morning, some open in the evening, and
some only open when the sun ig shining. These
are called ‘meteoric flowers,’ and the pimpernel
is a meteoric flower. When it is a cloudy or
rainy day the flowers. are closed, and they open

* Anagallis arvensis,



20 SCARLET PIMPERNEL.

in the sunlight. If the flowers are open in the
morning, it is a sign that there will be no rain;
but if they are closed, you must carry an um-
brella. This is the reason why they are called
the ‘poor man’s weather-glass,’ because, like a
weather - glass, they foretell changes in the

weather.

‘Come tell me, thou coy little flower,
Converging thy petals again,
Who gave thee the magical power
Of shutting thy cup on the rain?
While many a beautiful bower
Is drenched in nectareous dew,
Sealed up is your scarlet-tinged flower,

?

And the rain peals in vain upon you.’

“Then they are almost ‘sensitive plants,’ I
suppose, but not those which open and shut
regularly.”

“Yes, they are all sensitive to something; if
not to a coming shower, then to the light of the
sun. A clever man noticed this many years
ago, and wrote out a ‘flower-clock,’ so as to

know the hour by the opening or closing of



SCARLET PIMPERNEL. 21

flowers. Thus, there is the bindweed to open at
four in the morning, the sow thistle at six, the
pimpernel at eight, the marigold at nine, the
blue passion-flower at twelve ; and, in the even-
ing, the evening primrose at six, the campion at
seven, and others at eight. Some people call
the opening and shutting the waking and going

to sleep of flowers.

‘Oh let us live so that flower by flower,
Shutting in turn, may leave

A lingerer still for the sunset hour,

2

A charm for the shaded eve.’’

“The daisy always closes and goes to bed as
the sun goes down, and then it looks so sleepy.”

“Flowers are always most open in the bright
sunlight, except evening flowers and the few
that blossom in the night. You know the
garden flower called ‘purple convolvulus:’ it is
avery early riser, and opens its flowers at two
o'clock in the morning.”

“ Now I have found the pimpernel, but nearly
all the little flowers are closed.”



22 SCARLET PIMPERNEL.

“T have told you something about the families
of plants in our rambles, but you would scarcely
think that the pimpernel belongs to the family
of the primroses. There is not much family
likeness, but you see that the corolla is all in
one piece.”

“How thin and weak all the stems are, so
that they lie and creep along upon the ground ;
and the leaves are so thin.”

“Opposite to each other, in pairs, along the
stem. Almost egg-shaped, ovate they are called,
and not toothed at the edge. There are no
proper leaf-stalks, for the leaves are seated, or
placed, close to the stem. In some plants, when
pairs of leaves are so close, they are joined to-
gether, so as to appear to be one leaf; but these
are not joined, or connate.”

“J should like to find some plant with connate
leaves.”

“They are not very common, but perhaps we
shall find the ‘teazel’ some day. Now you must
look at the flowers, for you see that they have
rather long, thin stalks, and everywhere the



SCARLET PIMPERNEL. 23

flower-stalk comes out from the stem, just at the
place where the leaf joins the stem. This is
called the axzl, and it means ‘arm-pit.’ Just as
your arm joins the body, there is the arm-pit;
so, where the leaf joins the stem, there is the
axil, Pluck nearly any flower which has a stem,
and where the leaf, or the leaf-stalk, joins the
stem : that is the aa, and in the axil is a bud or
a flower.”

“ Axil—arm-pit ; I shall remember.”

“ And now for the flowers. The outside cup,
or green calyx, is in one piece, with five teeth ;
but the cup is a shallow one, and not like the
long tube of the primrose. When the corolla
falls away, the cup, or calyx, remains behind.
See how easily the corolla falls off, all in one
piece, with a hole in the middle, like a cart
wheel. When a wheel goes round it is said to
‘rotate,’ because rota is a word for wheel. A
corolla such as this is rotate, because it is like
a little cart wheel, all hanging together, with
a hole in the middle. There are five rays, or
lobes, or teeth, whichever you please to call

er

Wie



24. SCARLET PIMPERNEL.

them, to your bright red corolla, and within
these you will find the five stamens, with the
ovary in the middle.”

“The number is all the same again: there
are five teeth to the cup, five points to the
corolla, and five stamens.”

“Tn some of the oldest of the flowers, where
the corolla has fallen off for some days, you will
see that the ovary remains behind, and has
grown much larger; and it goes on growing into
a seed-vessel, and a very curious one, round like
a pea, until, when it is ripe, it is nearly as large
as a small pea.”

“ Not a soft, juicy berry ?”

“No; it is a hard, dry capsule, or seed-box,
and a very strange one. I will tell you what it
is like, because they will not be ripe for some
weeks. The little capsule is round, and green
at first, but becomes dirty yellow, and when it
is ripe it splits all round, and the top falls off
like a lid, with the little seeds packed closely in
the lower half, like egos in a nest.”

“JT shall have to learn the names of the



SCARLET PIMPERNEL. 25

different sorts of fruits in the autumn. I have
called them all fruit, and did not notice the
difference.”

“Well, Cissy, a pea-pod is a fruit, and so are
a filbert, and a plum, and a blackberry, and a
cucumber, but they are all very different.”

“ Are all the dry fruits capsules ?”

“Not properly so; neither are all the pulpy
fruits berries. A red or black currant is a berry,
but a cherry or a plum with a stone in the
middle is not a berry, but a drupe. Then the
dry fruits may split open when ripe, like a pod ;
or they do not split, like a filbert. Those which
split when ripe, if they are long and narrow, are
commonly called pods; but if short, or nearly
round, capsules. Those which do not split are
nuts. Of course there are other names for fruits,
but we need not trouble about them now. We
should learn to know the things, and then their

names.”



ite A Taleb

“ HE large purple tufts of heather which
grow in a scattered manner over heaths
and commons look very pretty in autumn, but
they should be seen in all their glory on moors,
and amongst the mountains of Scotland and
Wales, where they cover acres of ground like a
carpet. There are several different plants which
are called by the name of heather—such as the
ling, or he-heather, and the Scotch, or she-
heather, and the cross-leaved heath; but all of
them are very much alike, and it is no wonder
that they are commonly known by the same
name.
‘The heather flower -
Of scent delicious, and inviting still

The eye to rest upon its beauty, spread

* Hrica tetralix.



HEATHER. Q7

For miles athwart the moor, where wild fowl haunt,
And where the industrious bee collects her sweets,’

We shall find at least three kinds of heather, all
growing together on the common, and we will
take them one at a time, and then we shall see
how much they are alike, and where they differ.
A pretty cluster of the cross-leaved heath, as
the flowers look the brightest, is at your feet,
and we will take it to begin with.”

“What a pretty rose colour! and the flowers
look like waxwork.”

“The heath plants are almost like little
stunted shrubs with us, hardly a foot high,
and the flowers are small, but in such immense
numbers that they may be seen a long way
off.”

“And how tough and strong they are! I
cannot pull it up by the root, and I can scarcely
break off the branches.”

“T think we can call them woody little shrubs,
for they are perennal, and grow from year to
year, for many years, close to the ground, and
cover it like a carpet. In this one the tiny



28 HEATHER.

leaves are narrow, and growing in clusters on
the branches.”

“Always in fours, and fringed with hairs—
four, four, four, cross leaves. And this, then, is
the ‘ cross-leaved heath.’”

“ The ‘rule of five’ is broken with the heather,
as you will soon find out by the flowers.”

“So it is. Here is the little green cup, or
calyx, with four teeth; and the corolla, hardly
bell-shaped, but all in one piece, with four teeth
at the mouth.”

“True, it is a one-petalled corolla, nearly of
an oval shape; and these grow in clusters, at the
tops of the branches, with the mouths hanging
down, and all turned to one side.”

“ Racemes, I should say ; but the flower-stalks
are short. What would you call racemes at the
end of a branch ?”

“Terminal racemes; but these are more clus-
ters than racemes. And now for the inside of
the flower ; and you must be careful, for they
are small.”

“Pistil in the centre, and four—four, yes,



HEATHER. 29

eight stamens. All in fours this time, with
such strange-looking horns, like bristles, to the
stamens. I can just see them, but it wants a
hand-glass to see them well.” .

“ And now, Cissy, you must find the Scotch
heather, with longer racemes of flowers, and the
leaves more pointed, but not in clusters of four.
Look carefully, and you will be certain to find
it, for I have often found them, growing closely
together.”

“T wonder whether I have got it here, with
leaves in threes instead of fours, and they are
not hairy.”

‘“T expect that you are right, Cissy; for you
see that the flowers are not so much in clusters
as in long racemes, and the shape is rather
different, the colour more purple, and they are
more numerous.”

“J thought at the first that they were all
alike, but suppose I shall know them now as
the four-leaved and the three-leaved heather.
But they must be brothers and sisters, uncle,

they are so much alike.”



30 HEATHER.

“ More alike than they are to the other one
that we are looking after, which is called ‘ling’
in many places, and is very common. The
flowers are smaller, more open or bell-shaped,
and of a paler colour.”

“ Do you think that I can find it for myself?”

“You should be able to see the difference in a
minute, for there is plenty of it round about us.”

“Then I see which it is, with the little pink
flowers more scattered about on the branches.”

“ Look first at those flowers, and you will find
that the calyx, or cup, of the flower is pink, like
the corolla, and looks like a double corolla, but
it is really a coloured calyx, with four teeth,
longer than the true corolla, which is nearly
hidden by them. Outside of both is a green
outer calyx, with four leaves or bracts. So you
see that there are three sets of flower-leaves—
the little four-toothed corolla inside, then comes
the larger coloured calyx, and outside all the
four green bracts. Stamens nearly as in the
other heaths, and eight. Now we will turn to
the leaves.”



HEATHER. 3l

“And they are very small, and opposite.”

“The young branches will show you that the
leaves are in four rows, up and down, on opposite
sides of the thin twigs. So that in all the three
kinds of heather the leaves are placed in a
different manner. The branches of ling are
gathered, and bound tightly together to make
little brooms.”

“They are useful as well as pretty.”

“Yes. It is even said that, a very long time
ago, the Danes made beer from heather; and
now the bees, you see, are very busy all around,
gathering honey from the flowers. quantity of honey is gathered by bees from the
flowers of heather.

‘The powdery bells, that glance in purple bloom,
Fling from their scented cups a sweet perfume ;
While from their cells, still moist with morning dew,

The wandering wild bee sips the honeyed glue.’ ”

“T should thmk that the Scotch moors are
very beautiful when the heather is in flower.”

‘Indeed they are, Cissy ; and sometimes you



32 HEATHER.

can see the ground purple for miles with these
little flowers, and hear the bees humming over
them, and see the wild birds hiding amongst
them.”

“Ts the fruit a berry ?”

“No; it is a dry capsule, with many seeds, in
the heathers, but it is a fleshy berry in some
of the little shrubs which belong to the same
family, such as the bilberry and cranberry.”

“Could we not grow the heather in our
garden ?”

“Not readily. They will not grow anywhere
as they do on their open heaths and moors, and
only by a great deal of care will they grow in
gardens at all. The ling is the most likely to
succeed. Many very beautiful foreign kinds
may be grown in greenhouses.

“As we jog along, Cissy, I wish to explain
to you two words which are often used in books
upon flowers, as they refer to the petals or
corolla, and you may be puzzled when you see
them. These two words are ‘monopetalous’
and ‘polypetalous.’ Indeed, you might guess



HEATHER. 33

that they meant ‘one-petalled’ and ‘many-
petalled, but you will desire to be quite sure.
We have in the heathers a monopetalous corolla,
in which the petals are joined along the sides
into a corolla, and not divided into four or five
separate petals, in which case it would have
been ‘polypetalous.’ You do not see the join-
ing of the petals perhaps, but you know that
the corolla is all in one piece. In the heather
flowers the corolla is like a little jug, which is
narrowed at the mouth, swells in the

middle, and is rounded at the bottom.

Such an one is said to be wrceolate. y
But there are other kinds of mono-

Fic. 2.—Ur-
petalous corolla, which are not at all cvovats Co-

ROLLA OF
narrowed at the mouth, but form qa Hearuzr.
straight tube as they do in the honeysuckle
and the florets of the thistle. This is called a
tubular corolla. If we pass on to the primrose,
we find another kind of corolla which has a long
tube, and the mouth is furnished with five
spreading limbs or lobes, like petals, but joined
at the bottom into a tube. This is called salver-
(501) 3



34 HEATHER.

shaped, or hypocrateriform—a long ugly word.

If the petals are spreading in the same man-



Fic. 8.—TuBuLAR CoROLLA OF Fic. 4.—SALVER-SHAPED Co-
THONEYSUCKLE. ROLLA OF PRIMROSE.

ner, but the tube is very short, as it is in the
forget-me-not, then it is called rotate, or wheel-
shaped. When the corolla is shaped like a
little bell, as it is in the harebell, it is said to

be campanulate. But if the mouth is wider



Fic. 5.—Rovrate Coro.a. Fic. 6.—CAMPANULATE COROLLA OF
a, Stamens attached. HLAREBELL.

open, like a funnel, as in the bindweed, it 1s
called infundibulrform.

“ And now that I have named all the forms



HEATHER. 35

of the monopetalous corolla which have a regular,
or as we term it a symmetrical form, I must
run over the names of those which have an

irregular corolla—that is to say, the petals, or



Sic. 7.—Inrunprpvurtrorm Coronpa Fic. 8.—BmasBiaTE Corona
or BINDWEED. or EYEBRIGHT.

which would have been the petals if they had
been divided, are not all of the same shape and
size. There are the bilabiate, or two-lipped,
monopetalous corolla of the ‘eyebright’ and the
mints ; and the ringent, or gaping, corolla of the
yellow archangel, which is also two-lipped. Then
there is the very curious closed mouth of the
corolla in the snap-dragon, which is a personate,

monopetalous corolla. And the pouch -like



36 HEATHER.

corolla of the calceolaria is an example of the
calceolate corolla. Then, lastly, there is the ir-
regular form of monopetalous corolla which is
found in the strap-shaped florets of the goat’s-

beard and dandelion—the lower part tubular,



Fie. 9.—CALCEOLATE COROLLA Fic. 10.—LicgunaAte FLoret oF
Or CALCEOLARIA, DANDELION.

and the upper with a long strap on one side:
this is a ligulate corolla.

“T shall say nothing about the polypetalous
corolla, except to repeat that the petals are

separate, and not united together in any way ;



HEATHER. 37

and although the greater number of them are
regular, having all the petals equal in form and
size, there is one very marked exception in the
pea flowers, such as the yellow broom, the
flowers of which have a standard, two wings,
and a keel, and are called papilionaceous, from a
fancied resemblance to a sitting butterfly. Let
me advise you to read this all over again, and

be sure that you remember it.”



YELLOW BROOM.*

NE day we had a chat about families, and
Cissy learned what was the family like-

ness in the Crossworts, and many a time after
she amused herself by hunting after the different
kinds to see how many she could find. There
is another large family with peculiar shaped
flowers, which are quite as easy and even more
numerous. Some of them are grown in fields,
some are found in hedgerows, others on commons
and waste places, as well as in gardens and
almost everywhere. They are the Pea-flower
family, which include the garden peas, beans,
clovers, and many others, as well as the broom
and furze. They are easily known, both by
their flowers and their pods. All that are

found in this country have what are called

* Sarothamnus scopartus,



YELLOW BROOM. 39

butterfly flowers, which have five unequal petals.
The upper one stands up like a shield, and is the
largest, called the standard; one on each side

are the wings; and two at the bottom, partly

aa



Fie. 11.--Pra Frowers.

A, Flower ; B, Section ; c, Stamens and Pistil; p, Pistil; wu’, Petals; e, Standard ;
a—u, Wings; c, Keel; ©, Pod or Legume; r, Seed; G, Section.

joined together like a boat, are the heel: so that
there is one large one and two pairs of smaller

ones, and they look something like a butterfly



40 YELLOW BROOM.

at rest. Inside the flower are ten stamens, and
these are also singular, because the ten filaments,
or stalks, are either joined together to form a
tube, or nine are joined together and a single
one is left outside. Then the fruit or pod con-
taining the seeds is like a pea-pod, formed of
two halves that are both alike, joined all the
way down, both back and front, but easily split-
ting at the joint and exposing a row of seeds.
A very good example is to be seen in the
common garden pea, in which the peas are the
seeds, all in a row.

A great many of this family are climbing
plants like the garden pea, the scarlet-runner,
and the vetch. Some are little creeping herbs,
like the clovers ; but some are large shrubs, like
the broom and furze, or even large trees, like the
laburnum, and a very common tree called an
acacia. In foreign countries some of the trees
grow to an immense size. The very prickly
shrub which grows on heaths and commons,
with bright yellow flowers, is the gorse, furze,

or whin; but we shall choose a shrub that is not



YELLOW BROOM. 4}

a prickly one, with quite as pretty yellow flowers,
which we shall find in the old sand-pit. This
is the broom, or we might call it the royal
broom.

“You have read, Cissy, in your History of
England, that in olden times some of the royal
families were called Plantagenet, which is said
to mean ‘planta genista,’ because genista was the
Latin name of the ‘broom,’ and the broom was
the badge of the Plantagenets before they
adopted the rose. Another story is that Geof-
frey of Anjou placed a sprig of ‘broom’ in his
helmet on the day of battle, and was called from
it Plantagenet, and that he gave the name to
his children. Now we have reached the sand-
pit, and must gather the’ Plantagenet broom,
which is standing there in a thick mass of gor-
geous yellow blossom.”

2

“Tsn’t it lovely !” and that was all she said.

“The broom it is the flower for me,
That groweth on the common.
Oh the broom, the yellow broom !

The ancient poet sung it;



42 YELLOW BROOM.

And sweet it is on summer days
To lie at rest among it.”

“You find how tough the branches are, Cissy,
and ribbed, rising straight up, and so many of
them that the twigs are made into very good
brooms in many places. I wonder whether
besoms are called brooms because they were
made of broom twigs as well as of birch.”

“ And what little trefoil leaves! some of them
with no stalk at all. The plant seems to be all
twigs and flowers.”

“Yes; but it makesa grand show. And now
you can study the flowers. The green calyx
outside is almost bell-shaped, with two lips, and
finely toothed.”

“ Ah! but the flowers, the butterfly flowers ;
I want to look at the flowers. That is the
standard, the biggest petal, at the top; it is
twice as large as the others. Then there are two
smaller ones at the sides—these are the wings ;
and at the bottom, like a hood turned upside
down, two petals joined together in the shape
of a little boat—that is the keel.



YELLOW BROOM. 43

‘And now I have a little boat
In shape a very crescent moon’
Some other flowers have a lower lip, but when
you compare them you will soon see how dif-
ferent they are from the ‘ butterfly flowers.’”

“The stamens lie in the little boat, all of a
bunch; there are ten of them, and the stalks are
all elued together around the pistil.”

‘No, Cissy, you should not call them stalks ;
they are the filaments, or little threads, of the
stamens with the anthers at the top, and you
see that they are all curved so as to lie in the
little keel, and scarcely to be seen without
bending down the petals. Look how neatly
they fit into the hollow, just like a tiny ‘Jack-
in-the-box.’”

“T can only just see the top of the pistil.”

“Tf you would clear away the filaments which
are closed around the pistil, you would see that
the ovary is a long and curved one, just like a
very small and young pea-pod, for such it is,
and it is the future pod in a very infant stage.
When the corolla dies and falls off, the ovary



44, YELLOW BROOM.

remains, and it continues to grow until it becomes
the seed-vessel or pod, and this, in the common
pea, is the pod which contains the peas. This
is the kind of fruit which is to be found in the
Pea-flower family, and in the broom as well as
in the pea.”

“We must wait for the pods until later on,
when the flowers have fallen and the ovaries
have grown into pods.”

“Yes, my dear; and then we shall find the
pods nearly black, and a little hairy, shaped like
pea-pods, only smaller, each holding a row of
seeds much smaller than peas.”

“ And are they good to eat ?”

“No; they become very hard, and it is said
that sheep are fond of eating them, which makes
them tipsy for a time; and so if children eat
them it makes their heads giddy. Laburnum
seeds are even worse, and are more poisonous.
Children should never eat wild seeds, or berries,
unless they are strawberries, or blackberries, or
filberts, which they know to be good.”

“You said that there are many wild flowers



YELLOW BROOM. 45

which belong to this family ; shall we find any
more of them to-day ?”

“Yes; I pointed you to the prickly gorse.”

“T know; but I mean, any others.”

‘ Perhaps we may; but the clovers have very
small flowers.”

“And I shall know them always by their
curious flowers when they are in blossom, and
by the pods when the blossoms are gone, but not
by the leaves when there are no flowers or fruit.”

“Not for certainty, Cissy, until you know
more about wild flowers, because leaves vary so
much. A great number of them have ¢refoil
leaves, like the clovers; but some other plants
have trefoil leaves, like the wood-sorrel and the
wild strawberry. Then many of them have
pinnate leaves with a number of leaflets on each
side of the foot-stalk ; but many other plants have
pinnate leaves, only not quite like those of the
pea flowers. I do not know of any which have
simple leaves—that is to say, leaves with only
one blade, like the violet and primrose, or the

oak and poplar.”



46 YELLOW BROOM.

“ Are the leaves of any of them eaten ?”

“Only by sheep and cattle; none of them
for salads or vegetables. Don’t forget, if you
are ever uncertain about the shape of the flower,
to look at the stamens, which should be ten

joined together, or nine united and one free.”









SILVER-WEED.*

S we stroll along to the common, in search
of another of our wild flowers, my com-
panion and myself chat of many things that
relate to plants and their leaves. This time we
were talking most of the hairs which clothe the
cuticle, and such small objects as are scarcely
visible to the naked eye. Hairs are common
enough on leaves, stems, and flowers, and we
are often content to say that such parts are
hairy or smooth without being able to say
what is the form, which our eyes are not strong
enough to detect. By using a good pocket-glass
a little more can be seen. But it is the micro-
scope only which can reveal all the variety of
form in hairs; and as this last instrument re-
quires skill for its use, we had to be content
with gossip.

* Potentilla anserina.



48 SILVER-WEED.

“ Hairs,” I said, “are most often simple and
delicate tubes, tapering and closed at the end,
and either with or without cross partitions, at
certain distances apart. Some hairs are very
short, and then the appearance is velvety ; some
are long, waved, and twisted together, and then
the surface is woolly. Besides simple hairs,
there are some few which are branched; and
some, although not branched, are thickened at
the top. The stinging hairs of the nettle have
a swollen top which breaks off at a touch, and
then the stinging juice escapes. Glandular hairs
are little cells containing oil or some other fluid
borne at the top of slender hairs. They are
large and pretty on the leaves of the sundews,
short and small on lavender and geranium.
Some leaves have on their under surface star-
shaped hairs, or even irregular scales, and others
are only frosted with a powdery meal.”

“ And all these are supposed to be given for
some good purpose, or for some use.”

“ Exactly. And now we have to gather the
suver-weed, and learn why it is silvery. It is



SILVER-WEED. 49

common enough by roadsides, in waste places,
and on such ground as this. I don’t know why
it should have been called ‘ goosegrass,’ as the
plant usually called ‘goosegrass’ is a slender
straggling herb, which climbs in hedges, and is
very rough in all parts, with hooked prickles, so
that it cleaves to the clothes, and is also called
‘cleavers.’”

‘But the ‘silver-weed’ creeps on the ground,
and grows in large patches. We always call it
silver-weed because of the silvery leaves.”

“ As you know it so well, you had better give
me your account of it; and there is plenty of it
close by, which may help you.”

“Tt has a creeping stem, which creeps along
the ground, and has little rootlets at all the
joints, to keep it fixed, and the leaves rise up
from the runners, about six inches long.

“There always appear to be a great many
leaves and a very few flowers; for the leaves
grow in large dense patches, and the flowers are
solitary.

“ Of course the leaves are pinnate, and broader

(501) 4



50 SILVER-WEED.

above than below, so that the upper leaflets are
the largest, and about six leaflets on each side
with one at the end. Sometimes they are op-
posite, and sometimes alternate. Each leaflet
would be oblong, with the edge deeply cut into
rather large sharp-pointed teeth. The upper
side of the leaves is green, and only a little
silky ; but the under side is silvery white, and
very silky, because closely covered with long
white hairs, which are pressed down close to the
leaf.”

“Very good, Cissy. You have given a very
nice account of the leaves, and now you must do
the same for the flowers.”

“The first thing I know about them is that they
are yellow, and look very much like buttercups.”

“You must begin at the beginning, and give
us some notion of the flower-stalk and the in-
florescence.”

“The flowers grow singly, on the top of long
stalks, which come up from the creeping runners,
starting from the joints, and rising to about the
height of the leaves.”



SILVER-WEED. 51

“Don’t you see that they are axillary?”

“Yes—they spring from the axils of the
leaves ; but I can see no bracts. The calyx is a
double one, each cut at the edge into five teeth,
and the outside ones are the smallest. Then
the yellow petals are five, quite distinct from
each other, and scarcely touching. The stamens

are in great number, and stand upon the calyx,



Fie. 12.—SrTrRAWBERRY.

and not on the corolla, so that when the petals
fall they leave the stamens behind.”

“Must I help you with the column in the
centre, which is not a column, but a swollen or
thickened end to the flower-stalk, called the
receptacle, upon which stand a great number of

one-seeded ovaries, called also carpels, or ‘little



52 SILVER-WEED.

fruits’? The receptacle enlarges a little after
the petals fall, but is never juicy.”

“T suppose the calyx grows to the receptacle?”

“You know what strawberries are, and you
call them a fruit; but they are only just such a
receptacle as this, which continues to grow after
the petals fall, and becomes very large and juicy
and sweet. If you look at the outside of a
strawberry, you will see a great number of pale
dots: these are the carpels, or little fruits, each
with one small seed inside. The strawberry
flower is like a silver-weed flower, only it is
white, and the receptacle becomes fleshy.”

“Do the raspberry and blackberry belong to
the same family as the strawberry ?”

“Yes; and the flowers are very much alike.
If you pluck a ripe raspberry, you will gather
with it the end of the flower-stalk. When you
pull this out of the ripe raspberry, it is a little
white conical receptacle, and you will see marks
on the outside where all the fruits or carpels
were growing. This was a receptacle which

did not grow much, but became longer, and the



SILVER-WEED. 53

little berries studded over it, packed close to-
gether, were the carpels, which became juicy as
they ripened, each with a little seed buried in
the juice. Now, do you see the difference be-
tween a raspberry and a strawberry ?”

“I believe that I do. The strawberry has



Fic. 18.—Raspperry Frutrs.

the receptacle changed into the fruit, as we call
it, and the carpels are dry, and stick on the out-
side. The raspberry has a conical, rather spongy
receptacle, and the carpels become juicy and
jomed together all around the receptacle, but



54, SILVER-WEED.

can be pulled off all together, like a cap, when
the raspberry is ripe.”

“Of course the blackberry is just the same
sort of fruit as a raspberry, and all belong to

the Rose family. You have asked me once or



Fic. 14.—Recerracte, CARPELS, ETc., OF BRAMBLE.
twice before to explain to you how it is that
single flowers become double when they are
grown in gardens, or, as we say, cultivated.

The rose is a good example, because the present





Fic. 15.—Douste Rose.









SILVER-WEED. 57

‘double’ roses, so called, are descended, as chil-
dren, from a stock which was single. Double
flowers ¢ 2 those in which the number of petals
has been largely increased, beyond the usual or
original number in the wild flower, and are there-
fore what are termed ‘malformations’ or ‘mon-
strosities.’ The wild rose, you know, has in the
centre of the flower a great number of stamens,
but the garden rose has none or rarely very few.
The reason for this is that the stamens, in the
garden rose, are changed into petals. Learn
from this that it is possible for stamens to be-
come ‘petaloid, or to be changed into petals.
If you examine the single dahlia, you will see
that the central florets are tubular and fertile ;
but in the double dahlia they are changed into
strap-shaped florets, and are noé fertile. From
this we learn that when single flowers become
double they are no longer fertile, and do not
produce seeds. That pretty white flower which
floats on ponds and lakes, and is called the
white water-lily, is sometimes seen becoming

more double by the change of stamens into



58 SILVER-WEED.

petals, so that you may see little petals carrying
a small anther at the top. If you will take the
trouble to examine double flowers, such as those
of the double hawthorn, double primrose, double
stocks, you will find that as the petals increase,
so do the stamens diminish, until they are all
changed into petals. The lesson this should
teach you is, that if you wish to find out the
true number of petals and stamens in any given
flower, you should use single flowers; and if
you find at any time a wild flower which has
more petals than other flowers of the same kind
of plant growing near it, you may expect to find
also that it is deformed in other particulars, and
has fewer stamens than it should have if it were
perfect.”





Fie. 16.—Witp Rose.







EYE-BRIGHT.*

WO little plants, not very unlike each
other, are usually to be found in dry,

hilly pastures, and on commons or heaths. They
are often both of them plentiful, and can scarcely
be mistaken the one for the other. These are
the wild thyme and the eye-bright, and both
are in flower nearly at the same time. The
garden thyme is known to most persons on
account of its scent, which is similar in the wild
thyme, but is not so strong. That it is also

found on banks may be learned from the line,—
“T know a bank whereon the wild thyme grows.”

Some people say that it loves to grow on an old
ant-hill; but wherever it grows the bees will
soon find it out. When plentiful it quite per-
fumes the air. The other little plant has paler

* Euphrasia officinalis.



62 EYE-BRIGHT.

flowers, and does not grow in dense clumps, and
is without odour. The flowers in both are ir-
regular, small, and monopetalous—that is to say,
the petals are all united in one piece—but they
do not belong to exactly the same family. We
shall see them both, but it is only the eye-bright
which is our object to-day.
“T expect you to ask me at once what is the
meaning of the name, and I can give you two
reasons, either of which may be the right one.
The flowers, although small, are plainly to be
seen at some distance, when they seem to be
white, or with a faint purple tinge mixed with
yellow. Scattered over the ground the flowers
are turned upwards, and seem to be gazing at
you like hundreds of bright eyes. Hence they
may have been called bright eyes, or eye-bright.
Another reason for the name has been given
from its uses. The old plant-doctors, or herbal-
ists, thought it so good for the eyes that one of
_them wrote, ‘If the herb was but as much used
as it is neglected, it would half spoil the spec-

tacle-maker’s trade.’ One has even said that



EYE-BRIGHT. 63

‘it hath restored sight to them that have been
blind for a long time.’ From this you may
learn that it was believed to have the power
of making the dim eyes bright, and hence was
called eye-bright. I see that you have found it,
Cissy, whilst I have been talking; and now we
will sit down amongst it, and ‘improve the
shining hour.’”

“T have been trying to find the longest
stems that I can, but they are all very short
and tough. You see that none of them are
longer than my hand, with one or two little
branches near the bottom.”

“Sometimes they are not longer than your
finger, but the root is rather long for the size
of the plant.”

“Tt is not a creeping root, but goes straight
down into the ground.”

“Although there is plenty of it, it does not
erow in spreading tufts, but each plant separate.”

“The leaves are small, and almost egg-shaped,
or ovate, without any foot-stalks, sitting close

to the stem, and in pairs, opposite to each other.



64 EYE-BRIGHT.

The edge of the leaves is toothed, but the teeth
are more blunt in the lower part of the leaves
than in the upper.”

“There are not more than about five teeth
on each side of the leaf.”

“ What shall we call the znflorescence? There
are only a few flowers, and on the upper part of
the stem, or the branches; but I should think
they are in a sort of spike, yet not a very good
one.”

“Yes; it is a loose, leafy spike.”

“The separate flowers have no proper stalk,
but they have a green calyx, with four or five
pointed teeth; and within this is the corolla,
the petals of which are joined below into a short
tube. The outer lobes or divisions of the corolla
form an upper and lower lip, so that it is a two-
lipped corolla, gaping at the mouth. The upper
lip is two-lobed, and the lower lip is three-
lobed. The lobes would be the petals if they
were not joined.”

“This is not such a hooded two-lipped corolla
as we find in the yellow dead-nettle, or even in



EYE-BRIGHT. 65

the yellow rattle; but the two lips are distinct
enough to be observed at once.”

“There is a yellow spot in the throat; for if
we call the corolla two-lipped, we may call the
opening in the middle a throat.”



Fic. 17.—Ftower or [yr-pricut.
I, Flower ; 2, Ovary and Style; 3, 4, 5, Capsule with Section; 6, Seed, magnified ;
7, Section of Seed.

“Oh yes; that is a well-known name for the
opening of the tube of a corolla.”

“Most of the flowers are nearly white, with
purple streaks and a yellow throat.”

“When the plant grows in mountain pas-

tures or on high moors, it is dwarfed very
(501) 5



66 EYE-BRIGHT.

much, and is such a tiny little plant, with
smaller flowers, and they are almost wholly
yellow.”

“Do plants usually grow smaller as you go
to colder places, or higher and higher up a
mountain side ?”

“Yes; as a rule, plants and shrubs become
smaller and smaller as you go up a mountain,
until it gets too cold for them to grow at all.”

“ But some plants will grow in cold countries,
and on the sides of mountains, which do not
grow in the plains, or where the weather is
warm.”

“Certainly. Plants depend very much upon
what is termed temperature, as well as upon the
nature of the soil; and many animals depend
upon the plants. But you have quite forgotten
the stamens.”

“Indeed I have, for I was thinking of some-
thing else. I can only find four stamens, in two
pairs—that is, two and two; but they are very
small to find.”

“T am not surprised that you should have



EYE-BRIGHT. ' 67

forgotten them ; but as you find that there are
only four, it is well that you found them at last.
In this family the stamens are usually two or
four, as well as in the Mint family, to which the
wild thyme belongs.”

“ And is the fruit a dry capsule ?”

“Yes; it is a small one and flattened, with
very little seeds, which are ribbed or furrowed.”

“Do I know any other plant which belongs
to this family and is not so small ?”

“Two or three you know in gardens, but they
will not help you much with the eye-bright.
These are the snap-dragon, the foxglove, the
yellow calceolaria, and the musk plant; but
they are all very different looking plants, and
you will have to study them to see where the
family likeness comes in.”

“Tt does not seem so easy to learn the inflo- |
rescence as it does to understand the forms of
flowers.”

“ Let us try to do so by comparing together
the common forms of inflorescence. Of course

we leave out all solitary flowers, growing by



68 EYE-BRIGHT.

themselves. The simplest inflorescence is a
spike, in which the flowers stand one above
another upon the stem; but the single flowers
have no foot-stalk, or only a very short one.
The plantains have the flowers in a dense spike.

If the flowers are arranged in the same manner,

&

SSS



Fic. 18.—Sprkr. Fie. 19.—-RAcemE.

but all the flowers have foot-stalks of equal
length, it is called a raceme; so that a raceme
differs from a spike in having stalked flowers.
The flowers often turn over to one side, as they
do in the lily of the valley, but all the flower-
stalks are unbranched. When the inflorescence



EYE-BRIGHT. 69

is more spreading, and each of the flower-stalks
is branched either once or several times, then it
is called a panicle. Many of the grasses have
this kind of inflorescence, and so has the Iilac.
If we suppose that a panicle has all the flower-
stalks gradually lengthened from the top one to

Fic. 20.—PAanicie. Fic. 21.—Coryms.

the lowest, so that all the flowers stand at the
same level or nearly so, then it is a corymb.
The flower-stalks themselves may be either
branched or unbranched. It sometimes seems
difficult to know a corymb from a cyme, but a
cyme, although it much resembles a corymb in



70 EYE-BRIGHT.

form, differs in growth ; for the central flower
opens first, and the side branches grow usually
in pairs, in succession, so that it keeps growing
by increase of branches and flowers, as in the
campion. Or the cyme may be one-sided, and,

a succession of flower-stalks are produced on

Za
elo

¥ie, 22,—Cynn,
the upper side, which when young are curled
over and said to be scorpioid. It is hardly
necessary to tell you what an wmbel is, for all
the flower-stalks start from the same level.
When each of these stalks carries a smaller



EYE-BRIGHT. 71

umbel at the top, it is compound. The head,
or capitulum, of the composite flowers was ex-
plained in our chat on the dandelion, goat’s-
beard, and thistle.”





Tic, 23.—Compounb UMBEL.



THISTLES.

HISTLES are of many kinds, as well as
buttercups, but thistles especially, and

yet they have not many friends. Farmers do
not like thistles to grow upon their land, and
yet some thistles are very fond of ploughed
fields. Children do not like thistles, because
they have a way of pricking their fingers.
Cattle do not like thistles, and will not eat
them whilst they can get anything else.
Donkeys like thistles well enough, but then
they are asses. Goldfinches are supposed to
be fond of thistles, but only of their seeds.
Thistles are plentiful everywhere, and yet no
one has a good word for them, unless he is a
Scotsman. Why a Scot should love the thistle
may be found in its being the emblem of his

nation, as the rose is the emblem of England,



THISTLES. 73

and the shamrock of Ireland. The story is,
that in the time of the Danish invasion, when,
of course, the Scots and the Danes were
opposed, and fought against each other, an
attempt was made to attack the Scots by night,
when a barefooted Dane trod upon a thistle,
which made him cry aloud with the pain, and



Fie. 24,—THISTLES.

this aroused the Scots, who fell upon and
defeated the enemy. Which kind of thistle it
was is unknown, and so many kinds have been
supposed, by different people, to be the true
Scotch thistle. But the emblem of Scotland is
a thistle, of one kind or another. Many kinds



14 THISTLES.

of these plants are found on commons, heaths,
and waste places, where we shall find the dwarf
thistle,* and that will answer our purpose.

“There it stands, Cissy, growing close to the
ground, with scarcely any stem at all, and you
must dig it up with a large, strong knife, or it
will hurt your fingers.”

“ How hard it sticks! I cannot get it out
without cutting or breaking the roots.”

“They are not important, for we shall see
that it has a tough, thick root, and that will be
enough.”

“Of course it grows from year to year, and
lasts for several years, so that it is perennial.”

“ And it is not easy work to kill them.”

“The leaves lie back flat on the ground, like
a rosette—let me see, like the daisy and the
sundew, and sometimes the dandelion. But
the shape of the leaves, I can scarcely say what .
to call them.”

“T think I should call them cut down, nearly
to the midrib, in a pinnate manner—that is, after

* Cnicus acaulis.



THISTLES. 75

the manner of a feather—but very broadly and
coarsely cut, so as to appear like large prickly
teeth.”

“ And they are so waved, too, they will not
lie flat ; and the spines are so long and sharp.”

‘You see that the leaves are not cut, as they
are in the dandelion, into large teeth which are
curved backwards, but into straight and nearly
three-angled teeth.”

“And so much thicker and firmer than are
the leaves of the dandelion ; and they are quite
smooth, only not so shining as holly leaves.”

“They would make rather an uncomfortable
cushion to sit down upon. The in-
florescence is what we commonly call
‘thistle heads,’ and they grow close
down to the rosette, with scarcely

any stem. Of course they are com-



posite flowers, and each head con-

Fie. 25.
tains a large number of florets, so Tsrstuz Hzap.

that we have a name for the outer green leaves
of the flower-head, which is not a calyx.”

“Yes, I remember—it is an ¢nvolucre; and



76 THISTLES.

these thistle heads are not round, or globose,
but longer than broad, and rather egg-shaped,
and very hard and firm, almost like a prickly
ball, before they open.”

“Can you count how many bracts there are
in the involucre ?”

“No, I cannot easily, there are so many, and
they overlap so closely, like the tiles of a house.
I should call them nearly lance-
, shaped, but they are not very




long ; the edges are fringed with
short hairs.”

“Now then for the florets. I have
told you, when we found the goat’s-
beard, that all the florets of the thistles
are tubular, and none of them strap-
shaped.”
ee “But I could not count them, there
Foret. are so many—a great many more than
in the goat’s-beard, and of a purple colour.”

“ You will have to cut down the involucre to
get the florets out without breaking them, they
are so long and so tender.”



THISTLES. 77

“And I shall want a pocket-glass to count
the stamens, they seem to be so small.”

“Well, you will find them the same as they
were in the goat’s-beard—five stamens, with the
anthers all joined together round the pistil ;
but the florets are different, for you see that
they are all long tubes, and quite regular at the
mouth.”

“ And there are more hairs at the bottom, in
place of the calyx. J cannot think of the name.”

“ Pappus, I suppose. In the






case of thistles the pappus be- SS
comes the thistle-down. You have
seen the thistle-down blowing about
in the wind, with the seeds hanging
to it. This, again, is different from

the pappus of the goat’s-beard ; for

Fic. 27.
the threads are all smooth and pyrpis op

t DANDELION.

simple, without any feathering a
the sides, and so they are not joined into the
shape of a parasol.”

“ And there is no long horn like the parasol
stick,”



78 THISTLES.

“No; but the thistle-down can float in the
air just as easily, and scatter the seeds.”

“Then all thistle-down is very much alike?”

“Yes, and very soft, and may be used for
stuffing cushions. But there is a difference
which you have not noticed in the receptacle
when the seeds are blown away. In the dande-
lion it is smooth and dotted, but in the thistles
a great number of bristles are left behind, and
these passed upwards between the florets when
they were growing, and are now left standing.”

The thistle we have been looking at is a very
good. type or pattern of thistles in general.
They are all of them awkward plants to gather
or carry, and not very nice to examine. Some
of them are very tall, growing as much as
a yard high, and the stem much _ branched.
Both stem and branches are often prickly, with
very sharp, stiff bristles, and so are the leaves.
They will scratch you severely, and draw the
blood, but they do not poison like the stinging
hairs of the nettle. Thistles are to be found grow-

ing almost everywhere, for each head of flowers



THISTLES, 79

bears a great number of ripe seeds, and these
are so easily drifted about, and for so ‘long a
distance, because of the thistle-down, that hardly
any piece of ground is safe from them. It has
been calculated that one thistle seed will pro-
duce at the first crop twenty-four thousand,
and consequently at the second crop five hun-
dred and seventy-six millions of seeds. This is
a number you cannot imagine.

Although thistle leaves are usually lance-
shaped if the margin were entire, yet they are
constantly deeply cut into large, irregular-
pointed teeth, and each of these often ends in a
sharp stiff bristle. Besides which the leaves
will not lie flat, for they are puckered and
waved so as to thrust the spines in all direc-
tions. The stems are tough and woody, so that
they will not break easily, hence they will suffer
much crushing and ill treatment without any
serious injury. The roots strike a long way
into the ground, and cannot be readily killed.
In every way thistles are defiant, and well
provided with power to increase and multiply



80 THISTLES.

and replenish the earth. In return for the
annoyance they cause the thistles seem to have
few virtues, for none of them are of any value
in the arts or in medicine. As far as we know,
they might have been one of the original curses
of the soil, which man had to till by the sweat
of his brow. Farmers will testify that many a
brow has sweated in the attempt to clear the
ground of thistles. Their good qualities must
be deeply hidden, for they have yet to be
revealed, at least so far as they concern the

family of man.



EH Se) NDE Ws

UR plant-hunters are in search of a plant

so small that it needs close looking after,

and so scarce as only to be found in soft boggy

places, where the feet sink into the soil, and the

water oozes over them. They must be well

shod who would gather the “sundew” and not
suffer from wet feet.

“There it is, Cissy; I will get it for you, for
it is growing amongst the bog-moss, and the
ground is so very soft and wet.”

“What a pretty little plant, and how the
leaves sparkle! It is like a rosette, and no big-
ger than a brooch.”

‘“‘Here are three or four more, and yet it isa
pity to gather them; but we must see if there
are any with dead flies hanging to the leaves.”

* Drosera rotundrfolia.
(501) 6



82 THE SUNDEW.

“Oh yes; here are some little flies on two,
three, four leaves. They are all dead; but why
are they sticking there ?”

“ Because this is a fly-catching plant, and the
little flies are caught and eaten as surely as
if it were a spider’s web. We shall talk of
that presently, but we must first attend to the
plant.”

“ Are they always small like these ?”

“Yes, Cissy, this is the usual size; perhaps a
half-dozen small leaves, spreading, and falling
back, as you said, like a rosette, with no proper
stem except the one which rises in the middle
and carries the flowers.”

“T scarcely know what shape to call the
leaves.”

“ Perhaps not; but I should say that they
are very nearly round, and not half an inch
across, tapering into the leaf-stalk. The whole
upper surface is covered with glistening purplish
hairs, which are club-shaped at the top. They
are called glands, because they contain a sticky
fluid which oozes out and makes the outside



THE SUNDEW. 83

sticky and shining. The hairs in the middle of
the leaf are shorter than the rest, and they are
gradually longer as they reach the edge.”
“Some of them are bent down like hooks.”
“Tf a poor little fly alights upon the leaf, the
sticky surface helps to keep it there, and then



Fira. 28.—GLANDULAR LEAF OF SUNDEW.
(Enlarged.)

the long hairs slowly bend over it, so that it
could not fly away if it tried; and the more it
struggles the more closely the hairs bend over
it, until it dies.”

“Then it is really a fly-catcher.”

“Yes, and a good one too; for you will see on



84 THE SUNDEW.

those leaves which have flies sticking to them
that the hairs are bent down over them, and
hold them down until they are dead; and when
that is done the hairs slowly raise themselves,
and become straight again.”

~“ Are any other plants fly-catchers 2”

“Several ; but not many of them are British.
Now we must examine the flowers of the sun-
dew. The flower-stalk is thin and upright,
curved over on one side, and the flowers are all
on one side of the stalk. They are small and
white, and something like the single flowers of
a common garden plant called ‘ London pride ;’
but they are rarely open, and only when the sun
is shining upon them. Let us pull one of them
in pieces.”

“Five outside and five inside leaves,”

“Certainly ; that is to say, five green sepals
and five white petals.”

“ And five stamens, with a pistil in the middle.”

“Yes; and when you see the London pride
again, you will find that it has ten stamens in-
stead of five.”



THE SUNDEW. 85

“ Can we take these home and plant them in
our garden to grow 2”

“You may take them home, dear, and plant
them ; but you cannot make them grow, for they
will only grow in such places as the bog where
we found them.”

“What a pity! I should like to see them
catch flies. But how do they eat them, because
they have no mouths?”

“They do not eat them in the way that ani-
mals eat their food, but they dissolve them. It
is not easy to explain to you how they do it;
but there is a liquid which oozes from the hairs,
and this softens and melts the fleshy parts of the
fly, and when melted into a liquid this is sucked
up or absorbed by the leaf, and only the wings
and the hard parts are left.”

“Won't they catch anything else except flies ?”

“Oh yes; the hairs will close over almost
anything which touches them, but they soon
fall back again when such a mistake is made.
But they will dissolve little pieces of meat, just

as they would dissolve a fly. After an insect



86 THE SUNDEW.

has settled upon a leaf, it will be dead in a
quarter of an hour.”

“T should like to see the hairs move.”

“Perhaps you may be able to see that they
do move if we carry these plants home and
plunge the roots in water. If placed in the
sun the leaves will open fully; then you must
place a little fly upon them, and watch to see if
the glands close over it, but they will do it very
slowly. See how many of these leaves are closed
since we gathered them, on account of having
been touched.”

‘Would the sundew live if it were covered
up so that insects could not get on the leaves?”

“Oh yes, it could live and grow in the bog
if no flies settled upon the leaves, just as other
plants do, so that animal food is not a neces-
sity.”

“ Don’t you think it must be an accident when
a fly is caught and sticks to the leaf of the sun-
dew?”

“No, Cissy; I am no believer in accident in
such cases. The fly would not stick on the



THE SUNDEW. 87

leaf if the glands were not sticky. Then there
is some purpose in the glands being sticky.
Supposing that a fly were caught upon sticky
leaves or upon sticky glands, it could not be
accident which made the glands bend over and
clasp the insect so that it could not get away.
It could not be accident that made the glands
erow wetter, or made the sticky juice change so
that it would dissolve the fly more easily. It
is not accident that when a little bit of glass
touches the leaf the glands close only a little,
and more slowly, and then open altogether to
allow the glass to fall off, as if the glands had
found out that they could not dissolve the glass.
Tt is well known that the glands bend over
to catch the fly, that the juice of the glands
dissolves the flesh of the fly, and then the glands
open to allow the skeleton to fall off. And
as for accident, it is a handy word, which some
people are apt to use when they cannot explain
how a thing is done. In such cases it is only
an excuse for ignorance to say that it was an

accident.”



88 THE SUNDEW.

“Ts there more than one kind of sun-
dew ?”

“There are three different sundews in Britain,
with different shaped leaves, but the one we
found is the most common, with the rounded
leaves.”

We have now come to the end of the fourth
story of our rambles, and in closing the record
I have a word or two to say about leaves which
may freshen your memory or be of service here-
after. It will be quite enough if I chat to
you only about the different forms of simple
leaves, because the leaflets of compound leaves
have the form of simple leaves. To begin
with, the narrowest leaves we shall meet with
are those in which the length is five or six
times their breadth, and sometimes more, even
to twenty or thirty times as long as_ broad.
These are called linear, which suggests that
they are like a line, whereas they are not like
a line, but have an evident breadth, which a

line has not; however, they are the narrowest



THE SUNDEW. 89

leaves. If they should be as thick in the middle
as they are broad, then they are said to be subu-
late, or shaped like an awl, as in the leaves of
fir trees. When a leaf is much longer than
broad, and is broadest below the middle, nar-

rowed gradually upwards to a point, it is shaped

\

Fie. 29. Fie. 30.

Linzar Liar. Supunats Lear. Fic. 31.—LancroLaTe Lear.
like the head of a lance, and is called lanceolate.
There is a form of leaf, not so common, which
is broadest at the top and gradually narrowed
downwards, like a wedge ; it is wedge-shaped,

or cuneate. If the broad part at the top is short



90 THE SUNDEW.

and rounded, and the lower part tapering and
long, something like a spoon or ladle, it is said
to be spathulate, like the leaves of a daisy. The
remaining shapes are gradually shorter and
shorter as compared with their breadth.

When a leaf is blunt, or rounded at the ends,

and is from twice to four times as long as it is

Fic. 82.—CuNEATE OR WEDGE- Fic. 33. —SPATHULATE LEAF.
SHAPED LEAr.

broad, it is called oblong ; but when scarcely twice
as long as broad, but rather broader below the
middle than above it, then it has the shape of
an egg, and is called ovate. When reversed,
and the broadest part is above the middle, it is

obovate. The remaining forms are elliptical,



THE SUNDEW. 91

oval, and orbicular, because they have the shape
of an ellipse, or an oval, or an orb, These are
all the regular forms usually met with, but there
are a few less common and more singular shapes
to which names have been given.

Leaves with a triangular form are not com-

v

Fic. 385.—OvatTe Lear,

y

Fie. 84,—Onstone Lear. ¥ ic. 86.—OsovatEe LEAr.

mon, and the triangle is not perfect; but one of
them is called sagittate, because it is like an
arrow-head—that of the ‘lords and ladies”
is something like it. If the lower corners are

more spreading, it takes the shape of an old hal-



92 THE SUNDEW.

berd head, and is said to be hastate. There are
also two far more common shapes, but in these
the corners are rounded, especially the lower
corners, in a cordate leaf, which is what is com-

monly called heart-shaped. The other is broader



Fic. 37.—Sacirrate Leaves. Fic. 38.—Hasrate Lear.
than long, rounded above, and kidney-shaped,
or reniform. To these it seems only necessary
to add a form of leaf about as broad as long,
with the edge cut deeply into five lobes, like the

fingers of a spreading hand, and is therefore



THE SUNDEW. 93

called palmate. This is a lobed or lobate leaf,
for the projecting parts are called lobes. These



Fie. :39.—Corpate LEAr.

sorts of leaves are best described by the number



Fic. 40.—ReENtFoRM LEAr.

of their lobes—as two-lobed, three-lobed, five-
lobed, and so on. It is understood that the



94: THE SUNDEW.

divisions are not cut down to the midrib; for
if they are cut quite down to the midrib, it be-
comes a compound leaf, and the parts are not
lobes, but leaflets. Therefore, if a palmate-
shaped leaf has the divisions cut down to the

midrib, it is called a digitate leaf, with five



leaflets. And so the trefoil leaf of clover and
wood-sorrel is a leaf composed of three leaflets,
and is not a three-lobed leat.

There are such a large number of different
shapes in leaves, that a long catalogue of their
names might soon be made; but there is not

much wisdom in a multitude of names, and it will



THE SUNDEW. 95

always be best to confine ourselves to such com-
monly used names as we have given, if it can be
done, by the addition of an adverb, such as nar-
rowly lance-shaped, acutely ovate, or similar addi-

tions, whenever such accommodation is possible.



The preceding small figures of compound leaves
show a trefoil (1) leaf; two digitate leaves with
four and five leaflets (2, 3); two with a larger
number of leaflets, one a whorl of leaves (4, 5);
and a pinnate leaf (7); whilst the other group
exhibits forms of compound leaves of the pinnate



96 THE SUNDEW.

kind, excepting Figure 6. It will be seen that
Figures 8, 5, and 8 have no leaflet at the end,
but in 5 and 8 the apex is furnished with ten-
drils. In Figure 8 the leaflets are alternate,

and opposite in the rest.



eNG DW,

Alternate and opposite, 12.
Anther, 15.

Axillary flowers, 51.

Axil of leaves, 23.

Bees and flowers, 14.
Berry, 25.

Bilabiate corolla, 35, 65.
Bluebell of Scotland, 9.
Bracts, 30, 76.

Bramble fruit, 54.

Calceolate corolla, 36.
Calyx, 13.

Campanula, 10.
Campanulate corolla, 34.
Canterbury bells, 10.
Capitulum, 71.
Capsules, 25.
Carnivorous plants, 85.
Carpels, 51.
Compound umbel, 71.
Connate leaves, 22.
Cordate leaves, 92.
Corolla, 12.

Corymb, 69.

Creeping stem, 49.
Cross-leaved heath, 27.
Cuneate leaves, 89.
Cyme, 69.

Dahlia, 57.
Digitate leaves, 94.
(501)



~I



Double rose, 55.
Drosera, 81.
Drupe, 25.

Elliptical leaves, 90.
Eyebright, 61.

Filaments, 40.
Flower-clock, 20.
Fly-catchers, 83.
Fruits, 25.

Glands of leaves, 82.
Glandular hairs, 48.
Gorse, or furze, 40.

Hairs of plants, 47.
Harebell, 9.

Hastate leaves, 92.

Heather, 26.

Heather-beer, 31.
He-heather, 26.
Hypocrateriform corolla, 34.

Inflorescence, 64.
Infundibuliform corolla, 34.
Insect fertilization, 17.
Involucre, 75.

Irregular corolla, 35.

Keel, or vexillum, 39.

Ladies’ thimble, 10.
Lanceolate leaves, 89.



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describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'4267' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEPU' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
7bc79e6644bcc6fc73755a244e32ee59
1f14425f9396ae98f075d040fe78c0a0d50c7be1
'2011-09-20T02:06:22-04:00'
describe
'338998' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEPV' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
e316417b1222ad2a3be4b98165e142fe
ba53a38dc68fe4c55df8d3921b903e39e5c7b2fa
'2011-09-20T02:04:14-04:00'
describe
'146832' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEPW' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
ec5d7b3b60e2688811edad079bb6a9ec
fbbe002010e85f516480b5d036599c813a202a40
describe
'456' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEPX' 'sip-files00003.pro'
6445f9b55bdace5ed4005ab9827dc1ce
c8ae3c8e4c3a9106921161d9355c34b8a24d5e8c
'2011-09-20T02:04:21-04:00'
describe
'31567' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEPY' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
a71ac608fc15b1c03ef95b5a3c70d72c
e71b73804abb3e1188fb8225037d50d14936d85d
'2011-09-20T02:05:02-04:00'
describe
'2729304' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEPZ' 'sip-files00003.tif'
8b7d2410de360b312ce4ee1976953157
f74f338f0fac70f1e1b3a9058bc0a103bf2ee2d2
'2011-09-20T02:05:26-04:00'
describe
'94' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQA' 'sip-files00003.txt'
3ee9491aff6189f1a35ba37e97eee560
4fbd76345193284fe472ebef656de36a6fc03039
'2011-09-20T02:06:12-04:00'
describe
'7641' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQB' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
50500c9474db4df5a4eaf767e0ec9861
da0e85ad0c1447f7a840eca9c779792d347c4fdd
'2011-09-20T02:06:20-04:00'
describe
'334043' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQC' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
0b917a04e5a23bea4d727d4bae801d3a
fe6f2bc35e1261ae839acceac8e8f3998e308853
'2011-09-20T02:06:17-04:00'
describe
'9913' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQD' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
419dd16b1c582b23c5c7301d6cf6ba3c
f4014b8e0450fe7c9183e2a6aaf7745201fd5fb6
'2011-09-20T02:06:49-04:00'
describe
'517' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQE' 'sip-files00005.pro'
e3d4341c4099dc7d1d5ddb279c066c54
0306d1c4b323a81783d95259c9c605ef6bfa1d51
'2011-09-20T02:06:14-04:00'
describe
'3068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQF' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
75a0b17fe27851741bf9a07c453c4be4
e9e513ee09d1b26f4cf1b1604febcca27a9e96d9
'2011-09-20T02:05:49-04:00'
describe
'2691620' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQG' 'sip-files00005.tif'
d5c64e1e0b7c50b53b5a21954f096f45
30670ea710709f3ad27766e2bd1875cc4539bbfc
'2011-09-20T02:04:28-04:00'
describe
'18' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQH' 'sip-files00005.txt'
0b08981d925f87b5aa71f23d888ba160
8a421d57b915adad431208af5052fc7d9716ab64
'2011-09-20T02:05:21-04:00'
describe
'1002' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQI' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
03f344d0fde27e7472d2ff3da644938d
93f49b421956ee995efc6225c25f73b8ceaa7697
'2011-09-20T02:05:09-04:00'
describe
'320423' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQJ' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
ce8c39a72187f3508e54bec66c792f08
b33037261805266f0ac36e167873bf45cb2c2b82
'2011-09-20T02:06:46-04:00'
describe
'121554' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQK' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
d7248c92cc7e49e909e0fb474aec2617
0de5867e79287ce7937712b2bedd62226e0ca88e
'2011-09-20T02:03:57-04:00'
describe
'1658' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQL' 'sip-files00008.pro'
e286186ec095dfa0f53ce06460e6af97
63cb8322b50fde6c41c05f9b8586c4c9a804836a
'2011-09-20T02:04:31-04:00'
describe
'30068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQM' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
6961654585b60d13b60533eed382740f
d636ce391f7e7e1086e519d3b11a449f8bc98019
'2011-09-20T02:06:02-04:00'
describe
'7708932' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQN' 'sip-files00008.tif'
a2ff0969734c7eb6d2959a57213c80d6
dc2d7b351ec1c426ffd4bcb29af4672532d50729
'2011-09-20T02:06:29-04:00'
describe
'86' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQO' 'sip-files00008.txt'
ad16920ad2178e1148957e0b6f18fce2
40157efaf613ec07e83a20370dde187e11ad210f
describe
'8254' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQP' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
a9f46ce5cf4d65faf22fbd2d7a74772f
59860fe293375cb30815bf678a302134f8926bc1
'2011-09-20T02:06:03-04:00'
describe
'334347' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQQ' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
c324084b33ecf4c211fa1b9cb3c2bbbc
39b4ba691e5f18ed8f42015cda181457da5cbc18
'2011-09-20T02:04:20-04:00'
describe
'32860' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQR' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
7f57791693768c33c3791b16cafeaba9
409fb0529ccd7b592e566f3b7442d736d104f22b
'2011-09-20T02:06:26-04:00'
describe
'3691' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQS' 'sip-files00009.pro'
fd3435133b76b3613b787e2e62d530b5
3904191e8532cafaf761c71410f2ca195907eae6
'2011-09-20T02:06:19-04:00'
describe
'11454' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQT' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
2d3f3955b4242bc2564b4ad3ea00fddd
fcff083f77d3291da27ef065e89e2e47f6336671
'2011-09-20T02:06:32-04:00'
describe
'2692596' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQU' 'sip-files00009.tif'
3d2f6c10f7d36aeedbb9bebb19fcd74d
da2edfeef12955c7c9f3a2aa92b20c46c99b6680
'2011-09-20T02:04:49-04:00'
describe
'179' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQV' 'sip-files00009.txt'
bdecaef1936013c8208811d86853aec6
f618cf7190bf9c62c9b173a0fda821dbf605b4df
'2011-09-20T02:05:37-04:00'
describe
'4195' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQW' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
dd8d1f1975513057717efed6ceb30761
75a19d509c3b208f4821720f38c24208ee823554
'2011-09-20T02:04:37-04:00'
describe
'334304' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQX' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
00493539b7d575fb082fe07cfc2dd2fc
d3a17dfc5b7fff82685758c5a6c53cfc557b710c
'2011-09-20T02:06:06-04:00'
describe
'8872' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQY' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
130e7dc3f8ec9e8794eebfe6e32cd377
065ba28c0cad926d91e33e90d4dced3b2d6360b7
'2011-09-20T02:05:17-04:00'
describe
'2548' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEQZ' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
38a641e98526804b979335c6a8f578ab
7b3aed56ce47745b6508aef0032ed10f5c63e102
'2011-09-20T02:06:21-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERA' 'sip-files00010.tif'
885d40e30c05ad01cd873f120170f862
02353830155605378a53a29254cad149b7ae5e3c
'2011-09-20T02:05:42-04:00'
describe
'889' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERB' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
8708315b8bb9069dfead8f87711fd02a
b2f6bea28bc3fc71c00f373fc3ea622f4a501a8f
describe
'328222' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERC' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
7fe7ff50566d90c9470cb540dad0b5ff
346c9e3ce0d26251687736ff2fb26bd431f4c38e
'2011-09-20T02:06:43-04:00'
describe
'95410' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERD' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
97397b9ff009b05eaabbec6565e47e46
644f0c8ead15431a0d45cb89f5957e7ceace5f4b
describe
'28207' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERE' 'sip-files00011.pro'
8d225fcbb44db7a784ae07a0ea113506
10aecf091bf8807f8ca9e1e193b33c01e81a4dad
describe
'32569' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERF' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
afe34fab6f82a6f65ab49c71d2cdc818
fccc3cea5adc266de59d27f05d418a4f688b8f12
'2011-09-20T02:05:30-04:00'
describe
'2642660' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERG' 'sip-files00011.tif'
e9be77daf48c3096420f93390f7a17bb
d4d044b435304dbe703e6f9e4599a87927d9ea5f
describe
'1174' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERH' 'sip-files00011.txt'
c52c4d184a269d5e503f4f06fc448236
cc3cc9c0ed8b01b024ad82732c21440d2b06eef7
'2011-09-20T02:05:38-04:00'
describe
'8160' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERI' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
ff84f0cd2321cd1805a2e8bb2c25f13d
5d461886d14509f909e56e5487a62d5221ff416a
'2011-09-20T02:04:27-04:00'
describe
'334245' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERJ' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
47815857b97cddb7282de971b064fc76
6cd74b51db6f243a1cee58d5ea7f3e3c5007f953
'2011-09-20T02:05:39-04:00'
describe
'22573' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERK' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
8eae1d563ea0a52816f49f1753d7f693
51c3ab2674aca01e158d5fee33094c560acf3ab5
'2011-09-20T02:04:07-04:00'
describe
'9846' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERL' 'sip-files00013.pro'
1201f466bde7ff4f6556a60a21e851e1
9ae5044fb0d92a8b3fcb17c5cd5fb9f53c9d70f5
'2011-09-20T02:05:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERM' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
94a2f9065f1c0f6a3c4a5f53a1f5ea25
cf5b9dcac03d3617eb64d87abcaf8b216b845805
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERN' 'sip-files00013.tif'
57c223fe0e23416f05af40e189a8e41f
8092babf0052bca3e933f579c930608b4baeb607
'2011-09-20T02:04:46-04:00'
describe
'486' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERO' 'sip-files00013.txt'
b1b15759e206d7005962a8b410f9e8b3
f6604c98b880fc1d8ada22d1b2a52cdb3547d59f
'2011-09-20T02:04:11-04:00'
describe
'2390' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERP' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
2bde247872c161b51ff27cb8b3acf465
4d0682c0932c1a757ca21a3fd6c0c2360a0f92c4
'2011-09-20T02:06:40-04:00'
describe
'327582' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERQ' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
c45c33d9d085688d48ebba659dc5e72d
e3dad30cb2462cfd56b97789ebd020ebb6458776
'2011-09-20T02:06:50-04:00'
describe
'8559' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERR' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
0939cbb0e614a3db1ab6741cc1ff9189
5011b4725dd7a169ea2a10af012d0667fd982e6b
'2011-09-20T02:05:57-04:00'
describe
'2499' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERS' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
2520854833f8fbd0872e2d3b8f456751
58e2dff09ecaad97674a32ed7570ecdbed3ca23d
'2011-09-20T02:05:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERT' 'sip-files00014.tif'
5f9eb79b245be3265ca7eeac41b5cade
2c179653b7ddcff2bdc705ca2c5c5066346b61ee
describe
'912' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERU' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
7628b3f9271c382d7faaa5dd4ac91c2f
4848bf13b2007f1e50aa6c348daf87ff00ab7ef8
describe
'334399' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERV' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
105ce43e81ac321fa7a364badc892840
49535dfedce48c33db0f6b37dbb38b206e547486
'2011-09-20T02:05:08-04:00'
describe
'133027' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERW' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
d10eb5b52c7fabe817baec16d81379f2
0b276bd487a62d1e7f77e485002b42e0889897b2
'2011-09-20T02:04:05-04:00'
describe
'7590' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERX' 'sip-files00015.pro'
917c92e83e48fc0468f8bce98c40a895
0aecbb9bc6a91103e5e02646def3dd6e5a12789c
'2011-09-20T02:05:52-04:00'
describe
'36221' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERY' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
b528774d1f270f39808759a5fccc9668
fe7071f5e8c5f8891c6b4aef508b1d31b0b2f4c1
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADERZ' 'sip-files00015.tif'
9bed33fb4cb200e78d5d4947a831b0f3
0cf4bbbde305f1838b630d9eb24a94ef470b88f0
'2011-09-20T02:03:56-04:00'
describe
'327' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESA' 'sip-files00015.txt'
c52170ac7809d939ffcfa3e716226f81
c59a08fdd1976fb66f81b2b88aa463126e44df08
'2011-09-20T02:04:42-04:00'
describe
'9419' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESB' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
6fb349238c9f24cb6001ef60db4f5e21
3858e03a2750b56d8d41f663eca1bbb53515d27a
'2011-09-20T02:05:27-04:00'
describe
'334389' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESC' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
3093f3ea221bf2549a9d737d6c86ad55
98c68b4ab59ad57dccd221f1116dcdcd992dbeb7
'2011-09-20T02:04:45-04:00'
describe
'96433' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESD' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
9f26595dbb575aa9d9359e7405d2ee03
e5f389f196d8e0d86abd1511850739c7464d107b
describe
'25513' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESE' 'sip-files00016.pro'
efd8923d5811d28e14fc28b08f2662e6
d4b3ef4998cdf5a78874d2133b870dab50328138
describe
'33414' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESF' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
43bfff6e7f7b693d05a89f6c33ecf781
f740627a2646735690dfaca499cd42655093adbe
'2011-09-20T02:06:16-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESG' 'sip-files00016.tif'
ab689297afec1a7b1fa79c4434405a73
db0eea43242e8955da6a3d5a83e13fba918f0db5
'2011-09-20T02:04:03-04:00'
describe
'1053' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESH' 'sip-files00016.txt'
72acdba0e69f106b1135ee16338d2382
ef7184e698b3f9e2a8f1f31cc966583c8d999110
describe
'9087' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESI' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
23f1d2f44271106beed202a4aff96561
06c78758b40895536a45e2921a6d85d30f656d91
'2011-09-20T02:04:58-04:00'
describe
'334340' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESJ' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
1b4516c92f61e19f6a37b762c746d16d
b5afd2069aebea7d63fd78eaede4f8c802ad5fd1
describe
'94335' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESK' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
ba0b3e3db286357ac9a953dee0e6da04
f0eeee77b18e88184a55e1df8cbbb7c3681b550f
'2011-09-20T02:04:43-04:00'
describe
'25001' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESL' 'sip-files00017.pro'
ec2c9b3b9e48ec84b7c29310ecfba9cf
40b70da703df79cffff9cd242d3a878182811e93
'2011-09-20T02:05:47-04:00'
describe
'31933' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESM' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
097b52700cc321fd75611a576bd1474a
61f48252c27273427d567e91196c041e8eb2110a
'2011-09-20T02:04:12-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESN' 'sip-files00017.tif'
0daf0028c5ffac87353e2d6f0702b93c
075bb82c325cc483ffcc514b32d025efc36825b9
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESO' 'sip-files00017.txt'
2eba2ab88a96f862178ccbb5af90d6c0
0499ccada82e2cd52127e30920516d5fbc5c5c32
'2011-09-20T02:06:25-04:00'
describe
'8459' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESP' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
eb11a632da0578c62b86d08685e2b9c4
14f490ccabf5f6df978796f5064d7464f0398bdb
'2011-09-20T02:05:22-04:00'
describe
'334350' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESQ' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
54707dd9b1d46558148ebccf2f83d5ed
85d2accc34e1a32d99ce1916ec51746696081cc2
describe
'92888' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESR' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
1b2b1778c494f3b51cf8a16a39bdeb39
0c568faf6faddca8f2c4c34ac3986429914885f9
'2011-09-20T02:05:14-04:00'
describe
'24778' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESS' 'sip-files00018.pro'
a7e3535358414949c99b94041b037a02
3a285304a56fff1cca5a00c8f161f04c9e3086ea
describe
'31462' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEST' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
68b25ccfc14161cd05ce2638a016cf8a
0b5f74448249bdfeadc402fcd68c650e059de612
'2011-09-20T02:04:57-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESU' 'sip-files00018.tif'
5eda71ea8b76469901c5cbc8a5127f13
2a7b94c71bf5ed8eccb87f1f24f25f3e01628eba
describe
'988' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESV' 'sip-files00018.txt'
6a7396b185f988a520a13359d954ece5
d6bdd54105aaca7ba1096bf91811776c8ff73fa6
'2011-09-20T02:03:58-04:00'
describe
'8788' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESW' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
7e8aa23cec6e0e499954ff94f96fadd6
f80ecc06f5b7d00ab661e701cf8f892e34cb58c3
'2011-09-20T02:05:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESX' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
cfff4b29f762608fa77f20606c299873
5b1656253b1c7f5459b5dc5e58148c33942add73
describe
'97476' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESY' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
72672f43bb84fac9b56adfad285413a6
09dd9cf0423a050cf4dc31cad7244b80c0bb6e53
'2011-09-20T02:06:01-04:00'
describe
'25422' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADESZ' 'sip-files00019.pro'
e545854dce4027d5cd5569af809d9190
0507e195c98c5344d2d954f2697228e30f6b443a
'2011-09-20T02:05:46-04:00'
describe
'33586' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETA' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
4982a10ef9a6f7303e1bfd982d590484
7f61e3628b5b1143ecc904bd2a61c1e05ec92c15
'2011-09-20T02:05:13-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETB' 'sip-files00019.tif'
575f156a7214b077ae87994c830a69fa
00facef0e8a6f889317bb5e6b9b8dd1a70158def
'2011-09-20T02:05:33-04:00'
describe
'1027' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETC' 'sip-files00019.txt'
b4c43d622aec37abb74372470ecfbadf
34a42f27f3c6424ff9b85983763204b98450a843
'2011-09-20T02:04:16-04:00'
describe
'9142' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETD' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
3fc390926d1218b140c9c777b083d875
d91a92ad3c08061a3b1c5cc8d9ec96c9594ee5f7
'2011-09-20T02:04:40-04:00'
describe
'334315' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETE' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
e37c4c8098c92fe56a4ead804bce3002
3affbd3fe5559391d2d29ea7c3767166490f488c
'2011-09-20T02:05:43-04:00'
describe
'90770' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETF' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
fc26a090c873564c8b2b5838a9837e4d
de14e4667b3a7d2a915ad8b9dca975759d256259
describe
'23370' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETG' 'sip-files00020.pro'
a61f1f76cfe2fbe5f5c27668c304f3fe
873d8381a03281a6e8267d3258e4b460f0adb70c
describe
'31156' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETH' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
61db3f6b6eef4589dc2b7a14fe90425d
77b420093cc9c07bb14a0c5f97ef482206f9aab4
'2011-09-20T02:04:08-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETI' 'sip-files00020.tif'
d27e93803e558d7675f7d0e147dbe57f
ad026e252f6a57d47ab5955d77c3183ab398e4a7
'2011-09-20T02:05:29-04:00'
describe
'950' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETJ' 'sip-files00020.txt'
87e3ede7b2682b69b71a093a521fa388
50125002cce2a4964f06c7a34bd2586f15bb050d
describe
'8591' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETK' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
540350c54bf04f3d73ca14df6a19d4bd
6ace23695e3e0c3776c5c4b1fa0f68c3f6c537c7
describe
'334409' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETL' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
7fb02c1559e1bf2be7878aa388a24370
701a11b16804faac4a93e583595313a05057f2f9
'2011-09-20T02:05:06-04:00'
describe
'99456' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETM' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
b20217f3e92cdcbd82d6e20864247aa4
0875f3ad914fbd42fe62fd04fb1b43139b3ae0fc
describe
'25536' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETN' 'sip-files00021.pro'
347a8b74406d9323243747095d912f80
df2e5ca68c92749469e102499471d207a0826ca0
'2011-09-20T02:05:31-04:00'
describe
'33910' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETO' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
e4de1cd547f212a4b6a72ae754c1dbae
93e4e46078b6f5a038933f4d05de021697a5fa5f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETP' 'sip-files00021.tif'
cf2e71c767f9401a4af9cd35dcab9e8d
5891d2184b99b82b0dddcd9b8f844a4f5c5c5c97
'2011-09-20T02:05:41-04:00'
describe
'1024' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETQ' 'sip-files00021.txt'
e3f46440709716d36ae15993689c1440
8fad8c359e1e051079d0222a1048c33c65be0671
describe
'9407' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETR' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
f1dd3c52d7f3b7ef5e229078a6532ec4
2e4d593cbbcc19d0e7a9d0873244cdf85166f0a9
'2011-09-20T02:05:45-04:00'
describe
'334400' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETS' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
26e38601bd45a4d8b3368bf2e2d3c3cb
6223d38ba5233857695b3e1676fe5c152410b060
describe
'102234' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETT' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
ee6b9228acd3b6c9e8998180845543e9
d6c1e77d0998b622d2353724c52de379c4c75288
'2011-09-20T02:05:12-04:00'
describe
'26489' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETU' 'sip-files00022.pro'
2de12e6d8dcde3526af271a22e2f3360
423626b01a59e09ae0c38ed15271e346d175ad5f
describe
'34624' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETV' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
e977725565a39f2ccb71bb5bcae21a26
ad503cac6fbd0d6bde77d28d50e575a7adb753be
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETW' 'sip-files00022.tif'
011209f1acfba693a9a278fbcf97b2b2
7d1187ee786206a6265a085b9d2b7a043ccabdf8
'2011-09-20T02:04:52-04:00'
describe
'1061' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETX' 'sip-files00022.txt'
a750096e78be33d5977e583fbba327c3
5281d0288c168ba7f998b89532da27d5b9c35feb
describe
'9564' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETY' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
48a9a95383ae47ec2a25ce0871ae8acd
f21463444698e53f696b80977bb39785385b384f
describe
'334411' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADETZ' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
de9869c1d79f372b162e8a7ff126070f
7d348fef2271e219167a507905af66af44da7ac4
describe
'103579' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUA' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
ed7d27e141e488773332d778eda7f39b
e51b6ae9dc15ffc4d65c2d19f54f8a6b09b0c537
'2011-09-20T02:04:04-04:00'
describe
'26740' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUB' 'sip-files00023.pro'
4abc916854fe18726fe5783d09315d5e
bd454a24f7472fc679639f8d574c91b56da7fc3c
describe
'35788' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUC' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
a0a688f9e15a1ae05fde4e13ebb658b2
4f3563fdc6d068d62e6ee2b8fafbe1f878bb7b40
'2011-09-20T02:06:10-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUD' 'sip-files00023.tif'
8cc32aa6848532b24d0bc96acae4e754
43e2b471240784aa789a8811d502040887503c3c
'2011-09-20T02:05:35-04:00'
describe
'1067' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUE' 'sip-files00023.txt'
49779ed2970c155a8c5d2d85fce95b53
9b7bcb9365c6837bb4720d4c78dbf3683563a04e
'2011-09-20T02:06:39-04:00'
describe
'9472' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUF' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
d302c59a66137ca817d520845ef178a1
6d6a940e7e6bdc2e8fd9c42325da214ace8aabf5
'2011-09-20T02:06:36-04:00'
describe
'323490' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUG' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
b6787208a2e7238bec44a7287dc06a49
0e5ade2ba8d8a20b26e750e8f3e737ddb653b5e5
'2011-09-20T02:06:44-04:00'
describe
'79830' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUH' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
855346a94e24ec79d5df04c739bb2938
215db9052997cea6e89a9e18fbaa5185e805213c
describe
'20586' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUI' 'sip-files00024.pro'
00330e75cc5b6c6fe9b75d293def1c90
a7c45973f26c4060ad982a3b22ff9a3a59e92e87
'2011-09-20T02:05:54-04:00'
describe
'27376' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUJ' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
a23334121863511eede066d48e546310
552ee26e5da1a5d16b1d676cf8bb9c7dbd2e06ea
describe
'2604344' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUK' 'sip-files00024.tif'
16721854eb4c7fe1822f188116938a14
192963f223c5f919eb656e165f4a7404a8680589
describe
'817' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUL' 'sip-files00024.txt'
6b794f9e8ea37facb27427f0bc2d0e76
3b6f2ca49f05bab798f7def8f1dc5377a1868fb3
'2011-09-20T02:05:03-04:00'
describe
'7761' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUM' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
6a47f9f84f69411b8604e78ab5d308dd
6bb49a4d00ea2fc06416125e3afa35610a1e1f04
'2011-09-20T02:06:48-04:00'
describe
'323421' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUN' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
32852e4d3a1d64c2a2f5dca36964b1fc
3f68c192486a179bebc59c79725da80c9025bd2d
describe
'78771' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUO' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
db7e14408ea4f44df502ccca02516ccc
2b7e0df7c0b0775274a9a09a157afbb6dea461fb
'2011-09-20T02:04:29-04:00'
describe
'19760' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUP' 'sip-files00025.pro'
1f8bbea39150827632aa10dd8c898524
ed348dd14086b6ed4d9c6154d547d5c860dcec29
'2011-09-20T02:05:11-04:00'
describe
'27238' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUQ' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
5334826e1453aabb67d773fa8fa030ae
637e4106baabfa1063ff89f5fe47a5353b17e638
'2011-09-20T02:04:26-04:00'
describe
'2603900' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUR' 'sip-files00025.tif'
88050ece3d6239a5656a0cf5204fef30
3d523d7d32c7c978ff331eacc45bebc9068a58fb
describe
'831' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUS' 'sip-files00025.txt'
597a87a8baeda6db40a5a6ddbfb928e0
470eaedc03f0e568be555b4b23447af2ba74391d
describe
'7708' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUT' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
c0e527fec809536b06a08eb592961a6e
681f6d074e3e9067ee0a62e55c75c89e9539d281
describe
'334401' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUU' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
dd25602fc306269a6bee053f8ba0003d
7ac1a64b317c1493af583376993b3484b5a9decb
'2011-09-20T02:04:13-04:00'
describe
'86245' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUV' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
cbb8ed7e06f5209a0a303882b8ed3f72
92e7ebba41048ac96848318f65189b262d3d067f
describe
'24332' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUW' 'sip-files00026.pro'
03ed943c352eba43771168ec8bc9d4d0
c0244067ea0ddecfe7185f980c4142f5704f40e2
'2011-09-20T02:06:33-04:00'
describe
'29950' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUX' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
da59e833dc9585d3043c9e25245a3baf
a28e3b9b0626ce89089d5dd1ee5b0313320acaa4
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUY' 'sip-files00026.tif'
5460599ab06eda2d23ed0a8785849874
a35f4af8987762ad2c70b77befd27258d8b24480
'2011-09-20T02:06:11-04:00'
describe
'1032' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEUZ' 'sip-files00026.txt'
12117b4e15e181bcf30d66098f5b155a
2758ab7e62eeb3d00918ca69252c9578f324357d
'2011-09-20T02:06:00-04:00'
describe
'8130' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVA' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
0209cc2a6c2d00e797f7cb7b625a4da7
b439c41d82b12ef3ef16eaf931b5bbc9673da46c
'2011-09-20T02:04:38-04:00'
describe
'326490' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVB' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
3ec449066d65a5b41fa7e1b48cdd9497
9878279447c33efc3ef1d53d4e4d863aed4e9385
describe
'92517' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVC' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
9fa23520f436db06c14f7a3487dc9849
0f94de7851dc8b004d65d855cf0e4a5b6b8cb772
describe
'24768' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVD' 'sip-files00027.pro'
b98e42833a1cda468e1267c21ae78454
891abcfcd51a764957dc3872576468ca3850847c
describe
'30357' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVE' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
71c28cd1416d65556047697bd7ad5c45
20130a7fa7edb35b2b2d21a9a11b34e52800de6e
describe
'2628692' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVF' 'sip-files00027.tif'
069725da831ac1a9c36c32e34206a506
75b0c6bad0fbdb64f88f65a805c85e86e8a900b2
describe
'1022' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVG' 'sip-files00027.txt'
f8295f79ec067fbd1412c4c73931c1bd
ed769c6a2ef224590871a12ed9eb3df0db24d2a8
describe
'8740' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVH' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
0d7f9f962863c47ebb7fb98587a157d7
9098eb43db361f9a41a3bfa1dde504576238d076
'2011-09-20T02:04:18-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVI' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
111d6becaf3bb9fc3c47794988b235f0
5ffa968a03ffc3d1d204d357316ebd1b59e0414a
describe
'98943' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVJ' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
215856aa6bfefbfe9c502cd9ee69e430
d238a12dd20f61a6fe74cfe1adf3a90bf74c4a58
'2011-09-20T02:04:55-04:00'
describe
'26213' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVK' 'sip-files00028.pro'
921f49b38abcc3e8a9caac236196f4c1
0b023d33d142d89cf97b15418d95ea1e40bdea78
describe
'34158' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVL' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
a05f42b6119f09e3f985727de9f7f9b4
aaaeb54a8117e0d18c646e46c7d77eb9644ef67c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVM' 'sip-files00028.tif'
76caaf9558fc99738cb0fb66f78fd3bc
091093374dcb47fa49a6e876a1a1c8c83351b833
'2011-09-20T02:05:51-04:00'
describe
'1048' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVN' 'sip-files00028.txt'
73828f64e9a052bb2412bbce81e1a85c
145ffdbd6d547285adba9e23964dbb7f7e373eee
'2011-09-20T02:04:01-04:00'
describe
'9020' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVO' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
d2be45f7d8cebc3e0b1625a60ac3cff3
214a856b321d076c8ad0b98058638661d986e272
'2011-09-20T02:04:17-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVP' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
4385d917db9e56e1d37b1e7f76747049
7f1db8fd784fbd54f3bc00adf747bb66b001954a
'2011-09-20T02:04:34-04:00'
describe
'105905' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVQ' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
79e41065c633145cda271dac4af5c26e
63465a297c17ef79338f3b3c9a7dbf87786ad831
'2011-09-20T02:05:44-04:00'
describe
'28001' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVR' 'sip-files00029.pro'
a9fc2b7ca73b318db3ef22f024b7aef3
3b5e0f73f5edcc8567b1c4a2c20b89d091b4e371
describe
'36583' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVS' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
3152b4c364b9287bbb7860a4173d970a
f4fa34151bc9acac12c5f222038ecaea6fc5680e
'2011-09-20T02:04:19-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVT' 'sip-files00029.tif'
4d2f37ddd484471e3fe680822d8825fd
75530bb097bc2460247528c71c6bca5ab5a26d67
describe
'1108' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVU' 'sip-files00029.txt'
ae7230d12f31f11f9b5fd39f529e1fdb
ce8f3c1107b465cf3b1bae435d14368090e65ab3
'2011-09-20T02:04:51-04:00'
describe
'9896' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVV' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
2b0f8021422874530a4767d6fadab8fe
2192067d0fcc6250d028e3697eeb6b2150706fcf
'2011-09-20T02:06:05-04:00'
describe
'334319' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVW' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
a8450e6744a3a0158aea768025c31717
960013415566b75e55499a6f9f8e0d7b417b37ac
describe
'100242' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVX' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
118cac475bf0af7484b41e9508bdc69f
354e1b5b6b1ee762636c2bcc72809e2f107d6701
'2011-09-20T02:05:28-04:00'
describe
'26342' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVY' 'sip-files00030.pro'
d5dfb98eb8dd012579c38f45d5da7aae
ec64e59597366bb7e1174d36f25333ea0122f3c1
'2011-09-20T02:04:06-04:00'
describe
'34262' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEVZ' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
c55bf6f91baa69da3ce2172e7b46eaa5
484fa8e85a97ce28b43820c92f45fbd8940d9ea5
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWA' 'sip-files00030.tif'
a1564a108ba84bd870601fcb99158ae1
e9ff83b112891b741a1094e38cbd7ce15a619843
describe
'1051' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWB' 'sip-files00030.txt'
9b54d14a93035425dde6ff03507d9cc7
d2b41dbb08740d170e9de8f3f96734137377d589
'2011-09-20T02:04:23-04:00'
describe
'9313' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWC' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
76af15257514fd05cd0eb8a51204415a
f27614f8896ae0bce28716bfd033005f636e34a3
'2011-09-20T02:04:36-04:00'
describe
'334397' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWD' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
d6440c1c2e512286548ea9e7bd573fa3
4b2a31f32ef2ede1b5c81f129151177c8b9d4636
'2011-09-20T02:06:15-04:00'
describe
'90493' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWE' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
ee225a4b326092de89347e104b8ece1f
a6993eb507464191db749bf249159e01ea2de378
'2011-09-20T02:03:59-04:00'
describe
'22974' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWF' 'sip-files00031.pro'
621cbb8fb84de157090589663b8a9f98
4d0ec563d542189d35837ce28ab4a730d5d6c427
'2011-09-20T02:05:00-04:00'
describe
'30385' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWG' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
50467c88ec298fdd828362f19118953a
6ae193fd18c91a8b423169d9670dafa92ffced69
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWH' 'sip-files00031.tif'
fb36e4465709653f6a144912b3193d7e
d448f2bc8e2a18dbc24b66eacc3fbafbf805e36c
describe
'915' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWI' 'sip-files00031.txt'
6cc4dfa4c0b7d5f89ad245f99a5ea245
64bf20dc703dc8504944732d40cb26f8f5b99edf
describe
'8426' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWJ' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
689f8e40b9c62b95886184781fa9448e
048da6332cbb2e5812cd964efe262bcc76b3571c
'2011-09-20T02:03:55-04:00'
describe
'334307' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWK' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
4a28514745a2b96cc992e1bb260e1ec2
f4a01b032601fa56891e5a35c716cc9a9d359c19
'2011-09-20T02:06:51-04:00'
describe
'72985' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWL' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
22087e8b44605b1ae77fdce92c79491e
d29e9fd756f7a17b75d4c4104112a739074f566a
'2011-09-20T02:04:48-04:00'
describe
'18122' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWM' 'sip-files00032.pro'
2521f28f3806ebd178741e4d032b321d
1e3213f83fda9a4c946c50d6a45fb33893f92b65
describe
'24784' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWN' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
5671b00c3bf09b765c717cc618762bab
b0588b44d3e07d10df59fb019a7821d97eec30db
'2011-09-20T02:06:45-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWO' 'sip-files00032.tif'
f54563531a80e495876496b0fb0dbb68
299bc70c131bbc5fba348a390a811153e592416f
describe
'780' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWP' 'sip-files00032.txt'
0c18b2ed2123be07b9d4ad1ab716d7cb
488d39d4e8c34362a572b898a404e65d9ff5fadc
'2011-09-20T02:06:37-04:00'
describe
'6681' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWQ' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
1f651047859b93b37c7bc82eccecd91c
cd8f824ca3ff7a7529933dc36baa328511359558
describe
'334414' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWR' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
16b0a40fc5ec95cb76ff73c86a317701
40cd8e9b31b1460ba5d66f8a7cc9169f333d07ce
describe
'99128' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWS' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
1e9b01bb7c6c0a489e79bbafe2449484
a691745b620d7e29fff2ff7e7d1517e1dd201c88
describe
'25854' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWT' 'sip-files00033.pro'
acd22ba7794866d1ae4df86aa068ec38
13df7562473f00ecfb635726930465a75b3e1ae8
describe
'33217' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWU' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
b27a132b0d35b79ffd738e5118668342
d9a0b87cf4163ce064dd8f7a18fb5fc8e64c7e47
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWV' 'sip-files00033.tif'
c7d5bae8db2e3731d3d258c806c7883d
ea285f30d8b8f7f5f36dc8af5c16d3253569de1a
'2011-09-20T02:04:10-04:00'
describe
'1026' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWW' 'sip-files00033.txt'
ab2016cbe958f88545a177bb65a14c3b
13dc4e8447b3714606bbae86f5a788e91a9adf1a
'2011-09-20T02:04:39-04:00'
describe
'9172' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWX' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
be7047ea62cb5b935480172f72bb168d
500e3edc4936699c5764c82a7f4ca5d0f43831a1
'2011-09-20T02:06:13-04:00'
describe
'334376' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWY' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
e61cc70a0a61466898a735e5e7b4ecde
3d1947390106c4dad0c28c8bda5a6a19d9af017f
describe
'93529' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEWZ' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
57fe7d40476373d616d3bafeab092345
2fa38e969679e73029c812d2c82779fa39fe8ec3
describe
'24495' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXA' 'sip-files00034.pro'
f6478dae2bfa27249d15ea35740571cb
fbf08570814f4e69cd80f0657369ea4dea81f847
describe
'32091' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXB' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
90230ca95d3b615374540473e250617c
16c5bf1e651a89f1d5d095472f2f50cb3821b51d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXC' 'sip-files00034.tif'
5bc69295834788da2a7aa6b99e279d40
40d9c7e274c1687aff3fc05f1c03458c27dfcecb
describe
'982' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXD' 'sip-files00034.txt'
aae84a12990933eb2e3c85b96d01556d
ef2585d458b273855a22210fd40a05d62ec9eb42
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXE' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
1f9e0ff03c478e9cb4d2bd862e20de78
a6904f81bde3eee28990e72790032a8cf00b9bd5
describe
'334385' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXF' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
b46658b0d0749c2d4d1f11c7fca9fd6b
5c7503e96bf466a6a990cef4af8986c8f6edd4fc
'2011-09-20T02:06:47-04:00'
describe
'95091' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXG' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
2283040a6931103376bef216603cf400
f60f0a3d905df6653695ea3b74d559c170342deb
describe
'24839' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXH' 'sip-files00035.pro'
d74fe98bfdf57f1a4ebd3a35cce67db0
e23df47cc7178796f3eec05c239780140ef78c1f
describe
'32759' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXI' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
89ed227b12a88fed217913842c8579a7
fe2356d8b94b2ce75d1f21a0b4a3b4aba1734197
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXJ' 'sip-files00035.tif'
d55377f2cb53b3b475d784a7941f2f72
647a2550ddec916a69f54885bc73f170c0eacc2c
describe
'986' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXK' 'sip-files00035.txt'
e02fda044dd88df12aab12cd980da301
63d2abc051c3996c61cf2146b4d264cf80a643fd
'2011-09-20T02:06:18-04:00'
describe
'9304' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXL' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
2ea940ecae2a87562f14c73b5883fac1
4c827aefdf9d80342063e04012bc16c5456ad55a
describe
'334408' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXM' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
cdae2c8d802909cda7e3c4de20cecb5d
3a704e39f15a775b29a2d76bdfb82f0ddf631c99
describe
'101742' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXN' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
dad39219352c31740b0395d131ce79e9
a698158ebd5d30f87aff34298dd156de1eb5211a
describe
'27569' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXO' 'sip-files00036.pro'
7d5773c61029ca622ad844dceb2cf2d9
6946e9ebaf65e21cf1795ab1add226276d87285d
describe
'34308' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXP' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
5b712dafd4fd5001d0494e9e5b7543a4
e500a5ab354574743c1fc3348632e147e243647d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXQ' 'sip-files00036.tif'
8709a482f92c86e7a01cb884946be85c
6dd5a5e0487cddd480b0b0bef99fae7f251520b8
describe
'1105' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXR' 'sip-files00036.txt'
75b058603d465103c4bd22b514a6c19e
e4153256b8bf1ac0e07a13b472d9aed391ff3a24
describe
'9465' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXS' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
e51dbb0282e304eed1ce4077201e3da3
76decb0a25a345a0366b0f91194e44cb72b972c4
describe
'334320' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXT' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
c29e81bfe21930b4cad8ebdfe6c31ec6
e39a4a3eea68eb863b9c33e28620113e12a79391
describe
'96657' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXU' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
2ca0d71f3d70cc72a8f65c1f0d0b0255
36c8267677d3884ac7708be1bfc37eb1c6bba024
'2011-09-20T02:04:00-04:00'
describe
'25301' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXV' 'sip-files00037.pro'
826acbe49568d79bf898f35ea36003fe
711c546c0a1e6d9466ec4014a526d44bddc2793a
describe
'32162' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXW' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
0aef04bf3ad4d0de19f0c92d50a7f949
600566af899a50d743106f97cc634b6a55ec1d3a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXX' 'sip-files00037.tif'
579b397c8520541ce24fbef9e8d32087
666fa0b34ca011b0bc09d04236bdbd3a1cebf106
'2011-09-20T02:05:25-04:00'
describe
'1020' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXY' 'sip-files00037.txt'
bade5ebf6998dee89c3ac30fa6c479ca
9a62c494cd933d50f2ac1d2c0ebb956e3801fb49
describe
'9654' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEXZ' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
cb4add36f885d69e24e60b54cad3ba76
921be52a89068b960624b97f16ae0af6d5902a4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYA' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
6250a47a704f1043d784942915d6382d
df5efe9615186e9e89b65a1d35bf0353595c5ffa
describe
'97947' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYB' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
184619e8bf97af6b7e6f140091367603
f986867b3fa87516eb4330e3d256657818b8025d
describe
'24709' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYC' 'sip-files00038.pro'
c61315613620f6fdd9434d36e24c0e0f
eb1ef660166f80226f3fb2058b592cd9de1a2639
describe
'33499' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYD' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
228817255920febbe8f5bbca69ea7859
30ad050ba71d13077a173cd20e1f4ead32cae9c3
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYE' 'sip-files00038.tif'
c0e0fa9b8af272c1c09ef0b4028ebefa
413b947a846758d6e3aff00de856e9ba1d33d725
'2011-09-20T02:06:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYF' 'sip-files00038.txt'
3596348051ab3fb29a7fc2d81af0ea26
3b621166b222cac989c4c70445fecc29141c242b
describe
'9450' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYG' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
54f6f447e36f5bded37cc44ea4f69879
2ed07b12c66aaa4cad4725ecd41f8bf092d43a92
describe
'323755' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYH' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
6eb493fdb9cbf309ce9f200ab848634b
77d92a3ac5397b3a8e0a08311e187c1517c939d8
describe
'107020' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYI' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
e2634ecad41316474a11b21c09b72341
59cdc82b43b917167eb1a09da0213ff0d43539de
describe
'28626' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYJ' 'sip-files00039.pro'
bfb5997123a5969a20f776a8474ad660
3ff2bfc87eac220d5b68bfd7564ed9e187137052
describe
'36991' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYK' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
8b3d322a88bcc352d19e58fd02b3450c
a2dbe66a560b3c8944be483a63d99bd1d9cd1aee
describe
'2606620' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYL' 'sip-files00039.tif'
e9013fb4407aa90b45d57e3197886fff
66dd66dd3bdaa2d0f6f0820c66e0912eaedc103d
describe
'1221' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYM' 'sip-files00039.txt'
55e36dfb35bbc9b37e3ad542e95f0704
17bb19341b3cee5bfcaf967def1acd4fd84356a5
describe
'9803' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYN' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
7696e073dd2616713821a7ad60ebcb58
14729b2acf194c379a7582bf691eca6863056a91
describe
'334412' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYO' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
fb9e7fa286bdee24511409488dc5e3d0
67e85826439a640209578fcfe6e76e75557b0e70
'2011-09-20T02:04:47-04:00'
describe
'75381' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYP' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
fc7222650c49c5db1158a1d6c51a6393
ce9964b22a8eb328845ef202fa86caf4aefe813c
'2011-09-20T02:04:24-04:00'
describe
'16994' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYQ' 'sip-files00040.pro'
fd5216d60669767619f5d1cd7ae25b98
c4f4bdbae093fa32cf6cae2b73ed18a66c34b6b7
'2011-09-20T02:04:22-04:00'
describe
'24371' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYR' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
d35210a9f493e29fb4959e0d2251b877
6775f879ee1485fa86b7b197f3faa31ee53f83c8
'2011-09-20T02:05:40-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYS' 'sip-files00040.tif'
ba81a4e5295051c6f636c20beda23615
76fc795f00113d50980e598f2ea9f2cff7276cab
'2011-09-20T02:05:50-04:00'
describe
'742' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYT' 'sip-files00040.txt'
184f33bc9d790f2bc1f4f9559ddd5916
e7ab6696f44f759111464d0b334fc29e561c5941
'2011-09-20T02:05:16-04:00'
describe
'7138' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYU' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
1f48f4f9fef267c984aaa9de7b071e84
495240da4c244dfb5d585f23d78ee6bba491c67c
'2011-09-20T02:05:36-04:00'
describe
'334369' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYV' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
8df23b6ae29f83681656c10f39354cb5
ff2886fecd0b88d461774bbda42d95dd72009eab
describe
'90619' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYW' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
bbe247afe6cd58224ff36b09467124e6
c5fa8b23941635426af44c1df3068c92ae9cbb23
describe
'17106' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYX' 'sip-files00041.pro'
4744e538c81dcc5fc218c64769925636
0b0b1f05f7b425a612e0a38eed6ee3ca6fe314ad
describe
'29317' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYY' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
ea7e6744b5862b2a066763d5819bfea4
2f1c1524a0e991f7809e02ac7714f7d97732635e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEYZ' 'sip-files00041.tif'
c8ead00ccc3a195320af1d61ee539d2f
e77fa89c7219ff015231662e6978c81286ec1eaa
describe
'712' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZA' 'sip-files00041.txt'
6d2ad2ed3a7a750b01c449507694947e
cb114317c0ec3715aaa1e725b82442ca2bc951fe
describe
'7698' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZB' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
a7908c7ad7982de55153f1553699542f
46bb0cec72599d9ef01c038125476a5c5b642beb
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZC' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
f863cd31e6d9cae65d16c7b671dae005
74a8af257dd2de00824e703305bf8ceae8608b7c
describe
'74033' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZD' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
025d8a38856c542c4b529e3b018d5319
2afa06c22ffb039576ae0962e8872978c3d5c4f8
describe
'14556' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZE' 'sip-files00042.pro'
063d2871385a80f275154955f5f0c11c
aeda85f43939f164958cc827a72619de81fdd0b1
'2011-09-20T02:04:09-04:00'
describe
'22795' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZF' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
3273b9fa3aab5df77eedd5bd305f9c4c
6798c1ee0ff6d13b7d9c68dc4eff39b9240d86ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZG' 'sip-files00042.tif'
8f601991bd28562a1f2c123957319808
5bcd4aa3875a826a27419861d09bb4b8ce27a526
'2011-09-20T02:05:58-04:00'
describe
'599' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZH' 'sip-files00042.txt'
db1aa1263ec63f011ac89c46e3288315
72b90cc38b0a64bf9f25ed4df3162b2df53701d3
describe
'6670' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZI' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
dad1273da59137f5bbc3f5649373145c
2e2733c7fa582394cca89837cb3aeddf47b7a03e
'2011-09-20T02:04:32-04:00'
describe
'334384' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZJ' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
82868ea39170fbfeac6d082cc996d0b9
13cdf70fffb77e3f5ccae0d5a62f9eb6e21e7cbe
describe
'44708' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZK' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
753bce97e2ce843ebc200802015ac552
2d8ec86f02ea93500ea3474b375de808bf9522f2
describe
'11332' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZL' 'sip-files00043.pro'
157f4fd3f512171ca432c103d0bf558a
f126b967c6faef7d738acc170645dcf5fe87ad0c
'2011-09-20T02:05:18-04:00'
describe
'15066' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZM' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
cb9b42bbb477d92b12207a159ff51ccb
48546b6106f9027886cc9be270c3fad85534fbe7
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZN' 'sip-files00043.tif'
f231623c2353aa53c0e27d664ae788fc
82808783d1cadd9c2bf7a5196b3e86a0536e955c
describe
'475' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZO' 'sip-files00043.txt'
d9c8d2886f971516a88b1174f0482b3d
e7a0ee1928b3513289d01463e33e587f2eb72331
describe
'4248' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZP' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
21ee5f6d5f665c9213831761773fd6db
a9259eee31782ed1c7fcb11a0bb43d084d5d12ed
'2011-09-20T02:05:56-04:00'
describe
'334346' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZQ' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
19df67bf1b8f4209e6423e6fe737d832
a91464e5ffe294e33798d00a916c3e1aa2806380
describe
'75796' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZR' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
0e427bf382e31dd55338817a4c4d206f
80da18e26a8b9ad426f6a30c434d8215a2637803
describe
'20211' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZS' 'sip-files00044.pro'
582170d215b64d6eb48a1578ff9c399d
571124d3cc509437a856a3db99a4a73da43a26f4
describe
'25840' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZT' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
b8322722f8353dbd1def08e41001e97f
c9449ca7ea77e1620a34cc03062f5d71383f2cae
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZU' 'sip-files00044.tif'
d49754a76ef3c84c2bb3803008dc91eb
3163b6bda46e57d1be7af8c0bbc2ea53eeec1829
describe
'832' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZV' 'sip-files00044.txt'
9ab5fb0dbf64a1fd197bf75ac6a1abdd
4dc35fef1f8c5aa14cb11fe4807392498bf5183b
describe
'7013' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZW' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
7e2bb2fc4d5bc7268698822a5c2d9d5a
c8024754b902226835745d989fa6c59c094dfc19
describe
'334333' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZX' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
44d52a0f4d3c30f1e9ec8b01c85faca8
773ad93ef6c6badf58d0ae71a7e0a9661efc0f24
'2011-09-20T02:05:19-04:00'
describe
'103123' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZY' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
948b19acb2242a05c6be29bb5cc93fa8
d15995951479d293e4d89ffab5c6ca2f329fd8fb
describe
'14632' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADEZZ' 'sip-files00045.pro'
d944f422192019c8993e92d08e0c07c8
936e035e9a23531cdc0befc4bf7f3e1fdfd815a7
'2011-09-20T02:06:07-04:00'
describe
'31585' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAA' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
c50669c13aa96b057580315aedbbeb65
d17c8e40dda7c2582d42770907dbaba6b782c077
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAB' 'sip-files00045.tif'
5ae6975d1fbf283f7c357cd0fff8509d
a7a8db57d1cb3bf3260748e8932881b71c13881f
describe
'619' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAC' 'sip-files00045.txt'
b23b611f8d1682e548ca42a29da20688
16743f773dd96972893e985e5935ffcf25b4d7a7
describe
'8650' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAD' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
c2fa178758fd591ff7543829f705273c
00fce85cfff250ff88ccc942d22b76cedfca63fd
'2011-09-20T02:04:33-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAE' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
f70d12c30572a2e7e714ac97eec4f852
394b3aa27128829a52e1de17f4114cada8cedfad
describe
'102488' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAF' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
8342cbc21aebd3f4164bc66f04bebaf4
3587df9cd2773244b7b9eea9831760fb39ba072e
describe
'28089' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAG' 'sip-files00046.pro'
6b790ae3aa3ad2d0a3199e8286d28c09
86e4e78b1cd9d630568dd80632744e5321c836a9
describe
'34944' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAH' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
fa74ccb3e823c70911b3eadad1f6ee90
37c7b823fa06670b038daff768acb2892b2fb882
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAI' 'sip-files00046.tif'
9e6d417f2e6093de172137c9c4af112d
8aaed042b1e5975b7b3412e4240b4456ce6e03f7
describe
'1103' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAJ' 'sip-files00046.txt'
4871020c4736e84bc307f9e9c50e3555
e0280c478222574ec9a9edacdf75f21729d494c6
describe
'9362' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAK' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
50bf1f7b75d63975355912355a1aa763
deb8af6e72b031f29eced2e6eb31ab0284c99b1e
describe
'334378' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAL' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
84e22ad2fb6d6a470d68d1239aef9553
19317222b46fe4e022edd49ccb0e68961a01c817
describe
'94308' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAM' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
70517ef7b938e6177e8574a59cfef691
709dcecc151446622fb7ec668aa3f080fc9012d6
describe
'25136' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAN' 'sip-files00047.pro'
d115d6c7625e883e90da2213039b689e
ba6c89421578a3800da39a899f26e0fad9c80bd3
describe
'31865' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAO' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
40a29ee467beb53b0c96f92e561d21ca
62c3991a4eadd0dbcc62e4f7e7bb17d21a92ca99
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAP' 'sip-files00047.tif'
c740efc9b47d4ee25ec3625d81578bc4
63d431f34057c76cf613aa6957fcaeb3845f0e3e
describe
'1036' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAQ' 'sip-files00047.txt'
56afa72b433ecb60599c3de5ab78ce9b
ef0cbeeae4ee7ec81dd1f00b352b659034db070b
describe
'8719' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAR' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
9ca46297618f64e98f987446db676719
61879de663c80ce1731e61a6ae3ae111a0424a98
describe
'334349' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAS' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
1abd9e663fa4a93dccecd0d0691e02cd
632b4517ecc37c9a0335079364c704397a37c623
describe
'95329' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAT' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
b27c1fa761f2b438622b562e03cfedcd
7033d5acaff628e5833edd544a4a864c149cada1
describe
'25476' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAU' 'sip-files00048.pro'
d4a6fc2fa6c74d614134b76d9f6ec0a1
665ab3c77f96145083f6bac5b75503ae45fe3eec
describe
'31709' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAV' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
d48ea585aaf13d7a483bd83159c20dc2
924a56a4243a89bb7925a5aaea1d26fdfb2a7473
'2011-09-20T02:05:15-04:00'
describe
'2691612' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAW' 'sip-files00048.tif'
381a3a48773af82e25ebaead80a1cc9a
27b2ea7cc626ca09a82abab2e08fa6a03238635b
'2011-09-20T02:06:42-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAX' 'sip-files00048.txt'
537dd0466ceab77aa405209522f1d3e5
3c4e20b35032f4031071a99a7d8a75182ebee827
'2011-09-20T02:04:02-04:00'
describe
'8640' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAY' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
0215b3de01ff7fff351042c043ff9a5c
a3d3b09314fd95ff6042d16ce8f7a2cba11a2908
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFAZ' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
28f8e695980bf96724962b0a367207d7
b07ff53c79cbb91c5ad0f94710d797e393169d79
describe
'97200' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBA' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
77d7eca20400689bf6df6fc52409b1b6
acf7427bd9379f428f32670225496192016a8a64
describe
'26786' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBB' 'sip-files00049.pro'
5a9c7a668f7c5b96ad806a1c3eedbfb2
ab4d482ed58249d4edeedaff92756a53e800dafa
describe
'33285' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBC' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
8cb14218f60a98ae53e0cbe64cda2094
946243865bec00e3b5dc56548fc019cd4c70a527
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBD' 'sip-files00049.tif'
5ea80d76c81cc7cdea4e963dd8c0d1f8
ea2e1208b8af68e2831a25c58a36d3c6cb5f71da
'2011-09-20T02:04:25-04:00'
describe
'1083' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBE' 'sip-files00049.txt'
904ef90dfd4b7b1fc987ae40348304ab
df77f44c1ff5a265f9a4a5dcd4db6ade0fad4e35
describe
'8860' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBF' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
edea76ea8205948ecada8cc3e5504a26
69aa737f10d82f21e524fe820831dcd79fd749d4
describe
'334353' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBG' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
bd0ab8e8b2224c7d3bceb468734618ae
423237db09ab48cfe4763fe54877db271445c54f
describe
'97480' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBH' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
9ac36d864122b198476d086ef9736deb
b27270b9459bcec756b4a26b260d10ed2be2064d
describe
'26057' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBI' 'sip-files00050.pro'
d4703cd6a9aca4d51932d94ee55f33b4
15c301cff746a97a5a9fbb653d6a3cbf011daf51
describe
'32264' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBJ' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
9987012f9a44b3753be3edd8ded29286
8c48ceabe86d0220e3fb2295c52d968a97679d85
'2011-09-20T02:06:35-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBK' 'sip-files00050.tif'
e64caa18a40764ca1b54bd27cc13d666
3e662175c531137fa471ee8da36a5c2c0a6c070f
describe
'1037' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBL' 'sip-files00050.txt'
67ccbbb1ddf25e5d10a49c75fc31f05b
355f16fc8e3a1c5c3aec41b1ae822b5e308501ce
describe
'9336' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBM' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
fef635c9f58150e28bb86b2498e945f6
3437fe927886eb17e91add0be6e4a0d39a6a6413
describe
'334358' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBN' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
ae6eb308891cc4ffe3c2cdbfe10426a5
d0a63bdce6a0743c69ead2cfd2786240285de1ef
'2011-09-20T02:05:07-04:00'
describe
'97280' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBO' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
5581ef9a53ba6f1b94c7e6d49a3eca3a
82dd2efdc5cf9bc8634cb4a240a03dfc01f862f2
describe
'26106' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBP' 'sip-files00051.pro'
662a61324f217c75d31717ac88711c40
5ebe8ad4117d9080469097da23052d164c05ca94
describe
'32552' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBQ' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
7aa3307ffd7c8c5d1630a21792078fd6
98a9b9f9233644d68ebc892453f68d514cf4bbfa
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBR' 'sip-files00051.tif'
595de15dd9031e6d77feb427b0776a2c
9f2ea5f229433731810d38483d540febdef0617a
describe
'1043' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBS' 'sip-files00051.txt'
827ee2cff272297a173c01308f2ba2e6
67d0e186c94856dca0478c591caa1cddb5f479d4
describe
'9466' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBT' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
159a4a0d957d78a7e93f9640f118cc72
95b36abc345c2c10604605f9bd8a7ba86ad7f9ed
describe
'334273' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBU' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
029186b0ce7bd9fb541e1e9a1c90cb22
f35fe527c00bb56c7ed0bf56cc769b7e5bfca786
'2011-09-20T02:04:44-04:00'
describe
'39539' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBV' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
ff343630dad5c2e07e54814ed23a4fab
33672d4e94c0036f1706a787af6c0b11f9d993f0
describe
'7865' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBW' 'sip-files00052.pro'
df1e4f4738958b01b3abd0baa20058e0
87ec84a7064a48baa2b429876b3b10975ab8669f
describe
'13798' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBX' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
f6549fbb1e3b13ae96bb348916de585f
100d96cd5d7adadbc142b0b4be30133ff4bfcecc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBY' 'sip-files00052.tif'
f7e9342d2c13f0347b3ba26ca9f1332c
2f1727f8acf25d1e6e2a2e7ac4d96641cedfea0a
describe
'325' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFBZ' 'sip-files00052.txt'
0e8d69c5fb03bba15d9c5362cef91129
bb7df679fb0db976b933403fe3cd319663559f8d
describe
'4510' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCA' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
00e09e38a56490b8e0c26d4105329530
26214b5c2cac803502d7adaf97050db504ae7be1
describe
'334766' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCB' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
4728ded7f72a56647a212a4ff1b96a23
dee21d139e9b2154de1de3d31199763d69159bf8
'2011-09-20T02:06:04-04:00'
describe
'137718' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCC' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
18870acb502f29ce34d1a652c2ea8c74
7fd9bfd6b8461383cc9f4c21f59bffd8b170ec78
describe
'1692' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCD' 'sip-files00053.pro'
6aa447a6d590c85e4ac5bfeedb3611e4
a129e29525fd923cd5e7d4ac2dd0031ca30e2a57
describe
'31931' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCE' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
4bd2d5ab668c44d326194414d9714099
73787f02fc27b3ae7325c4078c772c743fa87b83
describe
'8050724' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCF' 'sip-files00053.tif'
f983ee38d073d6410650e81f03ffdd36
6fada7e75b8d2ace0722e70421d61cb04c8f8dc6
describe
'244' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCG' 'sip-files00053.txt'
3a9942b7b55fe7747434a985a9ef33c4
a0bdfd95d9811248e02616b1f3a4dfccf11fee64
describe
Invalid character
'8147' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCH' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
45c1c667fe56abea8d96be59d4a0bfe1
4fc86ba717ab4be3b8d09bc8ba3bc3befedfd7bd
describe
'334390' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCI' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
7795a34ee1e5ab73ec632f05afaf4713
cf76aa6fe893d1f20df85d01075f582c24a4269b
'2011-09-20T02:04:15-04:00'
describe
'80615' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCJ' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
87dc5c62e0d7713b8d5fd5da20ca82e9
e67b079eea7e7b1be369fffb7b0ead423b2bc26a
describe
'20750' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCK' 'sip-files00055.pro'
527d3bdbe6938f359e494ba969b1a1e3
4339f97a60d6b7a003726e58c0d519346f14ef74
describe
'26124' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCL' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
61ece36cb86da11ff1310b0ff946844a
39ac74d0307e15a26b5ff03bd949dc9d82e32650
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCM' 'sip-files00055.tif'
9e80d17e6993dce7995b3379396c6475
f16d728ec579a309b2d4edeece31de49c60511ca
describe
'850' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCN' 'sip-files00055.txt'
0811bbc849981397759e7100121db032
b99c1462b3c9a37a0d1aa1775da43dda9e43028a
describe
'7549' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCO' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
ed4848a2452cf5639fd09aa59b939331
60e6dedeea9fef27fba5cb40d0757a63cc91dcd5
describe
'334342' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCP' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
335839ac6e2474e420e81593e3207ec4
b69aeaf47b50ea5b75247f54ccb129d5ad9e3ab0
'2011-09-20T02:05:20-04:00'
describe
'105024' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCQ' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
39217e60018f21f002af709fb2fa89a3
db7806aa092f58ef8ef30f4c0f65949c3635f906
describe
'28234' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCR' 'sip-files00056.pro'
a0fa7072b13ab78c0dd1de705e2f8f6a
c03122891a6097cba634e812ef45e98a904138e6
describe
'35327' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCS' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
6c21d1e5c70ef894c0b5a5d2d358e989
e96c4c9c630cf6215d8c5d671b008986c9a30505
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCT' 'sip-files00056.tif'
a5d33349ed21758d89057f1c5fa35e22
89905a1940ddd3e24afca7954693bc53ea741cce
'2011-09-20T02:05:55-04:00'
describe
'1112' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCU' 'sip-files00056.txt'
0b46403f49fc57b6c435d907ebb62e1c
2a740bdf378dd684ad1eedda6d9351695cc01597
describe
'9626' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCV' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
c3a91a8471681cef0556edbd02a2e1fd
de56a2495cd61e7f17298248cc8ed67c20090118
describe
'327250' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCW' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
196ff16a10010d1850e7e21d98521fb3
f14afba134029e0dbfbef425eb36365dc7250328
describe
'102246' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCX' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
3a08d4b28a95bbb296e6f8f3112faa5b
18e84c33476c6a616663ca43bc574c9c2e3a6da5
describe
'26231' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCY' 'sip-files00057.pro'
8ba7c4aec2c03a30f2d76ca564645b32
79994198686bb85a7f95e8192564f8b558e5d261
describe
'34929' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFCZ' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
24892bd4db47caa0d0c69f32c4b1241d
98a3516612ee7458858c55a7ab0434cfc0fe4145
describe
'2634500' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDA' 'sip-files00057.tif'
b4463ca3f1963eb86f9d053dba619e3a
6e947a87efcd75d4409ae3be7459c056cda72b4f
describe
'1049' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDB' 'sip-files00057.txt'
7fa07d9763ad9c4815aaf3f29c7fecdf
ce3a61c940381ee467742232c67a645445c9ce4e
describe
'9578' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDC' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
a6e1ec7fec6a038d88b199b85c92c93e
5a7f769c3638058660982f909aff3d834e6d0af5
describe
'324206' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDD' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
b6103890d8596623570761b672d8f439
78e222b6621fe244bb3aa558e06d9506e7ee71c5
describe
'99051' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDE' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
d598b4c94244cf2e957ad9df65ea4483
00061248a4700f5e65c10cc46df23f5948b67342
describe
'25748' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDF' 'sip-files00058.pro'
e191cb3872f6c93a6313ce8bdbbdb74c
7868b65cc8b4ba8339ad3d153065d4a430b470f0
describe
'32631' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDG' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
83181a9392ba6267284f47a4ca61e8fe
fa9d92245f34b298208372b8e44d5036b9230ccc
describe
'2610020' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDH' 'sip-files00058.tif'
b600ddde58b76407cf1ef5f6cee5af8b
637edaf26196fd852d955ad3bda309983f2da31d
'2011-09-20T02:05:10-04:00'
describe
'1021' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDI' 'sip-files00058.txt'
b2ae5c0ac1fd7142b795b2d6c9558f17
642cd65db361436625f925b7a942e15e1c040cd6
describe
'9083' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDJ' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
464d1426c51f4c3bf1c66723de2e904c
2e9a41edbd66e953f0c30e076d7a377e74952060
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDK' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
52b5b283e072ddc8508e236df596700e
562f3c389091531e7951a97d728d863d3383e394
describe
'83521' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDL' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
cc0eb8f2152d246b71d91f346785eef0
b2469fcb119b1b689d52422d28ababfb70a74daf
describe
'19346' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDM' 'sip-files00059.pro'
dda7ad4af752211f9c2cb5352e835d81
f9839d092cdb073ff1af1c4d1a8a4858224870f8
describe
'27100' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDN' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
1e9907e29bd6d9714368fad62ebc91bf
32628bc94fd9d0f798f70b4abe04825e9ec87372
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDO' 'sip-files00059.tif'
2db44cabbdfb281c0994e654d327b95b
3459b10391fd5cfd51121accf39d6d3116d6ffc7
describe
'827' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDP' 'sip-files00059.txt'
3c4c08490fa84e9b9d827743eb897ed0
f00a81fb888846e3be9df6d4ae27cd99a54257b8
describe
'7654' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDQ' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
2b0a06c02e84c155816c70a7bd189430
f2fbb0cdf23d9851d52da34e2bf4bdd0cf3be101
describe
'334403' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDR' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
36dc9267a13cd7d5ec379ede75cae391
526d4188ca86a13449f5438436bd0f18fd8be1ec
describe
'102969' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDS' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
a0ea1d65c17c171a8f68f1d8ee910dcd
bc0760a9f65dbffb39d8776ac8034d4da7e29ea7
describe
'28393' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDT' 'sip-files00060.pro'
df62e778f1aff590e748daf270d496c9
f9aa07cd2beb92e98f0eb419384d0dd11b23f0b9
describe
'33901' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDU' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
cc93a3a927ae9ba637331a08938e36eb
3a6a368763cc575e15af81cf584f07f94a8791d9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDV' 'sip-files00060.tif'
1457061431e7b5b4d79c2dc078c778af
2acb322338311adccfdb74cbc621092a3d91debb
describe
'1127' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDW' 'sip-files00060.txt'
139a5542bc9c12e49a8fca67472c0b72
4afd431635ff0006d6c1e10468462780b58de02f
describe
'9368' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDX' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
0140456a04b6155db2dfcaadf8a59baf
bc2c7284867db10b75cd1f231985744932c1b90e
describe
'327121' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDY' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
a9359084fc426648c2cb94fdf346a541
bb230e052e8ab0f876b57909ea6b42857edcef7c
describe
'98655' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFDZ' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
a8d7f91d2128350ae2927efad7f55b52
5278da8aa9419ce18e30cfc445de0e4abafc53d2
'2011-09-20T02:04:53-04:00'
describe
'16761' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEA' 'sip-files00061.pro'
7afb700135f136fd6b874ce596c67af0
d8f2ae40277864b1f42f0cc287fceab64a65a298
describe
'29672' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEB' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
7fbf9c7d81c3e2c07651d93b84122f55
c4bff8482af8a743bed5773f9b947b6fa63c6482
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEC' 'sip-files00061.tif'
8a7f495285b52ae5c7580fdccc8db2d8
a5e9ece246ea201219fee5ea555e64d827fbe90c
describe
'743' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFED' 'sip-files00061.txt'
52c58bfa22929b36ccb10a357b16dad3
53fe420c545ec34fc714402278defadc4d1af997
describe
'8263' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEE' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
e5a3010f813de604136fe35b35f7c15a
8a3d953dc349439027f70b968601ef92ff42815c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEF' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
2413921e8f5dcea86084f0d56bf5eb87
b1d5321a0e3fcbffca24af7110c55ec90510b4d9
describe
'79055' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEG' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
b40107ee5dc8a8142936d3c74e305878
fc5736b5627e243731089b2c77a383e4cc35bf04
'2011-09-20T02:06:08-04:00'
describe
'12536' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEH' 'sip-files00062.pro'
8fb014736b83fe3e324789364e7397ba
99e89aa56f5b42e662ccd3bd01cb63ea46f61c7e
describe
'24890' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEI' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
510b138cc5694a8c3daa5db653940211
2909105266b8aad15875035884a2ab25fe64d73f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEJ' 'sip-files00062.tif'
7fcc19e4c351fa19b333f1f8785a2f86
90882e2c027b0e4f3405f7296891fa0f915c285f
describe
'568' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEK' 'sip-files00062.txt'
e5cdb8fbd4f88bded8a0c3db5c09c556
f157db08a3cd8b4bfa197048faf9b5b8829acc35
describe
'6913' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEL' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
d826a2e9283d527ce1460ca8450839e1
4d49d4d80c51a2fae44ec2cdd03fd5fda67f65e7
describe
'334395' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEM' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
e32f3c383b907223f39a98b6cff4ed9b
12119c8af6c02a4ac395cb8650c77f3f5b09a417
describe
'86642' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEN' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
21301ee992bd100e6b88660c5dd6b20b
1649c59e1cb8620197d48c4f3c8e7e48c1dd743f
describe
'792' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEO' 'sip-files00063.pro'
a2601de0cf6fa8fbe44784a005b3d54b
c504ed64298bab46221a164765ffbefe372a1150
describe
'22987' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEP' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
0aabd7ae02704fc85a1daece0eee96d5
696df23a5627cded1d3f685917fd1b735e7dd483
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEQ' 'sip-files00063.tif'
9a65dc8aaa5dd9451e4050a46c49d88c
4abbc025bbd167a840ea3d9937e80c524e6a715c
describe
'138' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFER' 'sip-files00063.txt'
34a7c57cbd4ea0fa6a05950281db6dbf
31979463fcac4a03d909e33dfe5e332fedfb81dc
describe
'6408' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFES' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
55b60cacdeb9f140a76ac9854f7c8059
e8f775a289b5cd40a9a1693ba24592ae36ea9576
describe
'334252' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFET' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
8a062eafcbdd26e111ad7d7ddb3c9f65
10d5d71c36310a9ee398ed58653897aa41dad73b
describe
'8522' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEU' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
9e9ab1fba1200d8869ff4d7c8b20fa64
a6735dc2c21d1ec17707f92613c0fecde771d14d
describe
'2605' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEV' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
b15b7df9014861e7a4b0a3f56b1235b1
314271a1088c01583a2ff198e38c46e8e0c77a7f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEW' 'sip-files00064.tif'
ca48b0cf8a642fbb1e65804a378341f2
7fc6d37d22a29e99bbbf6372e755a60f2c36fd2d
describe
'887' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEX' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
0f31648183ac25fb29c6e021366e97f9
8854f04c37221d618edc111098bb337cea75b264
describe
'334391' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEY' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
8c3ec87f988e1ed358e7248a089b906a
b4195d6970f85cfcceee18ad66c11a2acbf3c5c4
describe
'107685' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFEZ' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
0daa7815477826725ee271364325d46d
b28ca39007309839f402cb1615d26e2d27b69d84
describe
'28917' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFA' 'sip-files00065.pro'
6f236b88b51b66b488ca3f653963ee20
f89c794301fc524eb4a1f20bb0e715ac66166f62
describe
'36956' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFB' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
ac57875d1fe5f3bea144568d85396d99
2f16569fdf0ecd709cdaf9fe4e4cd3f62e9c6739
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFC' 'sip-files00065.tif'
c534e44de29cabeeef4f0d21e8bbb4df
bf8e30a99d87235568afb56a243204012910bc5e
describe
'1137' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFD' 'sip-files00065.txt'
aef0d97d6ab88c88e18b113f2bd8d8d8
216bd402028a195121ce1b937dbbe8e80b2f89dc
describe
'10045' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFE' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
3f083e2d95ecf39c509938fa793e0497
ec147123e076c45671d8c22d89ba83cbbfec1921
describe
'334392' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFF' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
5d82f55c2593faf7d47b9b951334094e
85facad6f360dc8ed26d9322348c3fd9e48355fb
describe
'76648' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFG' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
305ae0b642091cd750d3083336426bcf
f61a4a981f2de5cbd39e7c0c296d7bc31355382b
describe
'19718' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFH' 'sip-files00066.pro'
6a32e49a1ce050bd1d0fb3a45ca09403
f9d1a81fd8d710ae74904e641e16c871d77260c2
describe
'26491' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFI' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
386e22d528f15f1f04d5decc431ffdf8
5f22a9a81dd2e3dd779d4705c9afb2af0df96df1
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFJ' 'sip-files00066.tif'
a61872fdaf6eeecc88b4f75ef5ab5f4c
13af018b41dff18e3705c7d1e5844218806dc2fb
describe
'775' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFK' 'sip-files00066.txt'
02af74a1b1dc0dc0a17bd3af8c907402
a33affdc304585191a27cb03ba7bd5db5ab31a35
describe
'6756' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFL' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
4f35d504a106d9705df8c9f14ea242d8
3809a262f8e2c0b4c8283d220607c9f4a545f5c1
describe
'334371' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFM' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
a61daa758b5ce00aae22e0c6d272773a
512e5f7f6baadcb35d3e81df8b1ba1d329fa2250
describe
'93426' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFN' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
692005f309caf89896caf008fe7105ef
8d8726bc13875bdc8b4abf01d391b03e64949fa4
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFO' 'sip-files00067.pro'
72557a0107e17361e7781d1de99f1f1d
357b6907dc4fdb97db7c000dcb9b5736890cde58
'2011-09-20T02:05:59-04:00'
describe
'24463' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFP' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
3dfd38f2a7ec20c1ccfbc050fabc419d
e339a168878fb50e6e961496ae4caea6c767fde9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFQ' 'sip-files00067.tif'
4d658b29b457c3fe06838c37021cf27c
45a3939ec7b6d7e7e6eb376bb35fddaaefb9c471
'2011-09-20T02:05:32-04:00'
describe
'140' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFR' 'sip-files00067.txt'
e97120a4f52a88df133a0a68d2d8e60d
5993f4603a4976600a879c7a2d46c43fee621802
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFS' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
19936785993a241b609c09dc19cde445
e40c101704c7aa9a640600f1add80f78e6bca7e5
describe
'334176' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFT' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
80395f4268c117cee10b3e1ea3d0109d
43cd7db2725d37efefd606b3e47862716212519c
describe
'8506' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFU' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
36597e8e52b7f5b35677c6622804fa16
5db6b1ada116f94525b9948986f9a4e33777afd9
describe
'2547' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFV' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
dbd29b2d075354e3a5c842a50719b276
efc82c257c296ce880ace528b53a408c8888462e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFW' 'sip-files00068.tif'
9aa23e0c93f0b9df7f468726e05df32d
8daf92fe02188008b9805c2f50cb9aed796cc25d
describe
'909' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFX' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
3b43513fa985039f5ac8ae89bbaaccd6
23eb54fd859e2fa4d0ff038559132cb14be976c7
describe
'328512' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFY' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
c4026330cd379f9524a8baf906091fcc
8fcb5b95be532ee1e1e098bfb48bff774e068fb7
describe
'76280' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFFZ' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
fb03e547eac1e333db3d77cd15c1a10e
84043ea599a8982d92e99c46c77733296e4daa26
describe
'20356' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGA' 'sip-files00069.pro'
631d722f998c8e75d43941abff8d7f8b
43727b3afc18a135e4e5e26b16b178b9a61a4a4e
describe
'25056' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGB' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
b33856e0b7d7ce8198a5aebed9d2aef3
02254b5bedbdb98fce82652c48c6de9595c77f1f
describe
'2644424' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGC' 'sip-files00069.tif'
1382000589ca7632516c356692b15244
5871218cdea875236e518726cfb934891ea936a2
'2011-09-20T02:06:41-04:00'
describe
'840' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGD' 'sip-files00069.txt'
f33ab24e958961efd8ad4290a66d6e12
eb724d3921df490991e6bd707ea472c8ba043621
'2011-09-20T02:04:59-04:00'
describe
'7392' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGE' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
8bcb7e0f540d99c3f468d33844f000d6
056576d0c4032fdb60fa9995da6b81b6dd518842
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGF' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
06676a7093ef85a6de53348dba44186b
a705b358a68baf48555cb0d597f1fc80d7cd807f
describe
'105377' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGG' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
0918993647a409ccfcbb85742d212616
bbc23032059f7072a210e114d284722a247de39a
describe
'28214' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGH' 'sip-files00070.pro'
5d95b77f904141f8338e18cac4b58bde
4b124c3c09e8e0fc42a10ff7fc97cbf8a992d4a1
describe
'34607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGI' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
d0bfca6e56227e2717bfac964cf27c45
a27dd9545ace960f105230106085404853d5309d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGJ' 'sip-files00070.tif'
872c77d0db23c1bad50d21524f59af6e
deb707982be3f1507efab25cce7963da50310e56
'2011-09-20T02:05:01-04:00'
describe
'1107' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGK' 'sip-files00070.txt'
f5a1aed835b065738fd554b77b855c86
54461feb0363c4781f3e9488700799098acfef45
describe
'9600' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGL' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
25bc27a6ea62ea91469374c36323ed5f
1b5856858ffc0fdaeda37ccfa1c8671b748602cb
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGM' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
2fb7a5d03fe2859337f33d19c95c9b21
650c8598d7c1d0aa9bebf6fddebd4c38e9f962ad
describe
'95388' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGN' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
242c4279026c8d31aa1dc1865ad00ea1
31696d08820ae82d31508211a4012b62c4975a2e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGO' 'sip-files00071.pro'
88eb686190fd2c9cd013c4a401dd8866
c6ce2621d5f34a5deb792518f3f2e580fad567c4
describe
'32442' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGP' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
373859e5f8ba77be37adfe3d4cd8e7cf
11210137a6c6a010f9e71fc82982c72229c57669
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGQ' 'sip-files00071.tif'
ec519ad82a6435d507c7e5eb312fa94e
b09867119b4e0cd7f1d13a88a8dcb89deda7de39
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGR' 'sip-files00071.txt'
133e65af2d9c70cabc5b56bc15df0012
dcaa2d980980dbe7b6e8a749c510d3da4e0d0678
describe
'9280' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGS' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
7353fa6fc1430e510ab94b0968aa5837
8f388bbfa7fb7a09e1bf394052deb43526669299
describe
'334396' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGT' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
de287ab3a45148eceeb4dff7408f0fca
b07ded6d13498da692a88c6833fb7384157c0b06
describe
'95533' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGU' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
eb39f81e8467466ba9d9e7c69b6a8891
9f96f2588ae283e33aa533c1959c4c07b1b8a788
describe
'25617' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGV' 'sip-files00072.pro'
390ac65f12d636ebcfe587928e70c71f
0ff9471a04b85d3a66ee03bc58b9cf69f62a3f47
describe
'32200' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGW' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
a0ea0661d5c402dd130b29adc757952c
2147392102c5de7a8d84bce2f55685d4f4215ecb
'2011-09-20T02:05:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGX' 'sip-files00072.tif'
0c263cf62fa04457a6c790284a851c92
dc3066c9a7b88220b6647aecdaf4c5d5390a8bdf
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGY' 'sip-files00072.txt'
0df8e1f4c557dc924f262e16b37993cf
a0ba48ff9d65177feb721a1b2cac6a2eef063920
describe
'9361' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFGZ' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
ab2fe8b3b045536b344d77d4dd113076
91685611d6854383e10fc75b3003c20afa4034cf
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHA' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
6343fae01dea336244e32de71d1b3964
089b3cd7c180b8be5620bd848b2f19cb15163c8f
describe
'85245' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHB' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
955cd853095fa5e043a00de847041ccd
b21a6b063e9219352c9629e8330ac245106cfab8
describe
'16398' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHC' 'sip-files00073.pro'
32b5a9203dd10b13150323a4fba00c2a
51ed30052c2371e0db11bd69a7887a29e6056521
'2011-09-20T02:06:28-04:00'
describe
'27406' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHD' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
99337222630add27f76958286b90e032
8a09c4f60174e51bd98040aafeeb6e9addc7257f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHE' 'sip-files00073.tif'
9aa00d5a84b7dcd81f4ab20fa07deb29
a261671c12a5c9b02dd2cfb1b253e186972850d9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHF' 'sip-files00073.txt'
0791d2f57b5fa054d11286915f988d08
46a164f6e366262b0e63b5dac5ae5b983f93b000
describe
'7843' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHG' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
cbaeb77b9c430fd49277b73f3c803f5c
c274dfc0803aa2cb8f64ec37b655763b4e6cd13d
describe
'334364' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHH' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
e169fd256b2c474c0370cecab2c713ce
ebbb5aafa52233901c95432d80310b31c0969302
describe
'88599' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHI' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
aee6ae9116cf05871cc9e66269735497
f3d1e3370493bec01646cebde5bbde3d5460ae39
describe
'23319' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHJ' 'sip-files00074.pro'
70e41cb624e521362e191254f3961a17
12221398ecd5728433f1b4169e2798fdc9f0840c
describe
'30291' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHK' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
5e24a3b3f8cc94931dcbaf2b2169ea18
24311c7099b5f162a0134c185a95670e718b37f3
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHL' 'sip-files00074.tif'
4025bd6a11f349944bf704b475d23f69
c0b487bb26d2e8d8c4aa3a1770b0b9ccbc728d18
describe
'932' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHM' 'sip-files00074.txt'
161c6a2bf4a3a853d87cb2aaca87bc20
da81207b98af48546e74ac20e776af97ec79c94a
describe
'9130' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHN' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
691c9b3f8006ee627e01eb46d131eef5
91d3aedf5e03730d096d2688eeb09eadd3cdd019
describe
'334394' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHO' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
7207ab5c848a289dff7055fee382532d
1e6e35c6ee44b7631e17415db03f46690ecfcc95
describe
'97052' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHP' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
6d5a8b4bb119dd2cf2b3cc1726107688
2fe0336fcb03875c0fb645c9ea4bd020b3cd4c00
describe
'25632' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHQ' 'sip-files00075.pro'
d9bf2b69792bc8c4fb66a4510c88c4a8
2e1d3eefc56b30daad6f293a4c51a25eba6f51c7
describe
'33860' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHR' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
771a2d6adc0980541ae3611499b9401c
1516ca724279c086cf5ce8f26cbe587fbd026cfd
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHS' 'sip-files00075.tif'
454b6b4136db76eeafd33cb9e49fa130
d9aa07d42f6178d94a3b0b5da0868953c4c9c58a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHT' 'sip-files00075.txt'
fe892d01cf74794c57e764cc77f576d2
439eaab307928373a15fdf0db28503e1d35c0e56
describe
'9016' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHU' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
f32bb9c563962dc3e26c38164b667899
a396c3119fab757bda0c8ebffd8cfe96e9a02af7
describe
'334289' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHV' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
2a1f90dd0a520344bb00c5d96db5f3fe
34e595e174b77a46e80b90f783080ce2abacda85
describe
'68999' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHW' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
af9e5c20c3e5931efbd2d72ebbdd77d6
2108d1a67e7c55b9b921252f3af25af09d174d06
describe
'16354' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHX' 'sip-files00076.pro'
8ec91f916409c5f0f8367b579eb6e4a7
bc4ebe0e6c7a5b71ecdc3793bcbb84dfcb1ad000
describe
'24378' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHY' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
443753928d0959a6672f594a9695b0c1
9faddc43fd769daa94e7e57eaa23a8b922d4ba5f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFHZ' 'sip-files00076.tif'
75a80253bcb6090c3885f4a885adc6cd
f653a516f7e1cf39816fac9549371ffbb21cdfb6
describe
'679' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIA' 'sip-files00076.txt'
d9a3b0963f718a532ecbf3ca4b13f66e
41276146555d26b41fe1d821be21879cf6dc572e
describe
'7034' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIB' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
c071c69f95f516ba3e178263f5e0fa57
7a82ce1bec971ec7bc865957c0fb8e9a77875618
describe
'334302' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIC' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
1ccfd79a779db38b5c77000584693114
7707c510a63afd5c2ad4c756be3c94f20ddea921
'2011-09-20T02:06:27-04:00'
describe
'76031' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFID' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
7db1a17b4ecde0a99cecc79b9e5a31e9
b7baa8bc881f618b48c8c1693dc17612c4713969
describe
'16345' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIE' 'sip-files00077.pro'
5a9443df2002b28eb502fcd97f76554b
ccbe28258490e72c8d8002020d8d4407f7112126
describe
'26186' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIF' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
cbb4c84b785e36c544317cbd17f4aa58
6fbc705cbc7e21bb999766a8eb52b5ab02b3fcb7
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIG' 'sip-files00077.tif'
5b341dc1b749e8209eddb8e0ce5a56a5
ed04ea02c70b6637e7ed69a7e1e4c02643209554
describe
'680' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIH' 'sip-files00077.txt'
5515faf23615df3ac0f7e5cf5d66d98e
df8ddaa451ad8b36e8e0f0fe9e4efaf93d375bf5
describe
'7410' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFII' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
8294ca7f0df4ef6cf48e35e1e822faea
9b6a6f0211a08aefad10c7b599cdf129dd9b13f6
describe
'334366' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIJ' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
9d9f4d7361df3597418a3a210511d94f
ba9fcffd7c423a9086abd1c490e0715da019d014
describe
'63446' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIK' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
3cd5171198fa51c248d58a5301075410
0c483f8be057f4af43ccf52500d9159f25f0f2c8
describe
'14395' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIL' 'sip-files00078.pro'
f0721b026804898d16d83d9b8a8dc00d
6174e5d1a1a80f7e3711c247de931dd8eb688981
describe
'20526' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIM' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
fa981b7bd2acf74683cca2cd4a497270
9ca1e6cf721669f42971acb67de2ec79f2f3c429
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIN' 'sip-files00078.tif'
32268d97daabd81870800819c04d11b6
28f100dfc06e3750a0f2a08dd5e5b9e9008aceee
describe
'588' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIO' 'sip-files00078.txt'
1ca82561b11b14d751d6a8fb1c3cf784
6b2a552c189674de8241e14a434c9774ac533037
describe
'6423' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIP' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
4ca6955072ccccc2da79ffa54d6ee428
a2124fd1fe5eb8a46f5d7e383a9bb0f48527c0d2
describe
'334410' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIQ' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
f1d500253dc02f73d4156f91f93c1251
14ad584d7991632137d33e74171f2d2b55c37dfc
describe
'35563' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIR' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
b4ad3ac18f548e5d521b198bc46ce75e
6744fabf51f89b92aa03b68a95504b9a9ce108b2
describe
'5414' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIS' 'sip-files00079.pro'
11eec7fb6fb1cfbbd833415501f58f43
11572f4a166e8411608df1b1fc0fcdbb4d254a64
describe
'11674' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIT' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
cc04a1b5e946a58fbc736a62bba6e3c2
0de0c8cec2fbb8894760ba794ea8357222bdc152
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIU' 'sip-files00079.tif'
584fabd12e3f1984899beeecd197db83
2c9baede0dec0193efad80d6256f05ac72502aff
describe
'219' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIV' 'sip-files00079.txt'
7aa23650199547666647bd45cbb6afbf
42a61b5f52f22f911311b2f855eca5cce158411d
describe
'3259' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIW' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
4ac9eda594a3e01a9ed08e214152dac2
c070a999d31c5064b0f87f38e88cad2e28112f71
describe
'334380' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIX' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
23e4cdd551a1b475247f2b269ba47f00
5db18b8ff15ad44a85f2544dfb7fd630d8c73119
describe
'79552' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIY' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
c7ed777f5570d46946f06a8ee4ac5edb
b886e28d5e7efc9ba233aeebd8a83acf3f0efdfb
describe
'20286' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFIZ' 'sip-files00080.pro'
5a339f75f43eade921500fab92ee510c
3fbb56a2145917b12e054bc74eda2d5789064668
describe
'27312' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJA' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
0c245c54c6a1ad072e459d5ead433ea4
b9d9796e739e56303ed88b29b7942c1c6d4180ac
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJB' 'sip-files00080.tif'
1ff9c2799f3ec63afe225b6918430a07
8ab357dc8cd4f81d3c1328872d7976c716df8d22
describe
'819' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJC' 'sip-files00080.txt'
fb2631e90f4e44f8ad574cf785f1a297
b5361b8f8259712b331e3ce1e866b98a67eebb90
describe
'7304' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJD' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
749049b4e5319bb66446122d389f7b97
72e251ca55f540c3d7d5de51071bbcb0c19c179d
describe
'334405' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJE' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
00b604f1fcaee6a49ae0d58825b4ff06
800ccd87195547e9d0e3487dbc03a8132dad78e1
describe
'90566' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJF' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
f57489d0c388ab7cf1c88870038f88e0
78aa17b632fe21259f62c0b2e015d4d7e78eebc0
describe
'16116' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJG' 'sip-files00081.pro'
616dff9a3877fef3d34b3c890ebb0c1a
707d03477358781192f47b698f69a46967240806
describe
'28952' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJH' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
56721e107b8334fe1fa2a4c0a62c4e49
4a0cefd996c25501bb5a9f8fb9a51848ea35845b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJI' 'sip-files00081.tif'
eb7edc4f0617fc969a3e85e1e939c0f3
41e8baae1a2f40b855f76bf52119869a6e3b9933
describe
'682' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJJ' 'sip-files00081.txt'
1b38b4b4be00ee1ad20a7cadcd3d883a
2490dcff7bdaeabf7db2bb55ff329c0a01bea400
describe
'7959' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJK' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
65761bd0c9e90e774bf7676578625723
9986a72aa17348bce0d133a65449d5f6545a8bb7
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJL' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
0d15633b85bc099c25a44194586f6d37
e8e6bfa74975f28e6224a15d77270a02f6395e0a
describe
'94261' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJM' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
3a0a7cbcd86a429fafc687216684e150
859d8e2b5ea89bfa5db00cf996ffd7ccb76a2940
describe
'25041' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJN' 'sip-files00082.pro'
52f3c87987127612e88934b2514c0fca
8417dfbdd65c1a96dd916002fbf22037fce5d22e
describe
'31644' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJO' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
7c3d850aa161129e6d9d12a5dbb89aa7
7662f2b72af1a095622bdd2539e185697041357a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJP' 'sip-files00082.tif'
6095e9630acc64d5109fef471d20e08a
a28cd14358cceb240959ec7140dafb054c8a3d60
describe
'1028' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJQ' 'sip-files00082.txt'
0f87bb9320ed86ec0ff59327275524c9
affb02a4683a9917e6b106fbff5e38e1b0746a50
describe
'8945' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJR' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
556ac271193e4037ae3f3692d4cc557c
a3d1e22e0f2513254708a5dcfdc9daac3d1047f3
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJS' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
c5542ab419037e5023c97322195fc7ab
dbb36d1d2e1b8090373d0007ab48766e32f47abc
describe
'101354' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJT' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
75d56b97350740e27a414b327a8a145b
df7abeea03e95f5c085d74131ecdab47b4526ee4
describe
'24967' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJU' 'sip-files00083.pro'
627ae86938368560e410571be396b180
cbba0c34120468c446ab2e086c4cb76e11b87b97
describe
'34105' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJV' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
3af9716439b63e00b9ea494168cb5e72
cdbe57bb885f0bb7b1b6b32b327d871a619946c7
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJW' 'sip-files00083.tif'
fed5d8d4c98814f24c698c0a243930ab
07439d0b8f569ec82652d00dd90c076f4501f89d
describe
'1039' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJX' 'sip-files00083.txt'
db9da6b89bdc1cae0d0e17850646bfde
1c4fa1c86f558e98b0c9d372c9cec9bc7d6854cc
describe
'9311' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJY' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
e8a2ad9e1ba0e5671dc6bfaed4df04ed
7ecdc47bc6e9133116315a7b76cdc252c16bc941
describe
'334406' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFJZ' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
f69ed09e10355361414601789215a553
d923a704245901531e33aa8e80a5351a94a96293
describe
'89524' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKA' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
35ff49975c91e7d7621f34583d837e0d
e90673009f5d128e38560ed85ad61d96e226de7b
describe
'23650' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKB' 'sip-files00084.pro'
86b1d4687b20fb86e97b98407df291e3
79ac1aeaffc1a0a7ff9a549cedb3882a38444c56
describe
'30495' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKC' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
c2c43ad5f69992541fa3e4c257e24cd7
7a83068f938ca23e1c82b6df49f49a4dbdc66470
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKD' 'sip-files00084.tif'
fafa37d2bfc0055e86922373df6b21ed
fe8f616c2963c6837d423747cdd95c488fefb52e
'2011-09-20T02:04:50-04:00'
describe
'1010' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKE' 'sip-files00084.txt'
37204965d673bcf1139293605f7de905
0c5649bc035f06654c58200b052839855424ee72
describe
'8535' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKF' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
1360c0c31099ff7be03929147d7a9b99
c5e3998945b8f1329b1944b35c9763e98f5dc3f7
describe
'334329' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKG' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
c2186cbc1fae88829b2fd0de1b15689f
e8b5b811a7e9852026ced9f7067cb336469ec0b5
describe
'92224' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKH' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
4e2766edc63880d755e65b1b64ae1f23
0a91c5a2b13f416385e80b53aef79d1ee1ab5aad
describe
'23092' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKI' 'sip-files00085.pro'
97ee674dec003702adea85eb1bcc04e0
f8fda11b61f89ef9e465ec74ee4c4e860ab3f383
describe
'31415' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKJ' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
e873dc8ce5659dfbf1169a84050fbf97
58d82e149531dcd6e4ad19db49153268542aedfc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKK' 'sip-files00085.tif'
01cbed273e30c14c35903944a0423034
531dba5fcc215b229cd67a09a223bad33f69d3af
describe
'925' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKL' 'sip-files00085.txt'
2d5db33c5bc96cb6b198c837404c8e40
bcbc55fb11a6952d9cf604a8eb235b1ef3597d71
describe
'8469' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKM' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
c6a17db1e0d2347bac24851c36d2f61c
d7b5efa09a510af635eede3dac4bb33ae0ec7dc9
describe
'325173' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKN' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
8dd8e040518832eef99a5f9c28d35328
45fdac5b080edc13f86872e9f589b83f9772dd68
describe
'106132' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKO' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
c804434faa7f6efcf90d081a351721f9
ef62d53868ebd862635d074655e9eff0e5d80b57
describe
'28233' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKP' 'sip-files00086.pro'
d699f4e6473b25fed321aa52d6e06af6
c561fe35bf57b14b21f71ce96a78757469559704
describe
'35633' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKQ' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
3a4a9d391db6fd8beedf97840db12890
67d30c741ca3b293f3575227d0f8fdfeb14db2d1
describe
'2618204' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKR' 'sip-files00086.tif'
9e4c76c3039bf2108275bef86cd9c3cd
c827b16a6c3a7dc70acd8cbdd446107447bc2711
describe
'1115' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKS' 'sip-files00086.txt'
01656a42a51bbd5d1ec14d7d350001b2
f46e51c8dd5121996264a6cd946b7f70e846bca1
describe
'9781' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKT' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
ad0ab7b3e492de06fbf0810334644cbe
8476fc40787d78622ae3a91f21b6a1b3a0a93800
describe
'334367' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKU' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
32382fb124cce5d073b1fb53c1f05148
42bd867edb99890114116d443d6c4bfbeafcc737
'2011-09-20T02:04:56-04:00'
describe
'105236' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKV' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
5167fa05604ae0eeaa69c6d1090b4ecc
c0032774a57e32b7312e3eb63ee0972803767e1d
describe
'27948' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKW' 'sip-files00087.pro'
0c8ae877f385cf8d2be7a9344f4070f1
d763c2b1ec6b00b27cd5505eabd370be57996358
describe
'35902' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKX' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
ac4d35bd823f6311e0a9bb609a09ddbc
3ffe29b6f18ed2a8d5cbd95664ecbdc2e352f0b6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKY' 'sip-files00087.tif'
5d4b5dd418275157bf8aed56f780a9d9
6d4a4b3848c1378e9feedbde1a91f44ed435c64d
describe
'1102' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFKZ' 'sip-files00087.txt'
300fa4988e40cdd3c81dc9771e179917
b77dbd0252bc42e4afcde1c08d65bebd2be50575
describe
'9760' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLA' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
8ca2feb638297f664da6e926ac4e0e98
504c1f8c7deb093f982198c2920365fa39e49abe
describe
'316886' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLB' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
a6bd08ca54d35a6ebe13242ca317f9f8
b1ffcea22d5f43a8d18cc15476ddbdca3921bc38
describe
'58386' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLC' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
a5616ee3b7de5777e938749e1425e836
44b3373c64fbb7b6bc67670bc90e150ab99512ef
describe
'14393' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLD' 'sip-files00088.pro'
64fbdc14ff04123a50055d6c29d5352a
b2b388fab3af054b2bbe204a62604f758ca1e059
describe
'20301' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLE' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
408c13bbb4f8887a7663d850370843aa
f9a4ecee95f66c7b6026783f6d75025de3cd42fa
describe
'2551712' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLF' 'sip-files00088.tif'
5f6deb215b4962c6f735ad73d06ec7e5
a4918aac1ba1ec54c7de9c1df816e901eb62a522
describe
'575' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLG' 'sip-files00088.txt'
e31d4ab21290fafd8cb416e8f40efca7
388012a1115bc81d7c93a299ad1f4a94d820679f
describe
'5736' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLH' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
31cf32374236ec2a6339b79cced05b2f
701d8b3062d65c3558374ada6918c8b5659726f3
describe
'321860' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLI' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
ca181678fefc23e27987e5c1fafd93bb
ceb8c6bcb0ebf350b0b0ecb7b6f9b9449540e444
describe
'75963' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLJ' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
e6ccf975e5a9d821bff9707b467b1e72
b3e8ff6dd6b904769421f51e991bdfe425540dfa
describe
'18879' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLK' 'sip-files00089.pro'
8bdc685b4d1e0911a2eb8c35176cae22
3ee73f0035706254e1e9f0a6c96d3dde03794c22
describe
'25753' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLL' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
7d7ab67e76e8da98ff8fc876b9dc7793
4e44b3d7c5530dfaecb7f4d9aaf8e44ab7e5bc8e
describe
'2593444' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLM' 'sip-files00089.tif'
f5d1a2a1391619b1ed20dd23a25ef76f
f8cd15caa0031838186a811e2ba9816314b4ff5f
'2011-09-20T02:06:31-04:00'
describe
'793' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLN' 'sip-files00089.txt'
53dd5ee57e1d5da418609e42cc21c45c
864ac4412c33c66c9b4148dc65ea90b0376ad624
describe
'7122' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLO' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
801377bf075b35eb866b22f77ef6f3d8
90bf83235bbc5a94c8f2702963f94e4f577529da
describe
'334388' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLP' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
f1776d93358349331e5fc70b6a57b581
7056570f8d8ff569b59edd79cf2ab8186890895a
describe
'95841' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLQ' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
cc54cb326387c735256b0b4a36525d3e
ea921692d863779d7b96449b6658319895e32290
describe
'25196' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLR' 'sip-files00090.pro'
0a214f29bbdf26e3190f3e3220f10a15
59dd1b5987dca37502209d107742923d6c2480e6
describe
'32803' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLS' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
fd9603aa0320041782249700be5c1b37
142f8ebf6339af1752ad9580344f91c9a33ef3f0
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLT' 'sip-files00090.tif'
7c776ae9a9276ff2bf59e0b80a45393e
4b7c0d3460c5e83818c902a603ca4383bb25bd94
describe
'1009' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLU' 'sip-files00090.txt'
92f49dc0ff4395c34c753e405c24255a
49e490c7eaedc90afb844d9007792949c0fb8298
describe
'8908' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLV' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
f0f71243f7aedf9ac78ec3780e33b51d
ff91d7d64f2adedaa5f72e41f5fcccd3cd21130a
describe
'327847' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLW' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
4f8351ce3ac4348b2f5b45bdc2c0960e
e3c41e3e953de358b7b335e6db162e14c31c8d8b
describe
'78073' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLX' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
cb2d89fb23719f2e7e066d36d8ffeac6
160bec0d26f47942c84d35f4770b0215a94d3d9b
describe
'15396' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLY' 'sip-files00091.pro'
334a1a12b396aacc6c1f0acc4f9fdb26
9ac0a1bf8aeacb0bf6fe2ea8aaafa5a7118908d6
describe
'24916' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFLZ' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
7c8af95408a7ad29bb2593c7646be459
f3a77400ec99b92907601416a15982722479a6c2
describe
'2639180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMA' 'sip-files00091.tif'
cbdfd778a19afb0f2132f0e6e1b6ee36
6a68d699df2c2d8e6c458682147b492606b77358
'2011-09-20T02:06:24-04:00'
describe
'676' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMB' 'sip-files00091.txt'
5b4481c901ad3ea237fafadccc86633b
530212b35dc9f167da81a57a3c52f34a61934f94
describe
'6707' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMC' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
1be31443dee00c7baaf9fb6a87c19a33
1a63b6c1e00e8fc7c5a94e8ffe0b87309f582e25
describe
'323989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMD' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
a423cce01c3c8f83f1e1ddfc7430e617
d6b856039dd3aa674fe963150758413d38170c58
describe
'97608' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFME' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
5702fde6c33e7c1c9e473320492a72ed
ab9deb20ae7c574357e117a9f547bcbeb5f78432
describe
'25253' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMF' 'sip-files00092.pro'
edb18741c91c7e9db8b9c4670519cb86
7023f2bb46d358a93730474a26b9c52f445dca58
describe
'32733' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMG' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
552031b29e09774d0fa5c2f1839e0f81
88e82bba465c7e8814f91847f2613954ac672727
describe
'2608840' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMH' 'sip-files00092.tif'
5df619b40481c9084846d59886e09747
24b46c1b721c642c95ba170403ac148f79293f89
describe
'1003' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMI' 'sip-files00092.txt'
9743d6fa96f2e84864d0964b9be92103
0574a6adaa77fcafd14c88b4441a1ee546e6a7f6
describe
'9024' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMJ' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
244010c8b7d312a02158d9a1405b3d4b
442be0adb2ff504f2806a6d0d95a26b88d3d2ee8
describe
'328508' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMK' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
6733342e7e3a8c9fbc7c485ad73f91f1
db93552c9213f664a768541aa1ff24d434af9a50
describe
'97690' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFML' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
ac047833edc2bab95b78a9ca809274c2
71f998593a9a94263be0dbc9f13df2dcb7e990fa
describe
'25784' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMM' 'sip-files00093.pro'
6abf7ca20ff6ace88b891da22010fb7b
2b9b118fceb6bb13821e5200f0ef642b4698cfe7
describe
'32548' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMN' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
847427b94827bdbc7bacef258579e9f0
bd7a41494976edf2d358ca25db9efd46a0b85b32
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMO' 'sip-files00093.tif'
44b3571be4c1f9dbd1f653f9c7cfa14e
5e11d4bdd2944f95e739833d620526648dadd645
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMP' 'sip-files00093.txt'
895b2a0c2b14021692fb23b1e2c703ec
887acf6c52c834e4125b0ca0a43e5f56eecbb9b2
describe
'9761' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMQ' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
6aef3033be8bbf75231a9cd900971fb4
3250e3d9fc9a4b4e05683451c45095c4afb6370b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMR' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
74a51c14fe6f4930e1ad51ea4840e682
83f02aa2d0cc816cc763c17b2da1c3745d368c20
describe
'92062' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMS' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
f4ff6bdd8310da96d09abcfa62c03602
1a70249af85c9b0f8acdb6954ccf7d5123692e7f
describe
'24754' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMT' 'sip-files00094.pro'
e3d79cee71c7a42248f29920250d211f
15d2224523ba97bc3841b2d322002d6f58c1ed99
describe
'31897' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMU' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
33d8e6e68bbacc03a4305b44d2a99f53
306c41d9adfef1f13b4958276589859ac6abc9c8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMV' 'sip-files00094.tif'
1adb54b937c6b145159770b19632f16d
d3659db8ac3b1ea9ea8ef60c90ff74c8b0e12c03
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMW' 'sip-files00094.txt'
ebd7a6077ce3e18cec4bc4314f739df4
5003b0e877022501126d500eb8bbbae52aac1fcd
describe
'9022' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMX' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
788aeadc6909ac71d5bc8014dd3cf154
a373ae47ee7c95e1c0f98c435048ac7a31d649e9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMY' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
387f08a648e5a2641448dad1f47f9120
0b814d1029e4d8bbbef55963f7680aed0c6a6a29
describe
'105762' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFMZ' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
5a13042c1a095d2bba4b7a4befa34f53
6a7f6bd9a62eee04f301c6afe26b6f73873dd6c0
describe
'27748' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNA' 'sip-files00095.pro'
a41b46ee6b99f46ea3a1580a10d769db
7fa0a3aad8538ccd357138ba8e9589dc175512e8
describe
'36537' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNB' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
13e94dae02d28137eff4afec62f3a065
e2386f5341ab2102196243b59cf5df110d19280d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNC' 'sip-files00095.tif'
4f95dae581f9053146b09dc82773b0cb
bf73bb725924bd043b3e75f9a32523c82473c7ef
describe
'1091' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFND' 'sip-files00095.txt'
47f540cd5f7044963f6933f3a767f376
8c82ee4fb4b9aaf861aeaa98cb1971b858681559
describe
'9652' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNE' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
a2f2e170bcf17baf054718199229e789
eec040b51ef121da5bc61fe9145df059b7a47698
describe
'327828' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNF' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
e1d20e916469fad93e9825435974428d
67d78cc0154bccb8aa53fd07a0c3d736dad0ff66
describe
'93553' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNG' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
e98043db8db111f8c0bc6de3a79e608b
0fd13a48d4770f72a06293fdfadd33b5ba35a385
describe
'24826' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNH' 'sip-files00096.pro'
6e704e2c60aaef2df359d9e2f874be75
c99e925fc318db21409137410ea85ac3592495ac
describe
'32819' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNI' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
c74edb4da3944b425d761ff344a04eb1
a3dcc0dad61054e7de3aafcc78f1a44a08bb495c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNJ' 'sip-files00096.tif'
60de077c6cc6301a1ebdaea5fdcf1bbd
32be4c5885f5ddd5f94f386b75bc7b1672d99769
describe
'991' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNK' 'sip-files00096.txt'
01559e3c26ab7daefbfbd2c198f95cb3
2581acf2eef48dcb91e4ac0070219f538b201b76
describe
'8840' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNL' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
94c4480b9231e18be750fb9b3103fbf0
00ddd7be30749cb063d13dfd4e83feb108d6199d
describe
'334334' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNM' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
d84dd992b4dd703259f103f1f77d2d02
c1af04ba2233e77119d01d8f6cfce598b533686a
describe
'70596' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNN' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
84bdc4490f128af5fb7d25822ff0bdb5
bca621ca9e5d21e50299d3aecd9b5b33fdad8a4b
describe
'16365' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNO' 'sip-files00097.pro'
2df1140b2574b44e054fe7b970063766
148c20a178fa5ad189f1b548789b393195d05a45
describe
'24441' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNP' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
44cc9f9d3a55f92e662e4e17a93bd53d
052e277ab066de45621f2cdef97fbb878fd86e7c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNQ' 'sip-files00097.tif'
e5a018b91f1de4ff6a68dce4cc2514c6
37a5e856913270402c03f1a4ab523adbeb4a0f95
describe
'662' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNR' 'sip-files00097.txt'
45813ab9b8c0423187fd53e7de1c035f
329d240655dc29d93b73776806368d7bff2157b7
describe
'6891' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNS' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
220f4ee5c27a99431512b69069f86e5e
81973a2b35aaba9a244f73ca8ababd0048c64b7b
describe
'319621' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNT' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
447be2e15c6add8a1b2a91b3d89c366c
29ee2bcf573641447d89c8c65d0a0dedbe7c61e7
describe
'78078' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNU' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
459548ef89d5644b6395f93860d6427c
92fce240973af992613ea0926b9d2d39c0adc054
describe
'18609' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNV' 'sip-files00098.pro'
73d71fc58c2b0f9a0375027a38f58917
4d214901458ffc518ea8faafd1f57f358acf9493
describe
'26827' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNW' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
feb1070f550e1d839ef757427eda0eb0
a1611c29746288ecf7db2526ee40bdf4ccf9b3ab
describe
'2575736' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNX' 'sip-files00098.tif'
88171254aef875fbd7625a5965535e44
e1613d15bef1d32d307794c8128af717a0370549
describe
'788' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNY' 'sip-files00098.txt'
e37969fe278ce7a4c6ab104c95b8be99
389ececb0d5fb0caaa30b0ab8bd5f78fec336626
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFNZ' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
6b79ed751ac4365ffbc625923e6f2abe
629caaa0aaa47972c1841a947ed5347e2fc21a2b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOA' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
e22cad7b29beb2d0abdacd452ba86d27
01cac3ba3d2659643331365232ff82aa5b5896f9
describe
'68683' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOB' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
cae0e1509e00d2578b554f5350bcc71c
7c7e3dede2fce2ab3d9b4e6df42be97ee1258f9c
describe
'15526' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOC' 'sip-files00099.pro'
cb5470e8474b49d3d96b24847f4e9c77
6ce07914a53df895ee2052bcf6bb35f6f046a319
describe
'24082' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOD' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
0630382a78c5927a694de084c35b3a47
a2772a5402bcac5170ebd5399e1390453f5020a1
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOE' 'sip-files00099.tif'
661f6f9640ce53d62f208ead6a03c301
c43313dfd63650c753e5ddc83d3e696148a65059
describe
'687' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOF' 'sip-files00099.txt'
81ee49af168b2506e947525bdc7a3ad5
51c48a1528a6ba8e6c2b2e6d25aefc5069524261
describe
'6791' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOG' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
09d75f961fb80673524239f29aa9f57e
ba2187bf629e7420e140e322f3392ff54684be3a
describe
'326255' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOH' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
01ea4cea57d92d9c097d55f21d750f22
7b3e6c8078723837ffec973d1d2d82590f2359cf
describe
'74388' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOI' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
0971d02ea255786f114a578e9af53444
5d8fcfa052df0dcdf6d71f06e58182ba85eb39c2
describe
'14228' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOJ' 'sip-files00100.pro'
907f4735e70d884753f7e42b35d4425e
dd91cdd0f3c381b90ecb56f112426c93178af372
describe
'25238' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOK' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
f54114086921d1554cca667bf773e9d7
9f2f64df689d7351c3acee3be531f1fec3f0a96d
describe
'2626340' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOL' 'sip-files00100.tif'
2fad15ba6b65a83e1d08d997a6c3da61
bc01abc05f2ae7ef0e89f25e109777e2dc9a02e6
describe
'598' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOM' 'sip-files00100.txt'
204a13eff9b2e29b7464cad9d1d18506
6e45359878229f626f7eb99b3cb0761e5796f012
describe
'7052' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFON' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
c82b549a0a4b91932dc18bb9eec521d7
24552ae0e84d76a3c9eb05488b20aa1f2dccb687
describe
'334402' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOO' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
b170b76e7e3bb77a77a4cb2fedd4bfaf
75d70d3c82aca36c532ae9948d1c51bf156353b3
describe
'58719' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOP' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
43fac5eb53aa4ac37405ab72dfec6bd0
625567a633b050ec6bacf86d9a32a3f98c14cb1f
describe
'8145' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOQ' 'sip-files00101.pro'
22702252061c71888874d8b856e98fa0
f23cb1dd2de8c1d4fd0a9708789447d6d2bb3ed8
describe
'20013' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOR' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
2dc5e2685613ed1b7208b620cd74c6a8
ed7019e1f57ceb6f8a9695795ac0e862c811cc11
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOS' 'sip-files00101.tif'
eaa26dd888da6e203c15e1b37bb78d6a
f4949b3786d99ed6bd8ff979be8bad5d4c8ee7b3
describe
'350' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOT' 'sip-files00101.txt'
0cd66f5fdbbd8eed8bb2970371607b1b
9a1d85079a982cf96e3695adfd6c3c90bfa56680
describe
'5584' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOU' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
02d296f77dc9b6eb8ac817fa9c496941
f80f1533d1024c6206abb4588fbf861942dc8978
describe
'334355' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOV' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
6b4c9e69778fb2fc1f59261fd6ea2a0e
186ad46e3e95065de8d3e85de90fa95788556b38
describe
'89381' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOW' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
fb98407d8b492af1a899cac06c882f0c
c5bbbde188a0e134e6bf0c7099471b4426193ea7
describe
'16132' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOX' 'sip-files00102.pro'
bdcec50fcd0cd6f23a59c4c1718eee00
eb9fbf536f118cf401f011e9da7ce1c1914f4598
describe
'28969' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOY' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
0a7ba52e33ca6b476aaa890a9eee18c2
f915a45cd9092ec81fe40c97572e1ab3914d8245
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFOZ' 'sip-files00102.tif'
7e622763eab727b0484f649d37679b94
3776f80074cac19263bb66ff67f14f531de421c6
describe
'661' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPA' 'sip-files00102.txt'
4fbac002f399153a56e11ed5bd356bfa
a054b81652d7a12f67c14078a31be98a69b62235
describe
'8110' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPB' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
1d1d74a987063bfbbb12503cde6f3936
535e5eef70687473509761b89f2773f1672f61cd
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPC' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
2d811b2fcfcb649cd285b85735f696ad
759ed9e6fc5d0d1933fabbe3e27bca35b11460d0
describe
'92436' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPD' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
696e1535e1862dfeb6426db5e1f68859
7176bba0139ddb7d59722c15927bf995cf800170
describe
'14640' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPE' 'sip-files00103.pro'
e1444d9d6dcb70f5b33b06474f774aa7
cca3ec18af293325c9b7252dd62778a3613f34f9
describe
'29573' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPF' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
b3aebfa78704ab2253f84ee5fa85d4bd
72467a97655dcb9b05051dc39b266b4e0f289558
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPG' 'sip-files00103.tif'
f59a199adad9f2dbf001e0f097355542
0e555234736371ceccdb5b70e624791686daa571
describe
'580' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPH' 'sip-files00103.txt'
ba8c186c78acf82d24b613564296ce26
32e9507c1a1c896e77b16dea34907ba19ca08853
describe
'8192' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPI' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
8ef0f93fd41c97a1f77f535431ea1794
361d9a556e894aa4c71ce93a94cf3d648f4187b7
describe
'318692' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPJ' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
a0e4468072d3f9d7a15d0d1f7de5f363
f0481ba2d8d023d8d968dcb4d3fa7faad14eac77
describe
'30326' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPK' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
269e3c2734363325d81e9e8a277fac9d
d56f51dc6e9b3d520a27a5fd8091decfa4d8c1e2
describe
'6371' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPL' 'sip-files00104.pro'
368f78f41062378479ad4bc0b6480fe1
8a671b9d8e830f58e5aa451f7481d5858bea0399
describe
'10629' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPM' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
62d29f568c024e11a354ac4b07d73dc7
651fb439cc93214921d3b61707535315ae4dd03e
describe
'2567180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPN' 'sip-files00104.tif'
d1dea315d65e6ce65cf4f3184e8a11a7
b7b3f0aa5a0d87861ae2cface900c42cde607b7f
describe
'260' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPO' 'sip-files00104.txt'
3c677dd2824803a32e16ddc3a445c2fc
eaf1c8932eee12cf17b996186c1cd49f83f54646
describe
'3078' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPP' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
adf2c03521d3473fea3b0c664dec1069
319449494a8fe39ed56cd1bf4eafcaf381b2cbda
describe
'329075' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPQ' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
7d585a85ff9ce5fa70751c5042e6d526
5b8a968930b7d28a233069eba3f6a40e7df76fcf
describe
'77040' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPR' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
f97fd64fad8179c0453d76383dd78063
a73a0489f57c4b81b3b5dacb01a78d9483a4fefa
describe
'27794' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPS' 'sip-files00105.pro'
85f85946a2b3c71d3def07eaace318d0
61a75411ca4b3e09104e17a90a6dd7fe0ed427b3
describe
'23485' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPT' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
c40c6a17935d2b3537a53d1bbdd02aaf
9db3c7b35aff05f8ecdb3d8a7157f6188ae2039f
describe
'2650820' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPU' 'sip-files00105.tif'
ed48576c1d83397d0ce0d6cba4b4fbbc
b2e2998037d0ae1ee3baef354add7ed4675905cd
describe
'1199' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPV' 'sip-files00105.txt'
f0acce3bd1f1b936ea6d9fd7511ce08d
609ccdd7f56d338c51f62f0f1bccb37802ad2916
describe
'6206' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPW' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
9ce6073f435889259f92ea8324591838
f75e2c8497db118ca7b06c0c0cbb2a9d0a90b517
describe
'315989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPX' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
892b37405eda6488c7acd401706c83ed
32ea4ea284e4d2de206e42ae07843fc1387c5b6c
describe
'85285' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPY' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
4cb0657a3b0385a85b8e812ebed3f95d
d2d93c71c132f7bf1cc1f483f57998bab5f4e239
describe
'32178' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFPZ' 'sip-files00106.pro'
e6f980acbd2e597588e17fe875c58bf7
ecacac2a8de1c170f4b62a204584b6c4dbf5c4ef
describe
'25924' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQA' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
df4a91f0997a26c6cb1e49568bf92ee6
f3a40c0433578a73b0fb339d1c1a71119591d6d3
describe
'2544740' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQB' 'sip-files00106.tif'
ef4ea9ad706c0bb0720b2aac03afe416
4a09645c51d53dbc2def68521dbf7860a1df9765
describe
'1378' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQC' 'sip-files00106.txt'
54bb3f56ba9b02d74fcd79a59151c97f
9fad44581915965362bf0ea95e1986ff7c18bd91
describe
'7165' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQD' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
2a551be97978907accdf0ab7832ee3cc
bae2a103b4ee410c2d50fdc83bebc8ee7d7ee9b0
describe
'334316' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQE' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
be740448ed6828d91359abed8a3213f6
a6daedb7b5c4b3faf2d2122fe29e7db45a5e0feb
describe
'103706' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQF' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
cc321723efa3acd30bc85656e08fbccd
f640eb4a63709e557511945fb0a276ae734967dd
describe
'28361' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQG' 'sip-files00107.pro'
da9a18cd4ebf670b8bfff323d7314e6a
e4591a1d3ece615facc801efbcc789d587d33b80
describe
'30091' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQH' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
baedb21e549c0b4c265746408b34d0e1
ed9e0a80eb774e6f63fd231ec40f2bf471acbb43
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQI' 'sip-files00107.tif'
38cecc486e1f74d4d6c19630a3a22920
7a4290137b57a7737bfdb0e035bba0c37e94325f
describe
'1335' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQJ' 'sip-files00107.txt'
bc43ff00297e90c8c0a91e6c04985455
5d0a1ef9fba8f30326530dc371b3216034671c5b
describe
'8065' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQK' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
9c058e45fa74601c8b5dc2f4bd842b7a
5d81a298f7f149770182335823cbade9f25811eb
describe
'327843' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQL' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
55ee63c0acb6141c5dd929244888bacc
2068698c44c1fd210fc4e91b4d11f6e3295ef977
describe
'75985' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQM' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
9e63ee288e9657d2e90900cb4e0c2287
d40a201276af483214d2ba9c2c7019e84bec37cd
describe
'16866' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQN' 'sip-files00108.pro'
a214c92fff0e9db16e34d61a374aa9e2
d306b09e69b88bfe935679190640e3d960a5f639
describe
'24351' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQO' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
467e56c2082bb064b00ce8343d2e1660
be938d0cc3c62aa9a5aeffcbd1a8e76e6a97bc0c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQP' 'sip-files00108.tif'
a5b8ef658ecc0a066abcf5f7f31adddd
a4844938b7f59c2dd4b575271b67500f5c134d71
describe
'711' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQQ' 'sip-files00108.txt'
a3335d728546d891a9861829426275bd
dd16bbf7e4de28ef3b9f0f1aa9416ad6cc173076
describe
'6606' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQR' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
412f380b1cdeaceb8c7c972d8174d8b9
ede56452bbbcd0c0be3bc1fde397b03a4cd19dee
describe
'334343' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQS' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
a0b1d3d0c444f7a8aea7bd140b265975
a0fd2e97b7a83d019563e1da768c891071d79f0f
describe
'77210' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQT' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
39dea3fa33721b1b98005d14c335c619
721598b01d2bba757fd9c433893ec980b62ae806
describe
'19319' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQU' 'sip-files00109.pro'
0de90ec219f19c0096f04bfc891b1bea
45256c8b73534373801bf5005831cef0662e8a7b
describe
'23338' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQV' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
2207c428877ad4f836130a141d892b1f
87a392b1e65ca0c0619aab32b00db5fc5bb12126
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQW' 'sip-files00109.tif'
7447601612dd051faba1d233042d27d3
b3c1c3607529328a82284e97af5691014af5a5e8
describe
'858' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQX' 'sip-files00109.txt'
120649836d465aea3169c0e6577d2ee7
dc160edec76ded277e249716fdf27983f866cfc2
describe
'6607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQY' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
a91798a969feb9e33021d6ab69e5c8d7
0d50cecb5658041b5d1b26bf220c5afb8a9c5a9d
describe
'328153' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFQZ' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
3e374e2f3f46733a49b67ccacf68f3c1
c939d6ed160d28f1882fa3a00d180f86ee41c456
describe
'77003' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRA' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
59bbbd47d1cdbf9e48bf851ea12e84ce
d819b9ec1728189943348b9e0756566f8ea4da9f
describe
'24299' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRB' 'sip-files00110.pro'
a9a9c708887b6f077e6e2457b006b094
6b580aecd2af1e08f229429f13aeafd116458888
describe
'24760' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRC' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
efe014d27679a05276a47a87db42540e
3cac7e917f660861e1e7c8f45dec99a9d591af3f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRD' 'sip-files00110.tif'
2336c41d3ccbbf7ebb6f9b0f712391f6
f70e42c94e4a643dd76add31dfb4521d9b9b3789
describe
'1059' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRE' 'sip-files00110.txt'
1b65ff5b062aa6f1379faad6b57de58b
bb0d3dab5ca2f131b79a27703e5a45936ffc799c
describe
'6876' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRF' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
745678b2eba54f44ff3e0fb450812340
d3533fc41aa5c54b51af282f7970494a724a0ce4
describe
'330439' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRG' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
7f14c2b1ba9e050defaa1035da761ba4
2aa3784e61b75a98602f9d5c7ae371e5003ba3f6
describe
'62493' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRH' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
f271cb1719a3b7102474a63fc1557ff0
2d008e6fa293b4698042adf545374eebb988009d
describe
'13506' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRI' 'sip-files00111.pro'
afa7605e00c1eec35fc7398f218d9e33
b96e46a7211da2afeb62a82f055b318e098679e3
describe
'19373' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRJ' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
094f3d9febfada180d2b128c95bafbaf
0f865ad45bb4c97d06e4d2f50cac5491fdd52e20
describe
'2660156' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRK' 'sip-files00111.tif'
cad8e0a3c69eafda85f3606bcee292ea
4b7de2a07825aa1d91612e2e46a879e13eaf6993
describe
'638' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRL' 'sip-files00111.txt'
6a8853da9e5849e3af49e3e668bdb49f
16e046fd55e9e26e1a6ef0ada7c0864255eaa8ba
describe
'5857' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRM' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
c99092c5a57955ecefb07c00c9a6d88c
d92f8b116bcfe2072af15959bb880757d326b772
describe
'325212' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRN' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
3f188a390b44aeccf558074a4559bbd0
e3698795b6c876130c89bc97c76d4de0cd33cc2f
describe
'68919' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRO' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
c0f81fd1c89be1632c7b593ac0acea6f
0e9c9cb9251d22423c2f86907a68a93124ecd1b6
describe
'21848' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRP' 'sip-files00112.pro'
c3321e85d7f14e8e2323a640e05fb511
a36f1527fb04c11fb942108172dbff385071b15b
describe
'23410' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRQ' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
c6e27b848e2e1e90a19c7303e1d68321
2ad5fca99a87c0eae13fc0eb70deb8ec721eb998
describe
'2618180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRR' 'sip-files00112.tif'
b2e1292d13e585fb1a9f0f40e26a8f7c
8e5dec825741e82f61161da3729dfbcb481d7eb5
describe
'977' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRS' 'sip-files00112.txt'
70995cbbe611b57f7ca3a53d0a89337b
6381c126b28c642ad3e28beb4a68fb35ae555aea
describe
'6902' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRT' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
a31cc0d2e9a8fb8cd4a64643e3428c42
114d15e111a4be0a76bb9bfec5d5eb9b1f1c027e
describe
'334370' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRU' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
96f66c9bd4f5cf8d9f3a8db31f36372e
466536a3d169d6659c09f7546c3fd8f03f49f1c3
describe
'87229' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRV' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
aaccadd37fd6e4ed4f3b3fc9656e3861
dd7af2a8ff2caeb9238f777f6e90dd608475b787
describe
'22113' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRW' 'sip-files00113.pro'
08684df8901add846ff764b15e206088
b8b6b2c0a36f51f30e07bf3065700e8cb0a347ec
describe
'25701' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRX' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
1988b2d20f0e5b6601168f2fbd6c477d
2c7bd83daba46a2f8494e92ac59c201d867b2127
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRY' 'sip-files00113.tif'
884cc07719b2e2c3aeca07f5c374449b
f5fb4954363b6d8fb45218017e3fd6d256490f66
describe
'990' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFRZ' 'sip-files00113.txt'
a2534a179a00911a26baf64d0505b466
af0abed8633224505167ca7db9f2bac6bc1e3f15
describe
'7140' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSA' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
1e289440b12b886af4dd2defdd602e65
1f164bf824114c29ef83d7d49e5888decbfeab3a
describe
'322762' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSB' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
e0be31b1ab6f8f91545fdd7118246ec1
b6aad5c38881be2d6cc92eab5122759c17a204bf
describe
'76978' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSC' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
5f9b37636617d0789503f890a2d6b61b
e14aaae2911d56275f0123fb1bb408b8db771471
describe
'18798' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSD' 'sip-files00114.pro'
4299f9ffca921096092b118489de76f8
f5f8015527b02619fbf95bf24a760be29b5af6bc
describe
'24975' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSE' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
9f59ef9e364ade24051bc5414e9bff35
a5cc02686f454eae20981355fc577acfca058b95
describe
'2598576' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSF' 'sip-files00114.tif'
8d946bcc6744bf0a12c21814fcb69d95
dc545123336a78b60a1ac14ebc21478e63dc3182
describe
'838' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSG' 'sip-files00114.txt'
6e44e34ea4f2b4f4c9328852c2590079
56af337e484ae9bdf1ae3a1853ea4613e87cd6a6
describe
'6964' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSH' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
a64a7d2c017f82dec3f8b62bae271372
8b4ef1f52406fbf9bd6144b7c424c08196ee5b6f
describe
'315832' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSI' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
ab6e0df3ee7656f6b10bafb1d2cfb73a
7c683951c9ca9d562ec7973bbc2ceaafd62df25b
describe
'77607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSJ' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
6298fdd034ea98bbdd1f05a3e025095f
cc16fd2a893a3d35ff8abcc2f6fa724a7363bbb2
describe
'17668' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSK' 'sip-files00115.pro'
243fa8d21f113dc30d4d585296cfc12b
e6782a1324a905516987e5beedfbcfdb5c134b01
describe
'24790' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSL' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
683aa497bacda3e7ab4d657fc474a196
be97a5a591df4fb639411b668760732a582dbf83
describe
'2543180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSM' 'sip-files00115.tif'
c0dfc159842c5fb5416429309e1b9417
30d4bc4f2c3ecbf6b102e6d337bf7a8908ea04e3
describe
'812' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSN' 'sip-files00115.txt'
7a6f1c3d4bc81f433ff29aa6c92802f2
c8855d9e392bd0ef4d025da80253b0b6cef748a9
describe
'7025' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSO' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
bb42528ce4165c928b6f0152d977c1fe
1be673819edb1e71d464bb98007a94cfdbb6a9c3
describe
'320973' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSP' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
bb2cc265525a106e1a30dfd519f563a3
e5162c593417a3bf01e32b1d6f86671b74dab30b
describe
'80881' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSQ' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
dfa4e11c35b60b626876dd19f541204d
11b7472268a3d6cbbfed4c8ef7168078552cbef7
describe
'27316' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSR' 'sip-files00116.pro'
1c34333a0373614c984ac6433b27b1a7
f3a563acf56c09169fc68516013847009024e8e5
describe
'26741' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSS' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
cef2d6248512e5b0d201b34ce2f1601d
6d440cfb8ec427f93967093f22b1ca6126db5b16
describe
'2584600' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFST' 'sip-files00116.tif'
194cac458b5833498319ccb9c09f62c7
39867db67825318c8aa60d3a220bd6e5732604bc
describe
'1200' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSU' 'sip-files00116.txt'
28fdc136871ba34b03028dfc50a4a732
0df7b2bd22fdd791733ce893878653ab8690d5e7
describe
'7347' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSV' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
1f04e1b44d7bf27c6a4099a38d199650
0639246390f625526c0dd8f856e0a258e9a6e165
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSW' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
77511adcbc053f2959cebb875939cbb9
eb47c302ce0c016589c26ed8988268caba0eadbf
describe
'83992' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSX' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
d4c27e31868e07044719c04714824c9e
e269bc246e15485372677d128ead8bed77cd7bd7
describe
'22646' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSY' 'sip-files00117.pro'
42895c9520b44457133b6c2adf6a9bdf
d48175fa41e5bde8a91834484dad605fc8877cd5
describe
'26913' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFSZ' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
f3eca6322a606a98213ce2781870aab5
44bf98ddd7a98c9e6d7221ca8bbc6e01969bdb8d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTA' 'sip-files00117.tif'
10073abfb24899ec1ad3fb60abb6452c
ffe919a8baddaab7046fe83b5f0671cdbbb82988
describe
'1014' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTB' 'sip-files00117.txt'
f60fdd5e2e77a3cd573fe9809bb7ff6b
b064e7f769e94c2f06e3f8603b97901e2a8ce512
describe
'7233' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTC' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
2a2d335d33c05c44d6767e45543d0648
6f000ee84e7bd2cb68f5f2214b420000bc43db16
describe
'321568' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTD' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
ec48b13a32c77fe7bca741917b431be7
79ab362b5f953a96c5f4c1a926d1607a1f677107
describe
'71840' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTE' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
c832a1879986e959a4fdee0b92202096
405091265ac5bd824fd71bad5a96e588ca227eb0
describe
'23468' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTF' 'sip-files00118.pro'
a2afbb2c01677eee0eb26085bcc8237c
bc26dd08f328b0bb77b0e686afd516bad9b52fb2
describe
'25367' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTG' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
6a1bb136991c3357b1039c7985385282
6896361619f5e937cf5310c4c00ca776e5e823c3
describe
'2588852' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDIfileF20080729_AADFTH' 'sip-files00118.tif'
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EA ee net eR ee Be en AP ATA TE ae GE LRT Cn re Le ong) ghee © ah ar te eee eran NES ag atl) owt Ogee
is -: Seo eI i See SNES ete ere eatacet AT pA kod cad tO ened SAS

/ TRLKS ABOUT
| WILD FLOWERS.
OEM, Cc COOKE.
















The Baldwin Library

University
RD ok
Florida



AHeon. 1G 00.


)) HAREBELL. 2, PIMPERNEL. 3. HEATHER. 4. BROOM.
ACROSS THE COMMON

AFTER WILD FLOWERS

BY

@Lnucle Geatt



T. NELSON AND SONS
London, Edinburgh, and New York



1895

iE) PAR Gan

DrEar younc Frienps, this is our fourth series of
“Rambles,” and must be taken over whatever of
common, heath, or moorland lies within our reach.
Some of the flowers may be seen growing on dry
banks, but a little bit of heath or common will supply
them all. Hedgerows, woods, and damp marshes
have all of them their wild flowers which love such
places best, and so have sandy heaths; and in the
warm midsummer days we must hunt over such
spots for heather and broom, and such other wild
flowers as we have not met with up to now. Of
course, if you have read and used our first three
“Rambles,” you will have learned a little how to use
your eyes, and how much depends sometimes upon
a very little thing. You must. never forget how so
much depends upon your own powers of seeing.
You must have sharp eyes, and be quick to use
them, believing that every spot and every hair has
its use, and everything its proper place. The most
successful plant-hunter will be the one who can ob-
serve best all the differences between one kind of
plant and another. M. C. COOKE,
CONTEN ES:



HAREBELL,
SCARLET PIMPERNEL,
HEATHER,

YELLOW BROOM,
SILVER-WEED, ....
EYE-BRIGHT,
THISTLES,

THE SUNDEW, ....

19
26
38
47
61

Nn
bo




































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































HAREBELL*

HE “bluebell of Scotland” is

the pretty little blue flower,

so common on heaths and commons,
which is known also as the “hare-
bell ;” but children often call those

flowers bluebells which are found in

* Campanula rotundzfolia.


10 HAREBELL.

woods at spring-time, and should be called “ wild
hyacinth.” The latter have a string of blue
bell-flowers on one side of a flower-stalk, whilst
the former has only one flower at the top of a

very thin wiry flower-stalk.

“ With drooping bells of clearest blue
Thou didst attract my childish view,
Almost resembling
The azure butterfly that flew
Where on the heath thy blossoms grew
So lightly trembling.”
They are called bell-flowers because they are
shaped like a hand-bell, and hang upon a foot-
stalk so thin that they are always trembling
with the least puff of wind. A much larger
kind grows in gardens, and is known as Canter-
bury bells ; but they are all known by the Latin
name of Campanula, which means “a little bell.”
The harebell is shaped like a small thimble
hanging with the mouth downwards, and is
usually blue, but sometimes white. One of its
common names is “ ladies’ thimble ;” only that

name is sometimes given to a stitchwort which
HAREBELL. 1

grows in hedges and has a pretty white flower
that is never blue. The best name for it is
“bluebell” or ‘“harebell,” and by that it is
mostly known.

“ Bluebell! how gaily art thou drest,
How neat and trim art thou, sweet flower;
How silky is thy azure vest,

How fresh to flaunt at morning’s hour !”

The “harebell” is sometimes written “ hairbell,”
because the flowers hang upon a thread so slender
that they seem to be hanging froma hair. Cissy
was not long in picking a handful, and seated
herself on a grassy slope to take her lesson.

“ Now, uncle, tell me about these two kinds
of leaves. Those at the bottom of the stem,
which spread out and lie upon the ground, are
roundish, notched at the edge, and have long
stalks ; but the others are different.”

“They are the root-leaves, and are often
different in other plants from the stem-leaves.
That is one reason why we should always look

at the root-leaves as well as the stem-leaves.”
12 HAREBELL.

“ Well, the stem-leaves are long and narrow,
almost like little grass-leaves, and the edges are
not notched.”

“So far as it goes that is all right, but you
should always notice how the stem-leaves are
placed on the stem. In some plants the leaves
are in pairs, opposite to each other; and in some
they are placed apart, or alternate—one leaf on
one side of the stem, and one on the other side,
but higher up.”

“These are alternate, then, for they are not
in pairs, opposite to each other. And now for
the flowers.”

“Sometimes growing singly, and sometimes
two or three on a stem. ‘There are special
names for the different ways in which flowers
are seated upon the stem, but we need not to
trouble ourselves to-day.”

“ More names to learn, uncle ; but never mind,
let us pull the flower in pieces.”

“Before you do so, Cissy, you must notice
that these are bell-flowers, and all in one piece.

It is a one-petalled corolla.”
HAREBELL. 13

“T see that; and the little green sepals outside
are all joied in one piece, with five teeth—I
forget what to call it.”

“The calyx!”

“ Oh yes, that is the calyx; and the inside blue
flower like a thimble is the corolla, with five
notches at the mouth, and something inside,

“which we must cut it to see. That will do! I
have torn it down the middle, and there are five
stamens, with an ovary at the bottom. Isn’t it
strange that flowers seem so fond of the number
Jjwe?”

“A great many plants have the parts of the
flower in fives, but you will learn one day that
there are also many plants which have the parts
of the flower in threes: such plants as snow-
drops, tulips, crocuses, lilies, and many more.”

“The wild hyacinth, too. And now I can see
how much it is different from the harebell.”

“Have you noticed how the bees have been
buzzing around these flowers since we sat down ?
Those bells on the bank have been Be swing-
ing by the bees.”
14 HAREBELL.

“T saw the bees; but I am afraid of them, so
IT did not look at them very much. They cannot
know one flower from another.”

“ Indeed they do, Cissy ; they know more than
you think. I can tell you that bees know the
colour of flowers, and that humble-bees are very
fond of blue flowers, as well as of red ones, and
that more humble-bees visit red and blue flowers
than those of all other colours together. Honey-
bees are fond of blue flowers, but they like red
ones better, and yellow ones hardly at all.”

“Why do they go to flowers and hover about
them ?”

“O Cissy, what a strange question! Do you

not remember what it is that

‘Gathers honey all the day

1 , a a
From every opening flower’ ?

Bees go to the flowers to gather honey from
them. You can taste the sweet nectar in cow-
slip and primrose and honeysuckle flowers ; and
do you think that bees are more foolish than
you 2”
HAREBELL. 15

“ But do they go for anything else?”

“ Perhaps not on purpose, but they do some-
thing else without knowing it.”

“ And what may that be?”

“When you look at the stamens to count
them, do you never notice that the top, which
is called the anther, is often burst open, and
covered with a yellow powder which we call
pollen? This pollen or fine dust must find its
way from the stamen on to the top of the pistil
or ovary. If no pollen falls on the top of the
ovary, the seeds never ripen.”

“T have read that, but I never thought much
about it.”

“Suppose that a bee puts its head into one
of the bell-flowers, and tries to suck the nectar
from the bottom. In doing so the head of the
insect brushes against the stamens, and the
anthers will burst and sprinkle the pollen dust
over the head of the bee. Then the bee flies
away and goes to another flower of the same
kind, and thrusts its head deeply into the bell.
In this case some of the pollen dust is rubbed
16 HAREBELL.

off from the head of the bee, and falls upon the
top of the ovary, just where it is wanted, and
then the ovules become seeds.”

“Why does it go to the ovary rather than
anywhere else ?”

“Because at the top of the ovary there are
always one, two, three, or more sticky places, .
called the stigma, to which the pollen sticks
firmly ; and the other parts are not sticky. The
~bee cannot reach the bottom of the corolla with-
out brushing its head against the little sticky
stigma on the top of the ovary, and a large bee
cannot thrust its head into a bell-flower without
brushing the pollen out of the anthers on to its
head.”

« And so the bee helps the flower.”

_ “ And the flower helps the bee. There is still
another way in which a bee may help a flower.
I have told you before that there are some plants
which have flowers bearing stamens and no
ovary ; and that there are other plants, or other
flowers on the same plant, which enclose an ovary

and no stamens. The pollen has to travel from
(601)
HAREBELL. 17

the flowers which bear stamens into the flowers
which only bear ovaries; but how is this to be
done? The wind may help a little by blowing
the pollen from one to another, but insects can
do it much better in passing from one flower to
another. So you see that even an insect may
be doing good without knowing it.”

“Yes, uncle. But if a bee flies away from my
bell-flowers with pollen on its head, and then
goes on a visit to a dandelion, the pollen of the
bell-flower will not do any good to the dan-
delion.”

“Certainly not. But the bee does not fly from
a bell-flower to a dandelion—it seldom visits
yellow flowers—but it prefers to go from one
bell-flower to another, or from one blue or red
flower to another. Some insects are very true
to the flowers they visit, and they go from one
flower to another of the same kind as long as
they are in blossom. Insects are able to choose
_ the flowers they like best, sometimes by colour
and sometimes by the smell.”

“Do you think that bees or flies are able to
(501) 2
18 HAREBELL.

know a flower by its smell, and to love it as we
(oko

“Indeed I do, One blow-fly smells stinking
meat and likes it, another loves stinking fish.
One insect, or more, loves the scent of lime
flowers, and another revels in the odour of sweet-
smelling clover. Insects can detect the sweet
scent, or what is to them the pleasant scent, of
flowers, when our noses can scarcely find any
scent at all.”

“Some insects, I suppose, go to certain flowers
because they like their colour; and some insects
go to other flowers because of their scent. That,
I suppose, is what you wish me to know.”

“Yes; and I wish also to tell you that insects
go to flowers for some good purpose, and not
for pastime or mischief. It is their work, and
they do it as if they were at play.”
SCARLET PIMPERNEL.*

SE your eyes, Cissy, to find the little

scarlet pimpernel, and I suppose you

only know it by the common name of ‘ poor
man’s weather-glass.’”

“Yes, uncle ; I know the little red flower that
we call ‘ poor man’s weather-glass,’ but I couldn't
tell you why it has such a funny name.”

“ Perhaps I can help you; and whilst you are
looking for the flower, I will explain it. There
are some plants which open and close their
flowers at certain times of the day : some open
in the morning, some open in the evening, and
some only open when the sun ig shining. These
are called ‘meteoric flowers,’ and the pimpernel
is a meteoric flower. When it is a cloudy or
rainy day the flowers. are closed, and they open

* Anagallis arvensis,
20 SCARLET PIMPERNEL.

in the sunlight. If the flowers are open in the
morning, it is a sign that there will be no rain;
but if they are closed, you must carry an um-
brella. This is the reason why they are called
the ‘poor man’s weather-glass,’ because, like a
weather - glass, they foretell changes in the

weather.

‘Come tell me, thou coy little flower,
Converging thy petals again,
Who gave thee the magical power
Of shutting thy cup on the rain?
While many a beautiful bower
Is drenched in nectareous dew,
Sealed up is your scarlet-tinged flower,

?

And the rain peals in vain upon you.’

“Then they are almost ‘sensitive plants,’ I
suppose, but not those which open and shut
regularly.”

“Yes, they are all sensitive to something; if
not to a coming shower, then to the light of the
sun. A clever man noticed this many years
ago, and wrote out a ‘flower-clock,’ so as to

know the hour by the opening or closing of
SCARLET PIMPERNEL. 21

flowers. Thus, there is the bindweed to open at
four in the morning, the sow thistle at six, the
pimpernel at eight, the marigold at nine, the
blue passion-flower at twelve ; and, in the even-
ing, the evening primrose at six, the campion at
seven, and others at eight. Some people call
the opening and shutting the waking and going

to sleep of flowers.

‘Oh let us live so that flower by flower,
Shutting in turn, may leave

A lingerer still for the sunset hour,

2

A charm for the shaded eve.’’

“The daisy always closes and goes to bed as
the sun goes down, and then it looks so sleepy.”

“Flowers are always most open in the bright
sunlight, except evening flowers and the few
that blossom in the night. You know the
garden flower called ‘purple convolvulus:’ it is
avery early riser, and opens its flowers at two
o'clock in the morning.”

“ Now I have found the pimpernel, but nearly
all the little flowers are closed.”
22 SCARLET PIMPERNEL.

“T have told you something about the families
of plants in our rambles, but you would scarcely
think that the pimpernel belongs to the family
of the primroses. There is not much family
likeness, but you see that the corolla is all in
one piece.”

“How thin and weak all the stems are, so
that they lie and creep along upon the ground ;
and the leaves are so thin.”

“Opposite to each other, in pairs, along the
stem. Almost egg-shaped, ovate they are called,
and not toothed at the edge. There are no
proper leaf-stalks, for the leaves are seated, or
placed, close to the stem. In some plants, when
pairs of leaves are so close, they are joined to-
gether, so as to appear to be one leaf; but these
are not joined, or connate.”

“J should like to find some plant with connate
leaves.”

“They are not very common, but perhaps we
shall find the ‘teazel’ some day. Now you must
look at the flowers, for you see that they have
rather long, thin stalks, and everywhere the
SCARLET PIMPERNEL. 23

flower-stalk comes out from the stem, just at the
place where the leaf joins the stem. This is
called the axzl, and it means ‘arm-pit.’ Just as
your arm joins the body, there is the arm-pit;
so, where the leaf joins the stem, there is the
axil, Pluck nearly any flower which has a stem,
and where the leaf, or the leaf-stalk, joins the
stem : that is the aa, and in the axil is a bud or
a flower.”

“ Axil—arm-pit ; I shall remember.”

“ And now for the flowers. The outside cup,
or green calyx, is in one piece, with five teeth ;
but the cup is a shallow one, and not like the
long tube of the primrose. When the corolla
falls away, the cup, or calyx, remains behind.
See how easily the corolla falls off, all in one
piece, with a hole in the middle, like a cart
wheel. When a wheel goes round it is said to
‘rotate,’ because rota is a word for wheel. A
corolla such as this is rotate, because it is like
a little cart wheel, all hanging together, with
a hole in the middle. There are five rays, or
lobes, or teeth, whichever you please to call

er

Wie
24. SCARLET PIMPERNEL.

them, to your bright red corolla, and within
these you will find the five stamens, with the
ovary in the middle.”

“The number is all the same again: there
are five teeth to the cup, five points to the
corolla, and five stamens.”

“Tn some of the oldest of the flowers, where
the corolla has fallen off for some days, you will
see that the ovary remains behind, and has
grown much larger; and it goes on growing into
a seed-vessel, and a very curious one, round like
a pea, until, when it is ripe, it is nearly as large
as a small pea.”

“ Not a soft, juicy berry ?”

“No; it is a hard, dry capsule, or seed-box,
and a very strange one. I will tell you what it
is like, because they will not be ripe for some
weeks. The little capsule is round, and green
at first, but becomes dirty yellow, and when it
is ripe it splits all round, and the top falls off
like a lid, with the little seeds packed closely in
the lower half, like egos in a nest.”

“JT shall have to learn the names of the
SCARLET PIMPERNEL. 25

different sorts of fruits in the autumn. I have
called them all fruit, and did not notice the
difference.”

“Well, Cissy, a pea-pod is a fruit, and so are
a filbert, and a plum, and a blackberry, and a
cucumber, but they are all very different.”

“ Are all the dry fruits capsules ?”

“Not properly so; neither are all the pulpy
fruits berries. A red or black currant is a berry,
but a cherry or a plum with a stone in the
middle is not a berry, but a drupe. Then the
dry fruits may split open when ripe, like a pod ;
or they do not split, like a filbert. Those which
split when ripe, if they are long and narrow, are
commonly called pods; but if short, or nearly
round, capsules. Those which do not split are
nuts. Of course there are other names for fruits,
but we need not trouble about them now. We
should learn to know the things, and then their

names.”
ite A Taleb

“ HE large purple tufts of heather which
grow in a scattered manner over heaths
and commons look very pretty in autumn, but
they should be seen in all their glory on moors,
and amongst the mountains of Scotland and
Wales, where they cover acres of ground like a
carpet. There are several different plants which
are called by the name of heather—such as the
ling, or he-heather, and the Scotch, or she-
heather, and the cross-leaved heath; but all of
them are very much alike, and it is no wonder
that they are commonly known by the same
name.
‘The heather flower -
Of scent delicious, and inviting still

The eye to rest upon its beauty, spread

* Hrica tetralix.
HEATHER. Q7

For miles athwart the moor, where wild fowl haunt,
And where the industrious bee collects her sweets,’

We shall find at least three kinds of heather, all
growing together on the common, and we will
take them one at a time, and then we shall see
how much they are alike, and where they differ.
A pretty cluster of the cross-leaved heath, as
the flowers look the brightest, is at your feet,
and we will take it to begin with.”

“What a pretty rose colour! and the flowers
look like waxwork.”

“The heath plants are almost like little
stunted shrubs with us, hardly a foot high,
and the flowers are small, but in such immense
numbers that they may be seen a long way
off.”

“And how tough and strong they are! I
cannot pull it up by the root, and I can scarcely
break off the branches.”

“T think we can call them woody little shrubs,
for they are perennal, and grow from year to
year, for many years, close to the ground, and
cover it like a carpet. In this one the tiny
28 HEATHER.

leaves are narrow, and growing in clusters on
the branches.”

“Always in fours, and fringed with hairs—
four, four, four, cross leaves. And this, then, is
the ‘ cross-leaved heath.’”

“ The ‘rule of five’ is broken with the heather,
as you will soon find out by the flowers.”

“So it is. Here is the little green cup, or
calyx, with four teeth; and the corolla, hardly
bell-shaped, but all in one piece, with four teeth
at the mouth.”

“True, it is a one-petalled corolla, nearly of
an oval shape; and these grow in clusters, at the
tops of the branches, with the mouths hanging
down, and all turned to one side.”

“ Racemes, I should say ; but the flower-stalks
are short. What would you call racemes at the
end of a branch ?”

“Terminal racemes; but these are more clus-
ters than racemes. And now for the inside of
the flower ; and you must be careful, for they
are small.”

“Pistil in the centre, and four—four, yes,
HEATHER. 29

eight stamens. All in fours this time, with
such strange-looking horns, like bristles, to the
stamens. I can just see them, but it wants a
hand-glass to see them well.” .

“ And now, Cissy, you must find the Scotch
heather, with longer racemes of flowers, and the
leaves more pointed, but not in clusters of four.
Look carefully, and you will be certain to find
it, for I have often found them, growing closely
together.”

“T wonder whether I have got it here, with
leaves in threes instead of fours, and they are
not hairy.”

‘“T expect that you are right, Cissy; for you
see that the flowers are not so much in clusters
as in long racemes, and the shape is rather
different, the colour more purple, and they are
more numerous.”

“J thought at the first that they were all
alike, but suppose I shall know them now as
the four-leaved and the three-leaved heather.
But they must be brothers and sisters, uncle,

they are so much alike.”
30 HEATHER.

“ More alike than they are to the other one
that we are looking after, which is called ‘ling’
in many places, and is very common. The
flowers are smaller, more open or bell-shaped,
and of a paler colour.”

“ Do you think that I can find it for myself?”

“You should be able to see the difference in a
minute, for there is plenty of it round about us.”

“Then I see which it is, with the little pink
flowers more scattered about on the branches.”

“ Look first at those flowers, and you will find
that the calyx, or cup, of the flower is pink, like
the corolla, and looks like a double corolla, but
it is really a coloured calyx, with four teeth,
longer than the true corolla, which is nearly
hidden by them. Outside of both is a green
outer calyx, with four leaves or bracts. So you
see that there are three sets of flower-leaves—
the little four-toothed corolla inside, then comes
the larger coloured calyx, and outside all the
four green bracts. Stamens nearly as in the
other heaths, and eight. Now we will turn to
the leaves.”
HEATHER. 3l

“And they are very small, and opposite.”

“The young branches will show you that the
leaves are in four rows, up and down, on opposite
sides of the thin twigs. So that in all the three
kinds of heather the leaves are placed in a
different manner. The branches of ling are
gathered, and bound tightly together to make
little brooms.”

“They are useful as well as pretty.”

“Yes. It is even said that, a very long time
ago, the Danes made beer from heather; and
now the bees, you see, are very busy all around,
gathering honey from the flowers. quantity of honey is gathered by bees from the
flowers of heather.

‘The powdery bells, that glance in purple bloom,
Fling from their scented cups a sweet perfume ;
While from their cells, still moist with morning dew,

The wandering wild bee sips the honeyed glue.’ ”

“T should thmk that the Scotch moors are
very beautiful when the heather is in flower.”

‘Indeed they are, Cissy ; and sometimes you
32 HEATHER.

can see the ground purple for miles with these
little flowers, and hear the bees humming over
them, and see the wild birds hiding amongst
them.”

“Ts the fruit a berry ?”

“No; it is a dry capsule, with many seeds, in
the heathers, but it is a fleshy berry in some
of the little shrubs which belong to the same
family, such as the bilberry and cranberry.”

“Could we not grow the heather in our
garden ?”

“Not readily. They will not grow anywhere
as they do on their open heaths and moors, and
only by a great deal of care will they grow in
gardens at all. The ling is the most likely to
succeed. Many very beautiful foreign kinds
may be grown in greenhouses.

“As we jog along, Cissy, I wish to explain
to you two words which are often used in books
upon flowers, as they refer to the petals or
corolla, and you may be puzzled when you see
them. These two words are ‘monopetalous’
and ‘polypetalous.’ Indeed, you might guess
HEATHER. 33

that they meant ‘one-petalled’ and ‘many-
petalled, but you will desire to be quite sure.
We have in the heathers a monopetalous corolla,
in which the petals are joined along the sides
into a corolla, and not divided into four or five
separate petals, in which case it would have
been ‘polypetalous.’ You do not see the join-
ing of the petals perhaps, but you know that
the corolla is all in one piece. In the heather
flowers the corolla is like a little jug, which is
narrowed at the mouth, swells in the

middle, and is rounded at the bottom.

Such an one is said to be wrceolate. y
But there are other kinds of mono-

Fic. 2.—Ur-
petalous corolla, which are not at all cvovats Co-

ROLLA OF
narrowed at the mouth, but form qa Hearuzr.
straight tube as they do in the honeysuckle
and the florets of the thistle. This is called a
tubular corolla. If we pass on to the primrose,
we find another kind of corolla which has a long
tube, and the mouth is furnished with five
spreading limbs or lobes, like petals, but joined
at the bottom into a tube. This is called salver-
(501) 3
34 HEATHER.

shaped, or hypocrateriform—a long ugly word.

If the petals are spreading in the same man-



Fic. 8.—TuBuLAR CoROLLA OF Fic. 4.—SALVER-SHAPED Co-
THONEYSUCKLE. ROLLA OF PRIMROSE.

ner, but the tube is very short, as it is in the
forget-me-not, then it is called rotate, or wheel-
shaped. When the corolla is shaped like a
little bell, as it is in the harebell, it is said to

be campanulate. But if the mouth is wider



Fic. 5.—Rovrate Coro.a. Fic. 6.—CAMPANULATE COROLLA OF
a, Stamens attached. HLAREBELL.

open, like a funnel, as in the bindweed, it 1s
called infundibulrform.

“ And now that I have named all the forms
HEATHER. 35

of the monopetalous corolla which have a regular,
or as we term it a symmetrical form, I must
run over the names of those which have an

irregular corolla—that is to say, the petals, or



Sic. 7.—Inrunprpvurtrorm Coronpa Fic. 8.—BmasBiaTE Corona
or BINDWEED. or EYEBRIGHT.

which would have been the petals if they had
been divided, are not all of the same shape and
size. There are the bilabiate, or two-lipped,
monopetalous corolla of the ‘eyebright’ and the
mints ; and the ringent, or gaping, corolla of the
yellow archangel, which is also two-lipped. Then
there is the very curious closed mouth of the
corolla in the snap-dragon, which is a personate,

monopetalous corolla. And the pouch -like
36 HEATHER.

corolla of the calceolaria is an example of the
calceolate corolla. Then, lastly, there is the ir-
regular form of monopetalous corolla which is
found in the strap-shaped florets of the goat’s-

beard and dandelion—the lower part tubular,



Fie. 9.—CALCEOLATE COROLLA Fic. 10.—LicgunaAte FLoret oF
Or CALCEOLARIA, DANDELION.

and the upper with a long strap on one side:
this is a ligulate corolla.

“T shall say nothing about the polypetalous
corolla, except to repeat that the petals are

separate, and not united together in any way ;
HEATHER. 37

and although the greater number of them are
regular, having all the petals equal in form and
size, there is one very marked exception in the
pea flowers, such as the yellow broom, the
flowers of which have a standard, two wings,
and a keel, and are called papilionaceous, from a
fancied resemblance to a sitting butterfly. Let
me advise you to read this all over again, and

be sure that you remember it.”
YELLOW BROOM.*

NE day we had a chat about families, and
Cissy learned what was the family like-

ness in the Crossworts, and many a time after
she amused herself by hunting after the different
kinds to see how many she could find. There
is another large family with peculiar shaped
flowers, which are quite as easy and even more
numerous. Some of them are grown in fields,
some are found in hedgerows, others on commons
and waste places, as well as in gardens and
almost everywhere. They are the Pea-flower
family, which include the garden peas, beans,
clovers, and many others, as well as the broom
and furze. They are easily known, both by
their flowers and their pods. All that are

found in this country have what are called

* Sarothamnus scopartus,
YELLOW BROOM. 39

butterfly flowers, which have five unequal petals.
The upper one stands up like a shield, and is the
largest, called the standard; one on each side

are the wings; and two at the bottom, partly

aa



Fie. 11.--Pra Frowers.

A, Flower ; B, Section ; c, Stamens and Pistil; p, Pistil; wu’, Petals; e, Standard ;
a—u, Wings; c, Keel; ©, Pod or Legume; r, Seed; G, Section.

joined together like a boat, are the heel: so that
there is one large one and two pairs of smaller

ones, and they look something like a butterfly
40 YELLOW BROOM.

at rest. Inside the flower are ten stamens, and
these are also singular, because the ten filaments,
or stalks, are either joined together to form a
tube, or nine are joined together and a single
one is left outside. Then the fruit or pod con-
taining the seeds is like a pea-pod, formed of
two halves that are both alike, joined all the
way down, both back and front, but easily split-
ting at the joint and exposing a row of seeds.
A very good example is to be seen in the
common garden pea, in which the peas are the
seeds, all in a row.

A great many of this family are climbing
plants like the garden pea, the scarlet-runner,
and the vetch. Some are little creeping herbs,
like the clovers ; but some are large shrubs, like
the broom and furze, or even large trees, like the
laburnum, and a very common tree called an
acacia. In foreign countries some of the trees
grow to an immense size. The very prickly
shrub which grows on heaths and commons,
with bright yellow flowers, is the gorse, furze,

or whin; but we shall choose a shrub that is not
YELLOW BROOM. 4}

a prickly one, with quite as pretty yellow flowers,
which we shall find in the old sand-pit. This
is the broom, or we might call it the royal
broom.

“You have read, Cissy, in your History of
England, that in olden times some of the royal
families were called Plantagenet, which is said
to mean ‘planta genista,’ because genista was the
Latin name of the ‘broom,’ and the broom was
the badge of the Plantagenets before they
adopted the rose. Another story is that Geof-
frey of Anjou placed a sprig of ‘broom’ in his
helmet on the day of battle, and was called from
it Plantagenet, and that he gave the name to
his children. Now we have reached the sand-
pit, and must gather the’ Plantagenet broom,
which is standing there in a thick mass of gor-
geous yellow blossom.”

2

“Tsn’t it lovely !” and that was all she said.

“The broom it is the flower for me,
That groweth on the common.
Oh the broom, the yellow broom !

The ancient poet sung it;
42 YELLOW BROOM.

And sweet it is on summer days
To lie at rest among it.”

“You find how tough the branches are, Cissy,
and ribbed, rising straight up, and so many of
them that the twigs are made into very good
brooms in many places. I wonder whether
besoms are called brooms because they were
made of broom twigs as well as of birch.”

“ And what little trefoil leaves! some of them
with no stalk at all. The plant seems to be all
twigs and flowers.”

“Yes; but it makesa grand show. And now
you can study the flowers. The green calyx
outside is almost bell-shaped, with two lips, and
finely toothed.”

“ Ah! but the flowers, the butterfly flowers ;
I want to look at the flowers. That is the
standard, the biggest petal, at the top; it is
twice as large as the others. Then there are two
smaller ones at the sides—these are the wings ;
and at the bottom, like a hood turned upside
down, two petals joined together in the shape
of a little boat—that is the keel.
YELLOW BROOM. 43

‘And now I have a little boat
In shape a very crescent moon’
Some other flowers have a lower lip, but when
you compare them you will soon see how dif-
ferent they are from the ‘ butterfly flowers.’”

“The stamens lie in the little boat, all of a
bunch; there are ten of them, and the stalks are
all elued together around the pistil.”

‘No, Cissy, you should not call them stalks ;
they are the filaments, or little threads, of the
stamens with the anthers at the top, and you
see that they are all curved so as to lie in the
little keel, and scarcely to be seen without
bending down the petals. Look how neatly
they fit into the hollow, just like a tiny ‘Jack-
in-the-box.’”

“T can only just see the top of the pistil.”

“Tf you would clear away the filaments which
are closed around the pistil, you would see that
the ovary is a long and curved one, just like a
very small and young pea-pod, for such it is,
and it is the future pod in a very infant stage.
When the corolla dies and falls off, the ovary
44, YELLOW BROOM.

remains, and it continues to grow until it becomes
the seed-vessel or pod, and this, in the common
pea, is the pod which contains the peas. This
is the kind of fruit which is to be found in the
Pea-flower family, and in the broom as well as
in the pea.”

“We must wait for the pods until later on,
when the flowers have fallen and the ovaries
have grown into pods.”

“Yes, my dear; and then we shall find the
pods nearly black, and a little hairy, shaped like
pea-pods, only smaller, each holding a row of
seeds much smaller than peas.”

“ And are they good to eat ?”

“No; they become very hard, and it is said
that sheep are fond of eating them, which makes
them tipsy for a time; and so if children eat
them it makes their heads giddy. Laburnum
seeds are even worse, and are more poisonous.
Children should never eat wild seeds, or berries,
unless they are strawberries, or blackberries, or
filberts, which they know to be good.”

“You said that there are many wild flowers
YELLOW BROOM. 45

which belong to this family ; shall we find any
more of them to-day ?”

“Yes; I pointed you to the prickly gorse.”

“T know; but I mean, any others.”

‘ Perhaps we may; but the clovers have very
small flowers.”

“And I shall know them always by their
curious flowers when they are in blossom, and
by the pods when the blossoms are gone, but not
by the leaves when there are no flowers or fruit.”

“Not for certainty, Cissy, until you know
more about wild flowers, because leaves vary so
much. A great number of them have ¢refoil
leaves, like the clovers; but some other plants
have trefoil leaves, like the wood-sorrel and the
wild strawberry. Then many of them have
pinnate leaves with a number of leaflets on each
side of the foot-stalk ; but many other plants have
pinnate leaves, only not quite like those of the
pea flowers. I do not know of any which have
simple leaves—that is to say, leaves with only
one blade, like the violet and primrose, or the

oak and poplar.”
46 YELLOW BROOM.

“ Are the leaves of any of them eaten ?”

“Only by sheep and cattle; none of them
for salads or vegetables. Don’t forget, if you
are ever uncertain about the shape of the flower,
to look at the stamens, which should be ten

joined together, or nine united and one free.”



SILVER-WEED.*

S we stroll along to the common, in search
of another of our wild flowers, my com-
panion and myself chat of many things that
relate to plants and their leaves. This time we
were talking most of the hairs which clothe the
cuticle, and such small objects as are scarcely
visible to the naked eye. Hairs are common
enough on leaves, stems, and flowers, and we
are often content to say that such parts are
hairy or smooth without being able to say
what is the form, which our eyes are not strong
enough to detect. By using a good pocket-glass
a little more can be seen. But it is the micro-
scope only which can reveal all the variety of
form in hairs; and as this last instrument re-
quires skill for its use, we had to be content
with gossip.

* Potentilla anserina.
48 SILVER-WEED.

“ Hairs,” I said, “are most often simple and
delicate tubes, tapering and closed at the end,
and either with or without cross partitions, at
certain distances apart. Some hairs are very
short, and then the appearance is velvety ; some
are long, waved, and twisted together, and then
the surface is woolly. Besides simple hairs,
there are some few which are branched; and
some, although not branched, are thickened at
the top. The stinging hairs of the nettle have
a swollen top which breaks off at a touch, and
then the stinging juice escapes. Glandular hairs
are little cells containing oil or some other fluid
borne at the top of slender hairs. They are
large and pretty on the leaves of the sundews,
short and small on lavender and geranium.
Some leaves have on their under surface star-
shaped hairs, or even irregular scales, and others
are only frosted with a powdery meal.”

“ And all these are supposed to be given for
some good purpose, or for some use.”

“ Exactly. And now we have to gather the
suver-weed, and learn why it is silvery. It is
SILVER-WEED. 49

common enough by roadsides, in waste places,
and on such ground as this. I don’t know why
it should have been called ‘ goosegrass,’ as the
plant usually called ‘goosegrass’ is a slender
straggling herb, which climbs in hedges, and is
very rough in all parts, with hooked prickles, so
that it cleaves to the clothes, and is also called
‘cleavers.’”

‘But the ‘silver-weed’ creeps on the ground,
and grows in large patches. We always call it
silver-weed because of the silvery leaves.”

“ As you know it so well, you had better give
me your account of it; and there is plenty of it
close by, which may help you.”

“Tt has a creeping stem, which creeps along
the ground, and has little rootlets at all the
joints, to keep it fixed, and the leaves rise up
from the runners, about six inches long.

“There always appear to be a great many
leaves and a very few flowers; for the leaves
grow in large dense patches, and the flowers are
solitary.

“ Of course the leaves are pinnate, and broader

(501) 4
50 SILVER-WEED.

above than below, so that the upper leaflets are
the largest, and about six leaflets on each side
with one at the end. Sometimes they are op-
posite, and sometimes alternate. Each leaflet
would be oblong, with the edge deeply cut into
rather large sharp-pointed teeth. The upper
side of the leaves is green, and only a little
silky ; but the under side is silvery white, and
very silky, because closely covered with long
white hairs, which are pressed down close to the
leaf.”

“Very good, Cissy. You have given a very
nice account of the leaves, and now you must do
the same for the flowers.”

“The first thing I know about them is that they
are yellow, and look very much like buttercups.”

“You must begin at the beginning, and give
us some notion of the flower-stalk and the in-
florescence.”

“The flowers grow singly, on the top of long
stalks, which come up from the creeping runners,
starting from the joints, and rising to about the
height of the leaves.”
SILVER-WEED. 51

“Don’t you see that they are axillary?”

“Yes—they spring from the axils of the
leaves ; but I can see no bracts. The calyx is a
double one, each cut at the edge into five teeth,
and the outside ones are the smallest. Then
the yellow petals are five, quite distinct from
each other, and scarcely touching. The stamens

are in great number, and stand upon the calyx,



Fie. 12.—SrTrRAWBERRY.

and not on the corolla, so that when the petals
fall they leave the stamens behind.”

“Must I help you with the column in the
centre, which is not a column, but a swollen or
thickened end to the flower-stalk, called the
receptacle, upon which stand a great number of

one-seeded ovaries, called also carpels, or ‘little
52 SILVER-WEED.

fruits’? The receptacle enlarges a little after
the petals fall, but is never juicy.”

“T suppose the calyx grows to the receptacle?”

“You know what strawberries are, and you
call them a fruit; but they are only just such a
receptacle as this, which continues to grow after
the petals fall, and becomes very large and juicy
and sweet. If you look at the outside of a
strawberry, you will see a great number of pale
dots: these are the carpels, or little fruits, each
with one small seed inside. The strawberry
flower is like a silver-weed flower, only it is
white, and the receptacle becomes fleshy.”

“Do the raspberry and blackberry belong to
the same family as the strawberry ?”

“Yes; and the flowers are very much alike.
If you pluck a ripe raspberry, you will gather
with it the end of the flower-stalk. When you
pull this out of the ripe raspberry, it is a little
white conical receptacle, and you will see marks
on the outside where all the fruits or carpels
were growing. This was a receptacle which

did not grow much, but became longer, and the
SILVER-WEED. 53

little berries studded over it, packed close to-
gether, were the carpels, which became juicy as
they ripened, each with a little seed buried in
the juice. Now, do you see the difference be-
tween a raspberry and a strawberry ?”

“I believe that I do. The strawberry has



Fic. 18.—Raspperry Frutrs.

the receptacle changed into the fruit, as we call
it, and the carpels are dry, and stick on the out-
side. The raspberry has a conical, rather spongy
receptacle, and the carpels become juicy and
jomed together all around the receptacle, but
54, SILVER-WEED.

can be pulled off all together, like a cap, when
the raspberry is ripe.”

“Of course the blackberry is just the same
sort of fruit as a raspberry, and all belong to

the Rose family. You have asked me once or



Fic. 14.—Recerracte, CARPELS, ETc., OF BRAMBLE.
twice before to explain to you how it is that
single flowers become double when they are
grown in gardens, or, as we say, cultivated.

The rose is a good example, because the present


Fic. 15.—Douste Rose.



SILVER-WEED. 57

‘double’ roses, so called, are descended, as chil-
dren, from a stock which was single. Double
flowers ¢ 2 those in which the number of petals
has been largely increased, beyond the usual or
original number in the wild flower, and are there-
fore what are termed ‘malformations’ or ‘mon-
strosities.’ The wild rose, you know, has in the
centre of the flower a great number of stamens,
but the garden rose has none or rarely very few.
The reason for this is that the stamens, in the
garden rose, are changed into petals. Learn
from this that it is possible for stamens to be-
come ‘petaloid, or to be changed into petals.
If you examine the single dahlia, you will see
that the central florets are tubular and fertile ;
but in the double dahlia they are changed into
strap-shaped florets, and are noé fertile. From
this we learn that when single flowers become
double they are no longer fertile, and do not
produce seeds. That pretty white flower which
floats on ponds and lakes, and is called the
white water-lily, is sometimes seen becoming

more double by the change of stamens into
58 SILVER-WEED.

petals, so that you may see little petals carrying
a small anther at the top. If you will take the
trouble to examine double flowers, such as those
of the double hawthorn, double primrose, double
stocks, you will find that as the petals increase,
so do the stamens diminish, until they are all
changed into petals. The lesson this should
teach you is, that if you wish to find out the
true number of petals and stamens in any given
flower, you should use single flowers; and if
you find at any time a wild flower which has
more petals than other flowers of the same kind
of plant growing near it, you may expect to find
also that it is deformed in other particulars, and
has fewer stamens than it should have if it were
perfect.”


Fie. 16.—Witp Rose.

EYE-BRIGHT.*

WO little plants, not very unlike each
other, are usually to be found in dry,

hilly pastures, and on commons or heaths. They
are often both of them plentiful, and can scarcely
be mistaken the one for the other. These are
the wild thyme and the eye-bright, and both
are in flower nearly at the same time. The
garden thyme is known to most persons on
account of its scent, which is similar in the wild
thyme, but is not so strong. That it is also

found on banks may be learned from the line,—
“T know a bank whereon the wild thyme grows.”

Some people say that it loves to grow on an old
ant-hill; but wherever it grows the bees will
soon find it out. When plentiful it quite per-
fumes the air. The other little plant has paler

* Euphrasia officinalis.
62 EYE-BRIGHT.

flowers, and does not grow in dense clumps, and
is without odour. The flowers in both are ir-
regular, small, and monopetalous—that is to say,
the petals are all united in one piece—but they
do not belong to exactly the same family. We
shall see them both, but it is only the eye-bright
which is our object to-day.
“T expect you to ask me at once what is the
meaning of the name, and I can give you two
reasons, either of which may be the right one.
The flowers, although small, are plainly to be
seen at some distance, when they seem to be
white, or with a faint purple tinge mixed with
yellow. Scattered over the ground the flowers
are turned upwards, and seem to be gazing at
you like hundreds of bright eyes. Hence they
may have been called bright eyes, or eye-bright.
Another reason for the name has been given
from its uses. The old plant-doctors, or herbal-
ists, thought it so good for the eyes that one of
_them wrote, ‘If the herb was but as much used
as it is neglected, it would half spoil the spec-

tacle-maker’s trade.’ One has even said that
EYE-BRIGHT. 63

‘it hath restored sight to them that have been
blind for a long time.’ From this you may
learn that it was believed to have the power
of making the dim eyes bright, and hence was
called eye-bright. I see that you have found it,
Cissy, whilst I have been talking; and now we
will sit down amongst it, and ‘improve the
shining hour.’”

“T have been trying to find the longest
stems that I can, but they are all very short
and tough. You see that none of them are
longer than my hand, with one or two little
branches near the bottom.”

“Sometimes they are not longer than your
finger, but the root is rather long for the size
of the plant.”

“Tt is not a creeping root, but goes straight
down into the ground.”

“Although there is plenty of it, it does not
erow in spreading tufts, but each plant separate.”

“The leaves are small, and almost egg-shaped,
or ovate, without any foot-stalks, sitting close

to the stem, and in pairs, opposite to each other.
64 EYE-BRIGHT.

The edge of the leaves is toothed, but the teeth
are more blunt in the lower part of the leaves
than in the upper.”

“There are not more than about five teeth
on each side of the leaf.”

“ What shall we call the znflorescence? There
are only a few flowers, and on the upper part of
the stem, or the branches; but I should think
they are in a sort of spike, yet not a very good
one.”

“Yes; it is a loose, leafy spike.”

“The separate flowers have no proper stalk,
but they have a green calyx, with four or five
pointed teeth; and within this is the corolla,
the petals of which are joined below into a short
tube. The outer lobes or divisions of the corolla
form an upper and lower lip, so that it is a two-
lipped corolla, gaping at the mouth. The upper
lip is two-lobed, and the lower lip is three-
lobed. The lobes would be the petals if they
were not joined.”

“This is not such a hooded two-lipped corolla
as we find in the yellow dead-nettle, or even in
EYE-BRIGHT. 65

the yellow rattle; but the two lips are distinct
enough to be observed at once.”

“There is a yellow spot in the throat; for if
we call the corolla two-lipped, we may call the
opening in the middle a throat.”



Fic. 17.—Ftower or [yr-pricut.
I, Flower ; 2, Ovary and Style; 3, 4, 5, Capsule with Section; 6, Seed, magnified ;
7, Section of Seed.

“Oh yes; that is a well-known name for the
opening of the tube of a corolla.”

“Most of the flowers are nearly white, with
purple streaks and a yellow throat.”

“When the plant grows in mountain pas-

tures or on high moors, it is dwarfed very
(501) 5
66 EYE-BRIGHT.

much, and is such a tiny little plant, with
smaller flowers, and they are almost wholly
yellow.”

“Do plants usually grow smaller as you go
to colder places, or higher and higher up a
mountain side ?”

“Yes; as a rule, plants and shrubs become
smaller and smaller as you go up a mountain,
until it gets too cold for them to grow at all.”

“ But some plants will grow in cold countries,
and on the sides of mountains, which do not
grow in the plains, or where the weather is
warm.”

“Certainly. Plants depend very much upon
what is termed temperature, as well as upon the
nature of the soil; and many animals depend
upon the plants. But you have quite forgotten
the stamens.”

“Indeed I have, for I was thinking of some-
thing else. I can only find four stamens, in two
pairs—that is, two and two; but they are very
small to find.”

“T am not surprised that you should have
EYE-BRIGHT. ' 67

forgotten them ; but as you find that there are
only four, it is well that you found them at last.
In this family the stamens are usually two or
four, as well as in the Mint family, to which the
wild thyme belongs.”

“ And is the fruit a dry capsule ?”

“Yes; it is a small one and flattened, with
very little seeds, which are ribbed or furrowed.”

“Do I know any other plant which belongs
to this family and is not so small ?”

“Two or three you know in gardens, but they
will not help you much with the eye-bright.
These are the snap-dragon, the foxglove, the
yellow calceolaria, and the musk plant; but
they are all very different looking plants, and
you will have to study them to see where the
family likeness comes in.”

“Tt does not seem so easy to learn the inflo- |
rescence as it does to understand the forms of
flowers.”

“ Let us try to do so by comparing together
the common forms of inflorescence. Of course

we leave out all solitary flowers, growing by
68 EYE-BRIGHT.

themselves. The simplest inflorescence is a
spike, in which the flowers stand one above
another upon the stem; but the single flowers
have no foot-stalk, or only a very short one.
The plantains have the flowers in a dense spike.

If the flowers are arranged in the same manner,

&

SSS



Fic. 18.—Sprkr. Fie. 19.—-RAcemE.

but all the flowers have foot-stalks of equal
length, it is called a raceme; so that a raceme
differs from a spike in having stalked flowers.
The flowers often turn over to one side, as they
do in the lily of the valley, but all the flower-
stalks are unbranched. When the inflorescence
EYE-BRIGHT. 69

is more spreading, and each of the flower-stalks
is branched either once or several times, then it
is called a panicle. Many of the grasses have
this kind of inflorescence, and so has the Iilac.
If we suppose that a panicle has all the flower-
stalks gradually lengthened from the top one to

Fic. 20.—PAanicie. Fic. 21.—Coryms.

the lowest, so that all the flowers stand at the
same level or nearly so, then it is a corymb.
The flower-stalks themselves may be either
branched or unbranched. It sometimes seems
difficult to know a corymb from a cyme, but a
cyme, although it much resembles a corymb in
70 EYE-BRIGHT.

form, differs in growth ; for the central flower
opens first, and the side branches grow usually
in pairs, in succession, so that it keeps growing
by increase of branches and flowers, as in the
campion. Or the cyme may be one-sided, and,

a succession of flower-stalks are produced on

Za
elo

¥ie, 22,—Cynn,
the upper side, which when young are curled
over and said to be scorpioid. It is hardly
necessary to tell you what an wmbel is, for all
the flower-stalks start from the same level.
When each of these stalks carries a smaller
EYE-BRIGHT. 71

umbel at the top, it is compound. The head,
or capitulum, of the composite flowers was ex-
plained in our chat on the dandelion, goat’s-
beard, and thistle.”





Tic, 23.—Compounb UMBEL.
THISTLES.

HISTLES are of many kinds, as well as
buttercups, but thistles especially, and

yet they have not many friends. Farmers do
not like thistles to grow upon their land, and
yet some thistles are very fond of ploughed
fields. Children do not like thistles, because
they have a way of pricking their fingers.
Cattle do not like thistles, and will not eat
them whilst they can get anything else.
Donkeys like thistles well enough, but then
they are asses. Goldfinches are supposed to
be fond of thistles, but only of their seeds.
Thistles are plentiful everywhere, and yet no
one has a good word for them, unless he is a
Scotsman. Why a Scot should love the thistle
may be found in its being the emblem of his

nation, as the rose is the emblem of England,
THISTLES. 73

and the shamrock of Ireland. The story is,
that in the time of the Danish invasion, when,
of course, the Scots and the Danes were
opposed, and fought against each other, an
attempt was made to attack the Scots by night,
when a barefooted Dane trod upon a thistle,
which made him cry aloud with the pain, and



Fie. 24,—THISTLES.

this aroused the Scots, who fell upon and
defeated the enemy. Which kind of thistle it
was is unknown, and so many kinds have been
supposed, by different people, to be the true
Scotch thistle. But the emblem of Scotland is
a thistle, of one kind or another. Many kinds
14 THISTLES.

of these plants are found on commons, heaths,
and waste places, where we shall find the dwarf
thistle,* and that will answer our purpose.

“There it stands, Cissy, growing close to the
ground, with scarcely any stem at all, and you
must dig it up with a large, strong knife, or it
will hurt your fingers.”

“ How hard it sticks! I cannot get it out
without cutting or breaking the roots.”

“They are not important, for we shall see
that it has a tough, thick root, and that will be
enough.”

“Of course it grows from year to year, and
lasts for several years, so that it is perennial.”

“ And it is not easy work to kill them.”

“The leaves lie back flat on the ground, like
a rosette—let me see, like the daisy and the
sundew, and sometimes the dandelion. But
the shape of the leaves, I can scarcely say what .
to call them.”

“T think I should call them cut down, nearly
to the midrib, in a pinnate manner—that is, after

* Cnicus acaulis.
THISTLES. 75

the manner of a feather—but very broadly and
coarsely cut, so as to appear like large prickly
teeth.”

“ And they are so waved, too, they will not
lie flat ; and the spines are so long and sharp.”

‘You see that the leaves are not cut, as they
are in the dandelion, into large teeth which are
curved backwards, but into straight and nearly
three-angled teeth.”

“And so much thicker and firmer than are
the leaves of the dandelion ; and they are quite
smooth, only not so shining as holly leaves.”

“They would make rather an uncomfortable
cushion to sit down upon. The in-
florescence is what we commonly call
‘thistle heads,’ and they grow close
down to the rosette, with scarcely

any stem. Of course they are com-



posite flowers, and each head con-

Fie. 25.
tains a large number of florets, so Tsrstuz Hzap.

that we have a name for the outer green leaves
of the flower-head, which is not a calyx.”

“Yes, I remember—it is an ¢nvolucre; and
76 THISTLES.

these thistle heads are not round, or globose,
but longer than broad, and rather egg-shaped,
and very hard and firm, almost like a prickly
ball, before they open.”

“Can you count how many bracts there are
in the involucre ?”

“No, I cannot easily, there are so many, and
they overlap so closely, like the tiles of a house.
I should call them nearly lance-
, shaped, but they are not very




long ; the edges are fringed with
short hairs.”

“Now then for the florets. I have
told you, when we found the goat’s-
beard, that all the florets of the thistles
are tubular, and none of them strap-
shaped.”
ee “But I could not count them, there
Foret. are so many—a great many more than
in the goat’s-beard, and of a purple colour.”

“ You will have to cut down the involucre to
get the florets out without breaking them, they
are so long and so tender.”
THISTLES. 77

“And I shall want a pocket-glass to count
the stamens, they seem to be so small.”

“Well, you will find them the same as they
were in the goat’s-beard—five stamens, with the
anthers all joined together round the pistil ;
but the florets are different, for you see that
they are all long tubes, and quite regular at the
mouth.”

“ And there are more hairs at the bottom, in
place of the calyx. J cannot think of the name.”

“ Pappus, I suppose. In the






case of thistles the pappus be- SS
comes the thistle-down. You have
seen the thistle-down blowing about
in the wind, with the seeds hanging
to it. This, again, is different from

the pappus of the goat’s-beard ; for

Fic. 27.
the threads are all smooth and pyrpis op

t DANDELION.

simple, without any feathering a
the sides, and so they are not joined into the
shape of a parasol.”

“ And there is no long horn like the parasol
stick,”
78 THISTLES.

“No; but the thistle-down can float in the
air just as easily, and scatter the seeds.”

“Then all thistle-down is very much alike?”

“Yes, and very soft, and may be used for
stuffing cushions. But there is a difference
which you have not noticed in the receptacle
when the seeds are blown away. In the dande-
lion it is smooth and dotted, but in the thistles
a great number of bristles are left behind, and
these passed upwards between the florets when
they were growing, and are now left standing.”

The thistle we have been looking at is a very
good. type or pattern of thistles in general.
They are all of them awkward plants to gather
or carry, and not very nice to examine. Some
of them are very tall, growing as much as
a yard high, and the stem much _ branched.
Both stem and branches are often prickly, with
very sharp, stiff bristles, and so are the leaves.
They will scratch you severely, and draw the
blood, but they do not poison like the stinging
hairs of the nettle. Thistles are to be found grow-

ing almost everywhere, for each head of flowers
THISTLES, 79

bears a great number of ripe seeds, and these
are so easily drifted about, and for so ‘long a
distance, because of the thistle-down, that hardly
any piece of ground is safe from them. It has
been calculated that one thistle seed will pro-
duce at the first crop twenty-four thousand,
and consequently at the second crop five hun-
dred and seventy-six millions of seeds. This is
a number you cannot imagine.

Although thistle leaves are usually lance-
shaped if the margin were entire, yet they are
constantly deeply cut into large, irregular-
pointed teeth, and each of these often ends in a
sharp stiff bristle. Besides which the leaves
will not lie flat, for they are puckered and
waved so as to thrust the spines in all direc-
tions. The stems are tough and woody, so that
they will not break easily, hence they will suffer
much crushing and ill treatment without any
serious injury. The roots strike a long way
into the ground, and cannot be readily killed.
In every way thistles are defiant, and well
provided with power to increase and multiply
80 THISTLES.

and replenish the earth. In return for the
annoyance they cause the thistles seem to have
few virtues, for none of them are of any value
in the arts or in medicine. As far as we know,
they might have been one of the original curses
of the soil, which man had to till by the sweat
of his brow. Farmers will testify that many a
brow has sweated in the attempt to clear the
ground of thistles. Their good qualities must
be deeply hidden, for they have yet to be
revealed, at least so far as they concern the

family of man.
EH Se) NDE Ws

UR plant-hunters are in search of a plant

so small that it needs close looking after,

and so scarce as only to be found in soft boggy

places, where the feet sink into the soil, and the

water oozes over them. They must be well

shod who would gather the “sundew” and not
suffer from wet feet.

“There it is, Cissy; I will get it for you, for
it is growing amongst the bog-moss, and the
ground is so very soft and wet.”

“What a pretty little plant, and how the
leaves sparkle! It is like a rosette, and no big-
ger than a brooch.”

‘“‘Here are three or four more, and yet it isa
pity to gather them; but we must see if there
are any with dead flies hanging to the leaves.”

* Drosera rotundrfolia.
(501) 6
82 THE SUNDEW.

“Oh yes; here are some little flies on two,
three, four leaves. They are all dead; but why
are they sticking there ?”

“ Because this is a fly-catching plant, and the
little flies are caught and eaten as surely as
if it were a spider’s web. We shall talk of
that presently, but we must first attend to the
plant.”

“ Are they always small like these ?”

“Yes, Cissy, this is the usual size; perhaps a
half-dozen small leaves, spreading, and falling
back, as you said, like a rosette, with no proper
stem except the one which rises in the middle
and carries the flowers.”

“T scarcely know what shape to call the
leaves.”

“ Perhaps not; but I should say that they
are very nearly round, and not half an inch
across, tapering into the leaf-stalk. The whole
upper surface is covered with glistening purplish
hairs, which are club-shaped at the top. They
are called glands, because they contain a sticky
fluid which oozes out and makes the outside
THE SUNDEW. 83

sticky and shining. The hairs in the middle of
the leaf are shorter than the rest, and they are
gradually longer as they reach the edge.”
“Some of them are bent down like hooks.”
“Tf a poor little fly alights upon the leaf, the
sticky surface helps to keep it there, and then



Fira. 28.—GLANDULAR LEAF OF SUNDEW.
(Enlarged.)

the long hairs slowly bend over it, so that it
could not fly away if it tried; and the more it
struggles the more closely the hairs bend over
it, until it dies.”

“Then it is really a fly-catcher.”

“Yes, and a good one too; for you will see on
84 THE SUNDEW.

those leaves which have flies sticking to them
that the hairs are bent down over them, and
hold them down until they are dead; and when
that is done the hairs slowly raise themselves,
and become straight again.”

~“ Are any other plants fly-catchers 2”

“Several ; but not many of them are British.
Now we must examine the flowers of the sun-
dew. The flower-stalk is thin and upright,
curved over on one side, and the flowers are all
on one side of the stalk. They are small and
white, and something like the single flowers of
a common garden plant called ‘ London pride ;’
but they are rarely open, and only when the sun
is shining upon them. Let us pull one of them
in pieces.”

“Five outside and five inside leaves,”

“Certainly ; that is to say, five green sepals
and five white petals.”

“ And five stamens, with a pistil in the middle.”

“Yes; and when you see the London pride
again, you will find that it has ten stamens in-
stead of five.”
THE SUNDEW. 85

“ Can we take these home and plant them in
our garden to grow 2”

“You may take them home, dear, and plant
them ; but you cannot make them grow, for they
will only grow in such places as the bog where
we found them.”

“What a pity! I should like to see them
catch flies. But how do they eat them, because
they have no mouths?”

“They do not eat them in the way that ani-
mals eat their food, but they dissolve them. It
is not easy to explain to you how they do it;
but there is a liquid which oozes from the hairs,
and this softens and melts the fleshy parts of the
fly, and when melted into a liquid this is sucked
up or absorbed by the leaf, and only the wings
and the hard parts are left.”

“Won't they catch anything else except flies ?”

“Oh yes; the hairs will close over almost
anything which touches them, but they soon
fall back again when such a mistake is made.
But they will dissolve little pieces of meat, just

as they would dissolve a fly. After an insect
86 THE SUNDEW.

has settled upon a leaf, it will be dead in a
quarter of an hour.”

“T should like to see the hairs move.”

“Perhaps you may be able to see that they
do move if we carry these plants home and
plunge the roots in water. If placed in the
sun the leaves will open fully; then you must
place a little fly upon them, and watch to see if
the glands close over it, but they will do it very
slowly. See how many of these leaves are closed
since we gathered them, on account of having
been touched.”

‘Would the sundew live if it were covered
up so that insects could not get on the leaves?”

“Oh yes, it could live and grow in the bog
if no flies settled upon the leaves, just as other
plants do, so that animal food is not a neces-
sity.”

“ Don’t you think it must be an accident when
a fly is caught and sticks to the leaf of the sun-
dew?”

“No, Cissy; I am no believer in accident in
such cases. The fly would not stick on the
THE SUNDEW. 87

leaf if the glands were not sticky. Then there
is some purpose in the glands being sticky.
Supposing that a fly were caught upon sticky
leaves or upon sticky glands, it could not be
accident which made the glands bend over and
clasp the insect so that it could not get away.
It could not be accident that made the glands
erow wetter, or made the sticky juice change so
that it would dissolve the fly more easily. It
is not accident that when a little bit of glass
touches the leaf the glands close only a little,
and more slowly, and then open altogether to
allow the glass to fall off, as if the glands had
found out that they could not dissolve the glass.
Tt is well known that the glands bend over
to catch the fly, that the juice of the glands
dissolves the flesh of the fly, and then the glands
open to allow the skeleton to fall off. And
as for accident, it is a handy word, which some
people are apt to use when they cannot explain
how a thing is done. In such cases it is only
an excuse for ignorance to say that it was an

accident.”
88 THE SUNDEW.

“Ts there more than one kind of sun-
dew ?”

“There are three different sundews in Britain,
with different shaped leaves, but the one we
found is the most common, with the rounded
leaves.”

We have now come to the end of the fourth
story of our rambles, and in closing the record
I have a word or two to say about leaves which
may freshen your memory or be of service here-
after. It will be quite enough if I chat to
you only about the different forms of simple
leaves, because the leaflets of compound leaves
have the form of simple leaves. To begin
with, the narrowest leaves we shall meet with
are those in which the length is five or six
times their breadth, and sometimes more, even
to twenty or thirty times as long as_ broad.
These are called linear, which suggests that
they are like a line, whereas they are not like
a line, but have an evident breadth, which a

line has not; however, they are the narrowest
THE SUNDEW. 89

leaves. If they should be as thick in the middle
as they are broad, then they are said to be subu-
late, or shaped like an awl, as in the leaves of
fir trees. When a leaf is much longer than
broad, and is broadest below the middle, nar-

rowed gradually upwards to a point, it is shaped

\

Fie. 29. Fie. 30.

Linzar Liar. Supunats Lear. Fic. 31.—LancroLaTe Lear.
like the head of a lance, and is called lanceolate.
There is a form of leaf, not so common, which
is broadest at the top and gradually narrowed
downwards, like a wedge ; it is wedge-shaped,

or cuneate. If the broad part at the top is short
90 THE SUNDEW.

and rounded, and the lower part tapering and
long, something like a spoon or ladle, it is said
to be spathulate, like the leaves of a daisy. The
remaining shapes are gradually shorter and
shorter as compared with their breadth.

When a leaf is blunt, or rounded at the ends,

and is from twice to four times as long as it is

Fic. 82.—CuNEATE OR WEDGE- Fic. 33. —SPATHULATE LEAF.
SHAPED LEAr.

broad, it is called oblong ; but when scarcely twice
as long as broad, but rather broader below the
middle than above it, then it has the shape of
an egg, and is called ovate. When reversed,
and the broadest part is above the middle, it is

obovate. The remaining forms are elliptical,
THE SUNDEW. 91

oval, and orbicular, because they have the shape
of an ellipse, or an oval, or an orb, These are
all the regular forms usually met with, but there
are a few less common and more singular shapes
to which names have been given.

Leaves with a triangular form are not com-

v

Fic. 385.—OvatTe Lear,

y

Fie. 84,—Onstone Lear. ¥ ic. 86.—OsovatEe LEAr.

mon, and the triangle is not perfect; but one of
them is called sagittate, because it is like an
arrow-head—that of the ‘lords and ladies”
is something like it. If the lower corners are

more spreading, it takes the shape of an old hal-
92 THE SUNDEW.

berd head, and is said to be hastate. There are
also two far more common shapes, but in these
the corners are rounded, especially the lower
corners, in a cordate leaf, which is what is com-

monly called heart-shaped. The other is broader



Fic. 37.—Sacirrate Leaves. Fic. 38.—Hasrate Lear.
than long, rounded above, and kidney-shaped,
or reniform. To these it seems only necessary
to add a form of leaf about as broad as long,
with the edge cut deeply into five lobes, like the

fingers of a spreading hand, and is therefore
THE SUNDEW. 93

called palmate. This is a lobed or lobate leaf,
for the projecting parts are called lobes. These



Fie. :39.—Corpate LEAr.

sorts of leaves are best described by the number



Fic. 40.—ReENtFoRM LEAr.

of their lobes—as two-lobed, three-lobed, five-
lobed, and so on. It is understood that the
94: THE SUNDEW.

divisions are not cut down to the midrib; for
if they are cut quite down to the midrib, it be-
comes a compound leaf, and the parts are not
lobes, but leaflets. Therefore, if a palmate-
shaped leaf has the divisions cut down to the

midrib, it is called a digitate leaf, with five



leaflets. And so the trefoil leaf of clover and
wood-sorrel is a leaf composed of three leaflets,
and is not a three-lobed leat.

There are such a large number of different
shapes in leaves, that a long catalogue of their
names might soon be made; but there is not

much wisdom in a multitude of names, and it will
THE SUNDEW. 95

always be best to confine ourselves to such com-
monly used names as we have given, if it can be
done, by the addition of an adverb, such as nar-
rowly lance-shaped, acutely ovate, or similar addi-

tions, whenever such accommodation is possible.



The preceding small figures of compound leaves
show a trefoil (1) leaf; two digitate leaves with
four and five leaflets (2, 3); two with a larger
number of leaflets, one a whorl of leaves (4, 5);
and a pinnate leaf (7); whilst the other group
exhibits forms of compound leaves of the pinnate
96 THE SUNDEW.

kind, excepting Figure 6. It will be seen that
Figures 8, 5, and 8 have no leaflet at the end,
but in 5 and 8 the apex is furnished with ten-
drils. In Figure 8 the leaflets are alternate,

and opposite in the rest.
eNG DW,

Alternate and opposite, 12.
Anther, 15.

Axillary flowers, 51.

Axil of leaves, 23.

Bees and flowers, 14.
Berry, 25.

Bilabiate corolla, 35, 65.
Bluebell of Scotland, 9.
Bracts, 30, 76.

Bramble fruit, 54.

Calceolate corolla, 36.
Calyx, 13.

Campanula, 10.
Campanulate corolla, 34.
Canterbury bells, 10.
Capitulum, 71.
Capsules, 25.
Carnivorous plants, 85.
Carpels, 51.
Compound umbel, 71.
Connate leaves, 22.
Cordate leaves, 92.
Corolla, 12.

Corymb, 69.

Creeping stem, 49.
Cross-leaved heath, 27.
Cuneate leaves, 89.
Cyme, 69.

Dahlia, 57.
Digitate leaves, 94.
(501)



~I



Double rose, 55.
Drosera, 81.
Drupe, 25.

Elliptical leaves, 90.
Eyebright, 61.

Filaments, 40.
Flower-clock, 20.
Fly-catchers, 83.
Fruits, 25.

Glands of leaves, 82.
Glandular hairs, 48.
Gorse, or furze, 40.

Hairs of plants, 47.
Harebell, 9.

Hastate leaves, 92.

Heather, 26.

Heather-beer, 31.
He-heather, 26.
Hypocrateriform corolla, 34.

Inflorescence, 64.
Infundibuliform corolla, 34.
Insect fertilization, 17.
Involucre, 75.

Irregular corolla, 35.

Keel, or vexillum, 39.

Ladies’ thimble, 10.
Lanceolate leaves, 89.
98 INDEX.

Leaves, forms of, 90.
Ligulate corolla, 36.
Linear leaves, 88.
Ling, 26.

London pride, 84.

Meteoric flowers, 21.
Monopetalous, 32.

Nuts, 25.

Oblong leaves, 90.
Obovate leaves, 90.
Opposite and alternate, 12.
Orbicular leaves, 91.

Oval leaves, 91.

Ovate leaves, 90.

Palmate leaves, 93.
Panicle, 69.
Papilionaceous corolla, 37.
Pappus, 77.

Pea-flower family, 38.
Perennials, 27.
Personate corolla, 35.
Petaloid stamens, 57.
Petals and stamens, 57.
Pimpernel, 21.
Pinnate leaves, 45.
Plantagenet, 41.

Pod, or legume, 25, 44.
Pollen, 15.
Polypetalous, 32.

Poor man’s weather-glass, 19.

Raceme, 28, 68.
Raspberry, 52.
Receptacle, 51,



Regular corolla, 35.
Reniform leaves, 92.
Ringent corolla, 35.
Root leaves, 11.

Rose family, 54.
Rotate corolla, 23, 34.

Sagittate leaves, 91.
Scarlet pimpernel, 19.
Scorpioid cyme, 70.
Scotch thistle, 73.
She-heather, 26.
Silver-weed, 47.
Spathulate leaves, 90.
Spike, 68.

Standard, 39.

Stigma, 16.

Story of the broom, 41.
Strawberry, 51.
Subulate leaves, 89.
Sundew, 81.

Temperature, 66.
Thistle down, 77.
Thistle head, 75.
Thistles, 72.

Trefoil leaves, 45.
Tubular corolla, 33, 76.

Umbel, 70.
Urceolate corolla, 33.

White water-lily, 57.
Wild rose, 59.

Wild thyme, 61.
Wings, or ale, 39.

Yellow broom, 38.
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PRIDE AND HIS PRISONERS.

THE SPANISH CAVALIER.

THE TRIUMPH OVER MIDIAN.

THE YounG Pitcrim.

Separately, 2s. 6d. each.

The Complete Series of Four Boxes, Price £4, 4s.

*.° A Handsome Present for Sunday or Day School Library.

T. Nelson and Sons, London, Edinburgh, and New York,
Sold by alt Booksellers,
De aed


5 s

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WAS

Sa

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