Citation
Down the lane and back in search of wild flowers

Material Information

Title:
Down the lane and back in search of 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:
114, [2] p., [2] leaves of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 19 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 )
Publishers' advertisements -- 1895 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1895
Genre:
Publishers' advertisements ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Scotland -- Edinburgh
United States -- New York -- New York
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

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

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University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
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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:
026652507 ( ALEPH )
ALG4959 ( NOTIS )
31311925 ( OCLC )

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Full Text












lo





2. VIOLE 3 3. DANDELION. 4 PILEWORT.





ND LADIES



DOWN DHE LANG
AINDD) BACK

IN SEARCH OF WILD FLOWERS

BY

Lncle Gatt



T NELSON AND SONS
London, Edinburgh, and New York



1895







PREFACE.

DEAR CHILDREN, this book is for you. I have writ-
ten it for you, to help you to learn a little more about
wild flowers than you know, and yet not to trouble
you with any more hard words than I can help.
You love flowers, and so do I; and the more you
know of them the better you will love them. I have
pointed out the way to Cissy how she was to find
out their little secrets, and what I have said to her I
say also to you. If you will follow her to do as she
did, you may learn, as she learned, that the most
common weed has a story to tell, which may be told
to a child; that nothing, to Him who made it, is
common or unclean; and that wayside weeds have
their place to fill, and their duty to do in the world,
if only—
“To comfort man—to whisper hope
Whene’er his faith is dim ;

For Who so careth for the flowers
Will much more care for him.”

M. C. COOKE.



BUTTERCUPS, ....
VIOLETS,
DANDELIONS, ....
LORDS AND LADIES,
RED CAMPION,

ST. JOHN’S WORT,
MALLOW,

GREAT BINDWEED,

CONTE NTS:









“DOWN THE LANE AND BACK.”



BULTERCURS.

“ Buttercups and daisies,
Oh, the pretty flowers,
Coming in the spring-time

To tell of sunny hours.”

HUS sang Cissy, as her uncle waited for
her to take the usual morning stroll down
the lane.

“ Buttercups are running in your head with
the sunshine,” said he, “and we must try to find
them.”

“T love buttercups,” she added, “and I love
butter, and the sunshine is so nice.”

“ And the spring-time, when ‘ children are let
loose in the fields and gardens. They hold butter-



12 BUTTERCUPS.

cups under each other’s chins to see if they love
butter.’

‘The flowers
Children hold beneath their chins,
So to learn who ‘tis that sins
When the butter wastes by night ;

And whose chin looks yellow bright,

That’s the rogue.’”

“Ts that the reason they are called ‘ butter-
cups’ ?” inquired Cissy.

“Tt may be so, and partly because it was a
belief amongst country people that when these
flowers are plentiful in pastures the cows eat
them, and it gives the yellow colour to the butter.”

“Do they ?”

“No, Cissy ; the cows leave the buttercups
alone, and do not eat them, because they are not
pleasant.”

“ And are all buttercups alike ?”

“There are about a dozen different flowers
which are called ‘ buttereups,’ and all very much
alike to look at, only that some are smaller than
others.”



34S



Fic. 1.—Mrapow Crowroor.

1, 2, Plant reduced; 8, Section of Flower; 4, Petal; 5, Anther; 6, Cluster of
Fruits ; 7, Single Carpel; 8, Section.







BUTTERCUPS. 15

“ And what is the ‘ crowfoot’ ?”

“Only another name for ‘buttercup.’ Chil-
dren call them all buttercups, because they think
them all alike.”

“T suppose there is a meadow buttercup and
a field buttercup ; is there, uncle ?”

“Well, there are two ‘meadow buttercups’—
one of them with a swollen root, like a bulb, but
it is not a bulb, like that of the wild hyacinth ;
and the other one has no swelling at the root.
Some of the others, too, are now and then found
in meadows.”

“ And in the fields ?”

“The ‘corn crowfoot, and another one with
small flowers.”

“That does not make up the dozen,” added
Cissy.

“T suppose not, because, besides the water
crowfoot, there are two sorts of ‘spearwort’
that love ditches, and the ‘goldylocks’ which
grows in woods.”

“ And the others ?”

“Not of much consequence to you or me,
y



16 BUTTERCUPS.

except the one we are going to find, which is
the ‘creeping buttercup,’ that grows in lanes
as well as in the meadows, for it loves damp
places.”

“Ts that the only one we should find in the
lane?”

“Not the only one, for another of the meadow
kinds, without the bulbous root, is mostly found
in dry places; and there is the pretty ‘celan-
dine, which I should hardly call a ‘ buttercup,
and that is dreadfully common in lanes, on banks,
and under trees.”

“What a lot!”

“Too many for our poor brains, Cissy, and so
we will leave most of them to take care of them-
selves.” .

“ And only talk about those we can find.
See, there are some; I know by their yellow
colour, it is so bright.”

“Just as I expected, that is the celandine ;
but we shall soon find another in yonder damp
corner by the ditch.”

“Oh yes. And what a lot of big leaves!”

(497)



BUTTERCUPS. 17

“The roots are a bunch of rooting threads,
not thickened as in the celandine. But you must
try to find out why it is called the creeping
buttercup.” *

“Tt is like the strawberry plant, with ‘run-
ners’ growing out from amongst the leaves, and
they poke themselves into the ground, and make
roots,” said Cissy.

“That’s a funny way of putting it; but I
know your meaning—that runners shoot out from
the old tufts, and these runners soon thrust their
ends into the ground, and make roots, while a
tuft of leaves grows upwards into a young plant.”

“ That's it.”

“And so these broad patches of plants keep
growing bigger and bigger, and creep further
and further over the ground, until they may be
a yard or two across, and include hundreds of
plants.”

“With such dull, dark-green, hairy leaves,
pale on the under side, and woolly as well as

the stalks.”

* Ranunculus repens.
(497) 2



18 BUTTERCUPS.

“The leaves are large, and so deeply divided
that it is not easy to call them by any shape
that is known, or to explain clearly what their

shape is.”




“T should call them ‘trinity leaves,” said
v4
7
er ‘A \ if i ps a
O72
oe



oY CY, i

Fic. 2.—LEar or Creeping Butrercup.
(Reduced.)

Cissy, ‘because they are like three leaves in
one.”

“Or triple leaves, or three-leaved leaves, or
three-bladed leaves, whichever you please, for they

are like three leaves joined into one. The middle



BUTTERCUPS. 19

leaflet is stalked, and each side leaflet 1s without
a stalk. Then each leaflet is cut down deeply
with a broad notch into three lobes, and each
lobe is notched again at the edge. It is so hard
to describe in words a leaf so much divided.”

“Well, uncle, I could only call it a trinity
leaf, and each one of the three is three-parted
again, and then I stop.”

‘Perhaps you would like to taste a leaf, Cissy,
because you may if you like. Nearly all the
buttercup leaves would bite your tongue, and I
would not tell you to taste them, but this one
is not unpleasant.”

“Not even the celandine ?”

“Not even that. The stalks to the leaves
you have gathered are quite long—four or five
inches—and downy ; but they do not all rise from
the root, as the flower-stem is also long and
branched, bearing smaller leaves, which have
shorter stalks.”

“And the flowers are not like the rising sun.”

“ But more like a ‘ buttercup’ as it should be.

Let us pull one of the flowers in pieces, that we



20 BUTTERCUPS.

may compare them with those of the celandine.
You will notice at once that the petals are
broader and round at the ends, not pointed as
in the celandine; and there are not so many—
only five. Then the outer circle, or calyx, has
five sepals, and these are hairy, like the stem
and leaves. So you see that there is a great
difference in the flowers of the two plants, al-
though both of them are yellow and have a large
number of stamens, said to be definite, or more
than ten.

“T think, Cissy, that it is quite time for us
to turn back and take a last fond look at the

little ‘ celandine.’

‘In the lane—there’s not a place,
Howsoever mean it be,

But ’tis good enough for thee.’ ”

“What a lot of it, and how different it looks
from the ‘buttercup’ !” said Cissy, as she began
to root up some of the plants.

“The creeping roots are very useful to the

plant, because, although so common, it seldom



BUTTERCUPS. or

bears ripe seeds, but spreads itself by means of
its roots.”

“Then these are both of them ‘creeping
buttercups' in the lane?” inquired Cissy.

“Yes, dear; but, as I told you before, this is
not a proper buttercup, and we will call it either
the ‘celandine’ or the ‘ pilewort,’ whichever you
please.”

“ And is ‘ pilewort’ one of its names ?”

“Yes; and an old one too. But you must
look at the roots well, and see how different they
are from the roots of the ‘creeping buttercup,’
for they are thick and club-shaped, like little
tubers.”

“Tubers, uncle! what do you mean by
‘tubers’ ?”

“What we call a ‘potato’ is a tuber; not a
bulb, but an underground swelling or knob,
which if planted would bud and grow into a
new plant. But it is not an underground bud,
such as a bulb is, only a thickened root, which
may bud in two or three places. A bulb isa

single bud, and only grows from the crown.”



22 BUTTERCUPS.

“T shall know better by-and-by; but I can
see how different it is, and I know it is not a
bulb, like the onion and hyacinth.”

“Now for the shining, glossy, bright ereen
leaves, they are very different too. You see

that, as well as being small, they are regular,

/

Fie. 3.—Lear or Prteworr.

and not divided at the edges with deep notches.
So that they are heart-shaped, and not more
than an inch long, or seldom longer; and the
edge all round is a little toothed with blunt,
rounded teeth.”

“Yes, I can see that; and they are rather

thick and stiff and shining, something like a



BUTTERCUPS. 23

violet leaf in shape, but thicker, and so
smooth.”

“ And they have long stalks, which come up
from the roots, so that there is no stem except
the flower-stalks.”

“The leaves all grow close to the ground, and
the flower-stalks rise up in the middle.”

“You are quite sure that you would know the
leaves again if there were no flowers ?”

“JT think so. They are so shining, and such
a lot of them grow together.”

“The flower-stalks are longer than your finger,
and a little longer than mine, some of them with
one or two little leaves growing out of them,
and a single flower on the top.”

“T see that, and the star-shaped flowers.”

“True: the flowers are more star-shaped
than in the buttercups, with eight or nine
flower-leaves, of a bright, shining yellow colour,
standing out all round and forming a golden
star.”

“What are the flower-leaves called ?”

“ Petals. Pet-als.”



24, BUTTERCUPS.

“TI can’t think of that, it is such a funny
word.”

“Indeed you will think of it, because I shall
say it over so often that you cannot forget.
Did you ever read the song to the small celan-
dine, where it is supposed to have taught the
painter of sign-boards how to paint the rising
sun?”

“T do not think so.”

“Then here it is :—

‘T have not a doubt but he,

Whosoe’er the man might be

Who the first with pointed rays
(Workman worthy to be sainted)

Set the sign-board in a blaze,
When the rising sun he painted,

Took the fancy from a glance

At thy glittering countenance. ”

“T did not think of the sun,” said Cissy
only thought of a star.”
“But when evening comes, instead of coming

out, as the stars do, the celandine closes up its



BUTTERCUPS. 25

petals, and then it can be seen how they are
tinged and striped with green beneath, as if to
conceal them.”

“What time do they open in the morning
and close at night ?”

“T think that depends so much on the weather ;
for the petals close at the coming of rain, what-
ever the hour. The celandine is almost the
earliest flower to blossom with us, even as early

as February.

‘Ere a leaf is on the bush,

In the time before the thrush

Has a thought about her nest,
Thou wilt come with half a call,

Spreading out thy glossy breast
Like a careless prodigal ;

Telling tales about the sun,

When we've little warmth, or none.’

“Perhaps in the average of years we should
say that the celandine flowers in March.”
« And before any of the real buttercups ?”

“Yes; but when the petals close you will see



26 BUTTERCUPS.

three smaller green leaves beneath the flowers,
which enclose them in the bud.”

“Tn the middle of the open flower there is a
tuft of threads, but I always forget the name of
them.”

“ Stamens,”

“O uncle, why can’t we call them something
that we can’t forget? Flowers are so pretty,
but they have so many hard names.”

“Well then, Cissy, sit down and count the
stamens, and you may call them what you please.”

“T find twenty-four in this flower. Is that

the right number ?”



Tic. 4.—Section or FrowEr or Burrercve.
a, Sepal; 0b, Petal.

“That will do. Then there are the flower-
leaves or petals.”



BUTTERCUPS. 27

“Yes; twelve.”

“Not exactly. There are twelve altogether ;
but there are three outside ones, which we call
the sepals, and nine inner ones, which are the
petals. In many flowers the sepals are green,
but in some they are coloured, as in the little
celandine.”

“Then how shall I know them?”

“Call the outer circle sepals, and the inner

petals, and you will usually be right.



Fic. 5.—Srep-VEssets oF BuTTEeRcur.

1, Petal; 2, Ovary; 3, 4, Sections; 5, Section cut through a cluster of ovaries,

“Tn all the buttereups, when the fiower-leaves
fall, the seed-vessels will be seen remaining on

the stem in a roundish cluster of about twelve.



28 BUTTERCUPS.

Some other wild flowers have only one seed-
vessel, it may be a berry, or a pod, or a capsule,
which keeps on growing after the petals fall
away; so you see that it is of importance al-
ways to find out, if we can, what kind of seed-
vessel any wild flower has, and if it is single, or
whether several of them grow in a cluster.”



Fic. 6.—ButTrercues.



VOR Eas.

id HERE, Cissy, in that quiet little nook

you should find the March violets ; but
you must use both eyes and nose, and what
you cannot see you must smell.”

“Oh, they are lovely; I hope I shall find
some.”

« And whilst you are looking I will tell you
a short story of them. You have read in your
history of Napoleon the Great, the Emperor of
France ?”

“ How he fought many battles, and was then
taken to Elba, and escaped, and came back to
France.”

“Right; but you have not said that his
friends welcomed him in on his return, on the

20th of March, by wearing bunches of violets.”



30 VIOLETS.

“T did not know that.”

“Nor that whilst he was away, before his
return, his friends used the violet as a token.
If any one was asked, ‘Do you like the violet 2’
and the answer was ‘ Well!’ he was hailed as
a friend, and was told, ‘It will appear again in
spring.’ ”

“The violet was used as a token, because it
comes in March, to tell all his friends that he
would come back in the spring, as the violets do.”

“Yes; but after the battle of Waterloo he
did not come back, and no one was allowed
to wear violets in France: so that when the
Frenchmen could no longer make war upon
men, they made war upon the violets.”

“ Now, uncle, as I have found two or three, I
shall make war upon them, and capture them
too!”

“You have no doubt that you have found the
right flower ?” *

“T should think not; just smell of it.”

“* And what does it smell like 2?”

* Viola odoratu.



VIOLETS. 31

{2

‘“ Why, violets, of course

“Yes; but that’s a girl’s answer. I want you
to tell me, as if I had never seen one, what the
scent of the violet is like.”

“ But I can’t tell you; it is like violets, and
nothing else.”

“T suppose you are right, and that there is

no other scent exactly like it.

‘A lowly flower, in secret bower,
Invisible I dwell ;
For blessing made, without parade,

Known only by my smell’ ”

“Do the sweet-violets appear first ? because
there are some violets without scent.”

“Yes, the sweet ones come first, for a short
time, and then comes the dog-violet.”

“ And they are shams!”

“No, Cissy, not exactly shams, because they
are true to their nature, and make no pretension
to be what they are not.”

“But they mimic the true violet in colour

and shape, without scent.”



32 VIOLETS.

“You might as well say that they are
naughty violets, that have done some wrong,
and lost the virtue of sweetness.”

“T don’t care, I don’t like them, for they
deceive me.”

‘ Although the fault may be your own, for
not knowing them better. We shall see. Now
you must get a plant up by the roots. Never
forget the roots !”

“Oh, they are just the same as many other
roots—little bunches of threads or fibres.”

“Just so; and you may as well call it a fibrous
root as a bunch of fibres. You are sure it is not
a creeping root ?”

“ Look, uncle, here is something like a runner
which joins two plants together !”

“T thought you were too hasty, and that
you would find, in a large patch like this, some
of the plants made runners. Do not hurry so
much to say whether the plant has a stem or
not.”

“There are flower-stalks coming up from the

root, but I cannot find one with a stem.”



VIOLETS. 33

“Then you think we may say that it has no
stem, because the dog-violet has a stem ?”

“That is another difference besides the scent.”

‘““ And now as to the shape of the leaves.”

«They are nearly heart-shaped, are they not,
with long foot-stalks ?”

‘“« And the edges are not quite even?”



Â¥ie. 7.--LEAF OF SWEET- VIOLET.

“T hardly know what to call them, but the
edge is toothed all round with blunt rounded
teeth.”

“ And the upper surface is smooth, but the
under side is sometimes a little downy, with
very fine hairs. If you lay one side by side

with a leaf of the little celandine, you will soon
(497) 3



34 VIOLETS.

see the difference, though they are nearly the
same in size and shape.”

“Yes: the violet is thinner, and not shining,
or of so bright a green colour.”

“T suppose you would say that the flower-
stalk is as long as your finger?”

“ Yes, and bent over at the top.”

“Well, Cissy, how would you explain to
Lotty what the flower is like if you had not
one to show her?”

“T should say it was of a deep violet-blue
colour.”

“Don’t you think purple would be better than
to say violet, when you are speaking of a violet?”

“Ts it not bluish-purple then?” —

“Yes; but you are not to forget that some-
times it is pinkish or white.”

“ Not often, as none of these are white.”

‘“‘ But all are paler at the centre, or eye.”

‘“ And each flower has five separate leaves—
two standing up at the top, one on each side,
and one at the bottom, and all nearly of the

same size and shape.”



VIOLETS. 35

“Perhaps the bottom one is a very little
broadest ; but turn it over and look at the back
of the flower.”

“ There is a curious little horn sticking out at
the bottom, almost like a spur. Are all violet
flowers spurred like that?”

“Yes: and the bottom leaf, or petal, of the
flower is narrowed behind and forms the spur,
which pushes aside two of the little outer green
leaves of the flower, called the calyx or cup.”

«“ And I see the little threads inside the eye
of the flower. It looks like an eye, doesn’t it?”

“Tf you will count the outside little green
leaves of the cup, you will find five; the purple
leaves are five, and the threads inside the flower
are also five—all fives.”

“ And where are the seeds ?”

« When the flowers die and fall off, they leave
behind them a little green swelling; this grows
into a capsule or seed-box, which splits into
three parts, and allows the seeds to fall out.”

« And that is called the fruit?”

“Yes, that is the regular and proper fruit.



36 VIOLETS.

In the violets and some other plants there is
another contrivance for growing seeds that
sometimes puzzles little people, and not very
long ago puzzled older people also.”

“ What is that?”

“JT don’t think we shall find any to-day ; but
there are little secret flowers—I cannot tell you
the long name they are called by—yet these
little flowers have no pretty purple leaves, and
they only look like little green buds, growing
hidden, in out-of-the-way places, about the
plant.”

“ And they don’t look pretty or smell nice?”

“No; they are for use, not beauty.”

“ And for what use?”

“They become at last changed into seed-
boxes, or capsules, containing more seeds.”

“Then if little girls were to gather all the
violet flowers they could find, there would be
no seed from the proper flowers left on the
plant ?”

“No; so that by-and-by, as the old plants
died, there would be less and less, and at length



VIOLETS. 37

no violet plants at all, unless young plants were
born in other ways.”

“ By the seeds in the secret flowers?”

“Ay, and by the runners from the old
plants ; for you must not forget the use of the
runners.”

‘“ Has the dog-violet secret flowers as well ?”

“Yes, and several other violets, but net
pansies.”

“ And are pansies a kind of violet ?”

“Indeed they are, for the wild pansy is the
common field heart’s-ease.”

“‘T should like to find the secret flowers. Do
they grow on any other plants except violets ?”

“There is another pretty little plant that we
must seek some day in the woods. It is called
the wood-sorrel, with trefoil leaves, like clover
leaves, and such pretty flowers. Secret flowers
are to be found on that plant, and also upon
some few others.

“T suppose, as you are such a lover of violets,
that you will think they have need of no other
virtue than their odour and their humility.”



38 VIOLETS.

‘What else do they need, uncle ?”
“Then you will agree that—

‘Long as there are violets

They will have a place in story.”

“Yes; but what other virtues have they ?”

“Well, the flowers were at one time given as
medicine to children, and the roots of many
species contain an active substance still used by
doctors.”

“Never mind; I won’t be set against them.”

“Not even because violet is not really an
English name, but imitated from viola, which
was the Latin name of some fragrant flower
which might not have been a violet at all.”

“JT think they deserve to be found all the
world over.”

“ And they are nearly so, but not often sweet-
scented ; and so there are many countries where
the sweet-violet and the little English daisy are
unknown.”

Cissy and her uncle found no “ dog-violets” on

that day, and not until two or three weeks later,



VIOLETS. 39

when their gossip on violets was taken up again
and made more complete.

‘“ Now that we have found the ‘dog-violet,’”
said Cissy, ‘“ I still think the other is best, because

the colour is deeper, to say nothing of the scent.”

\
\ 1

|

f \
Ny
~] :

|

Fic. 8.—Lear or Doa-VIoLet.

Ne?

“That is not the point,” said uncle: “you
called the ‘dog-violet’ a sham, and you must see
that it is not.”

“ And what must I look at?”

“ Firstly, the stem. Now the sweet-violet has
no stem at all, and this has a stem with leaves
upon it.”



40 VIOLETS.

“So it has, but that is not much.”

“ Well, then, compare the leaves.”

“Qh, they are a little different, but not
much.”

“ And the flowers ?”

“Not so pretty, and with no scent. Why
was it called the dog-violet ?”

“ Possibly the animal’s name, attached to
flowers, was meant to point them out as be-
ing less good than some other flower or plant
which was something like them. We have
dog-rose to set against the rose; dog-violet to
place against the violet ; horse-chestnut against
the chestnut ; cow-parsnip against the pars-
nip; and horse-mushroom against the mush-
room.”

“ So we have three kinds of wild violet in this

country ; and is that all?”

“By no means; there may be eight British
violets. But the bog-violet and the mountain-
violet are not likely to come in our way; and,
after all, you care most for the sweet-violet, and
very little for any other.



VIOLETS. Al

‘Smell at my violets! I found them where
The liquid south stole o’er them, on a bank
That leaned to running water. There's to me
A daintiness about these early flowers

That touches one like poetry.’ ”

“Can you tell me no other story of the
violet ?”

“Only a short one about Io, who was the
daughter of Atlas. One day she was being pur-
sued by Apollo, who was the sun, you know,
and she fled from him into a wood, where
Diana changed her into a violet. Perhaps this
is only another way of saying that violets grow
in the woods to escape the sun.

‘The trembling violet, which eyes

2

The sun but once, and unrepining dies.’



DANDELIONS.*

¢

: UNCLE, mamma says we should not
pick the nasty dandelions. But they
are not nasty, are they ?”

“Well, Cissy, some people call them nasty,
but I don’t.”

‘Why do they call them nasty ?”

“ Perhaps, my dear, because they do not smell
very nice, and perhaps because they have a
sticky juice, which makes the hands dirty.”

“Ts that ail the reason, uncle? for Lotty says
that country children will not pick dandelions,
and some of them aren’t afraid of making them-
selves dirty.”

“Indeed, Cissy, I have heard the warning
not to smell the dandelions; but I fancy the

* Taraxacum officinale.



aon

|













































































































































































































Fic. 9.—DANDELIONS.










































































































































































































































‘DANDELIONS. 45

young urchins always do it all the same, and no
harm comes of it.”

“Why are they called ‘dandelions,’ uncle?”

“Well, my child, I think we had better walk
down the lane, and find the plant growing, when
I can show you the cause for the name.”

No sooner was this plan agreed to than Cissy
and her uncle, hand in hand, were strolling
along a quiet country lane, in quest of the
humble and common plant of which they had
just been talking. Some of the leaves may be
found all the year round, but the flowers only in
summer and autumn. In some places the chil-
dren call all the yellow flowers which have the
star shape by the name of dandelion, but there
is only one kind of plant and flower which has
the right to be so called, and that is the one
which Cissy is looking after and her uncle has
already found.

“ Here is one, Cissy, without any flower ; but
we must dig it up by the root.”

After digging for some time in silence and
loosening the soil all round, Cissy complained



46 DANDELIONS.

that the root was so long and so deep that she
could not tear it up.

“T am glad that you have found what a
strong and long root the dandelion has,” replied
the uncle, “and how difficult it is to pull it
up. Some people think, when dandelions grow
amongst the grass on a lawn, that it needs
only a weed-‘spud’ and a push to clear them
all away; but the diggers only break off the
top of the root, and then they find, soon after,
that the rest of the root, still in the ground,
crows again stronger than ever.”

“Oh, never mind the root, uncle; I am in
such a hurry to know the meaning of the name.”

‘“ All in good time, Cissy. I only want the
leaves for the present; but they must be whole
leaves, and not bitten by the slugs or gnawed
by the rabbits.” __

“T can soon find some beautiful leaves, and
we need not have been digging at the roots
at all.”

“My dear Cissy, your labour has not been in
vain ; because you will not forget that if this



DANDELIONS. AT

weed has no stem, it has plenty of root. Now
you must smooth out five or six leaves and lay
them flat on this book, so as to see their
shape.”

“Yes, uncle. They are long leaves with such





Fig. 10,—DANDELION LEAF.
(Reduced)

a funny zigzagey edge that they look as if the
slugs had been biting pieces out of them all the
way down.”

‘Just so: the edges of the leaves are toothed,
and by that I mean that sharp points stick out



48 DANDELIONS.

all the way along each side, like teeth in a large
saw. Some of these teeth are large and some
are small, but all are sharp pointed, with the
points curved backwards towards the bottom of
the leaf.”

“Ah yes; I see all of them are hooked
downwards like a cat’s claw.”

“ Not quite the best likeness, Cissy. I should
have said, perhaps, like a lion’s tooth ;- but you
never saw a lion’s tooth, did you?”

“No, uncle; lions don’t grow in our woods.”

“Did you ever see pussy’s teeth? When the
cat opens her mouth do you watch her teeth—
sharp pointed, with all the points curved back-
wards, just as the lion’s teeth are; only the
lion’s are so much the largest.”

“T see now—‘ dandy-lion.’”

“Not exactly, Cissy. It was at one time
‘dent-de-leon, which means ‘tooth of lion’ or
‘lion’s teeth, but has fallen to ‘dandelion,’
which means the same thing ; because the points
of the leaf are curved backwards, ending in a
sharp point like lion’s teeth.”



DANDELIONS. 49

“Yes; but lions do not always show their
teeth.”

“True, my dear; but you remember on the
village green at Wickham what we saw as we
rode past one day. Outside the public-house
there was a large board upon which was painted a
red lion, standing on his hind legs, and pawing
with his fore feet in the air, his mouth wide
open, showing his large teeth. He always
shows his teeth. I could show you a book in
which it is written, ‘The jagged edges of the
leaf are like the rows of teeth that garnish the
jaws of the red lion which announces the head
inn of some village or town.”

“ But, uncle, would lions dance on their hind
legs, like dancing-bears ?”

“Perhaps not, Cissy, unless they are red
lions. Could you count how many leaves there
are on this dandelion plant, all bent back to
the ground and lapping each other, spreading
like rays, making a rosette of green leaves?”

“T don’t think I know what a rosette is.”

“Well, dear, a rosette is an imitation of a
497) 4



50 DANDELIONS.

rose, or supposed to be, in which a great num-
ber of leaves have their lower ends all joined
together in the centre and the other ends spread-
ing out all round, as they do in a marigold
flower, or a plant of houseleek, or London pride,
or a dandelion.”

“T like a rose better than a rosette.”

“ But each one is useful in its place.”

“QO uncle, what can be the use of the dande-
lion rosette ? it is only a common weed.” __

“Cissy, call nothing common or unclean,
until you know it well, and can find no good
Eb

“ But I do know the dandelion !”

“ Not yet, my child; you have not even tasted
ibis

“O uncle!”
© * You like lettuce, and celery, and water-cress,
and other green leaves, and call them ‘salad.’”

“Yes, I like salad; but I don’t think I shall
like this, because it tastes bitter.” »~

“ And so does endive, until it is blanched.”

‘“‘ Blanched! what is that?”



DANDELIONS. 51

“ Blanched simply means bleached-—losing its
green colour. Suppose we place a piece of tile
or slate on this dandelion plant, and leave it
there for a week or two, and then look at it
again. The leaves will be there, just as before ;
but instead of being green in colour, they will
be turned sickly white. They will be blanched,
and, if you taste them again, no longer bitter.
By shutting off the light the green colour will
not be formed in the leaves, nor will the bitter
taste, both of which require the light. So that
by blanching them these leaves become more
pleasant to eat. In this state dandelion leaves
are as good in salads as endive, and are con-
stantly eaten in that way by some people,
without being blanched at all.”

“Then shutting out the light makes them
better. Why don’t they always grow in the
dark ?”

“Yes, Cissy, shutting off the light makes
them better for eating, because more tender and
less bitter ; but at the same time they are made

what we should call sickly, unhealthy, and



52 DANDELIONS.

would be killed at last. Celery, endive, sea-kale,
etc., are all treated in a like manner for the
same purpose. So you see they cannot always
grow in the dark, and, like most little girls, do
not like to be in the dark.”

“TJ didn’t think that the dandelion was useful
to any one but slugs and rabbits.”

“And you were mistaken, because those
troublesome large roots are useful also.”

“What! to ‘people’ ?”

“Certainly to ‘people, as you call them.
The roots are dug out of the ground and washed
clean. Then they are cut in pieces and dried
in the sun, in the air, or in heated rooms.
When quite dry and hard they may be grated
or pounded, and the powder made into pills,
which are useful as a medicine.”

“Dandelion pills?”

“Yes, Cissy ; and even something more than ,
that, because when the dried roots are roasted
until they are crisp, they can be ground and
made into coffee.”

“ Not real coffee, uncle ?”



DANDELIONS. 53

“Not real coffee, of course, but dandelion.
coffee, which some people like as well as they
do real coffee ; and it is sold in the shops, some-
times pure and sometimes mixed with real coffee,
and either way makes a very pleasant, cheap,
and sober drink.”

“ But I wish you to tell me something about
the flowers, they look so curious.”

“Let us spread your white handkerchief on
the grass and pull one of the flowers in pieces,
gently and carefully pulling off every one of the
yellow leaves, so that we may count them and
not lose one of them.”

“See the little tuft of white hairs at the bot-
tom of all of them.”

“Yes, but do you know that they are not
simple leaves, such as they are in many common
flowers, but each one of those yellow florets, as
they are called, is a perfect flower ; so that there
are a great number of very little flowers, grow-
ing together into a compound or composite
flower. Just you count them and see how

many there are.”



54 DANDELIONS.

“TJ find a hundred and fifty florets in my

flower.”
“ And in mine there are one hundred and



Dandelion Clock. Pappus and Fruit. Floret.

Fic, 11.—DANDELION.

sixty ; so that we cannot call it a single flower,
but a cluster of florets, or a flower-head.”
“And is every one of these a perfect flower ?”



DANDELIONS. 55

“ Certainly it is; of which I will convince you
directly. They are all alike, too, in the dande-
lion, but they are not all alike in the daisy,
which has yellow florets in the middle, and
white ones all around them.”

“Then the daisy and the dandelion are both
of them what you call compound flowers ?”

“Yes; but the daisy has a disc of yellow
flowers, with a ray of strap-shaped white
flowers.”

“ And are these florets of the dandelion all of
them strap-shaped flowers ?”

“See, the bottom of the floret is a tiny tube
with a long, yellow, strap-shaped flower-leaf on
one side, nearly the same width all the way,
and little notches at the top end.”

“Oh, what a funny little yellow column stands
up in the middle of each floret, which is split at
the top, and each half of it curls outwards!
what is that?”

“Jt is the style, and the five stamens are
around it, but so closely glued to the column

that you cannot see them with the naked eye.”



56 DANDELIONS.

‘“‘ And where will the seeds come ?”

“The ovary, or young seed-vessel, is at the
bottom of the floret, just a little swelling, and
then it is narrowed above a little way, and then
swells again, just where the fringe of white
hairs stand up all around it.”

‘“ What are the hairs for?”

“That is the pappus. When the florets die
off and the seed-vessel grows ripe, the narrow
part above it gets longer and longer, and carries
up with it the tuft of white hairs, which spread
all round, so that when the seeds are ripe the
pappus at the top is like a parachute, which
floats in the air.”

“ And then we blow it off to see what o’clock
it is!”

“Certainly. What you do is just what is
written in the book:—‘The little girls adorn
themselves with chains and curls of dandelions,
pull out the yellow leaves to see if the schoolboy
loves them, and blow the down from the leafless
stalk to find out if their mothers want them at

99)

home.



DANDELIONS. 57

PPh

“We call them ‘ dandelion clocks.’

“But, Cissy, we are forgetting the flower-
stalk, after plucking off the florets. You must
look at it, and see that the top of the stem forms
a little cushion upon which stand the florets,
packed closely side by side; and by-and-by as
the seeds ripen they stand upon the cushion,
until they are blown away by the wind.”

“ And form a pretty globe of down.”

“You remember that in most flowers there
is a cup or a ring of small green leaves just
beneath the flower, called the calyx, which is
another word for cup. In the dandelion and
other compound flowers there is also a circle,
or two or three rings, of small scaly green leaves
just beneath the flower-head.”

“There are two rings of leaves in the dande-
lion.”

“ And the outer circle bend backwards. But
these green bracts are not a calyx or cup, but
a general involucre. Every floret has a substi-
tute for the calyx in the fringe of white hairs
or pappus. The involucre protects the young



58 DANDELIONS.

flowers in the bud, and as the seeds ripen the
whole of the leaflets bend backwards, close to
the stem.”

“Can we find a ‘dandelion clock’ with ripe
seeds ?”

“T am afraid not; but you will remember
them, and I can remind you of one or two
things. When all the fruits of the composite
flowers of the dandelion are ripe, they have a
long stiff bristle at the top which supports the
parachute or flattened pappus of white hairs.
All the combined parachutes of one receptacle
form a delicate round ball, but the fruits are
attached so slightly to the cushion that a puff
of wind will blow them away. The use of the
downy head is to cause the seeds to be floated
in the air, and thus easily scattered. When a
suitable place is reached, the seed settles and

begins to grow; and this completes our history.”



LORDS AND LADIES.*

“ C* HARP eyes, Cissy, in the hedge-bank, for

the flower of ‘lords and ladies.’ I can
see plenty of the glossy green leaves, but not
a flower as yet.”

‘Show me the leaves, uncle; I am not sure
that I know them.”

“ There they are, scores of them, rising out of
the ground without any stem—bright, shining,
arrow-shaped leaves, many of them spotted with
blackish spots.”

”?

“That's the ‘wake-robin,’” exclaimed Cissy ;
“ T know the horrid leaves.”

“Why call them horrid leaves? for I think
them handsome leaves.”

“Yes, uncle, to look at; but I bit one of

* Arum maculatum.



60 LORDS AND LADIES.

them one day, and, oh, it was horrid! it al-
most blistered my lips and tongue.”

“You were foolish, Cissy. I do not know
any leaf that would punish you so much for
tasting, and you will never wish to taste it
again.”

“That I shan’t. But why ‘lords and ladies’ ?”

“ And why ‘wake-robin,’ or ‘ cuckoo-pint,’ or
‘calves’ foot,’ or ‘starch-wort’? All are names
for the same plant.”

“Perhaps ‘cuckoo-pint’ because it comes
with the cuckoo.”

‘Perhaps ‘starch-wort’ because starch was
made from the roots, to starch the big ruffles
which were worn in the reign of Queen Eliza-
beth.”

“ Let’s dig up the roots.”

“They are almost like a bulb, but solid, and
not with one coat over another as in the onion.”

“Hach root has three, four, or five leaves on
long stalks rising from it.”

“ And in the autumn a new root grows beside

the old root, and as the berries ripen the old



LORDS AND LADIES. 61

root dies and rots, and the new root rests through
the winter, to send up green leaves and flowers
in the spring.”

« And I know it flowers in a hood.”

“There is one at last! See, this round,
greenish, spotted stalk comes up from the root
amongst the leaves, and on the top of the stalk
stands a long hollow husk or sheath, very pale
ereen, puffed out like a bladder, sharp-pointed
at the top, and split down on one side nearly to
the bottom.”

“The hood, or sheath, must be six inches
long.”

“Yes, Cissy, quite as much as that, and an
inch thick in the middle.”

« And is that sheath the flower ?”

‘No, not the flower.”

‘Nor yet the flower-cup ?”

“No; it is like nothing that we have seen.
It isa sheath or hood, sometimes called a spathe ;
but it is only a wrapper, or sheath, to protect
the flowers that are inside.”

“Then we may cut it off? H



62 LORDS AND LADIES.



Fic. 12.—SpaTHEe AND LEAF.

“Yes, and lay bare the flowers hidden within.
The upper part, for more than half its length,
is a purple club, like a pestle or clapper, rounded



LORDS AND LADIES. 63

at the top and narrowed downwards, and paler
below. Then again it becomes thicker, and around
it a ring of little knobs with hairs at the top.
Below this is a ring of male flowers, /
and lower still a broader band of female
flowers, and then follows the flower-stem,
which runs down to the root.”

“Then it is not one flower, but a host
of flowers shut up in a sheath ?”

“Yes: passing upwards from the bot-
tom there is a band of female flowers,
then a band of male flowers, then a ring of

barren flowers, and above all these the up-



right purple club, and all enclosed in a long
sheath which is split down on one side.” Fie. 18.—

ef SPADIX
“The flowers must be very small. or Lorps

“ And so they are, and as simple as they Laptes,
can be. The male flowers are only pollen-boxes,
and thé female flowers are only seed-cells, or
young fruits, containing the minute ego-like or
bud-like seeds.”

“ How many flowers are there in one of the

sheaths 2”



64, LORDS AND LADIES.

“JT know not, but perhaps scores. Only a
few, or not more than a dozen, of the fruits
ripen. Later in the season, clusters of the red
fruits, of the size of red currants, are to be seen
crowded together on a stem amongst the leaves,
quite naked—the club and all above the ring of
female flowers, and every shred of the sheath,
dead and gone.”

“They must be easily seen.”

“Tndeed they are. And it is said that phea-
sants eat them, and perhaps other birds also ;
but I do not wish you to try them.”

“Thank you; I had rather not. I have no
wish to taste again.”

“You had enough with tasting the leaves.
I am told that if the fresh leaves are bruised
and laid on the skin they will raise a blis-
ter.”

“Do you think they were called ‘cuckoo-pint’
because they come with the cuckoo ?”

“T have read that it was called ‘ pint’ because
the sheath was like a drinking-cup, and ‘ cuckoo-

pint’ because it cometh with the cuckoo in the



LORDS AND LADIES. 65

spring ; ‘friar’s cowl, because the sheath is like
a friar’s hood or cowl.”

“Yes; and ‘lords and ladies’ ? i

“Tt was fancied that the hood of the flowers
resembled the ruffs in which lords and ladies
buried their heads in olden times.”

“Did the plant make wonderful cures, like
some other wild flowers ?”

“Well, it has been said that it will do a great
- many things; but I should not like to try it, if
it can blister the skin and scorch the tongue.

«© You will love it, and ride away!”

“Yes; I will be content to remember
How sweet it used to be when April first
Unclosed the arum leaves, and into view
Its ear-like, spindling flowers their cases burst,

Betinged with yellowish white or lushy hue.” ’
Or at other times—

‘Oft under trees we nestled in a ring,

92:2:92

Culling our “lords and ladies.

(497) 5



RED CAMPION.*

ue HEN I was a boy, Cissy, that red
flower was always called ‘bachelor’s
buttons’ in Norfolk, but I have since learned
that in other places some other wild flower is
the ‘bachelor’s buttons.” »~
« And what is this one called ?”

“Sometimes ‘red campion’ and sometimes

999

‘red robin ;’ but I never forget the old name.”

“Tt is almost like a ‘ pink.’”

“Of course it is a wild pink, and so is the
‘ragged robin,’ which grows in meadows.”

“A spring nosegay is dull without the cam-
pion.”

“So I think. Although it is straggling, it
is a pretty object in the lanes at spring-time.

* Lychnis diurna.







RED CAMPION. 67

The long, thin stems are often more than half
a yard high, and velvety.”

“The roots are rather tough and stringy.”

“And do not die in the winter, but remain
in the ground, and send up a tuft of green
leaves in the spring.”

“The leaves are long, and broadest in the
middle, narrowed to each end, almost like a
boy’s ‘ tip-cat.’”

“We should call them lance-shaped, because
they are like the head of a lance, only that they
are rather too blunt at the tip.”

« And a little hairy or velvety, without any
proper foot-stalks.”

“The stems are quite round, with swollen
joints, rather wide apart, so that there is a long
naked space between one joint and the next.
The stems will break more easily at the joints.”

“There is always a cluster of root-leaves on
the ground at the bottom of the stem.”

“And not many leaves on the stem; but
these always grow at the joints, and in pairs,

one leaf opposite to another.”



68 RED CAMPION.

“And the branches come from the joints
too.”

“Yes: the stem divides into two branches
at the joint, and then each branch divides again
into two at the next joint, like a two-pronged
fork; so that it goes on forking up to the top,
each branch becoming shorter and shorter the
further it is from the root.”

“See, the last branch, with the flower at the
top, is quite short. Is that campion with quite
white flowers the same ?”

“No, Cissy; that is the white campion, or
the evening campion, which is different, but
very much like the red campion, and the flowers
smell sweet in the evening.”

“The leaves look almost the same, and the
flowers nearly of the same size and shape, only
that they are quite white.”

“True; but the flowers of the white campion
are sometimes pinkish, and those of the red
campion nearly white. You must not be guided
wholly by the colour of the flowers.”

“Then what must be the guide?”



RED CAMPION. 69

“The shape of the capsule, as we shall see
by-and-by. But we have still to look at the
flowers, ‘ each of them standing in a large green-
striped hairy husk, large and round below, next
to the stalk.’ You will remember the ‘ flower-
cup’ in other flowers, but in these it is more
distinct.”

“Oh yes; the green flower-cup, with its
toothed edge, is very plain to be seen.”

“In the red campion the teeth of the cup are
very short; in the white campion they are
longer, and with a broader notch.”

“T see the difference now; but it is such a
little one, and the teeth are always small.”

“We must pull the flower in pieces, as I
have to show you something here which we
have not seen before; but before I do so, we
must see the coloured leaves, the true flower-
leaves.”

“There are five of them again.”

« Five, deeply notched at the outer edge, and
lengthened out into a long claw at the bottom.

Pull out the pink leaves and find the claw.”



70 RED CAMPION.

“Here it is: nearly white, and as long as the
blade, sharply bent in the middle.”

“Of course you can see the reason. When
the flowers are open the top is quite flat, like
a button, with the five spreading
pink leaves ; but the long claw
must be bent sharp downwards to
pass into the flower-cup, making a
sort of elbow joint at the bend.
All the family of Pinks have these

‘clawed petals,’ as they are called.”



Fic. 14.—
Crawep Pera. ‘* Yes, [ see—the pink part quite

flat, and the white claw bent sharp downwards
into the cup.”

“Now I must tell you of the ‘something’ which
we have not met with before in other flowers.
Some of the plants of the campion have only
male flowers, and others have only female flowers.”

“« And are both sorts of flowers just the same
to look at?”

“Exactly the same; and you could not tell
the one from the other by just looking at them

outside, only by pulling them in pieces.”



RED CAMPION. a

“QO uncle, show me the difference; I should
like to know the puzzle.”

“Yes, dear; but you must have patience,
because you will hardly understand the puzzle
all at once. I have told you that the first set
of parts in a flower is the outside set of green
leaves, which we have agreed to call the flower-
cup; then the next set are the true coloured
flower-leaves, which are pink, with a long spur
or claw in these flowers; but the third set are
the threads in the middle, called stamens, and
the column in the centre, with the young seed-
vessel at the bottom.”

“T recollect all that.”

“We have always found, up to now, both the

and the centre



stamens—you call them threads
piece all in one flower; but we shall see in
these flowers, as in this one, that there are ten
stamens or threads, but no column in the centre.
Here is another just the same—only the ten
stamens, and no column. These, then, are
male flowers.”

“Tg the column of so much use?”



72 RED CAMPION.

“Certainly it is; for the young seed-capsule
grows at the bottom of the column, and if there
is no centre piece (people call it a prstil) the
plant will have no seeds.”

“Then these male flowers have no seeds?”

“That is just the point; we must hunt in
other flowers for the centre piece or pistil. All
the flowers on this one plant are male flowers,
so we must find the plant which bears female
flowers.”

“Do they grow together ?”

“Yes. Let us try this one. No; it is just
the same, and all male flowers. We will try
them on the other side of the road.”

“ Hlere’s a nice one, uncle—all a-blowing, all
a-growing.”

“ Ah, that will do; it is a female plant.”

“Tt looks just like the others.”

“But it is not the same. See here: there
are no stamens, only a column, with a swelling
at the bottom, which is the young seed-vessel,
and holds the very little dots which one day
will grow into seeds.”



RED CAMPION. 73

“The column is split into five at the top; and
these female flowers will have seeds, while the
male flowers will have none. So the male
flowers are of no use, only to look at?”

“T did not say that, Cissy; but your ques-
tion makes me tell you something more.”

“What! about the male flowers?”

“Yes; we must go back to them again. You
saw the thick tops of the threads or stamens?”

“ All powdery like.”

“These tops split lengthwise, and scatter
very fine yellow powder—the pollen; and this
pollen, if it settles on the top of the centre
column, grows, and thrusts a very fine tube
down the inside of the column into the seed-
vessel, so that the liquor that was in the pollen
grain passes down this tube into the space at
the bottom of the column, and helps the little
dots to grow into perfect seeds.”

“Wouldn’t they grow into perfect seeds
without the help of the pollen grains ?”

“They would not grow, but shrivel up.”

“Then how do the pollen grains get from the



74 RED CAMPION.

male flowers into the female flowers, that may
be growing a long way off?”

“Perhaps in more ways than one; but I will
tell you one way in which they travel. You
have seen bees and flies hovering about flowers
and sucking their juice ?”

“Very often.”

“Little fly goes to a male flower, and pushes
about and gets into it as faras he can. Doing
this, he knocks off the pollen powder, which
sprinkles all over his head and back. By-and-
by he goes into a female flower, and there he
rubs the powder from his head and back upon
the sticky top of the column, and so the pollen
travels from the male to the female flower.”

“What happens after ?”

“The male flowers die, and nothing is left;
the female flowers die, but the swelling at the
bottom of the centre column remains, and grows
bigger and bigger, until it becomes a large seed-
vessel or capsule, open at the top, with ten teeth
round the edge, so that when the seeds are ripe

they shake in the inside and fall out.”



RED CAMPION. 75

“Then they are all female plants which have
capsules ?”

“Only female plants; and in the red campion
the capsules are nearly round, with the teeth
bent back; in the white campion the capsules
are longer and almost pear-shaped, with the

teeth straight. Thus you may know the red

Fic. 15.—Caprsu.e or Fic. 16.—CapsuLE or
Rep Campion. Wuite CaMPIoNn.
from the white campion when the flowers are
all dead and gone.”

“Suppose the fly carries the powder on his
head into another sort of plant, such as a
stitchwort, and leaves it behind him, what will
happen ?”

“Nothing will happen. The tubes will not
grow, and the powder will wither and dry up.”

“Have all the pinks, and such like plants,



16 RED CAMPION.

male flowers on one plant and female flowers on
another ?”

“Oh no; only a few kinds.”

“They are very pretty flowers, and some of
the garden pinks smell so sweet; but are they
of any use?”

“T am afraid that very few of them are of
any use to man, except for his pleasure; but
some of them may be as useful to smaller ani-
mals as ‘chickweed’ is to the little birds.” __

“T know the chickweed; it has such miser-
able little white flowers.”

“The flowers are small, but rather pretty if
you see them through a glass. I would advise
you to watch the leaves of this little plant, and
that you can do easily, for it grows in every
garden. At night the upper leaves draw to-
wards each other in pairs, so that they close
over the young shoots, and protect them during
the night. This has been called ‘going to
sleep ;’ but it is rather more than that, for the
leaves rise upwards and cover up the buds, to
shelter them from cold or harm. In some other



RED CAMPION. 77

plants the leaves either rise or fall, but only to
protect themselves, and they look as if they
were going to sleep. It is not generally known
that the young plants may be boiled as a vege-
table, and are something like spinach. You
must not despise the chickweed, for it may |
remind you that little things are not mean or
miserable because they are small.”



ST. JOHN’S WORT.*

o ANY old customs, Cissy, have to do

with flowers; but some of them have
gone out of use, and others out of thought—
mistletoe at Christmas, hawthorn on Mayday,
willow on Palm Sunday, and St. John’s wort on
Midsummer Eve. We must find the St. John’s
wort, and learn its story.”

“‘ Shall we find it in the lane?”

“Tt grows on hedge-banks and by roadsides,
as well as in woods, and is in flower in July and
August.”

“What is the story ?”

“Not a long one. A Welshman says that
in Wales they have the custom of sticking St.
John’s wort over the doors on the eve of St.

* Hypericum perforatum.



ST. JOHN’S WORT. 79

John Baptist; and, without naming this plant, a
bishop wrote of olden times, when men of the
country brought into London on Midsummer
Eve branches of trees from Bishop’s Wood, and
flowers from the field, to array the houses and
make them gay.”

“Do you know why this flower should have
been called St. John’s wort, or why it should
have been chosen for that purpose ?”

“Perhaps because it is a showy plant, and
flowers at this time of year. It is a large plant,
and we cannot miss it.”

“ And the colour?”

“There are at least ten kinds of St. John’s
wort found in this country, and all of them have
yellow flowers. Our St. John’s wort, which is
probably the true species, grows more than half
a yard high, and can be seen a long way off.”

“ T hope we shall find it.”

« There’s a plant, with golden yellow flowers,
just in sight. It may be a ‘ragwort,’ but it is
the more likely to be St. John’s wort. You

had better run and look at it.”



80 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

“ How shall I know it?”

“You will know if it is the ragwort, because
the ragwort is something like the dandelion:
the flower-head, which looks to be one flower, is
made up of a host of little flowers packed close
together in the middle, and rows of strap-shaped
flowers round the edge, like the rays in a dande-
lion or daisy.”

“Yes, a composite flower; but if it is St.
John’s wort?”

“ Then it is a simple flower, and in the middle
of it a very great number of golden threads

which we call stamens.”



Fic. 17.—Srction or FLower or St. Jouy’s Wort.
At length Cissy called out, “ Here it is, and
they are simple flowers.”
“ You see that it is quite half a yard high, and



ST. JOHN’S WORT. 81

grows so stiff and upright that you should know
it again a long way off.”

“And such a number of golden yellow
flowers.”

“The stem, you can see, is distinctly two-
edged, and bright reddish brown, so slender that
if it were not tough and woody it would soon be
blown down.”

‘“‘ And such a number of branches.”

‘ Mostly in pairs, one on each side of the stem,
and opposite to each other; not spreading much,
but pointing upwards.”

“ And what little leaves.”

“ Yes; the leaves are small for the size of the
plant. Oblong, three times as long as they are
broad, with quite a smooth edge; and I don’t
think you will find hairs upon them anywhere.”

“They are rather tough, aren’t they ?”

“Yes; but what is more strange is that they
are pricked with little dots, and you must use
your best eyes to see them.”

“ And the leaves grow in pairs, too, on oppo-

site sides of the stem.”
(497) 6



82 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

“ All the branches grow out from the corner
which the leaf makes with the stem; that is to
say, the branches grow from the stem, or larger
branches, just over and close to the bottom of
the leaf, and are said to grow in the awils of the
leaves.”

“The leaves are all smaller at the top of the
plant than they are at the bottom, and smaller
on the branches than they are on the stem.”

“ That is usually the case with herbs.”

‘The flowers look very different. from butter-
cups.”

‘And yet the flowers of both have five yellow
floral leaves, and a great number of threads, or
stamens, in the middle of the flower.”

“With five little green cup-leaves close to the
outside of the flower.”

“Now then, Cissy, you must pull one flower
in pieces, very carefully, over this sheet of paper,
and be very careful with the stamens.”

“One, two, three! Such a lot of stamens—
sixty or seventy—but all grown together into
two or three tufts or bundles.”



ST. JOHN’S WORT. 88

‘ Exactly. That is just what I wished you
to be quite sure of, because that is how you may
always know St. John’s wort from any other
yellow wild flower. The stamens are always
joined in bundles. You can remember ?”

“Yes; I don’t think I can forget it now



Fic. 18.—FLower or St. Jonn’s Wort.

1, Flower; 2, Bundle of Stamens; 3, Pistil; 4, Section of Ovary ; 5, Fruit;
6, Seed ; 7, Section.

that I have seen it. And there is a large
knob in the middle where the stamens are
pulled off”

“That is the ovary, which grows into a fruit
and contains the seed. You will notice that not
only the stems, and sometimes the large veins



84 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

of the leaves, but the tips of the flower buds,
before they open, are tinged with red.”

“ And the plant is smooth all over.”

“You have been pulling the plant about,
breaking and rubbing it, so that I want to know
if you can smell any scent on your fingers.”

“Yes; I think I smell something like lemons.”

-« There is a yellow juice in the plant which

perhaps contains the scent, but sometimes it is
better to be seen than at others. Suppose we
carry some of the plant home, and put it in
water in a glass bottle: then we shall see, after
it has been standing a little while, that the
water becomes yellowish.” »~

“See, it stains my fingers, but not yellow.”

“ Tf you press some of them between blotting
paper, the juice will stain the paper yellow.”

“Ts the yellow colour of any use ?”

“T have been told that when mixed with
alum and boiled the dried plant will dye wool
a yellow colour, but I have never tried it.”

“ And yet you say that all things have their
uses.”



ST. JOHN’S WORT. 85

“Yes; but I did not tell you that I knew the
uses of all things. The St. John’s wort was
gathered in the country, when I was a boy, by
many old people, who believed it to be so useful
as a medicine that they dried it and kept some
of it always in the house.”

« And what was it good for?”

«Tt was supposed to cure the ague, and to be
good for jaundice, and T think useful for wounds
and for internal bleeding, and perhaps for many
things besides, for it was a plant of many vir-
tues.”

« And not all of them true?”

“You will think so when I tell you that in
France and Germany the common people gather
the plant on St. John’s Day, and hang it up in
their windows as a charm to protect them from
harm by storms, thunder, or evil spirits. Even
in North Wales there was at one time a similar
belief, I may tell you that there is a St. John’s
wort, with large yellow flowers, as big as half-a-
crown, often grown in gardens and shrubberies ;

but it ig not one of our wild flowers. One name



86 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

for it is ‘ Aaron’s beard,’ on account of the great
number of stamens. As the flowers are so large,
you will be able to see the bundles of stamens
better than you can do in the common St. John’s
wort; so that you had better look for it, as it
grows close to the ground in large patches, and
the large flowers stand singly, and not in bunches.
It grows in some places like a wild plant, but it
is a native of Southern Europe, and was intro-
duced into this country, therefore we cannot call

it a true British wild flower.”



MALLOW.*

‘ OU should know the mallow, Cissy, with
the pink flowers close at your feet.
But what do you call it?”

“ Oh! ‘cheeses.’ Yes, I know.”

“ Cheeses? why do you call it ‘ cheeses’ ?”

“ Because little cheeses grow all over it, and
so we play with them, and call them ‘ cheeses.’”

““« Pick-cheeses’ they are called in some places,
and are the round, flat fruits of the mallow.”

“What a sprawling plant! too lazy to grow
straight.”

«“ As some people are too lazy to walk straight.
It is a strong, tough plant; so you may grasp
it firmly, and pull with all your might to drag
it up by the root.”

* Malva sylvestris.



83 MALLOW.

“T can’t; it sticks so hard.”

“Then I will help you. Now, pull all to-
gether, and up it comes.”

“But the end of the root is broken off.”

“Never mind; there is enough for you to see
what a large, tough root it has, thicker than
your finger ; and if you rub it where it is broken,
you will find that it has a clammy juice.”

“Tt is almost like liquorice root, but not so
nice, is it?”

‘ Not so sweet, but nearly as useful.”

“Good to eat?”

“Not exactly ; but all kinds of mallow roots
are whitish and full of a slimy juice, and when
laid in water the juice runs out, and makes the
water thick and clammy. It is said that the
old Romans used mallow roots as a vegetable.”

“ But it is not used now-a-days ?”

“ Yes, it is, but not in the same way. Mallows
are one of the few common plants still used in
proper medicine, and more abroad, in Europe,
than with us.”

“« How is it used ?”





Fic. 19.—Common Matiow.

1, Part of Plant, reduced; 2, Root; 3, Section of Flower ; 4, 5, Fruits; 6, Carpel;
7, Seed; 8, Stamen.







MALLOW. 91

“The water in which it is soaked is sweetened
with sugar and drunk, or it is used outside for
bathing inflamed limbs, or made into a kind of
poultice.”

‘“Only the roots ?”

« All parts of the plant more or less, especially
the marsh-mallow, which is made into a syrup
or lozenges. French chemists sell the dried
flowers and roots under the name of ‘ guimauve.’”

“The stem is tough like the root, and strag-
ogling.”

“The common mallow is not a neat-growing
plant, but the flowers are pretty; sometimes it
is half-a-yard high, and often less.”

«Tt seems to be soft and velvety all over.”

“Yes; but the marsh-mallow is much softer
and more velvety. Let us try to name the
shape of the leaves.”

“That is not so easy. They would be rather
rounded if they were not so deeply notched at
the edge.”

“JT should call them kidney-shaped, and

notched at the edge so as to have from five to



92 MALLOW.

seven broad and almost three-cornered teeth:
too large for teeth, we might almost call them
lobes. The dwarf mallow is nearly as common,
but the leaves are more kidney-shaped, and
scarcely lobed.”

“ Lobes! what are they ?”

“The lower flap of the ear is the lobe of the
ear ; and so these are lobes, or flaps, if you like.”



Fic. 20.—Dwarr Matiow Lear.

‘Never mind what we call them, so long as
we know what it is that we mean.”

“You are right, Cissy: names mean little
until we give some meaning to them, and it is
seldom easy to state the forms of leaves in words.”

“‘ And these plants have lobed leaves.”



MALLOW. 93

“Yes; which are not opposite to each other
in pairs, but grow singly and scattered. ‘The
lower leaves, in most plants, are the most per-
fect in their form.”

“ And there are tiny leaves at the bottom of
the foot-stalks upon the stems.”

“You will see that there are a great many
flowers, or flower-buds, which have short stalks,
and spring from the inner corner or axil where
the leaf-stalk is joimed to the stem or the
branches.”

«Some are only buds, some are open flowers,
and some almost like buds, only that the flowers
have opened and fallen off.”

«“ T wish you to look carefully at these flowers.
I should tell you that in all flowers there are
three things you should always look for. You
should look for the outer green leaves close up
to the flower, and which close over and cover
the young bud: these are the flower-cup or
calyx. Then there are the coloured leaves, which
form the proper flower. And lastly, there are the

thread-like stamens in the middle of the flower.”



94, MALLOW.

“ And should we always find all these three
parts?”

“ Yes,—we should in all perfect flowers: but
sometimes one of the parts becomes very small,”

“But in the mallow the green leaves of the
flower-cup are very large.”

“They are in all the Mallow family; and
not only large, but double. The inner cup has
five divisions, and the outer one three. It is
not usual for the green flower-cup, or calyx
(which means cup), to be double, as it is in
mallows.”

“T must not forget that.”

“Not even when you see hollyhocks grow-
ing in the garden, for they are big mallows.
Now, look at the second set of parts in the
flowers.”

“Yes, the coloured flower-leaves; and there
are five, broadest towards the outer end, and
notched. Very pretty pink with purple lines.”

“Do you smell anything?”

“No; I don’t think they are scented.”

“There is a ‘musk-mallow,’ which is not so



MALLOW. 95

common, and that is supposed to smell faintly
of musk in the evening, but I never could smell
musk during the daytime in the flowers.”

«“ Now for the third set of parts in the flower.”

“Yes, Cissy; and curious they are too, for
you see they form a big bundle in the middle of
the flower, which stands up boldly.”

“And such a lot of stamens! That’s the
name.”

“ See, all of them joined together at the bot-
tom, ina sort of tube, around the column that
stands up in the middle.”

“ More than five?”

“More than five—more than ten—quite a
bunch of them, with large nodding heads. You
will not forget that in the mallow flowers the
first set and the third set of parts are different
from what they are in most flowers.”

“T shall not forget. And see how the flowers
are twisted round before they open, almost as
they are in the bindweed. But the ‘ cheeses ’-—
I want to know about them.”

“Of course you do; and here is a young one



96 MALLOW.

at the bottom of the plant, where the flower hag
fallen off and the cup-leaves have closed over
again.”
“Oh yes; there’s a little cheese inside.”
“That is the fruit, like a thick round button,
with marks all round the edge; and when quite

ripe all these little seed-vessels will break off



Fic. 21.—Fruit or Mattow.

from the core in the centre and part into sepa-
rate pieces, with a seed in each piece.”

“T eat them sometimes,” said Cissy.

“When they are green and juicy, but not
when they are dry. If we are to believe all the
good things which the mallow is said to do, we
would call it the most wonderful of plants.”

“‘T suppose some people have believed ?”

“ Hardly so much as Pliny did, who wrote



MALLOW. 97

nearly at the time of Christ, that ‘whosoever
shall take a spoonful of any of the mallows,
shall that day be free from all diseases that may
come unto him.’”

“That would be a useful medicine.”

“ Another says that the leaves bruised or
rubbed upon the place stung with bees, wasps,
or the like, presently take away the pains, red-
ness, and swellings that arise therefrom.”

“Mallows must have been known thousands
of years ago.”

“Even in the time of Job, when they were a
famine food. As he says, ‘For want and fam-
ine they were solitary ; fleeing into the wilder-
ness in former time desolate and waste: who
cut up mallows by the bushes’ (xxx. 3, 4). The
Greeks and Romans ate it boiled, or raw in
salads.”

“ And are they ever eaten now?”

“T believe that the poor inhabitants of Syria,
especially the Armenians, subsist for weeks on
herbs, of which the marsh-mallow is one of the

most common. When boiled first. and then
(497) q



98 MALLOW.

fried with onions and butter, they are said to
form a palatable dish.”

“T should not think we could eat them like
cabbage.”

“Well, Cissy, I am not so sure of that, but I
never tried them; yet there are plants in India
very nearly the same as mallows, the leaves of
which are used every day as a common pot-herb.”

“ Any way, if the mallow is a weed it is not
quite a useless one.”

“The neatest use I ever saw for the mallow
was a pretty lace collar for a little girl, made
from the stems of the common mallow.”

“Do tell me how it was done, uncle.”

“The bark was stripped off the stems, soaked
so that it could be beaten, and stripped into
very fine threads, and these threads were spun
into something like flax thread. This thread
was worked up and made into lace by some
ladies in Ireland, and sent to a great exhibition—
it might have been in 1851—and no one could
have known that it was not lace made in the

usual way.”



MALLOW. 99

“ What was it done for?”

“To prove that common things have their
uses, and that the common wayside mallow
could be made into lace that was fit to decorate
the finest lady in the land.”

“To deck the living and the dead.”

“Truly so; for the ancients used them as
funeral flowers, and it was customary to plant
them round the graves and tombs of dead

friends.”



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'33607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJO' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
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3c717a67358217e34ddece247f5f39584379c85e
'2011-09-20T01:46:23-04:00'
describe
'2694636' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJP' 'sip-files00003.tif'
0b30e7fb166216568150a8fbd4c25cce
fa24ca18bd41cb89e9ffcedd70d688901f63c1f4
'2011-09-20T01:47:32-04:00'
describe
'65' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJQ' 'sip-files00003.txt'
bdacdc8197e5886081b4ceb58fb94a39
1f4e83a035cf2273d33f9d2fb03bf6a57908b4b5
'2011-09-20T01:47:35-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'7473' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJR' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
91e6fce09adbcbbd3ea49b4c9cc9a14f
b269f3da51e7350331aa3efc6f30d84be0ab93e2
'2011-09-20T01:48:29-04:00'
describe
'334317' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJS' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
156820be2c7ee3ce4f1f7a7ab1b7e450
2e0bbc20cc681dd11fc0b982784d7c987f06c4b1
'2011-09-20T01:47:26-04:00'
describe
'20053' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJT' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
81e4c599060a1c30e7f54bff5363ff2e
5f753def24da8548aca2556c0f4635afed49bf77
'2011-09-20T01:48:41-04:00'
describe
'4706' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJU' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
2443a1488c5a38aa07cfeb512ff1e7cb
b38d5dd88b98de3a019520c5f021a534ddecd21a
describe
'2691620' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJV' 'sip-files00004.tif'
125bd4f2f74009de74e46e6751585944
e0034774c7e146997670d12d9e0caad3df71d282
'2011-09-20T01:46:26-04:00'
describe
'1355' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJW' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
a7d0ba2d73a76511b6612586ba4173ef
fca391a971ffd360dff10470b388c43e264cc0ef
'2011-09-20T01:48:09-04:00'
describe
'335811' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJX' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
0471eff70541540f9891213b670a1b72
0e7f0428ef024126df10addfc68b71ca1f17d8bb
'2011-09-20T01:46:59-04:00'
describe
'138324' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJY' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
04c28be3a07c26a0cc67b8584f6f7801
f98060e7bff8aeeed24671a991b7ab2c4bea79a4
describe
'569' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDJZ' 'sip-files00006.pro'
1eab0178fbb258c9f10585f193204356
be7e53e053b116e30c3774a906d993467820e69c
describe
'31618' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKA' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
b4cf752ffbc86571b56f16320b516175
cf603b094eae30275f0207e8c01e7c6cdd36c5a2
'2011-09-20T01:46:24-04:00'
describe
'8080028' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKB' 'sip-files00006.tif'
c9dd3028f30be756e5146128c2ec1630
3684a281af6d1d0040b508d132ea4e2ee4079295
'2011-09-20T01:46:21-04:00'
describe
'71' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKC' 'sip-files00006.txt'
66bde2630f9749ce8bd0892c594d1b6d
b18733d9b1ebc0b72839a30a40df90997cb0022e
'2011-09-20T01:46:25-04:00'
describe
'8141' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKD' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
0219f319181ebff77d3d316ad65069f3
ac3d188e241631fb543be13394e9d1f89909c54d
'2011-09-20T01:47:25-04:00'
describe
'334253' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKE' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
3dfe46c717998d2dfbd9517dd911b2c2
9f9be246200f5188dd9605e8b0e1e3c3801ce690
'2011-09-20T01:46:35-04:00'
describe
'33561' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKF' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
5f5505a56afb79538a680795c1b27ea5
73e6c3d1d5044abe4c18b15315c62990fcdb67e9
'2011-09-20T01:46:15-04:00'
describe
'3779' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKG' 'sip-files00007.pro'
3521f85484e0a4d0f800d0ef79fa25dd
48e751125a01084c734f1675a755a16b0e8146cc
'2011-09-20T01:48:19-04:00'
describe
'12383' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKH' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
e56cf8023d7102ed7895afacabfdb1de
495e8ae31f32a6d92f02556e5393ebcacd71837e
'2011-09-20T01:47:58-04:00'
describe
'2692596' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKI' 'sip-files00007.tif'
5a4ebc9d56e5c50920dc42d0e4b2f935
3b49028b770d3e40ecc46c443080924e12735bee
'2011-09-20T01:47:55-04:00'
describe
'196' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKJ' 'sip-files00007.txt'
1a89668ca2ae3f6d35fcc453e2e31303
e7324bbc631371c0d086456347ef781216242c07
'2011-09-20T01:46:49-04:00'
describe
'4352' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKK' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
315a9f4edeeb91c171c0cee9a2c090f5
d39680771b3f78d8138153954ba24f18113642e5
'2011-09-20T01:48:24-04:00'
describe
'334410' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKL' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
906a0ecc28bceb6bc32ba85984acc26a
37ad985258160bd88e07bb6ed8c0813eac872795
describe
'8743' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKM' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
85f421bc5c5642ed5286178b5c3e7534
43c11002f76bc88d0b905d73cd5ac546b1492f35
'2011-09-20T01:46:14-04:00'
describe
'2593' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKN' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
258d9ef8769e3df20bd5a46a5f643b26
ec9187e94eb8c03cd00650a4fea82ed79de2737b
'2011-09-20T01:46:22-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKO' 'sip-files00008.tif'
70b8128d11dd7db208febfa145ce02a2
21a22bbe2d71b36c29d4db48a486cbdd47ac31e9
'2011-09-20T01:46:44-04:00'
describe
'918' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKP' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
db09993c6be85d875987e29a41dc7c24
7039d19b883f83f8cbbe5cf7a03b7e033fc32fb6
'2011-09-20T01:46:16-04:00'
describe
'334416' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKQ' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
9a177d7bb81e61ee40bd895c9e6a7fb9
e5ea98d5a84788dc13c4b885ae9c6672f5ce1bd7
'2011-09-20T01:46:33-04:00'
describe
'74919' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKR' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
7cd5babe5af83cb26cee92185a0c6f91
4a422130e7ad59515a8a15bec5508b41a6b4d6dc
'2011-09-20T01:48:20-04:00'
describe
'22897' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKS' 'sip-files00009.pro'
3463de1d053efd9363b035bdb0089e22
a614c0919c3bd4b6e8ef3fac4aaa54ed79a4f265
describe
'25695' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKT' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
9bbb8138fe1688d2a0e19e15b7945b99
b54aaa793f26d5410c3ae241732398316ad6f922
'2011-09-20T01:47:39-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKU' 'sip-files00009.tif'
d0f1681cef9b1b6a80d350ab10f1cdf8
36ce0142cc69b22cef45f08d9ee7d437b551eec8
'2011-09-20T01:46:36-04:00'
describe
'1012' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKV' 'sip-files00009.txt'
3e5d3ed0c6ce4974465b29de4a76fb75
bf993ba9920ad1bd48b236708f520c116cdafa0b
'2011-09-20T01:47:00-04:00'
describe
'6893' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKW' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
a703e6a91768c6b0f20e0e12b16d4f49
2a349224f27f1d343f9384e62207b6ec69c592a6
'2011-09-20T01:48:30-04:00'
describe
'334298' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKX' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
2651710fd769346ce15153f252d2d6f8
c7badb67930513c4e2bd87910cce743fff546f98
describe
'23572' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKY' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
e0c35b248a84b191caa28b41704b3ebf
dbccda424210dd82e203424db8f0c45223d9e610
'2011-09-20T01:47:18-04:00'
describe
'9963' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDKZ' 'sip-files00011.pro'
6defad1c801c6fe579fd9f0bcc9d7d55
acbb29013b8f609a08da526808a41e8ee3de5121
describe
'9164' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLA' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
08379e4193a131ee85eb331c0ec5c10b
8b4f502fcef4454747cc955897da53a566c655ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLB' 'sip-files00011.tif'
da26a59334fcdfaba219d108d44fc45c
c3078d4775e3611d3ccf40eb6e8857da0498353b
'2011-09-20T01:47:15-04:00'
describe
'484' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLC' 'sip-files00011.txt'
9f6d0d6e621b94000be51e611b094220
04525d8dc5f0cd2a1d6f948386e4b500f3412b8c
'2011-09-20T01:48:14-04:00'
describe
'2760' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLD' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
ef508fd4bf5359455a3ce7c98d3296d9
6a4ae22ce3f4e49512582747c870fb18302e059c
'2011-09-20T01:47:27-04:00'
describe
'334340' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLE' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
3034319b881d34db823062dac9537b07
9fb8c196cb4241cd119f8db094939db665e1950a
describe
'8662' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLF' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
534477374a024a5bfea83cac1b3dfe74
1aee0552830afcf827111cc0a45d2a39ac7578c7
describe
'2526' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLG' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
41e38027a6ecdfe5ed0787b3affab0c6
2152aaaad988c0447c17f0f213a548791f66b914
'2011-09-20T01:48:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLH' 'sip-files00012.tif'
bc12188d6c38234763b323ee228875c0
e52a1ef822253152e03f5c7898a8ed36da1bc679
describe
'900' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLI' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
9d1c11da4b99cef6fa83e36ea1ee99bc
c74da00aa0421038e2bb6b3c6d54b0098048d35f
'2011-09-20T01:48:17-04:00'
describe
'334324' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLJ' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
c1285a9c412ede235d2179e72f735b03
fbd8568d72449a817acb2be58d57b23488bde3b4
'2011-09-20T01:48:15-04:00'
describe
'59689' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLK' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
c06efadb70deb157f6cf5bd30157b977
062f6ac425e55a2a367730bd803ae8624f8faa24
'2011-09-20T01:48:40-04:00'
describe
'13669' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLL' 'sip-files00013.pro'
2f3a97e01bcbc7c3ae7e5ace703dff48
4b20fc94e1f57f0e1bc1159a2af64dc19f4bea3b
'2011-09-20T01:47:10-04:00'
describe
'20585' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLM' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
20ac9d3f63f40f1545f8e9461e11e0e8
8142c693af4e138ad0b2ed1dddce24cf2c3ff69c
'2011-09-20T01:47:33-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLN' 'sip-files00013.tif'
8c8a486a0220d69761cc9bb8fa8c7ca2
71cd47e0b40323e5fc8d2d23b0aa38e3cbf5aa61
'2011-09-20T01:46:50-04:00'
describe
'629' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLO' 'sip-files00013.txt'
2ab8c61e6040c086e1a65ad579ab61ae
e8c653aafafbdeb66ba88d658472f3b626307dfb
'2011-09-20T01:48:04-04:00'
describe
'5867' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLP' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
cc019b6f6c5efa514cc5ecf870d76b44
9df349a5934a94e94a21a62d1c19d5566c48e488
'2011-09-20T01:46:39-04:00'
describe
'334327' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLQ' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
09e89119022ab3d7593f41db12830857
33a4a26cc5a675b0d4460d6f873f737cdd5d9a47
'2011-09-20T01:48:16-04:00'
describe
'78458' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLR' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
2d877b3ccbc1fea08807bbd518a73e2e
912f115f6c539f4637d1307ef94f02201c74d9db
describe
'21254' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLS' 'sip-files00014.pro'
4fff5c835c0f4be2f3acca78c27e0804
e91113a2f93d8d621149d7f2ffd4181741197910
describe
'27161' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLT' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
39bd099dd67fcd148ba9b23dd1b8b819
5609532fd352550139a2c6c39710217bdaa14adc
'2011-09-20T01:48:28-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLU' 'sip-files00014.tif'
46267c47023ea975daf1b2b39aee385f
7f3395178c283fc63986525a34a60139113282f8
'2011-09-20T01:46:40-04:00'
describe
'917' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLV' 'sip-files00014.txt'
f3cff2a5737aa5b1f9e3282f938e8d65
730debe40a8d962465618eb2636a40a9037280dd
describe
'7391' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLW' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
27a42327babb595dd18b0128702b938f
3ee7f7c16e6e55a6ad6aa2c897e3a0f183cb96eb
'2011-09-20T01:47:02-04:00'
describe
'334401' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLX' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
9d48dbb2273495e931db7e903bde4f0d
4201cd5f0ce79dc5a622b3302d0f2d0cb9775086
describe
'102886' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLY' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
a7fa702d49da587674abad334de1c496
27761c3d0e17fbf197bc810ebc09e6c9bc2dc91e
'2011-09-20T01:46:30-04:00'
describe
'5281' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDLZ' 'sip-files00015.pro'
c1264cbbdf86dde7508c04a044a57082
ef5126d53dc5341f90b7f21a8fd6f1f1d46853e5
describe
'28038' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMA' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
0fce5d11affb9580fc3b52822bc68f42
92a146a7ca90f7dbd6f111538c9c148450f75286
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMB' 'sip-files00015.tif'
1bd44f13f5a06c6c4a18e10f0284431b
f913f4316178a1c8f6756fcc7c0ad30b88420a92
'2011-09-20T01:48:05-04:00'
describe
'409' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMC' 'sip-files00015.txt'
63ee83aa55c2bef13f23c435a23c248d
18d8953632384b6c1aa5a0131bc26bc2247a96fe
describe
'7205' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMD' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
1a2792ca8bc4a94b36456657b0051a57
be1ca3e1b992d02347af251f4aa7dec894a16ae2
'2011-09-20T01:47:36-04:00'
describe
'334194' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDME' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
198059e09188585da3c5e8ffb225be51
1d79996b458597d13ee3f51cbb5d6a1d8f7ea6ae
describe
'8602' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMF' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
5ae442a5fb08e2d5b7962ee5a566726d
798289e8a49bc5ca154207c2543b0d0ec38bad98
describe
'2573' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMG' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
580aca69ba14dc498757cb2f2fa0970a
6045c366497474527f453a5c5d390cef56352c35
'2011-09-20T01:46:07-04:00'
describe
'2691616' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMH' 'sip-files00016.tif'
fefbde9a6e16d7b65295f26c9a208f2f
0c4c113b84203f7e6922311b5bc7aab42494b92c
describe
'892' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMI' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
e5261fa0eaf42a394e619d721c09fa20
3aed595760fba038e06f46198368d9f3c9186703
describe
'330306' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMJ' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
090103cd631b36858f1df756e75a8c0c
589e51da3806537ab4b545f8b3bc6fcb00f57ade
'2011-09-20T01:47:40-04:00'
describe
'84673' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMK' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
036f4f515a9978153281a1e65d4df4aa
aade9e2ef3f3038a70b2583f667e699162383cfd
'2011-09-20T01:46:34-04:00'
describe
'21786' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDML' 'sip-files00017.pro'
972abf5ecf6b2e26111284441a8d05a7
6812b4f0ad0ebc882ec4061268d4d446a7e43ec5
describe
'28917' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMM' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
c28abda81c5f2ffb34a6e10e342e473c
190f171d57e61abfbc4b9388798aa8cea5e1b80d
describe
'2658980' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMN' 'sip-files00017.tif'
216c61381cacb6c79aac90191f39cc9f
63e1be01bf406f83432c9ce82871b2a3f9aa4539
'2011-09-20T01:46:13-04:00'
describe
'885' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMO' 'sip-files00017.txt'
8c2fd3ff4682bc765ce0b03aa17a06c7
6baea23765bb2ee2150e86f0fb2dfb541ce0a27e
describe
'8892' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMP' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
e49436da51075410733c463f915e8e8d
ffa0e0e66cc61bed9b688dc36f1684b63d63e826
describe
'334413' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMQ' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
178a994232e0c75ca4a4d0e8bf79de1a
3e1093b46bb551bfa98ebe043dfd99b204b993a6
'2011-09-20T01:48:11-04:00'
describe
'86506' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMR' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
ea68531bbaac36bdcd3d0efcc6bcc416
97c6c53c75fdc96827351df95632da37b8d81ef7
'2011-09-20T01:46:48-04:00'
describe
'22741' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMS' 'sip-files00018.pro'
20c76ede2131de0f34226c69229a71b9
a774095319768e08f887881cc23e5721cc3a5bc2
'2011-09-20T01:48:53-04:00'
describe
'28663' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMT' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
142013e7a07deb3bbe7ef9302f6cfcca
0ea7ba71105768094576c4b3429c85c1e7a1b691
'2011-09-20T01:46:38-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMU' 'sip-files00018.tif'
21af616eae41c17ad3bd1e22884a5cb6
c56b8f662aac4bb21665687c1d43804b715cda93
'2011-09-20T01:47:22-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMV' 'sip-files00018.txt'
056da0e4246643e5f66b78fdf47ac1bb
016d168ce6233fcbf46ceb6b285ff55a2ec43b39
'2011-09-20T01:46:37-04:00'
describe
'8729' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMW' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
2b216fbd9813f5b9f072b2049c493426
9eae811b88a7d70a7cd519b3d58f524603968fda
describe
'334396' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMX' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
7dc0b3b2d4af4843efb3767d61ed9b74
9897b189ac6ab5ecb318bc390d6b0f8b0bf09430
'2011-09-20T01:48:47-04:00'
describe
'89971' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMY' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
0c35a7000e54ace969bcd77a842f2225
d4054d4dfc2d35be98588dddcc7c54c20057f0bd
describe
'23329' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDMZ' 'sip-files00019.pro'
6cdaaa7ef3c47e700cd41005b1a0d348
2e5b8a52a2770b58bdebb457eba56e2179cc9838
describe
'30640' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNA' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
4d14d5e39f1aebaf163754dceaed020f
5fc0250aaa833204a5f60e790222cc33b898c535
'2011-09-20T01:47:37-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNB' 'sip-files00019.tif'
80f6fbcca2b957a9a0e555c284a20b66
daabfe31cecd3c1ba44f955216cdc2ed25211d4f
'2011-09-20T01:47:50-04:00'
describe
'951' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNC' 'sip-files00019.txt'
d0e9bdd23128b57229665d00dc4e218f
fa53dd0d32ade8984d5185c4e5234fb57404a4c6
'2011-09-20T01:46:52-04:00'
describe
'8428' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDND' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
8242a2ae037ed2a086450bed4c9edb11
877771805b9fb7039614b7bee0ab25e0d12a8ea1
describe
'334287' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNE' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
8f62bfe19a5f59ea060669bb1794d935
7780319cbc7c032015a7f25eae5beb6c8db9233d
describe
'76399' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNF' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
6577cec530afff60367b4cc40c3465a2
be87b078dbfa7d9915d773ff8f394fc6a101b4e9
describe
'12470' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNG' 'sip-files00020.pro'
cd1c28fe6ce163023606baab7d38a7e3
625eb384cc1df58f6bf094622ef3ae30287d56c5
'2011-09-20T01:48:10-04:00'
describe
'24508' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNH' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
c70a64658d47a68c0236d2afdc4e1fd7
c4cfefe73864a44d8fef30a7171818e8304deb4f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNI' 'sip-files00020.tif'
7f19cf58466ad70236c6d6ba78272b80
5ac2b1901283bd3475daf8985a9bd9fd65e077a9
'2011-09-20T01:46:53-04:00'
describe
'524' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNJ' 'sip-files00020.txt'
390320e4ed0075561b90a12d5dc55db2
4a21e59381e3eb758d909875b775b6d4a772dd16
'2011-09-20T01:48:54-04:00'
describe
'6421' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNK' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
7d1e68587d85d6810b6109f838c6695e
631e4355f22ea40e097301268cf142ca720dc7e1
'2011-09-20T01:48:39-04:00'
describe
'334403' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNL' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
17c8256a4f3180d8dafc279f472a941e
40cfecef327dcca3b56bdc453112a15d63e1e8cf
'2011-09-20T01:48:32-04:00'
describe
'96711' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNM' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
9b82e42efc314fa0a41e8d3b1515459e
d9adb11fdb8ebc879f3da9e897d7d939a5b63df2
'2011-09-20T01:48:21-04:00'
describe
'26142' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNN' 'sip-files00021.pro'
2c8c9c41bb22ef51ee55d1a287420842
c8997ab70505b2129ebf82068002c04ba5f3c660
describe
'33467' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNO' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
2f7b81a87e2b62901a7e65521ca8cb47
88d0d57d502497849f1c3b5ac133846c6c64cf05
'2011-09-20T01:48:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNP' 'sip-files00021.tif'
62542378effbc55261cbcb11ba75d9ef
053aa3a80cb4ea140480f8ba035ddb211a2020d3
'2011-09-20T01:47:12-04:00'
describe
'1041' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNQ' 'sip-files00021.txt'
f2d0070bb6f9afc44352525416435fa3
8b8a650371aa6e65f3c3012845f60ca509906335
describe
'9125' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNR' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
8b4037a46b21c15b5cd8858f8d992b2a
3f890f6146e9e9d816e1dd18e0186d11be77c6fc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNS' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
fd3388bbe9c18b88fcc293e18c3b60a1
942b87a874c87cff7f2ed75932b5b930b854ef97
'2011-09-20T01:47:59-04:00'
describe
'88565' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNT' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
7d903cff6e728675f81112e63a6ba3c8
7ad70b35776dd46f6411bd757e246b1cea13b212
'2011-09-20T01:48:35-04:00'
describe
'24021' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNU' 'sip-files00022.pro'
726793df082f23b697c38c81f587f422
d27285f8164bb59e0e140ad625dc798fcfa471f2
'2011-09-20T01:47:21-04:00'
describe
'30423' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNV' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
d4b1e3f4458e611ded8b35ec30725dfd
89b158bc12f35093abe567ca7a6c18f4e99c0b2e
'2011-09-20T01:48:01-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNW' 'sip-files00022.tif'
5328b55baf348457d082779de33fdea3
cc7d5be310e792e5dbcade33434938f71a0859a3
describe
'981' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNX' 'sip-files00022.txt'
3a70e6475bc86abd3f8282e6dc0135e4
b443a7a17ff0d60e18202f1c7fc668ca7d110350
describe
'8402' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNY' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
b3f5db5ad572c4b4a89cbc7c7b2f1b73
4a38c1cefb667ef820bfd0447b0f824d0d819d3d
describe
'334376' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDNZ' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
5d95aef477f3af3b29d488fda2280b85
515a48104628c7ba8b13d1710432e58aff33c9dc
'2011-09-20T01:46:27-04:00'
describe
'90707' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOA' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
8468f0ad456605dd3c756cd9f4a8bd50
8ffa25967132f4fe2114dcb01e33675cb9fa0c5a
'2011-09-20T01:48:48-04:00'
describe
'24012' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOB' 'sip-files00023.pro'
0878a316a016aaef82bc97dc8d31f2c9
bcfa83a20232b3c2ed957f4aa11d1bf8721dc08f
'2011-09-20T01:47:16-04:00'
describe
'31494' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOC' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
dd50f4367f0ee4517b5b611b17b7a3f7
1abca2d52ff30e44259de1081a1c91423f9b947a
'2011-09-20T01:46:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOD' 'sip-files00023.tif'
03e7e8d0bbcb0e353b349fad9b9d5862
f06f05468443230f34221ba5363101b9386a80f4
describe
'967' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOE' 'sip-files00023.txt'
7e7dfcbb58ee3adc59e99e360d46f42d
85ad552e4514fd3d7ff001466406091fb7340096
'2011-09-20T01:47:14-04:00'
describe
'8824' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOF' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
7a5e5a1bf928c9d72c5eeccd5ba6c424
2dc2254f8f7e0eae9a43e25b1c840f54bdd9155e
'2011-09-20T01:47:48-04:00'
describe
'334409' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOG' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
f03efc3018f9917aea32496e895f8d11
1d4243cc2deef7ae1e98e0e40764f1f72a380a71
describe
'71252' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOH' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
6f1c914e6678d9fd1c3596f8863931a6
ec43335eaa24dd8b616f1deb8d4273313d4a3320
describe
'15650' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOI' 'sip-files00024.pro'
0cf06db57c7cb56925d98c8f9bff3046
9ff0e34b2b49974949ab410d69de7eba395d4375
describe
'24742' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOJ' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
abf57e4d37da4b8b9601c592ab8b8faa
996caea267f881ee0bcb54a7ff89ebc86ac11f89
'2011-09-20T01:47:01-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOK' 'sip-files00024.tif'
55ace9482424d5e73c7e4830ae92b37e
b165c8d4d6aa3468da9c3804444bfd00a04e14cf
'2011-09-20T01:48:18-04:00'
describe
'668' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOL' 'sip-files00024.txt'
934927e7e8991b5b1486a264d35ea6bb
59bf80e34edd5dddf7e0536bd38285dfde239ba0
describe
'6911' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOM' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
6b11128c908c7cda553329142d9c99c0
8b193b063844c75d749de7f4a01a6b1d4e91299d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDON' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
ace93a50d9e67fc6e37f0d241fe74cca
6370e9bd7667ddf9b4329d35ebf10cf8c43929c2
describe
'87556' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOO' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
8be66388740f0f7b8a1b82b248c740d8
3f333c5f2a303345c45caeda6282753e8871a4bc
describe
'23595' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOP' 'sip-files00025.pro'
a34a25efacba97b7de96b08f5f837391
036c8fafe100c48be9b0a3d2f47c952361dfcefc
describe
'29328' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOQ' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
c453aab290f88f7002c831023584c883
bcbc0db115e99285644e6053eaf888ec85c5c8a6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOR' 'sip-files00025.tif'
be27f44eea27785bd1f7dcbdc73dd93b
c93bcaa95a30d27d5935fecf9f7c7c8ec9c87444
describe
'950' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOS' 'sip-files00025.txt'
5780cab829455c64869fbb2106163b60
5cc213910394dde042ad76e880db1c59d867e4b3
describe
'8224' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOT' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
125ccd4b1eff6aa238839e3574b6fc35
f716b2b9b255e6ed4732ad50319242d50b23b2b7
describe
'334349' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOU' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
1130b84faca09eae17942442ab1987e4
8ecd600c36136359ae502715975b71fa827c3058
'2011-09-20T01:46:47-04:00'
describe
'72248' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOV' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
b3cf66fe662be5a982d0122168d04990
ad7ae03e37187ac47357cdef639382009e9959bc
'2011-09-20T01:48:51-04:00'
describe
'19960' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOW' 'sip-files00026.pro'
ac8b33097361e4b581dd14e6130d5142
7c4753cdd874c47e11d3e25be5bf3803645c997e
'2011-09-20T01:46:29-04:00'
describe
'25263' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOX' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
f21ca0cedc6bc8c6ccede9255606eb5b
e98c0f310c3bb232575d2c9f5a62515bd8728797
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOY' 'sip-files00026.tif'
a5bb34ffa11c7e16bfb34058c56a6c79
c7fd89c74ad62d78b87a662cf6b71e1307f16665
describe
'895' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDOZ' 'sip-files00026.txt'
eb48e818a2bceda07fc830da80d257d7
25e3a4a26a033363f442ef0449b718a2c6fac8c2
describe
'7278' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPA' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
09541b6d97fc5da56836bf599a8dd48f
e52b8841af1b4de36ddd531b8a76e696fb754021
'2011-09-20T01:46:51-04:00'
describe
'334408' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPB' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
51229875d24b010f11760e14dd73700f
19e0701a2551bd352ea343506072e63ab02838a9
'2011-09-20T01:46:43-04:00'
describe
'78656' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPC' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
8894450716be94fc598dce7f433ef260
59a41a2effb702bc140e4a7aa475768658b4c418
'2011-09-20T01:47:49-04:00'
describe
'21395' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPD' 'sip-files00027.pro'
a0b16e5dd2a1f5071d69b6b9cc78e1d4
7a0c9bfeac6cf2b9dbdbf3fab69364cac26d1249
'2011-09-20T01:48:12-04:00'
describe
'27123' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPE' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
ff8a4f5dac4f031c470475a2064ddb59
deb832164b15726f4e3e278b3a910d174de271d5
'2011-09-20T01:48:22-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPF' 'sip-files00027.tif'
49ed0a941585f3d5bf5cd4b3b5afcdfe
a3273c5b7c6054cb76d978419162dfe8849ba89a
'2011-09-20T01:47:51-04:00'
describe
'929' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPG' 'sip-files00027.txt'
457a11a868c3a9d67616f4f5cd2d4efb
f6f5128ca3603cf2f8bf0464c7415fdf37c27bc3
'2011-09-20T01:47:06-04:00'
describe
'7227' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPH' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
fbcc539800c584e2f7ce354690c07d99
85ff88997aab2f1d318201495dda24be6f13cef5
describe
'334372' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPI' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
2682c2e8e4956e3e70d72251a7600b01
e99346867c6f315b1c763338796f56e4c48fe093
describe
'70228' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPJ' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
b00440325dc7675c5737c8b694d758b5
aa1df27515170de7ddc5e6e78e3e486456ac0c33
'2011-09-20T01:46:19-04:00'
describe
'16158' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPK' 'sip-files00028.pro'
00ca40e2db81e80200f79aafed2c221a
22cf5f81581c162a930704acf2f59e0f871626dd
describe
'21686' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPL' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
6dab4753418d7c76b9e423831e7a655a
232b24d071b7d0adc143beb151b9c870d1ecad1f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPM' 'sip-files00028.tif'
114a0c06594a2b0387219d814a6e287d
f944fbab58a4f94a15ab8eda4008a518a560b106
'2011-09-20T01:48:13-04:00'
describe
'703' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPN' 'sip-files00028.txt'
9c3bc51a861cefeae9f3900de6ef1977
af64d15b1d75feeb3b00f33b85abdc3abdf7707b
describe
'6823' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPO' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
f5a6f9500a88e8bb5b849d0b8d9e407c
fc9cd7a14fbad136f7143186dcd3168592ae98d4
'2011-09-20T01:46:11-04:00'
describe
'334370' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPP' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
c3df27433ab80892f7e61c932d108b06
fd4288f274ce756b6b601769aae5e56a5cb8c2d3
describe
'79179' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPQ' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
541695a608b67a26bc1345c27c82227b
123e689c112b1fd9cc0ab3d9fdd9e93cc6b547f4
describe
'18338' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPR' 'sip-files00029.pro'
e975bb98ee4356139e39414d68e1cc22
90177cf037570f8562d280c9fdf1d6156f8adf93
describe
'25819' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPS' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
eb72348e0a0014010b5194c1e574e040
a21fcd9618ebcd686529871fcaea7e115325eb46
'2011-09-20T01:48:06-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPT' 'sip-files00029.tif'
378d1b5dd8e54bbfb1264455352931be
e42c87568c14a5276c271392440cd8504d111ccd
describe
'842' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPU' 'sip-files00029.txt'
815ccd5d808031d38b2ea6dc80e45f90
88a7a7e16ce1b65bcd9f66059e520a80ffd73354
'2011-09-20T01:46:42-04:00'
describe
'7221' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPV' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
2eed6130636e43df02ba20d794f17166
fc05b0bb946108b23f762af4f0d547edcf3a19d0
describe
'334240' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPW' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
58864900b0dbc314357c47708c924327
f4b0084bb9773c96c597723f6beade2f6c94fcf6
describe
'79123' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPX' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
720c74294e164d05dd6647a70b89075a
6c14dfc1b5ef6fbd713a765e0ab7267d3b4d2e69
'2011-09-20T01:46:10-04:00'
describe
'9771' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPY' 'sip-files00030.pro'
b46c0779aeebf4c3c4443507632f6a74
38b5b4399186bface26b3dacb7148d771797fe13
describe
'22648' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDPZ' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
3445bced13b14991da94769e35522d63
41b71c6133404e7ef1e4166f00a9b209af7c418d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQA' 'sip-files00030.tif'
6a989bb8f59697b424cc791546c2e56d
7b0060b72216a4a7a40d169b4bc5cabad6f4eda2
describe
'390' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQB' 'sip-files00030.txt'
d0ed232727624bc7436e6c065d4db25a
042fc6a95183c60073fc1c527986a081bf6f71af
describe
'5864' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQC' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
f87a958421825553e947c1a2bfa78b72
ea2df4d4d2b44567aaf724ac0fa6a0e7550d0c89
describe
'334303' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQD' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
662656693e1e4e342404e3329e1ccdac
5464896602cb107fcadd3b0d9a2a1eb6fb713477
'2011-09-20T01:48:37-04:00'
describe
'64849' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQE' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
eed8e59fa846b006516273522f199ff5
5a8aa6c579a2f6df741a217578b23db6a8ac69ae
describe
'15902' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQF' 'sip-files00031.pro'
e285f0262bf55181d7f916f7fae780f9
37ecd59762bd6244c598f81c8969c08624c1d0be
describe
'22372' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQG' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
7541c2b292af077cd227a9f978f4f374
12d85a02599d68fb252e63afef8ff1eb5998cd37
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQH' 'sip-files00031.tif'
bbf78e80513cb9c6259958127864fc98
19b66be5ed3217cd962ee9b9c21f7f24adf663ab
describe
'657' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQI' 'sip-files00031.txt'
dc8f421e40e302a52770d5be7992b132
290fa11691fb803fbf97d0619c382cb88190d3a0
'2011-09-20T01:47:46-04:00'
describe
'6327' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQJ' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
bbf72c394b1b225ed7da44b7ec5caf96
057d78e01d2620d0a188693d61e2517b9f9d6c21
describe
'334395' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQK' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
2eb54768d591d80f704863eed7917dcc
181c3acb15ba5690b9fdf4accbe976ce99e75723
describe
'84188' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQL' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
f0a06186844a287ce5a81613fe7ace65
c107ca26710ed76c87406e3a9a255b62e3b1bf8f
'2011-09-20T01:47:43-04:00'
describe
'23153' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQM' 'sip-files00032.pro'
263656ae7d8cb26b65054eae8ca868e6
3cbef90fdd07a8255b0ba6809c9232f549e3d67c
'2011-09-20T01:47:28-04:00'
describe
'28472' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQN' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
9a02b7592389c60be1babcc2638d6b72
97ff24bb1aaf6c1d9ac7ca1966e83c9bb931c910
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQO' 'sip-files00032.tif'
ee3766cf1a73b6e4b2a499551b83a03d
fae36a58e72d03f2d69a692f8bbf01670972c716
'2011-09-20T01:48:57-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQP' 'sip-files00032.txt'
2d0793779b4809bdaa71e7c5d5ba3f48
be7a027fbeb4590cc904ce0d2c7919d53349d9fb
describe
'8316' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQQ' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
fff539e67fd087a78f7ecafc075cce01
cd48882d2c611327503412cf633fa1cea639f9a4
describe
'334365' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQR' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
e987a71b37230e0643b59b1ce0a7ae02
f3031dce6c31bad7521c2857b63eaa2770dcffa3
describe
'76728' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQS' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
502eebcb98b8d8e4bb21f041e9be3361
9cdda06b121a363796e824a0647274e29137cef8
describe
'21259' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQT' 'sip-files00033.pro'
9d144ebbf07089336f9cc9bee0e55cf4
06ade27d703b095fe58ceea4b1d9ac92acf27127
describe
'26134' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQU' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
1f5b90f22448053e6d5615bd9f61629d
4ee5cca0cd524e69d459d5dab15f5910756cbe76
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQV' 'sip-files00033.tif'
18e8d3a873770dfd7ab9edd268090e0f
6b532dbf2dfc256ecfed02287d3bb716254e053b
describe
'899' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQW' 'sip-files00033.txt'
1040dbe8bdd1703472496c2bed5cf6f6
b08ac4a69a96d737d7257b0357a8a7c2a2cb8012
describe
'7436' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQX' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
df4c886869463b97d67fe66076089bde
54562f5b4a1211b2e77f03c96f9e1cb1de922b1d
'2011-09-20T01:48:25-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQY' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
afef9272be61c10cb0110c954c2baf4f
e7041a9d85ddca003fa23cf7021c681ae48c3614
describe
'88464' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDQZ' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
c2a9ec069c4aa9b3d8a9437ff50b9631
ec224700d822d925ac2fbc3d2492fc42f8fb61e6
'2011-09-20T01:47:56-04:00'
describe
'23618' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRA' 'sip-files00034.pro'
6c2f653e52a6f1aa0517f03ade2ddd66
ebec23a7c5d6019fe9929448d9dde44ffa4ff96c
describe
'30624' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRB' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
8007923335acd40cb76bfdfd240683c9
73a8853c81cb5fc1d002b4c67014fae4c8b52f1b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRC' 'sip-files00034.tif'
462b8ffbb4a7c0ccea97ba9a8ce92aa6
52fc28a3e32091ed3a787d790367f0ac2cf2d8c1
describe
'949' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRD' 'sip-files00034.txt'
8b03f8e2550ab1e92a732901224a2653
3ab6b0454dc5ae709ce1a8c1892832e08cbd0d33
'2011-09-20T01:47:20-04:00'
describe
'8595' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRE' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
7ec9ab859d29642d2ed322a16b9b2fd0
a575807f4f760c13a64f9edcf117963eaab7d0dd
'2011-09-20T01:47:11-04:00'
describe
'334335' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRF' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
9e2434d8696e22eae5cf538157f8528e
ed207477367ada4a25d9f3691cae51e0c860e8d0
describe
'73358' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRG' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
322677fffe4e5611cf7988aeb37d2900
6f3322daa5234c52dab773d2dca5788f59f3b0d7
'2011-09-20T01:48:56-04:00'
describe
'16524' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRH' 'sip-files00035.pro'
3be6135ac2febe8a99ea33d8d1c2d6de
0fc4dee86b1a333f622a2970a1875b550deac2af
describe
'25311' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRI' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
695316ee19f52a3c6dc574b7025ee081
27d26ff35adeb4c7f50a847948364b28815cf82b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRJ' 'sip-files00035.tif'
2d9152ee5d1d38ba480af620d99d1ac9
416634897a82386f55cc840c17bfcdfcbb8f5179
describe
'717' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRK' 'sip-files00035.txt'
3adc97a5d26d68a87d06046db02fcefa
0d4325a7d1993219bb60fd5d80bfb04b5962d47e
describe
'7083' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRL' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
eeaafbaeba2059504c5dd892f293899a
0fc6074b7aa50a55dee2bf37c14d60e44567577b
describe
'334405' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRM' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
e2e829bbe1a43af8d68c54c47eee0c39
3f56a97f1287f409ac23eb45f6fc059dc5c3c3ab
'2011-09-20T01:48:43-04:00'
describe
'87004' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRN' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
3aa9a4db856789fdedcd70cdd68b209c
75f60d47a07740d7dd836a6b1df0c52a96444355
describe
'23309' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRO' 'sip-files00036.pro'
ce48cee73c8e33d028b26db59925f195
06c95aa23ae50825c73f6a4b9308e07b13042916
'2011-09-20T01:47:57-04:00'
describe
'29057' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRP' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
251dafb5f36aac809a544b08c8029da9
902756a5d10d74968cf442cffd80ce3ef08a3643
'2011-09-20T01:48:42-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRQ' 'sip-files00036.tif'
b170e65df9ba302ed07934440cdc85cf
1e338ef8bbdfb409b54f639b9946bf20d168330b
describe
'938' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRR' 'sip-files00036.txt'
2eaeb9255c8376cc956c1bf33b48de4a
2059b83925ff78bf91bdbc99d9dba6f0a17a04f6
describe
'8252' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRS' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
238566154c5fe999295d46b9db76d5c8
edc4fb2cbd3cb122d5b94d2f472f709bbb822d63
describe
'334352' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRT' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
d9d414298f00794e752725b6f2da33ee
5cb3bf640f627dfd8c3a051a13ddbd4b76797886
'2011-09-20T01:48:33-04:00'
describe
'98692' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRU' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
a19876145eb505c33dd2bacd1725c913
72feeb38a553338fd5aebeddba52220fba7d1f27
describe
'26250' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRV' 'sip-files00037.pro'
8820631c1b1605901ac354e2f2faec15
d589e53de6fea3c594d6289c198e186a18faf2d7
describe
'33937' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRW' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
ec190b0ff4d5e84de22f292fa5a8b343
295a7aa304c05031689571ebbe2e6b3dd07dd4c9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRX' 'sip-files00037.tif'
ec514615132a6cdd6618444f8f910420
d3a27959efefe6f08c3cdae044a915f7c4d8e94f
describe
'1066' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRY' 'sip-files00037.txt'
95052a4d3a36c6fec138a9da442b9de8
e1ac264b25d92cd68dcd811e3df8bc03ea19b504
'2011-09-20T01:48:44-04:00'
describe
'9071' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDRZ' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
e96ed13777d4cacc705c21959f3157c1
e5da74cf4a89cd474090edab33c6f537563b02e4
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSA' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
5b71cfc96a576da1916959f5becd0a60
dfbda758b6d6c3db3c3b9a08bc31323f8fda4360
describe
'91990' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSB' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
4c4906a4879c336a347b771b3555ed5e
fefd0b11d806c156333286dd3e6e0704c92617bd
describe
'24185' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSC' 'sip-files00038.pro'
42251ad2ae6b9a629f58b1742f3abb43
ab1e2110a2df2aace68dcaca59fd55a935c7211b
describe
'31852' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSD' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
f778072517f6b0aec0ed716e25206982
a473b0c0b41207891ef772fd447c495d70261b5c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSE' 'sip-files00038.tif'
820a1c752c08c6feef9285c00d3b9ed7
c79dd58fe8cec2a6f5188b6ea409219463e82688
'2011-09-20T01:47:30-04:00'
describe
'974' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSF' 'sip-files00038.txt'
0897868997cd8c0fe9d782129fc118a6
7b58a9f81d1da8d898faee520885ddeeb39a066a
describe
'8329' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSG' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
7aca09ec271ed84886017afed392ec7c
4a98e981a9d7ab8e299b5c0c132fb9b078d9533d
'2011-09-20T01:47:17-04:00'
describe
'328254' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSH' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
30bcffcc49c0af4b289fac4c94c7c2f3
1d644aff1587f197fe10e7f37ace8e74eb622a72
'2011-09-20T01:47:09-04:00'
describe
'91040' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSI' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
a243858d7f06322531c69c0a19ade095
754e2c24f9e9edb6e45a81d2243e1fc03e791787
'2011-09-20T01:48:07-04:00'
describe
'23983' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSJ' 'sip-files00039.pro'
bd4bfb59d46f40ba4e28e6836fa5a2b6
d9f298eeaf580a67b08c5fe73a679ac92413d9af
describe
'31216' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSK' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
14bf6853e671d2465eb0e94da1779813
21248c44bf0f03b76d1390f9cc98c1688318be15
describe
'2642660' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSL' 'sip-files00039.tif'
2e9acc62c156216d2c961dc1dfe01044
eb18975a16fd74f5416ea0bf6f08d7d0ecc37c57
describe
'964' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSM' 'sip-files00039.txt'
c4efa4847f9e69251aa8c2b0cdf99b5c
ea19f7fa1000c46a340c37ffd3dd1e02cad97150
describe
'8548' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSN' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
e2809f6fc37b23c9be6864d8599afbdc
84ed37c634731b8d94b20ee24f025e5bba59cf8d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSO' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
76c3b5444ca176d73287fb2eadfc1f77
1a626cd287723444cf92350f36f5d5b72d9e543e
describe
'83158' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSP' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
86c712d8fc8160a4327739ef1bcb14de
23ac2d10490daef4c4dce5d71a0b5cac59e31489
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSQ' 'sip-files00040.pro'
35c6ba57992c93398f9e4489f81599e4
19368ffc02523024b8fb3a3e72a350f78ac2d2ca
'2011-09-20T01:46:32-04:00'
describe
'27940' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSR' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
78072720830ae70291d9b139cb63ad78
e8b667c04cebd4bcd2b29c54f785829bf56eaef1
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSS' 'sip-files00040.tif'
c1bfde952f544ed4be4d712048347486
31c36d95cc40f68eef2f56f66bf2be7fad04508c
describe
'925' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDST' 'sip-files00040.txt'
912ae69fc82e2e765202808297fefe22
de23946a86a7b35996051a97b935f661fd48035a
describe
'7956' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSU' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
f50367bcb96887088dcdd74ee0dd267b
2b31005d53c2028a33b0b079fc2f1d58e0a92836
'2011-09-20T01:46:56-04:00'
describe
'324865' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSV' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
55bb5a3b2916a0708da8e88ff0131db2
2d1da2fd6c70b55c712b02d3351555a6b39634a2
describe
'61793' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSW' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
56d1a5906c9ab9350e22c8ac93bc7b94
d1ecdbd0d8057d76dac9fa05729a21625c0ea140
describe
'13467' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSX' 'sip-files00041.pro'
33f9cca0bb6745372bda1d7ce7f1bcdf
64e2df786c7b23f592dfc4c45f09faf001ea605f
describe
'21129' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSY' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
4e03194125967f9abce400013dfa11eb
b9d1d5dc4739ab76dab81b9c241a731873fb59fc
describe
'2616920' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDSZ' 'sip-files00041.tif'
a86398b9a8d908388d9fe6e8b65e718a
906995e31fd4034b223d2118b794daca7c4fe99e
describe
'599' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTA' 'sip-files00041.txt'
74e592540f66db6fe9c8cb3d1908de0c
41ce3d92ed7d9173d636e172cdefe1ac71a3c668
describe
'6288' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTB' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
bf1cec475fb58f7c3f75c9c1c61023ad
46d03322a7c1e8aa27913b379f68ad5794594f39
'2011-09-20T01:48:02-04:00'
describe
'334377' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTC' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
b01294ae28546585a7d414c23312861f
551945640ce4523e2f88376479221696ee6d4494
describe
'89961' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTD' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
72987bcefdd9ec8bd80f5ec6d27429a9
86f2585bdbafcb1a5098be0d5b3fd1fd67f2e683
describe
'23192' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTE' 'sip-files00042.pro'
1891efccc4c1337ab48d7f6d1a7b6e9e
cfccc1f4802d85637f80c6950ea953bd0e453a04
describe
'30170' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTF' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
2d28716902a100a1f5b007ae77867344
bd10addfcfabbff42e04bddead588468d85e6b50
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTG' 'sip-files00042.tif'
87be76dacfc64305746a140f68499a64
012cfd79f4866e40486dc6db74e09509ccb39694
describe
'942' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTH' 'sip-files00042.txt'
93b96358c52082fe16bb097d86b067b1
3e3fc525fe43040a86c9b7739df0be1e05b77468
describe
'9353' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTI' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
8d4ff2450ef55786a35c4cd49cea3233
dda01926ce5d6fad99f005d43c2634879b1e00ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTJ' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
1fb033b218e63601e0fc1c367fcb7a16
b65a4063c60a40890032c058cb289357372fa02a
describe
'62699' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTK' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
cda052596c7d35a5d8d846d244d8cf12
bd7a327c387ac1872f91f178720e881ebfd91802
describe
'16777' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTL' 'sip-files00043.pro'
14cca7f1f0792e4aee350a39fc74c658
43ea0266316e113a2d3eec958f95cd175702e81e
describe
'21569' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTM' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
932f8eac60bf251843478f2ef4f98ec6
c855c54a1af0fbb0d1bfae80bda15bfcc8d4c490
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTN' 'sip-files00043.tif'
b31bb1f421a2c6de1341cde9f179af1e
78b5882d8ab27f0e52ae99066fba65ca58293894
'2011-09-20T01:46:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTO' 'sip-files00043.txt'
d7cfc8e2033870d3ebf82c2e81cb7449
edf290d042510b90341d438c83ef1b1e7913922f
describe
'6066' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTP' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
7e8342609d123556f8029b1382143570
3f4cd1f8720a225ff23e63de27ef03cc486b320f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTQ' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
9748b37e4b6075bd749fc8cf9a39766c
8b1789c2e396885763b1a45816aeaf929e1e89bf
describe
'66433' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTR' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
50325acd926b5fb5dd79b015cad12917
3d998936a0f006a123e9582abba916966610df27
'2011-09-20T01:48:08-04:00'
describe
'16179' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTS' 'sip-files00044.pro'
802820b8564726588f774b247e5a4f15
e6965ade73e539fcbdccc671833a49bca59eea5b
'2011-09-20T01:48:46-04:00'
describe
'21997' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTT' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
7e5ba0b860b0b82c4329238e35f4ba1b
eba3dd19f2fddaa8fa402f69c093096079e55ca8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTU' 'sip-files00044.tif'
5c06c2446118d5b074213d66d3a77c7d
0f02a7c1971462536aa6e8cd5171be4d86bff23d
describe
'691' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTV' 'sip-files00044.txt'
3155cf93a74a75420cef5979cecebc21
4acfb29aea305ccf2fa4f15c054b6029adcd2e9c
describe
'6753' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTW' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
c39c8520cea5e9f5782d2b0d0c75e66f
ef9d47c382bfae326353e57f813cd3fe4abddff4
describe
'325230' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTX' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
6eb4d14a578321f78df5a8883a19a8e3
39b9329be6f8286a903e2b12b29a79d4f49a5aeb
describe
'206242' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTY' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
4316377d3e74fa3926190ea8294e68cc
4224d533359b6d80b66e697f68fc908d365370be
describe
'1607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDTZ' 'sip-files00045.pro'
668ba653977efcea81e8bcc635c635c3
446e46458887e5a46ddcd02221d07b0d7f219898
describe
'48864' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUA' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
38287c2cc54792eccae6ef5391a7786c
801429de4868c04a5c0d2be5fd758470b63d35c1
describe
'2618180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUB' 'sip-files00045.tif'
ad33b0942e4affbd3b38b02f97b740c8
b73b0339d2ecfd0ad13529406fc5dfccc1fcf246
describe
'174' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUC' 'sip-files00045.txt'
03fea17666cb48887f506c92de9b274f
151a3cf5218687f05b7a54fd1bc98a8629a822ae
describe
'11494' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUD' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
3dc8eb3eeacdabfa49a2e30882a85040
43dd1ae8aea6c96da7779048ecd07c75ea9d5187
describe
'334389' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUE' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
50f2e6b5b8ae7c789041ae2ed28bea24
cc0704d8e329c7a6cd001c51069a18052a676bfa
describe
'10112' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUF' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
99105870b82c4b9a8cf481cd8529d083
4daa1684f49c4131311844e6eb8f1051b741a6ab
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUG' 'sip-files00046.pro'
f9cc6d74e48e75d569aff1f62978c03f
f946fd26a1809ad95dfc48b836407081893be9a4
describe
'3297' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUH' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
a1b8b71a8cd7362b7de5076ae34b7882
9ff7efd6222cf0556692caa8f1bcbd4636c83884
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUI' 'sip-files00046.tif'
79262e4a0aeb939627c1eaa1a56fefc2
6795f9da5e16da0887cc6910742c5a6b64ab0389
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUJ' 'sip-files00046.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
describe
'1172' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUK' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
11c35e7c8d19d1c67d46581fcc2fcfc0
eb041d72ffdb7ec388ce240f7121e84beebefde4
describe
'334414' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUL' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
1aa22e5e7832950d2b8c13c0bcce90c5
c5312d81217f70e70253c1ddfc36396256c34480
describe
'102078' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUM' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
07d9282a170c24c1c5026f6cb8d099c6
c664af73e1caa62c5d3caf5830166013418243eb
'2011-09-20T01:48:49-04:00'
describe
'26125' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUN' 'sip-files00047.pro'
7f76e8aaab08497a9eb1e59b83c57b9d
114eb9d43c22597ca8b8e18fb63865fae08c0d74
describe
'34548' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUO' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
11706fb512f193e36f8fc919f0c3f338
b32c1be153bd875ee47e2bdcb02d178f499bca76
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUP' 'sip-files00047.tif'
bfbf2146ae24d41feeeebb39c430e331
25b7f74fc6b3bbd4de7f2dd9c5959b9be4edbf68
describe
'1053' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUQ' 'sip-files00047.txt'
40c8eb84349ad73a8fc5e673bdf65899
136f51d4176a5e1259d8627367e0642fe8b0bac7
describe
'9914' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUR' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
4d11b97a94ff0f1046b4bd0d7bfffdf2
0598746de106bd53d8e674b750cd38a9425bd956
describe
'326253' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUS' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
18258344f66bfa1398cb04868cb36d60
7239bd7178aa5e62eb5c000d1b3659a856a0f3d2
describe
'99834' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUT' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
11cb92f19616a721276ff9085f8a3bb7
aeb58bd9317e99bc52cb4f4fd03ecf3c91522450
describe
'25059' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUU' 'sip-files00048.pro'
7786aa1bfe6bf2e963fd2da012497d3b
fdf7cbf1c4fe6360cd36a107afc8bac27a511575
'2011-09-20T01:46:12-04:00'
describe
'34038' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUV' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
b29cd44940cc8e809ee2960916fe306b
a631b91686e7251958240b0765a1fff0e4a03b64
describe
'2626340' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUW' 'sip-files00048.tif'
f911efdfcd3024d2b7366ee295f26f7e
8cceaf8ee912143aa829955bd1f034ad1f4bcbea
'2011-09-20T01:46:20-04:00'
describe
'1004' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUX' 'sip-files00048.txt'
8a7cfedbcfe50da0bfcd8827d9ae7da4
3e73c666d0fd27917ca27061fba83305d313d94e
describe
'10022' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUY' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
ff1b29f2242ace284dc630360a5b8ff9
5d1a1507bcadfe8bb9a05fe64a83e3ab91a2396e
'2011-09-20T01:48:55-04:00'
describe
'334291' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDUZ' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
10c63ab046629139356c8b926ccba8de
d093f044dd56ee157d9b9e509b1c37e49c97b39f
describe
'60867' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVA' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
1b97e366413c0860cf3bc0f915201c8e
b2f3258039b3f99691d4754b1d4a886dab209df6
'2011-09-20T01:48:36-04:00'
describe
'11749' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVB' 'sip-files00049.pro'
b3659c82aea55a92d1e674191896b670
5da71fde3e4728ffd79bb6ed20fd15a3b4386049
describe
'21575' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVC' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
7c0fece84ad5b9e4176cbc40a52bdce5
77244bf3168254a3de52aa08cb4e3adabb10cef7
'2011-09-20T01:48:27-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVD' 'sip-files00049.tif'
dad34e444f2768fdb4b97394f3def911
5cd546d856ae7d6c72f537776b322899de9b7051
describe
'561' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVE' 'sip-files00049.txt'
09bf5ecc201e4a30e8c8b04471700a2b
1f636887959cef07697cba13de8947ccb62c9f38
'2011-09-20T01:48:52-04:00'
describe
'5883' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVF' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
b9a2254ea192bfc43dbfc6cba05ae040
d626d105d28c3ff3c09b881819b4c94bb164d9a9
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVG' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
8a4b090a98e837f3c4b89c10d5987d54
ebfa02afc42115bd3d994626827d51b15ceefb48
describe
'97952' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVH' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
49d2679202cb91886241c5536abf46b9
9b3dc3bad94df4e6db0a6cbd0bcc0e8777f76f6b
describe
'25551' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVI' 'sip-files00050.pro'
be3285491b69dd2218d256599cf3fd1c
dafed325df131b0eb46ec412668733e498783f8f
describe
'32830' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVJ' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
b1c32db0aeb91d62f00969e729966e50
a574d403967bfb95dbf19b5dff888ff195ea6eab
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVK' 'sip-files00050.tif'
90bf5ec5e13c08902cb9016e60c21f33
3d4efdf0a5915e9a48e6e6633924dd2a05862e6b
describe
'1018' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVL' 'sip-files00050.txt'
950bbe583ed5ec6c26e3cca4d5af276d
b8c4eae2708774db97564eed7865e82a11b44f0f
'2011-09-20T01:48:45-04:00'
describe
'9253' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVM' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
f0998ac0d3dd39d3cb024a4a340d6cb0
26c90badac89b17824a62bd4c94ae429e71b4ffe
describe
'334368' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVN' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
e77adfe371b1a123ea8b4539cca4fa19
a9c0711696601ec27b85678c3a1ecb1c79bbfec4
describe
'101016' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVO' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
2b34aea134d76355f9b6b3da2d86ab35
2f0e901c0e8dc7e34e67d3420a777fb34b077117
'2011-09-20T01:46:41-04:00'
describe
'25745' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVP' 'sip-files00051.pro'
4ad146248d051614d4d29006aa7562ad
c7aecba0b6a9356ed365765f1624e6a403b98333
'2011-09-20T01:47:54-04:00'
describe
'34136' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVQ' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
dbea36b4dbae21c957bcfc0857e31cd1
23ceae11cb62b67c840311e22f2d7d340e5aec6c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVR' 'sip-files00051.tif'
5c3f462d1f0d90fec830268bc4b7466d
6d2be4249a7b49e775db069ab88cf5fa0ad7d2db
describe
'1030' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVS' 'sip-files00051.txt'
6ac3d918c10ab13eb12dfc0da98c33a3
38517ae8fcfafa7c2f0474a0baecb4992a3cf40b
describe
'9504' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVT' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
3a0517674b5a9e893bdcc3d0dc604758
50700a043c50e8430663089ffcfec27778c30740
describe
'334306' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVU' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
95db220989ccc03dcb3c42d90b7792bd
30b0b03d799648ff2c8550762318b631ec7b4e69
describe
'87945' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVV' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
aae8bdf846a99e9c59de0fc6e1ea148c
affbc636e917a8aeaa15caddb9d1d33d33de8f98
'2011-09-20T01:47:31-04:00'
describe
'23323' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVW' 'sip-files00052.pro'
06065de6a37bb084e2c47abf942b4cbe
53379caf48ccc619a374c1cadddaf62f318f1751
describe
'30576' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVX' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
afa46dfc32c93d19b13883bd57359c0f
f84769d0d953b400bcfbeb7e76cb488be6065f0f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVY' 'sip-files00052.tif'
d7c4d1d04958baf0f27a9457b5a7bee1
411aa4b760f84d294b92d52aa0fefe1b2d76ab9a
describe
'941' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDVZ' 'sip-files00052.txt'
c726cda05a0bddf01ac19e57a44aca75
1704d5c4689ab0b830512187708c0c7825804fbd
describe
'8162' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWA' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
cbc4e04f600a68b796a3b22c53ace943
dfffb54ba1fbb2d6ab89515b7482cc803e355534
describe
'334393' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWB' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
e32fa31c46910fa98862e2e2abdbd3c4
7e91bf8de06c591cb45f196feeffff0ba795acf8
'2011-09-20T01:47:34-04:00'
describe
'104342' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWC' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
e9ba68b216636de6787d0b8e6ef48a2c
fe1b2d5b8e3ff010a52566bed9a6a67ca770192e
describe
'26775' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWD' 'sip-files00053.pro'
1f7e5fc097b53f6940077e4bfdf554dc
e3afb61592ffdd937115fa459427ef016cfd6b4e
describe
'36147' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWE' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
25f9644f8666102eb69ffd39aeb8fc68
04b4d4c89293929492bf08363d3bd81ccce15bb8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWF' 'sip-files00053.tif'
242fc65e33e835c57b8510b86f862349
e71b36979921765ce081a8a00e2360c68c3bee22
describe
'1065' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWG' 'sip-files00053.txt'
31b8de13d59fe5b70b2b2a90bcd0021f
94c355df275a87a23052627c9560b2705fdc9c87
describe
'9438' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWH' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
2ba04856ebbb833e64104c7e0507eb6f
2a68c9ee8455b7da3e99ebdb6b32139a04193b91
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWI' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
7042aef14f544b8ea7283372ad0f7dc5
f88c1a7a628544bff8ee88dda7ef19f0713bbd39
describe
'93786' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWJ' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
e167ce176295193c61b6a821915fd90e
8ca5b3b9eb80543323f6603341f2ef5e7d868311
describe
'24241' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWK' 'sip-files00054.pro'
c0ffb09db51bd68740a7bcef76b11dd3
b7942de64241eeb7b6dfdb1268e32f5d052fcf92
describe
'32673' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWL' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
15f69875a37ce19a41396e83aee1ae85
733f431dc69a657781557e6d84d12f9ce52033d1
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWM' 'sip-files00054.tif'
f6b72b8ea38d28127c18f259180032d9
697eebf1e8d879df9224924f2bd84b6973a7a95d
describe
'978' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWN' 'sip-files00054.txt'
868cfee0bd8206f3846f90c8f58fac42
8efe343bbe6986b7c9d5c58251cec7b5ec7e7a84
'2011-09-20T01:47:38-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWO' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
cfe6f9eacdb1f8fa5dffaf9aa1c18b94
0ad4fb4f1f0328e858fc3081f02e0697dede1d9b
'2011-09-20T01:46:17-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWP' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
014409798902dc93bb7c9e25e2896255
da6a86801f0e86a04e6f8b51337f1cf9d7bdfc0a
describe
'96522' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWQ' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
30740427e7a2c53f8ec178721d6c0e0e
955b9fe8dcb8eaccbc11d869858ee44e7cd58c14
describe
'25517' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWR' 'sip-files00055.pro'
1658a3f8ff9455ccc6ae4b3d27596968
2ad7031d3088fcda293ea9f971165f91aea99993
describe
'33709' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWS' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
3c752374186dfd31b4a9e4b73f3f8852
39e425974c285016f15eaab6a545ef5edc56e35f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWT' 'sip-files00055.tif'
ccc963a6116c77921c95f08af79114a4
a02db2bc9249a2f9d7369c79103a80131e9c672b
describe
'1019' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWU' 'sip-files00055.txt'
a68b6a70c7c12d7ffa0bb46e918f0fc5
9e7475fb3e1ed96fde8f815730086b918e7d85ab
describe
'8972' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWV' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
b6b8e8a412f1f27eb0bd990ebaf1eba6
d7c4ce841758c6f4619bfc4f01c673ed0f1bb12b
'2011-09-20T01:48:50-04:00'
describe
'334402' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWW' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
ca97d2440640d219a39670faf7c5205b
8694416ae7d2f64696f33207c8d581144acd6745
describe
'73970' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWX' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
0d7d03685c0be8a6a48cf12260e1cf0b
6366b2b76fdd38546a8ddee507ae298e126fd2c5
describe
'9817' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWY' 'sip-files00056.pro'
2058fc89f977126e1f1271ac2fa7ecea
11ac523e0895f3c451fcaddd7c2b31b898aeafbc
describe
'21277' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDWZ' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
7c54dd8c4318a205e0ddb652e856a8b2
deb5162df248f56e97492aaf0b1b28a5273c16c8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXA' 'sip-files00056.tif'
4b9b247d7c3f118a78e81f860bd7e066
324bb034e8058483fed293c1fb15fcfd845a65b5
describe
'438' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXB' 'sip-files00056.txt'
cf7bd1c2d69bdab3af01243a0afb139d
a04c5dd07e050309b2f1ac9818ba9f26b4fa1808
describe
'6724' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXC' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
e1e4bc2e2753b38ab2aef38be4c3c2ba
81be1a77283339c142a4513b388a5df273262abc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXD' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
0dba56833be428974817df771c8b0cd5
7ee693a7fdef546e70c2a0399283ba6d254c363c
describe
'96430' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXE' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
5193e69f85f3106efcd79ea320373922
fb5a7289e572e3622faf0370e2421d3ca0d2aeb0
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXF' 'sip-files00057.pro'
4db917caa51ff75fb1e225d723d58bae
0f803f973eee1d32a8bcfc005b92bc1bd801a926
describe
'33509' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXG' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
6b9986b9ab8eed2822024d875fd4b25e
5bfaefac82790f47679bb77ba55a0f6be3038a8a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXH' 'sip-files00057.tif'
0a84861180e51ecb670a0cfd4c64ac2b
2e14e015442ca94ba6a4804d2d8e7cbb872482e7
describe
'1011' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXI' 'sip-files00057.txt'
fb61a9eef9953580c56b54c667e51cd6
f1173c991df7610ffd860be32f512d2cda458c42
describe
'9070' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXJ' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
5b36f78c3d233aa6686a4cda65612978
657e6b59d3de12c4ac13858d4b5c57617aa35a95
describe
'334415' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXK' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
90adbaf36f32a2781592ee2ec9e27fdf
24de35934521726057006a87d6a7e60f01eae757
'2011-09-20T01:46:18-04:00'
describe
'93655' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXL' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
5a1d9c3f9000105a7d7e551999cba02c
c7f444ac077684ae2835c7657edc755004d10376
describe
'24851' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXM' 'sip-files00058.pro'
af151b8d399b017cd8927d72e24139d2
68959755f70cb41e09a110b8f3f213ddf4a24306
describe
'31967' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXN' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
201fec9298d8c2ce38c7ca2cf03e85c7
158c4a0f2ed7f4b6264fde4008fc28574df55991
'2011-09-20T01:47:42-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXO' 'sip-files00058.tif'
466b4db77510af4983c96b900d9db60d
add8cb5c51f4d984afd1a9032cc035000bab9e35
describe
'993' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXP' 'sip-files00058.txt'
16cfdc6c9984d652d8f43a2920931f7a
2783fe6bdc288ac48e8ccbbf6d2d0f215e87db18
describe
'8992' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXQ' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
c53204035851575d8e3a1715c05a8e4d
866e594fbaeb70d4bf06cb8b33bf1b8889f94960
'2011-09-20T01:47:05-04:00'
describe
'334400' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXR' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
9c20416340315ff83138e146585a65bb
7752999bbc57aff3f68baa1b20047a532337c2d5
describe
'100520' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXS' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
4d19fb65bb149ce6d6024ad73cfc9d52
f01f7a22a7aaaf1a6fdfb24be9ed2a13d71bfc0b
describe
'26202' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXT' 'sip-files00059.pro'
dfb002ec3ae388bc7ee348203e40e954
caaf7ffdbf4b9b92b9367c9e3540ffcb421b441f
describe
'35022' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXU' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
938380c31ffe4762c4a8f2f478ebdd91
b4384f70915280d7ccf819a873f86b7490cd26a6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXV' 'sip-files00059.tif'
3740e99af8b879d97f12f95330e82b7e
5dcf0c4bd2fddc25f7654d65380039eadfccb639
describe
'1050' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXW' 'sip-files00059.txt'
39f82f1be50551483d14b3837117956b
65e60a1148494af051733564af575ce5c54f9e0e
describe
'9365' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXX' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
8f36d2fbb190d9b708faa26131a62f14
39ab603f2b53a705cc1e715aaa54621b17ec8bdc
describe
'334348' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXY' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
c8aa1ebe98daf78c00ea2a79cd0d00c6
58daa906f4955e5d74244d6c5fc1d12e774dd300
describe
'84114' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDXZ' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
23342e46145b6ac2394d85f59fddaedd
050e9a1f075e54f0fcaea43c1b303cebc595aa74
describe
'21507' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYA' 'sip-files00060.pro'
f162800462565889196af6da2a59652a
f63e27e79fe71dba70736a0babd72b2e37d01a20
describe
'28704' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYB' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
9142f6c5184024eaf057cc209ef9086c
71c196df2a76b7fdaf18d940ebd7449121a83964
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYC' 'sip-files00060.tif'
d7659fce9fe6065d78d52263c44ca254
e5b0bb3585a1bcbc0f9b91a460fc71d908caa253
describe
'852' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYD' 'sip-files00060.txt'
f0222e0291c1353fd564a8344062cd09
fda3a55f4f98bcb33052ff1075d06e0ec693021d
describe
'7801' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYE' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
f938476880d66bfe946ef3a769df4b0a
df663951499059def1b41db15c81ce98a055db87
describe
'329607' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYF' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
6eb6905038f0331325ca7e5a00947e98
766abddd6e545d18e90cdbae160520766adadcf3
describe
'64403' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYG' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
e2257816e26e3c0bff6c8c1a03e635df
d4dd31f9c21b35985f7343827a521dbb20c7f320
describe
'15640' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYH' 'sip-files00061.pro'
750ebd7d0494d9b65c3ed9479c671b64
a9e37970774434270649d8bd07a872205a7acff7
describe
'21542' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYI' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
1866b2667145addbcf5ed090b5417cc5
945c802eb5ea25ec4f18240db61760665c29d0e9
describe
'2653180' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYJ' 'sip-files00061.tif'
8091b307bd40fd2ab2dcfff168dea987
77582cba8ebd1f6d6d8a320969bf9f6fce3f7214
describe
'665' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYK' 'sip-files00061.txt'
a53c3ac3e0c5ce0321ee37aadcb2b997
7f383f50ed665e4ec59c1b26c95eacc61b9de026
describe
'6060' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYL' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
2a46cbeec7d931fc288f22c91b635ec4
7466c262650b6da4d894a6672c08108247895940
describe
'334351' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYM' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
9817930d57e51b869c9b3f2ca561423b
f7b325f408f0e188da0834bbb559ae3b8971c8e6
describe
'89304' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYN' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
0b10a8ef7ec9c57144e5a1aca380a98a
54f354b879ef7eed2e680843520dabc481104129
'2011-09-20T01:47:07-04:00'
describe
'23427' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYO' 'sip-files00062.pro'
e95f5b8f35bcf8bc1c7cda5b12c66739
e06cffd52bc45d45b55ba6e11df0d3af1c25f19d
describe
'31433' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYP' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
1d1af39133f83e30fd9a6e93c842d4c4
207ebe242232569ee5bfc9efe6806c1fa003c1d2
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYQ' 'sip-files00062.tif'
0531df953531569a55aabb07f1ac6340
851aff97a7fdc84e59ffd6777b76471c57f5c793
describe
'939' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYR' 'sip-files00062.txt'
cbbb2cc6040b20c1b621c286f90c9b36
cdf575d571ad92ea45f106af04e8b83c1957517d
describe
'8615' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYS' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
3153ff79b1593ef6609238ce32d338ab
6c57449662b29d5b986b990a750b621beb4fd609
'2011-09-20T01:46:57-04:00'
describe
'334375' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYT' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
e66a0c37e6f852d1e01483ddfb947b0f
8d62b813df1c7be56e495a915e30916e273e46c5
describe
'88702' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYU' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
403aeb06ee47fe1ff1404871add0e61a
8c3213826e6e7a3f52631300184c6e8565f9434d
describe
'22887' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYV' 'sip-files00063.pro'
cdc4f5303db55a7980279add5629500c
8373348a99523a55130752627cfd53f0efdd4c4d
describe
'30583' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYW' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
a3cef0c05eeed390b1baedd22492b2b7
00d83bc334cfd4acaf5036b9d0db0260e6734f77
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYX' 'sip-files00063.tif'
808c8f993ba3ff31837db18fd2b2bd55
878f4655d322c4261be473934b49371989f75989
describe
'934' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYY' 'sip-files00063.txt'
41bbae19d409b895f2c1f5fc8d7c708f
2d30ae0a8a61fc4f2f10a2850cbe89588ed5a289
describe
'8508' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDYZ' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
6ac446bbf4912af3300c0f5288ac296e
3714b1a81b5bd8980c83222dc99840c1f044c4c9
describe
'334325' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZA' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
00a4c255946d918083419da01bdd6312
bc02c109b527bda18ba110f2bae58b78d5923506
describe
'58438' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZB' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
c5302b1df097dd6cf62b73bde32cb4a2
8810194ee12c822ccca869a006e1872c3ad6477f
describe
'5181' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZC' 'sip-files00064.pro'
b5923184a618c52b7e9c29594edfc6dd
befa8544b0a273a12b17d129f88efcbda2d0204e
describe
'16783' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZD' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
121c7eabd9f5672df36be8fbcfa149af
7984a1c6f16015343af2644729c2a4e690f39c6e
'2011-09-20T01:47:52-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZE' 'sip-files00064.tif'
bf1418eb276899293903aae17af2699b
41cefd6446904cbbc92689e3b1c77849a3b19d2b
describe
'226' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZF' 'sip-files00064.txt'
dd861ee568fbb1810e6672406da0c5ef
bf64c4d9c497dced0d19df504a8f0ef8c4ae0341
describe
'4703' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZG' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
b28c687b0b8dfa8f02593ce590251c4a
08f032ed9ab6ca5a910390ed4cc6f10d993b9ec8
describe
'334380' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZH' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
da134e93d655fb2eeed1deb7667bbb70
3999225ac5227fbd9b1535c8f29dcf7fce550844
describe
'102532' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZI' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
a84f0602f569abf099d8d6faede755b4
1d4babb06ad2d439c5abc3c1929387a58acbe185
'2011-09-20T01:47:23-04:00'
describe
'25574' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZJ' 'sip-files00065.pro'
6cb91ebe69457d7292c199a288acfecf
ad3a8990b981fff0c85db6bc3814bf8ab618776c
'2011-09-20T01:47:08-04:00'
describe
'35130' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZK' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
e7503819a01a2d5440da0a870b864292
0c5d653d34af40472f3f2d65b20657e45330f801
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZL' 'sip-files00065.tif'
9ad0854a19a6ed22331bac79c53caa35
445a45303de7d56f6c9091a1d1eb2ad6feb50308
describe
'1106' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZM' 'sip-files00065.txt'
db87bb593d28b8aa2fa322cb06b90414
937e59ebc22523b620dfd843d0d91415c8c52825
'2011-09-20T01:47:19-04:00'
describe
'9348' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZN' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
93bf4d70e417ca1ad0c2f29f8900e300
fa9f8940f0744e4b6609399ba8a3f68baa6a0b5c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZO' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
ca7eaf42fe5ef4407478462187f3397b
da88bfc938eb903a227ef2dae01f8c47008cf2e6
describe
'94790' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZP' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
03671bd90c5e2c51bfd41c7219449ebb
96a6e3cca390dc044a2611c262b156b6d325113a
describe
'25044' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZQ' 'sip-files00066.pro'
09819c0c4ceb5e26fe3d5c5d69d4a472
2bb7ecde5e4b988c2257698adf087399c92dbb90
describe
'32483' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZR' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
9f8618979861144b7f23c323222f3feb
968180e1067aaf6f138a1a73d2992d43f4ac66c5
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZS' 'sip-files00066.tif'
92ac319b4d443d6867ccd14e29192d3b
f0e269c06db564dad9c4114c26c96c14360df171
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZT' 'sip-files00066.txt'
e1f28a5e9d0fec4f10da5109782f1844
1a7f7cb96b619ae201cda44a9a3d328eda6b9544
describe
'9191' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZU' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
ea809694027409cd3731e68da13b4d7f
04155d9aede36c5bb76d5d9b638dcb239ec228e6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZV' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
2691fe5d06845cab7bd7246fcd24b006
130674be6624bc245b62c12f1f376f04ec9869f3
describe
'78878' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZW' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
248dc3176d47e5b44f80ccc2d1165c7b
72651d9f847743694c68026fae4b30ed8cca8b3a
describe
'21669' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZX' 'sip-files00067.pro'
8acce2db39c4488643dd9d537c57bfb1
40acf492f0cde67a6ad6a83c9123377719ac25e5
describe
'26539' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZY' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
0aec4ff4e2cc25d63b8cfb545a41feee
f9364287f594855f45ca3bde2a035e87bc677be7
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADDZZ' 'sip-files00067.tif'
1ee7483679ce072ae73b4c4af60fc738
5241f851263cd2da3c802e215bffcd9cab84f4d0
describe
'924' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAA' 'sip-files00067.txt'
e96e59a80455771eda6a41b6b00a91f5
233049528917e24d42803424d501f2c65fea1233
describe
'7567' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAB' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
35ab1093809a321fa47ce0597fd403a2
1c006c409130192196179a3166669e9999a0bf57
describe
'334357' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAC' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
a62057151721df94f430afac0fab7e8b
9596113e3d0833980686a98e8991a0d8d6f7e44c
describe
'69998' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAD' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
3d8dde7226668e3a5dc3e947528a9489
6cadb3b8946801051258d843f2c4b0db3d6963c8
describe
'16564' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAE' 'sip-files00068.pro'
03782898b53a8a8e57cc9fd23b4d9dfa
8a92005e0a26c9e05d5972d25375d317336c332e
describe
'24307' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAF' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
f66ed845cb44634cb0b9eb4ebb807628
888f1bb6dab7cdb1bf2506a5c34e8db8880dee89
'2011-09-20T01:47:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAG' 'sip-files00068.tif'
f20fd15d13298d9ce656fbf77b2950d3
4b469be5dc44b293dc613e857b54b948857343a8
describe
'723' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAH' 'sip-files00068.txt'
9f15f9fac9498d6932473e1d8faff82d
8baf15acb8b29effaedd5e9e867c766ce1dac6e6
describe
'7477' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAI' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
2842147a037d96e4ed8803bba4e4c234
c9f0a7380f708e3c20ea2c55c2c2652865bd0cee
describe
'319604' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAJ' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
063736bea935c392c5cf0f414bc79b8f
b217210d4c3665865bca05753674cd5ed8dc636a
describe
'145609' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAK' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
cea0d392643b7a13c6034822e716efe5
750d0a0b85cd58b6a50033dd2852ec1cef9b2baa
describe
'1784' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAL' 'sip-files00069.pro'
cef76a2bbb5dcf3576faef2ab9a081a7
92fff5699fe89c485968a0fcdb384f988f003432
describe
'34500' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAM' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
1b2cd877bfaf87fc87ac5cf33a6500a6
fc08ad21e2b61ceaa0bb7c77201de59fd64fe022
describe
'7689880' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAN' 'sip-files00069.tif'
baced0148e2605c2f8b89d65b31b842c
4bd119f0b01427c7d6c9bc69becf74dbdf8ed15e
describe
'124' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAO' 'sip-files00069.txt'
a30dada04020a50f8c05c98b9b7b72da
559336a9e79842070147bbe7091ded4494e1b535
describe
Invalid character
'9031' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAP' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
ea0c1afffe573f55a84843028cea7f52
c21f3c46f1d9dee61b2068c43db8cc9ecff88bb8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAQ' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
44c19a32cf11b3e4ac200cfe9a02a8f6
797532eab17d9c81750f08c860b131379cdf6585
describe
'91163' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAR' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
76750e401d1b1dfaad13914023ee8a7c
ba719c7a472b4af687ba4d691022e6c31f949e36
describe
'24254' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAS' 'sip-files00071.pro'
6ea35a92bcf7cb31728281fe07ff5b02
862509cb443ac6bb536e4aa671acb60a0b00c561
describe
'31090' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAT' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
e6d321ac325e71a0ec0c114044b2c3c7
5caffc291b982a8746351e018de783d12ec697d4
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAU' 'sip-files00071.tif'
8c3d36d31b6fe1896ca3d537bc0ad7b0
cc8ed383f28c6578cee7a57e4ef3e453dcbd9d6b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAV' 'sip-files00071.txt'
9e112a7eb60c66bcad8de4303f5e4357
e5e8c1e8a056d07daed8ef58d3b0cf0cb5ad6169
describe
'8538' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAW' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
05bc487ceedd385d08de323247284db6
671b5d9203a6cade1ec0388d5449678900782c84
describe
'334390' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAX' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
077604d04b04dd6dcfc6968efe92da56
8da014c9b7720173ec5fca2a7e0cb3abcf941d28
describe
'94130' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAY' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
7ce08b772ceee7f42e4e5330cc2bf14c
aa54c61d15da32f24b1e952c77048d8255c294c4
describe
'24613' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEAZ' 'sip-files00072.pro'
0760a38cd649b223dd9b12fa5a0383ea
bf6a42b6111b589f0bd27bdcd3680766fc7eb0f5
describe
'31786' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBA' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
a86e92715583735353699fa9145f50f0
eb7a71173da311876d080f8338afaf81e1a202be
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBB' 'sip-files00072.tif'
108fe75cdea9ea5ba269fdff27b8fc71
b8eb8330ecb44dfa959f7a979147eeb3ade436c5
describe
'989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBC' 'sip-files00072.txt'
29988c7f0aceac0625e7a35c6f67cc41
e89b2614cf5c4e22c773edaed892b1aaef308120
describe
'8592' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBD' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
bd89671eb0b1e73c766469a5ded232ab
1a6cc58a4f21d27b64f65ddaa62058876356e095
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBE' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
390a5b3adc5b03fac4195e7eb904e932
4dfb4b1971e22d7ba8f6f15bf1468336e5639a7c
describe
'94955' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBF' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
d8d52cc6b3aa5d19b00ef5ff84a7eead
0f05f17cf39b127feb3b9dc16dba31f63c1d198d
describe
'25119' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBG' 'sip-files00073.pro'
efb069d60c2b7adb4925775d11a4f310
503545c842ff104fba57a8417003d7d7529ce18b
describe
'32267' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBH' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
d34d8a46eabce70b3173981c7b5e4b69
6f49e741fed45f878b6636dcb83a7bd2ed007c55
'2011-09-20T01:47:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBI' 'sip-files00073.tif'
1cd5633e363d83285c86f0708d199a77
22fa071519b8bb35a04e564a0a11ed2fea19a413
'2011-09-20T01:48:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBJ' 'sip-files00073.txt'
93d89c9d8d289f4623f180f5ee05a292
080d7b212d3730f0cf87c00cd9903fab80aab7ab
describe
'8715' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBK' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
b3cc9a479a1c078cf168600465e22fac
9b1d60dcb84c5720701b679f8a80b482e695fe6f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBL' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
6eb31ae346cc7f7493881af4b17cfe81
e40ac5553917e0989f4cada150a3051c9dad3218
describe
'93370' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBM' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
0f9f708b0a76f6fba2cb417fcdcedc6d
eda522f2062c53901ab74f35fa55ea6e583ae83f
describe
'24741' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBN' 'sip-files00074.pro'
057ebcd249f21b8d9f60f9c8f6071f7e
efbe7aff19b96526ca94759178e8bab40a97285c
describe
'31340' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBO' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
2418fda921c9d19ee91cf7c4589c8267
9baad3677b41d123540a95a9f5f516decf9c5d6a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBP' 'sip-files00074.tif'
0fbf38f0d364ab682bfeb0fd2d71cb1f
2ff0bc5d7a606cca7cc4ccac93360f3e46c5e817
describe
'1059' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBQ' 'sip-files00074.txt'
9c75a8267b093e18ab33fce71dfdbecf
b77a246aa60998f75fd67f5c4acc93c46a52c08e
describe
'8514' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBR' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
db138dea883ce293cdaaf25b64c866b1
ce092cf8846c5ea6fb1be733958a6620af41bb13
describe
'334399' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBS' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
f6977f945355c59acc3a145ca8132f35
4b1e522a27327028a941e2018c7b817f7846c38f
describe
'93144' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBT' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
ed0a217820622e177e32d541b7436f24
9fb7d087b77e23fdcdae5f3fe6c1c2c03391f30c
describe
'25532' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBU' 'sip-files00075.pro'
6df58d92c4e150d8ccb23efcca5e34b3
bcd5df3b70ac2bf082b1c48f156912de3177f3c0
describe
'31798' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBV' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
5da55da52d6292c03a0217fef3d4dfb6
b221822b3e22e2c45fc07ef11da3999fe04a24c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBW' 'sip-files00075.tif'
b0fe21ad7512faf75fe87a820e1136bc
c38bc9336c8cbefee6b08280e7f9454765ba7070
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBX' 'sip-files00075.txt'
1aba5167337662ffd2f91dfff951206e
2d491aa6cd1e2b1b8c4fd662b7c5525ac02e2ccc
describe
'8808' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBY' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
8e4379e2e9481b6cdfb6dc304ecd6c1c
f33d716afc18d09b8f650489b55e8f369deb6f4a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEBZ' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
1557e090c760f6af212bab9c37cfac1d
ea586282ba4c7d8e7fd7b331fbb7ee781432d6c1
describe
'90559' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECA' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
66a1dca9e35c9e5c9e4bcbbb0d980c46
34f8341c7308ecb86a481c9513016154a6e422c4
'2011-09-20T01:47:44-04:00'
describe
'23976' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECB' 'sip-files00076.pro'
c3309fff4d917ae732a1872e9828b63c
1f4c58258a03c0a239c93e7139bf89cb96de82dd
describe
'30594' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECC' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
8be928034d4a6e45e2711a1d452beaf0
bf259c823d6dda9d456906a225ddafd41334553d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECD' 'sip-files00076.tif'
57303b5283744a227ed529c176a0274e
87ce094f17601c3abac9ec00fbee5576e325f8c8
describe
'962' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECE' 'sip-files00076.txt'
7f64268a66af7e26892ab4272a46c347
abc5308fa44ad9495e35073c5d661b9d0de93456
describe
'8338' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECF' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
4bdfe3144d29c985e09cab369b414f6f
26b016cfd18903e395f298bdcd4a522802bfd9b7
describe
'334356' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECG' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
1f50fd1d35ba51e42e58bcbd19793126
51fda2ec9e657cd5aafefb2c74265bb609787081
describe
'99736' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECH' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
885cb6c1ab5547608265278f96951e39
6910c71d0f39dfeb1d9946d5ec83e0733d340aa6
describe
'26096' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECI' 'sip-files00077.pro'
7e3612da18d276d4a4665826a5a1571e
04acaef1304c2f81d08daea50dc4504d2d7525d3
describe
'33606' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECJ' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
15a415811807bf62023aa0e91a546ee2
3af68ad2818f29012b2e47d01978a44070642972
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECK' 'sip-files00077.tif'
7b2354265471d5cb91684248208f3be0
09ab0c7623dc9394fb8ccbc4eeca3d587cb2d5dd
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECL' 'sip-files00077.txt'
6948bcc2fa648dcf9e22b5d9b2369102
1ea84a7a63186dff0a92940f27300cfd2879422a
describe
'9155' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECM' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
74d7e24ea0f372fac0c4c356911ba959
54d9ec5ffd8a9419a09453c3607bbac93cfba21a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECN' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
96c7d94ed911084926e26be9e8cff4a7
ff375ac8ce1e195e93d5c3fa9c9523109b7295a8
describe
'96400' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECO' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
cd8a36b27a137d83566631b6edb73af7
be91adf65265a36b830cdf34914e3396e5f0b5a7
describe
'25943' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECP' 'sip-files00078.pro'
9b9634fd4871006352cbd27891e35dc1
b0c7af0c0654cb370816aa9223eb6c1bdad0d435
describe
'33128' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECQ' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
b5af02a8d81afde5c93b7ea4207a5a66
1c10006725c0297df2c0043ee5d57cb1c75d5fb0
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECR' 'sip-files00078.tif'
36713f791bf25391fb66e0ccb254b041
f2abd723eb13a34bf2fd0e2a489e84a7e7bc611f
describe
'1032' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECS' 'sip-files00078.txt'
0712c85bb6bb0c873267392adb0dae15
217595747c5815b45d015dd5fd33c3d7cc630f7d
describe
'8684' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECT' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
0b3b738138a3b1735412ccd7ca581ea8
e96f5285837984d8220df3a46bbb07bfe9f23697
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECU' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
71b759fd55c6bc6671470b3729eaa7e5
7cc1617c29f2dddb1a1c929d6ec568a7a1ce46de
describe
'74779' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECV' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
61707c69773363c280db502e173d118f
d34a681455220ab27b1773f9056acb316d26f56e
describe
'18666' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECW' 'sip-files00079.pro'
ed8343d04f490dce07227ded4db146dd
8a2f73746f597cbc94e316259f51acb287a25322
describe
'25851' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECX' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
e53d03fa1f1bd50247a866024f2ebc93
93277efc333db11460b58eede1fbad15ef92e408
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECY' 'sip-files00079.tif'
adc6fcfab91ff3b87e9a3133b5a67ec4
02d2960c943559c07288cc01000cf568556e0db1
describe
'780' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADECZ' 'sip-files00079.txt'
fca39eed96882c95ed3f3a722a45dd92
ff39ee25a9e82841044b081cac429781581b43ed
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDA' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
ade5527ff2ffb0d390ff464fa32169b9
a0889014ac34fb9dbd2d4941f4931ed998bdaf40
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDB' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
2ee7889224894c463d26459123b4d1c3
9e50c348d489d5c433108042f0e9ac718005e486
describe
'95818' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDC' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
d8ee29ec8ad7ccf7bd4a48cde429981d
7068ff8aa32e1aa8e45ebefd08d5b2eb31bc99f9
describe
'25297' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDD' 'sip-files00080.pro'
75ce25c6e21e19f1c06ea0f22f42b01c
94719bdc952a8798f9dc45760a8af17b0579dc07
describe
'32562' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDE' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
c8757ce14ec5aac03e3fcc626eb1f826
315d4665a00b7a76677472e633d5fd7bb9f7e3b0
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDF' 'sip-files00080.tif'
532bdbf121a1dadafadcb54c37e597c5
f0e8ab32a15819beb8ac736e6fe80bdff0d50fbe
describe
'1007' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDG' 'sip-files00080.txt'
aae5f0c5919b0fdc127ff49a0ffb34cd
13c2cd06aee90f62de45512df8b90abaa9fbbbb1
describe
'9797' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDH' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
b23e8c0946c27b6de23b38d29d2dce80
4df62f622700d21e6b9d95d4e903184e9d9a2447
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDI' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
82f3e51959a0f20ec0af607a73738535
eeae9e5df307e580d16d968a144a5ae9cb4deba6
describe
'42336' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDJ' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
c6d9db0930fd7a0b226caf2808c45e16
cf77b8753ab043ff4b3f44d08bfdf66d074989c0
describe
'10213' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDK' 'sip-files00081.pro'
02886797e1deaffd27f4bf4074771b2b
c48c137da02ba1c7bcf485a912d8d76668ed9815
describe
'14389' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDL' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
46912c0b30071005e346db40ec37b3f1
fab0d0efdc9ba987c21da19c8a36e589e66e2ef5
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDM' 'sip-files00081.tif'
60e427c8d2975d34cf57695af34422e8
416ebc9a0171a532d9de1e99eeadbd5a42f4f2bf
describe
'426' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDN' 'sip-files00081.txt'
bc3393c1ef3ed5ad203dfe00c0ac01ec
df07855ed23f626003593aac01ff4539f74d5e9a
describe
'3947' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDO' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
32b12bee1944bd7723bd6d86eb9aaeb4
4e81298b4cfaddd33876ec43f29b5e169f93d5e9
describe
'334364' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDP' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
4ecc84cac7551081ea7c201e97da01f2
63ac06e7638179b06bc229093fade6f55c05d9d3
describe
'65703' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDQ' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
de3f690137295c72a91bce44f6b66134
669aa00a7737e0e2e5eed774d3a86b3383d272dd
'2011-09-20T01:48:23-04:00'
describe
'16418' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDR' 'sip-files00082.pro'
b25218481105395ced4b6454ba0fa24b
105b21a0649ade8e0c39e9969832c1c78b676b94
describe
'22154' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDS' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
27cb9a3c170e9034c51d0aab99a287b6
5af819055a6d5c495a0bdc8ec3a9b64b6aabdcd2
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDT' 'sip-files00082.tif'
be38abae01ac63a5230a25a82b9f21db
94027e89e6e9e444f0b319f0d87616a430d36115
describe
'685' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDU' 'sip-files00082.txt'
5c0297f81b93c0abcb3a5e5984d16494
c3b3d5ddd1630caf1b59a046c951f41772cc2947
describe
'6010' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDV' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
ac8482ccfc5643b776d9f227cb785940
292373a17c3fc59ba8fe79155d91d71d5f0e52b1
describe
'334385' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDW' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
48ab1031234dbb8b2596b4205848f2df
b8ff4c247bc987dc9302511a301862d11981714a
describe
'94307' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDX' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
7ed227c898f828c4b9dde3d4a363ab69
80c2ca9c13ea349cccfffd675c4ae9ef408b5ff8
describe
'25295' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDY' 'sip-files00083.pro'
5a1aa67ec816738332276bb93bacaea3
8c2d9d2f2da4f4f2a3a742f7ab689fc102634fb2
describe
'31543' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEDZ' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
b47aaa6a9f16c2b866427d0f94de1838
53d57b32bcb7e4aa74589b67a900c30f67350931
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEA' 'sip-files00083.tif'
d032dcf9aa93482d491bbae501b02798
600152f0c814e78221326bc2fd1c76cba9798bf6
describe
'1013' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEB' 'sip-files00083.txt'
cf43a670a8c53ee155ef118edb5b8f32
375afe762ec2c978630ece2d1b4e0dc688070516
describe
'8706' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEC' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
26b7315858488386b3c151d0c81cddc1
2687ff5408979e3a02475726d61e32a5460d6eef
describe
'334373' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEED' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
25dff13c4ea61cb7effa7d18ad195c1d
f3165436b638509df10e4cd3b0cdf243deab3eee
describe
'81838' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEE' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
1484b8bc6598b5afcd23447ec880273f
607a46d599617dc265fe0c12497baebbf92fe45b
describe
'18989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEF' 'sip-files00084.pro'
efaf9e771c383292d448b9e7f8325362
c22b2a520fc685f53466938fb49d6ed6577f08ee
describe
'26983' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEG' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
c4b4a72c36246271b0dfc36fcd614151
642e1a4dc74c67e4a7ee37a86b408a6d8ebcc0bd
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEH' 'sip-files00084.tif'
f6dc547088ec2c0100d490ac807dcc58
3564cba1d9305f76b930a874007d986e65dda7b5
describe
'799' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEI' 'sip-files00084.txt'
bd111102ef88bdc343a8782ccec106dc
53db681618cdce7f55888bf45bf4cd5901478e2a
describe
'7672' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEJ' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
d293970a6a469e72bfac3c9df132d184
3f24407fbecc3372149629df46a2341ef2989d25
describe
'334330' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEK' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
eb2dc2ac1bf6af88774969f4414f7aa0
e2f4c13e5fa9284c19e44cc41c21ed651cc53c1a
describe
'92144' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEL' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
de32e0c9da2a609a6fb94cdc46ccdd2e
7316be2a75c2d0a8906be86f63b7e27a2a000646
describe
'23989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEM' 'sip-files00085.pro'
623a427cbc3bd4fac7a37e41d4e9a4ce
dbf9c9d85439fa753387c625da874799c0478a2b
describe
'31089' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEN' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
6191e5a0911ec7e95d90b673014e2e95
19df250300313a4a9a8c1f1b5440cf29339802eb
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEO' 'sip-files00085.tif'
04b965b6a033de9f88891853e070d6bb
f29a59e7612a0ce9ed37e749ecf08dfc1183df36
describe
'973' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEP' 'sip-files00085.txt'
da5ee1e1977d295950c9a66b595789f4
854c641a044ba606b1897caccd632af5c50b7d42
describe
'8370' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEQ' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
e0f15ef89991177c030d398ba9f1b67a
7158d62c5ead94b01d06bd4a6ed3ab63c30ab909
describe
'334363' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEER' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
310e0b4a871ceeff0a362b1c1e569a07
5bae081a366264621faeb93fc6eaac37f05f726f
describe
'93904' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEES' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
0ad270887f152cd53ce6151998ba1c02
d08c385e6a3e63e66d3cd32d2e5bd4c2b0634306
describe
'25290' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEET' 'sip-files00086.pro'
afc66497f02bb5e78ede6adb6c1691d0
c955771a97266f21e37a2b29325b8156b236cbb7
describe
'31453' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEU' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
4c0bdedd966187eec7061fd335c94905
b2eafb950159950414bee0ae593600f20a3ee07a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEV' 'sip-files00086.tif'
974f7e29ca594bdd79398bba66f88d6c
3644e75ca9ada134ada95c45ef5f8cce28c80e95
describe
'1021' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEW' 'sip-files00086.txt'
603097b43cfa6c8b830d700cc89ce578
90f79814659b0d92bdffe571145fbc232e87a139
describe
'8462' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEX' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
6458e804dbf18c0a1d9f40444e28fb3f
4e2251f90b4abb74e2eb42ba6633a0ca9de2d4d8
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEY' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
6f24e48d4c5de9a12f96dde5810b761b
6f022a0aa1222a0b50f3d9cc6bdd6775a57a5c81
describe
'90152' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEEZ' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
ab14e6fc935d54a35dffbf26b8cca16e
9bb2845d5778617a220ef49f9d6cc76a6b42fcd8
describe
'17368' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFA' 'sip-files00087.pro'
693d0aa4f3089a2ac0719480075bf51e
339e7585137bbdbb9e1cea26b3641bb21c0bd6b5
describe
'29452' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFB' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
353f8914b54fbf9427b820d43ea0c272
f64c13b290e71df9ab5581db2d7b5b1138aa724a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFC' 'sip-files00087.tif'
423af65e9cc58b09347dd978dbbacfcb
cada714c1a1457a984fbf5c466f5f20942a5407f
describe
'778' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFD' 'sip-files00087.txt'
961c3657690911a35ac2436202b0ae5e
7ce6515d4b10506c4486300a91c567ea6145546c
describe
'8210' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFE' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
2c3e64323d2d25bbe7d9f902215bd1d8
d00497de5f44512a6a55cf0c6db3594b0020bd2d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFF' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
29a94b925329c0922bc586afb7394db1
25b96f7522bc25e572a2313e31c522cddfcec459
describe
'98856' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFG' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
6e9fe6bf84dd2ad97972a890d4caba22
0aaaa56097d8dfb2c5f78aa48203f5cdf2913514
describe
'26065' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFH' 'sip-files00088.pro'
ab91f2ffdc59fd44f4a3419c99012a90
50a2f15d3723367b1d8e70c9391d69ce13cf87ad
describe
'33887' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFI' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
3edcccb759b2b0d98b60e7459d52c1ad
a764f4cf748736c19e08d6ffb83dfb030fa12f8c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFJ' 'sip-files00088.tif'
2410bc0c28da5615a2b8968056482487
a79b27e70e373303f62e418a3caac6b01609d386
describe
'1046' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFK' 'sip-files00088.txt'
a1bdb59dc4755957d2fb2e2deb7d115e
e5bdad9a83567075832128786f0a3d39f85b4f2f
describe
'8905' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFL' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
03f4d798c3282be9b0d7e9cb82ef2421
a931a52387d675f56428a69e01053cb0f1edb32a
describe
'334407' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFM' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
4763c5d447687f5b2949a17027ec0dce
d65ef3816263a84c37d1e8d0cdcfc7e06e332192
describe
'101314' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFN' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
3f97b2f6ca5b448b6683e1a84739218d
a9cd2314f4468101567355b0ed08709aa36364c6
describe
'26560' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFO' 'sip-files00089.pro'
2c8a1fbdc8e56ee0f09eed3022632be7
c12fcf4f35b1ceb36c926ec679b211b12672f4c6
describe
'33939' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFP' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
2963314c88ff084ce28fbf117b1729a1
34b219e8840e62b503fa68036e57c2ada2f040c7
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFQ' 'sip-files00089.tif'
02cee4c00c5f75187c3e846a0f17d2d0
d893395251249a6258bb2967a54936070a198f49
describe
'1067' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFR' 'sip-files00089.txt'
782ffc9e6b7dfe273e156a7d5c69d028
f1ff71ca581e923d6c4cf5ff9def820d6c290b5b
describe
'9328' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFS' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
10fed58fc1239b0e03855e9fbba9be6a
e1f7ffd7d1672d8e2fa176bb282fa1f129507491
describe
'334406' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFT' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
f69a2791dbc60b75e1445a4448e8fc48
4aa9223d390d54ade02a120df15bbf3213d249af
describe
'56760' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFU' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
13bec1120bce7928ff1f16260f7d0f50
73a421a61193e8d1e7338bdd1c9869431ea5a12d
describe
'14454' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFV' 'sip-files00090.pro'
58a8b0ba5979d6807f7dbb6fbbe288b8
5bd235d2f0398594302619a72f15323bc2749bb5
describe
'18322' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFW' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
5c60656003980f9eaf0c193ae8b57d97
3595846a9b026276381e10bf7ce3f245813a9887
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFX' 'sip-files00090.tif'
51531d81fe9fbd1326ca052c4c351cef
2ab0f0129cd99670b46ac99da097d296ffb9a402
describe
'574' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFY' 'sip-files00090.txt'
b127ec4fa8f21b31a53051c65fba606c
0bcb01b8a0a8bbd0c5fe8a703bf04659e531c300
describe
'5078' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEFZ' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
820c5962e5587f0aa4fd0f3c9eeb0448
f53274d7bc164301f0a59531aaaf9286c88d75f8
describe
'334374' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGA' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
f285b38a39b0cc34f6bb1ff1c5aa9c58
4faaba70451f28815b317ecae9274c574fca3682
describe
'63052' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGB' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
7ac690fee8551689c9ed851244677581
f7e61d6513db2154d896ef795571a2b303270853
describe
'16619' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGC' 'sip-files00091.pro'
c5e448dfca49cfd5a33f07bcabe82b4a
3497730525c621181fcfe503c342c59140cb9de9
describe
'21266' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGD' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
10f6b81afdc7b6b08cae265078fcc674
fac8c5e7ebdbfdfc5b7a2d018fd6cd89e8896c7e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGE' 'sip-files00091.tif'
ca840450a4294d76c376797007995b27
ebfd2c7555b7862f9d5b23502cc03f9e0326b4ea
describe
'711' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGF' 'sip-files00091.txt'
609e15a895f60e96aeedc4397bae3de5
2d89b5fbb9ebbf1132436116a5ef8471db592782
describe
'6056' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGG' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
7a0b7fa98e0ea0a55a78669984c53260
0c51d3f8b7ef3cf4980c2f87f2b6236ac11a4c68
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGH' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
b21b4e52589fe04af21458b144903b96
8b2692c3d17fc10cd4d5d920b39d0cf04e3722ec
describe
'86986' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGI' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
b372cf6b5ed5988d5158f9994c7d3a43
ef1821feaf0ea51ba87bf248795c4f3c6f6bed5f
describe
'23582' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGJ' 'sip-files00092.pro'
09c11cf516e810b0ca4254a672587078
55834862ecc3a643a85891101ffdddc1ed145b46
describe
'29919' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGK' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
cebdf3d5d358d481292f36109cf24b3c
2693ae07e98a3fb2da5d239ce0053d727d8af67c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGL' 'sip-files00092.tif'
992d449cea149f148ee33bdfc62464ba
95bf5741dc539d8660ec8c5bdd157021f5658bdd
describe
'956' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGM' 'sip-files00092.txt'
deabd76a53ad844ec2f8aaf384976691
4ef0ca7c8a356db5f376f1d0154a6617913ca885
describe
'7876' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGN' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
b6309a222f5e9a9eb52660faffc01e0c
1e4733e47d5d50e959d079341804e8a794d24a5d
describe
'334297' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGO' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
d112d5a22556d953abf02af11c082983
5595bbb0da31337f611cf2f8aa5727231854870e
describe
'122993' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGP' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
01c60188d31f4e22a8f5e9b779577ec5
a16ebf53d7848b58625d374304a6df0399bdad02
describe
'3632' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGQ' 'sip-files00093.pro'
f28cdc8a015458d1d87786e095654109
886e7208fa7dce8f828d1dab9501f06e8973c3b9
describe
'31948' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGR' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
db4630168e44c82bfc14c3015de783b5
ace842a7673b63320aec0a2d100f5840216e8a81
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGS' 'sip-files00093.tif'
b07b07af65d14724292b77743e790421
66f9803e68717fc365014c0fe5435adf67737262
describe
'261' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGT' 'sip-files00093.txt'
570ce53bab32cdb9d9d558f60f44f2bf
4a71ffab804da1be34879aade40e645e47de7166
describe
'8020' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGU' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
88f4c10852c217eb88277ebfa3775107
3e492eae52708397bbc71012b3298b03f327bd70
describe
'334355' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGV' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
28b5def1b66e310ad55692e328c400de
a47591331cba7da991c78fe35ee72b40ac002fa4
describe
'8435' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGW' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
8923b84b9aa9a6903e7c7b371cd019e3
6a80a37dcd20020775b1656b25d803b9e6da1e25
describe
'2435' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGX' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
29aede1d4aea4707f1d5a0c8217b1667
501e9f9aa4731390a38543357a4ba0a98aa6ae72
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGY' 'sip-files00094.tif'
7eb4d1aeb358990baa29d8bab6529706
eacf80c0722fadd8cc9cb0dc2a25d81f3f1f0266
describe
'873' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEGZ' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
b8321c5fb9578c7a49340331e11b3706
7cb369b0b33322ef9d7f8526119d2f47837ece1d
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHA' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
79827b4a667b87b556053256882788ea
6fe7c5061d3557549c36b582d5f8b98036a8ae09
describe
'90842' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHB' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
c1d10de195d74185ed33bd0579ed840f
40580caf2de1f00eecf3ecd1f213d5363998864a
describe
'23656' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHC' 'sip-files00095.pro'
62dfd9007b6dbac685d6f24abe76b996
3ece5fc418a1ab8cea428d1d486b48d66cac2dc6
describe
'30165' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHD' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
62dda63c71401c43a0cba5d01f4677b6
b5ae3e93fccd3b02d18fc10e37fb2dcc5c98faab
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHE' 'sip-files00095.tif'
48781129f901b395c84af4db456311b1
722a9684c8472a8d625a55ed12a6d979c7095091
describe
'955' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHF' 'sip-files00095.txt'
9ff9f4b91ffde62c0ed1d6fbd718b17c
d34ccbe8680fc9be5f013e7eb6a5eb0f4b4982fd
describe
'9272' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHG' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
8655dabb9f197d7f6edc43c290c0c7df
e9c3e0cf3d79b0dcb992c98103a75af54fee732f
describe
'334299' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHH' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
f001bc451b6a5ee9ae836a13e316b711
12bb89266dbace58ec2416bc926facbb2fd1c6ba
describe
'76609' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHI' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
5a674c533accf2a18a1b923d1d42d138
7e4d7d652a56cf984234217691f6e93f0ec1f8df
describe
'16319' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHJ' 'sip-files00096.pro'
50fe1b317546a2209eff8e9be0bdcd09
6705b3a8b53a1122a82a39e80c95c41d9381b739
describe
'25380' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHK' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
87afde62526833cf502774226e63ad31
71bdcd8d11234a09bdda286d40d63f244307740c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHL' 'sip-files00096.tif'
b61ddbfd8a154f8fb80ee4e2b635949d
972ec5fcdb3d7171cacda7611c70c6eee6f57ed7
describe
'689' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHM' 'sip-files00096.txt'
0c095ac98c9c6c52bf4e628496ac5b25
2a6ffb42b32741892412064a01cfe1fc06ec4baa
describe
'7416' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHN' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
466f0687149e9d4ff32a4b8c655945ea
0bbb53318b69b02b1894012dcc8c08910cf5552b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHO' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
f3867d909d22adfd9237fc7cfbe97753
8b7c16fffb7c9e1ffa4ecaf8965f07a1eed53065
describe
'101809' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHP' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
7e478af3232e375a669ea07ecf2b24d3
0971ce641756f5d451dd1c442795471afd5b9d64
describe
'26321' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHQ' 'sip-files00097.pro'
7629cd2124a616da67e2584800b06435
55cb8e81811126db0b230ba940152eac6118b4c6
describe
'34445' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHR' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
002808e16f186ba93b573264fba17462
7e9c943fda36709df4456bbe91444042f0cd0836
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHS' 'sip-files00097.tif'
933e633e5e3733116c825e5f2375da0d
adef0c2dffc96531c7b316855fa5fdf3dca9478e
describe
'1055' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHT' 'sip-files00097.txt'
6eef34354602d9e699655761a1708c3a
c4fa671ea00ba0c2f30a9a1d1a1139f12e7ae7c3
describe
'9989' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHU' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
e57f8dd3e445962822b05e1d1b0bf4c8
bca9207c1712b691b46c32c6d1c94663935fb6eb
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHV' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
f29d0759d907fbbf510b5eb02341f041
623bd5ea9a4412647bb33fb04c3b4551835ab1d1
describe
'86449' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHW' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
f48178f4199e39535930ab17a543ca32
b567e46a7fe90619e0258f13e8a575501a12cc55
describe
'23063' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHX' 'sip-files00098.pro'
93cc6a503990be6bedd64bcdcd811705
d8cfe0ea5246df7da1395e285a7756df175331cc
describe
'29370' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHY' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
e690185591c2fd3662251771bfbbaa23
b44cd794dccc72bf741e4473645efee7e5c28d0e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEHZ' 'sip-files00098.tif'
c1b29c70f5bcbeed01c342d72a8ae4c9
d02766a5290cf459e0e6e805f1f7ce8cb9169f2c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIA' 'sip-files00098.txt'
f9a6edb4d940fa3d82528e326528f7b3
9f1a272b3a00de25ceecbab38a394744c0498517
describe
'8309' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIB' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
63d19c56871522e5a0d1cda4aa81517a
ba905138b54b531bf93c0c41687e03bbab8e9f2b
describe
'334360' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIC' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
dc10e020b859741fdfa2cd3bd2017b70
f1f2339c7b0ee24810c6be8597f0733a81db5c65
describe
'94198' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEID' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
0a94c6d56d9fed8c12f88e245d97f888
5b9f46f313891cf49055a43294c0b229b0b80e4e
describe
'25108' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIE' 'sip-files00099.pro'
6e425f7200a62b4719571624e7a5cc1a
ad6b413fbe4ad001d5ec95c8145b896acd1ca09e
describe
'31995' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIF' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
290ab4d2aad32c8e1c46691ab60dc312
43a63f98f79c1b5ea29fe6b95ab5e8f09b65600a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIG' 'sip-files00099.tif'
2c9ec269ec254a6730e40419173e0cec
27e297f683c8a16fa2eb4eca2e46143e2f764289
describe
'1045' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIH' 'sip-files00099.txt'
ad174764c1bcf2cdf7e7e94bfb2b2d77
972f0de48cd0300faebb97aec301a1a66ce798ba
describe
'9337' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEII' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
e67f5c8b19f81d4d577dad12f7c8df58
d2c256c77a35db3ca890fe118032142ae5067ef2
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIJ' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
9280c2d8c78fbccd282fe494a5b095b8
eb713c1e071a87ffdb111bbe7be539412ab21a98
describe
'82068' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIK' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
d36512cff6eb2c364d10244f69cab995
cadf8e5b498bf7e78dc0da93be32777dc2a161c9
describe
'19040' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIL' 'sip-files00100.pro'
fbbbffd8fe1e84fa6fcc6f2ea3a90011
5f5cb47d83275d4058da6b8b1fe9589ff544efbc
describe
'27177' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIM' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
2d2ddcae46a72aeb873118b44a76cd44
d903658821110260b64d2a85283444507bc3f0df
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIN' 'sip-files00100.tif'
d1b61c70dfaf8a643c08d5f8678fb12e
9cf5fe0672af9343ce0783613e3edac3b8b97074
describe
'811' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIO' 'sip-files00100.txt'
3926680fb974b45778d13847c616526e
150338aa0f63da401fd7d4cb451619b7bf505602
describe
'7909' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIP' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
7ed15ec77cc1dff3de9f0007aae56450
7d2d6d25b20ce6fcef1bb7be976a8e53dc2eacd8
describe
'334394' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIQ' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
041b85b39e117d36dbc5f8b0c54c1f30
6b72fb676ef60bc6725a74b73f99aa97afae27c6
describe
'91650' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIR' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
e36bd2a774805fb93e5e1477ec5ff6fa
e9c6f9bf0a35fe42012bcef0dc59dcc11ae39f9c
describe
'25101' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIS' 'sip-files00101.pro'
97999ef807c549c5ff0e8b76d725629c
7332c7d19648d86796d57854ce775fddbed3fe7c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIT' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
59725a86d8751b161a6325bff3f88dab
3f077739227abb2d289dd5a4db2ab3dd2a1248a3
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIU' 'sip-files00101.tif'
393bd136e3ffa129426eb19680fd361c
cc63a7830936f7828bd735573570f52c69a42b6b
describe
'1015' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIV' 'sip-files00101.txt'
25546f25c4a9650e4a62d5ba4e78c3bb
723fa7e83858a4edf5ba2f3db3e8800722cdb754
describe
'8798' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIW' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
9f8f47570ce87c7809a54996dad5e83a
8636cfeb13272217a84aab645457ba43d79e6e2f
describe
'334367' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIX' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
d3951969c54381f2bb348ea6b7f540a6
ca1b3ae8cda5bcd3755663fd38b2f1b7b0cf8ce6
describe
'91800' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIY' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
917d4a57ba064407e9dc492b52adb87e
efcc17afa91cc8b6746b4707ff66da7e14096727
describe
'24686' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEIZ' 'sip-files00102.pro'
f28406de542bf3922d924649a4de285e
739ffbf7eb3a6b865b6444fd0177ed475b384ce9
describe
'30466' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJA' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
481db5d6c3b0c8aa852230710c5e51b4
493dfea0243ee1c02107f6263bb73274cdd22994
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJB' 'sip-files00102.tif'
1166a411530a6483085bd718ea28b0db
3e8ad2d9003dfa155d4ab9724367836fa9a5deb5
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJC' 'sip-files00102.txt'
4494d8712db76ede4d0d1ff03234398a
e7024912326cc8af4fef9a5d4911fd1c032b2e32
describe
'8375' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJD' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
19ec293918c77d7d5947a64b490f6972
9346b2d7e9ad83e3a57e4c1588ea6c4350510f78
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJE' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
7b7bdfaf04da246e680007442434d647
c47e05902a85eb0db6b83f0d19a5f208ae3ac9a7
describe
'41888' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJF' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
b45394eb728e91e3aca75c47b2cfcac1
e703a15553c0b946dc3ceae6f8baa766b0a5a09a
describe
'10102' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJG' 'sip-files00103.pro'
63b2009e77ecd76fa3bf5458c52380d0
5d74491f318d320bc06dc97502febc551ee5373f
describe
'13581' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJH' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
70b56a609bae3dbb0288eb7cb48040bc
786ee645bb843a944a71706f534432792bd46416
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJI' 'sip-files00103.tif'
a3f0afd75a91d7a901e6000225a25842
e6769b778a6925cc82a7f89f15c886e7151a670d
describe
'436' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJJ' 'sip-files00103.txt'
019a9405376aba421316ac9913c775d5
a1c13822bd71ef384feeb9d59c90fed5c0ab2ba6
describe
'4036' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJK' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
ddee672420b1ade816062f017c07beec
d438d0a04e3af07d4044e6a730834cbb6c4cb84b
describe
'334320' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJL' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
e2e53b1789ebbba5d00ee39a1aaec9ff
9a0fb0496852b571ca2302c94d0f5e9f914e206b
describe
'63194' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJM' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
ddc4f318b3c5532b68018b1703068103
2dc7cc7ccd6f17c6dd68a70ed024f1906610a7da
describe
'16052' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJN' 'sip-files00104.pro'
687ec21b5959df7e365b136e37fd32c5
42a483007e6aa110c9cc2371e715fdd506043f14
describe
'20876' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJO' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
68fd4e6c93113e922acd8b6206f41e00
8937db83b678c2b4ab71335b4f257d24549ab871
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJP' 'sip-files00104.tif'
90dd826f5c1ccaefdf966ca50fc70c5c
df909bd115fc256cc25b8fcd5d84a767f4ee3b8f
describe
'694' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJQ' 'sip-files00104.txt'
1c2c33c5da948793232bbf30922fd829
c20b498fee1996e103523f769feb76f29fe40a96
describe
'5512' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJR' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
267b9cc46467ad78f04125c8e0437c83
d2f5b347d9f49aa25c35da248ea667aed1239fea
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJS' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
31713497873e98a2367f1e946346a6ec
62592a4c1110bbec3afab346b3ea4d2988843a70
describe
'94901' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJT' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
c9d624169f004b1057aa7236fef88f3a
4f1a78f23bc4d29184e3bb8aab4101ea32f8eeb3
describe
'25385' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJU' 'sip-files00105.pro'
8ef57a956d55cde66507f208784be409
b5e91fd98e666671adf12004c1be2b59ff3a80b0
describe
'31889' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJV' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
3295257aebdb80a4a4aede60532cf6db
8829b81353722ebc4986f2077669e69b2055fc2e
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJW' 'sip-files00105.tif'
ceb2730a2b1688eb3a6f08f7dd65305a
f26a6b931b41d3a72dbb0236292059041217febc
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJX' 'sip-files00105.txt'
645ecf83b82c06f1c0db2286ea81c927
6e6253b532cb664c6b8fdeca30f151195ec796d4
describe
'8855' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJY' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
00410c84f07e57b587df1dc7179a927d
9093305d8bb0ac906a9b75dce280f3b8a3a37b7a
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEJZ' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
dbfd7ff7bce2e15f60ecf97af328a7e1
2d79fb08a30243a2244c0c0b97d6b99ca2d71677
describe
'87844' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKA' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
caad5a4f532f9a71463a5beb184b37bb
be231847f8e38dd8346ac70ace65bc2b70e391bd
describe
'23857' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKB' 'sip-files00106.pro'
9a3eb3eb0f353df3c7a88dfac2263611
aefb650040aaf0ca5ae87c44c19650f98f8e135e
describe
'29714' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKC' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
fd76e5b81618f44f4d9dd55a8671c3b0
8f0f56cb05cdce20b39c0de4a5f4534811b79809
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKD' 'sip-files00106.tif'
d5b6df795080c866c7a24acd0086e47c
519887fe1407f1e25e20b9a78bcd7ce048860f01
describe
'969' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKE' 'sip-files00106.txt'
3487522febac2d65a118a8f8a2290c42
6cd6242e040c20fcbaee3de5d0965b633beb1951
describe
'8677' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKF' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
977f6a1e6ea0741919b2e575e8ca6616
85d00812b8436eaa751fa549f7403ede5f2ed9ec
describe
'334003' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKG' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
afae29627b5a96397b290b2beee394ad
34370aa74c11d55a3d4b83c27f9fecd8d2348bf8
describe
'57815' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKH' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
ad0f18924779b99df11aebf9f11d8f95
99a411b28ddfdd82fd6517cdcaf417d3b926b050
describe
'12785' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKI' 'sip-files00107.pro'
8b6d17e5b7464445478e7b21950bf45e
cd35c5f87c845d211ab7ba0a087009aaf3c00308
describe
'18916' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKJ' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
f05c5af6df6a8f5e8c0e5a8d2e5f08dd
5ac2c4571f9b4244c800dea26d3e6e75191fa503
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKK' 'sip-files00107.tif'
ba42406a3ba4ca5dc1e60b20eb092fd5
1637201784bcbd0f5e621cae70c0f929bf3dffea
describe
'558' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKL' 'sip-files00107.txt'
a99bbdc081427e2ac3fba86313c100c7
d7b244ddb986c2ba73e8f391d70b23c1ffee7538
describe
'6459' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKM' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
06f03a75c194e6240b0cbd0afd144a44
0031f96820c55dc6bb3e29062f3fe22b8dbca3be
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKN' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
11ffd2827e2ad49d7c7e1af71d69a688
e088b602851a6e32e3f13d99f6ea8491351ce059
describe
'89074' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKO' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
35039c9eb105e479bfa7cb7691783b49
d8273a1f349b73b78fce203226b15a6989be7acb
describe
'24652' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKP' 'sip-files00108.pro'
f9c6f63b2d927be74a1ea426a6d3ee2f
55971192edef77696293dfa1a7b252b235320ea2
describe
'29654' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKQ' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
fe2ceb450e87c893d80b6783605db3a4
88705787621938ee428a9e9a1c01ce107d867a08
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKR' 'sip-files00108.tif'
b170f231b9360feceff5c01cb8054388
4168eeab27a5a6c6d5b8f71b88eae8009aafecfe
describe
'992' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKS' 'sip-files00108.txt'
760332895a4a61f9526ba3e292dd8105
2c0c490ecb4d99830a4cbac4957f94c2c07a50f6
describe
'8814' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKT' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
6f67208dfa4daea1cb0a9e679fa034c9
f13d3e722ef0acaabee9e7fb5e19ce9e5f26ba2f
describe
'334387' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKU' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
4b330b26aa6366588cd574d178ab5ad8
19fec003bc29d34e2dcb8a35b101cbb71ca6f579
describe
'80867' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKV' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
197660017cb11d8b54bf0794e110bd8f
326e7087cb88905e586d4b6521e2fde75a1c9d48
describe
'21502' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKW' 'sip-files00109.pro'
98abd1875a845f4bd6121d0af914919f
493a3a6f01c0bb03787ccd57e2d6db4de1db1f6c
describe
'27152' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKX' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
f326d3bced13c47fdddcbe57cfcb7688
e488fdcc3ad4dc90a622b10b99b0be6416405a33
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKY' 'sip-files00109.tif'
cd310c1b21d39f475b4d7df2e56d1e9d
abbb44a14c242c047fa408082b2fdfeb7045a402
describe
'882' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEKZ' 'sip-files00109.txt'
e103607851143cb6f4d46c7005264415
d2777f63cdc1df43b4c6f47a1740efa01a55a799
describe
'8266' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELA' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
12bfd2b3d94774bf458f83c70eb21de8
87120dcb5ee828718ad6f940bba39c9ccb3e30e9
describe
'334397' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELB' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
f1a1609f0dc69a332c73d4f6427ceb2d
1ae8622c6dc9f799eaa4f2125adc730534f48779
describe
'75035' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELC' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
5ef6d58084999fe9d9313fb6bb38ebf2
a413edefa03f7859053f4a7ca55e75ce9a429d97
describe
'8544' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELD' 'sip-files00110.pro'
1b4921f634570ef24812825d113c4010
8f5eac560a5f9c955445f457297b78841234ee40
describe
'22686' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELE' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
de44b1a4cef7bfe8a85d4d964cc7d01d
3b61a0cc9dd5061c5b68c6e2aaa15fb2dfafbe62
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELF' 'sip-files00110.tif'
b86e6d23c82ca421d0f4455d66db57ad
64d5367741cabd06312dd244a9d05b3287a8fa1b
describe
'393' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELG' 'sip-files00110.txt'
3d4a5d59c7ccf65971dc031d501afc6f
e26b36cd1f9fbb78546b3308bfe0516c618ed2b0
describe
'6726' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELH' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
002f7ffc910408217568f719b821a62c
0eeb5ec2fea8a65b2291cd52cf1b15b3abdc7a52
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELI' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
c3352699da933f932b26c228a49efb18
a8fb3a50b8f17f62adcb56ed2a55047cc02b8a1c
describe
'82310' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELJ' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
201917d8f33d73ead086012f4e806742
12d5b5bbb8fc782d65b0e007920c5b4a9d0603d7
describe
'22402' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELK' 'sip-files00111.pro'
d7e2ff0748814f9a3d2ea00dae113dba
9d413b50d978a20749e40d5b2b250a92d893a47a
describe
'28208' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELL' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
eaff95ea31bb3f1f31ae19c0ed70d398
389d45d8e08c46642d93aa6eeec5335b02023c45
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELM' 'sip-files00111.tif'
fdc1f91977f97c4e07d338b295ad66b6
974c095db7ec51652967d3b6cb14ad615d4eaed5
describe
'933' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELN' 'sip-files00111.txt'
ec69b72e1aca137a79f303892e610289
666aa61d5cb668adcd0362eb2c53f23326ab8210
describe
'7925' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELO' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
9f83e1182c24b41d75b05671c418d96e
3da42a350a172688c34e0e52ca6c9b01a30064c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELP' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
116b27a3bcfa3fe64cad0c84673ed5c0
d50ac78e706311436d59c2f697c104ae08fb0576
describe
'93853' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELQ' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
6aa8f1dca968dfc532a86a24b27d5ad0
159938c4485455745fb9f085ab19a0c2e28a978d
describe
'25537' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELR' 'sip-files00112.pro'
b19725956df38c81c72e58184c35ec41
3cdcdff05d71e53b2117114ec128b7690493565a
describe
'31279' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELS' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
eb89f46ae07388b4674090d5a9dd1c43
be8e16d4a487b3723a05205c38f61998ee9b1ea4
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELT' 'sip-files00112.tif'
467991b4692b205ce2f1a115ab69ae8d
365b250c68f204ed0afeeb396c920864fd0c91c3
describe
'1027' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELU' 'sip-files00112.txt'
a79b6729f6e484422d27f5c116a96f26
267abe70c6dba4e2001f82f9a03846969822b123
describe
'8580' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELV' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
f40fa2af13cb19c12d671c5a00097998
deca37849d197d7955c701eb684965aa7692ed9c
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELW' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
4f5f56315b8c66691cea217808a6f7ba
e235fc92a83fbaa63bfb30cb998ccf26b880e955
describe
'82499' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELX' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
43b481113fc5f66ca0656554921c1aef
d67806ef6dcd670c510d0e7ee6dcb5b0983c900b
describe
'22205' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELY' 'sip-files00113.pro'
83f53e5814b1da3553ebf0216089ea8c
b9f9ba4ff9481a73ed2a857ee1b94ceb9ed5a9db
describe
'28478' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADELZ' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
5a5a2109bb5c6aba8111b2a6130eac1f
698fa54145b1fee7c72ea3faa08d61d2158f324b
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMA' 'sip-files00113.tif'
ea9bb2ea09342c0919060c8cbe46dc3f
6c13cdb9f7efd3683598580c38e0cec6e004fa1f
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMB' 'sip-files00113.txt'
5e108538edaddd77425422188a4141f2
c0561ce59b54e6abc279978c10baa6d18d34ac4a
describe
'7940' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMC' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
5e0ba352f911125ac257a44bed3ed0ad
4af76f8de1bb4358b6f07a47790cce517e7061ac
describe
'334201' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMD' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
c9170f5231bd2856323ecc0cd06bdf44
2f1b1498ffbf960c3d060a12cfa821795f654454
describe
'74923' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEME' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
2c65a9fbcdb71f3b728fdbffadaf6077
8bfd7a261b6dcd6a72243dcf0c156f9c5cd4dffd
describe
'19888' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMF' 'sip-files00114.pro'
fef78934a6f26002d5fd30bcadb53643
fca24758d4d9319c555339ad5e0b5ecf6a12a5be
describe
'25982' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMG' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
5c345e2ffe6ba9d6c090777a855dab14
80c2ffddadf839fd16f92f60588b77ee01d84e19
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMH' 'sip-files00114.tif'
9c7d68cf111c748cf9ab329db9cb110b
597f862fdff62da0a57f04ad6a60b2e07d558d4f
describe
'812' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMI' 'sip-files00114.txt'
f9f8e011157b4ae06868b27f3361ac43
d9288ec5762220eb66bf80ac7bd63c972398a9f4
describe
'6843' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMJ' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
d00dad3fe3fd39b81588a9cbcab71671
2f805a4cf3ae054cb3529cb2357b4f9803b6de01
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMK' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
99c8aaf50ff495a869cbd35133fe63c2
75ab8550783ac6a4598ee0e71209f85c132126d3
describe
'104497' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEML' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
07d2bfa52c4622c94f5cada590b7367c
d3022e557e6ede34c2a9ebd9b1cddb5f9629814f
describe
'28300' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMM' 'sip-files00115.pro'
df8bc27c99b7e67ba92b7a5b55d2de0f
483a0b45bd9d7cf42bb23aec79ce0179905393c3
describe
'34903' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMN' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
127f78a15db83d63e9f55f5c19fc49df
42d74c81c458d89aded00daf4813a26386216f11
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMO' 'sip-files00115.tif'
46a150a7bcad6611fc871124af983765
9c67b7e9a362acf416babc156534c3bd4b036aef
describe
'1111' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMP' 'sip-files00115.txt'
08b065ad4acb77f475bd6d6a7c6e5d01
c72a342a4ff23e6546c5dfce9554bc3724473979
describe
'9116' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMQ' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
68efabb4d55749d2aec8df21b2e48046
a703028db21cdefe2ba5a14bab69ce204c356014
describe
'334398' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMR' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
55ae7f4e018a7fc562f72b01ae8b1b51
7af38c185410153416c31f09449d209f8760bf2f
describe
'50974' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMS' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
9e9f5c6cf92f91843dcfa86ff3a43caa
b4594f15630a779725fd81e05e85dd9a01692d9d
describe
'12593' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMT' 'sip-files00116.pro'
5a13b4e2299be8e7eb2ed9a8e503b614
429563e0bf02ae0963056c14b98db3766eda85cc
describe
'16877' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMU' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
84d695006ad9724290690319a0c10507
cbc1a3737c4dad3e32b059a2b6eb1d62b5569b17
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMV' 'sip-files00116.tif'
a4c32e6b7ffc27e9d0feb57487012eaf
476524127dc030c8b177e16fea5bf16c2a564785
describe
'501' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMW' 'sip-files00116.txt'
0e2c2fadcb3ef8ec27e87f0c83bb8fdd
5acb86b77b89bfc3c1853f0cbec1e0be57734a2e
describe
'4784' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMX' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
16064bf36c3b6c95771026467577590a
8a28d0aa2a6e5adbe479a47c6b87c54025cbac26
describe
'334392' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMY' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
82fb43ea8eb4172f30a521010393e427
4eceba836ad63c823d25ec9a114efb98ad40474c
describe
'57577' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEMZ' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
f97a0f26ec3088a3b6158d33d4933bb2
2dc0a008d96dfabf3c72ffa4973bb8ee7965fccf
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENA' 'sip-files00117.pro'
6227c557124f817ab3f4abb8e1f1c86f
23a9444381a4ba4030add6814710e7b22ae572b8
describe
'18431' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENB' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
1295f4ee78cc8b1c09e4cb0cc53a9a3d
ac6f4067c1f62a7beb3fe760a4bd4ba7935f55d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENC' 'sip-files00117.tif'
534cf7b47479076bcfa16e3c087e9b2c
c8561b61a9e82b217e5e587b003965f044b7a511
describe
'837' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADEND' 'sip-files00117.txt'
aae1db932cf76455620687f11a10cdb9
fe85a679d059abe1980781d7e4431070daacb538
describe
'4823' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENE' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
93440b1d85ac70beae582861d93ef276
3b7b8387b0994c86048300da762193642e0334fb
describe
'334354' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENF' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
5b81b90ff57e622d4cddaaff12616dc7
1b760b60bf5466db44eefe8fdbbf00d9a4185624
describe
'60264' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENG' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
04945f6193136fd3f46b70f1bd6c1fd8
965552bf2e281cd62b9286ad8766e5728aeec342
describe
'20889' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENH' 'sip-files00118.pro'
29be63648352ff3a7b5eac035e8011fa
a24a3232e9019af64186cf7dd4415d95e7749d36
describe
'19897' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENI' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
3ede5181cd13d7d761f9f2419aa54b2c
afc3dffcffe5d31ca821902e4884d627c5d1c559
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENJ' 'sip-files00118.tif'
9997a53c0d65c7fb154f1d0a5c071a1b
8c7c35674344d2ce7c87ddeb00065ef9d0a2775f
describe
'889' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENK' 'sip-files00118.txt'
f152cc66d8806061de6a42397b15d80a
17ae99acf494e8d9cea5c537cd91d110b450588e
describe
'5193' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENL' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
dd7ca0e15f6293986fb35f77f90bb9b2
028a1e5f0d525656f795e4f83fd34887af253090
describe
'334362' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENM' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
420f2fcd8039ce7e838e4b5991956f8c
43c8c4eb39c449a4b7a2571403a426761c6f1dee
describe
'159465' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENN' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
ca2c94d87f25e86df5bc5eebc971d971
507bbc86387f59c82ea820ad9395c16657cfe008
describe
'73620' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENO' 'sip-files00119.pro'
bb06b65f0a2455d0420308f8e1c4b3d1
52a9f8061c732201cb0449ca0c91966de3fa65ef
describe
'45289' 'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENP' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
113d0e5865f2c3e83995e459d8d714ea
4f47923eff1002a959c9e2dce261e6fd45411308
describe
'info:fdaE20080728_AAABDHfileF20080729_AADENQ' 'sip-files00119.tif'
c21ef349c15b1c966e7f85f6b2fade95
ecb675d9f6eccc75554ed462812ee2c2a5eee617
describe
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lo


2. VIOLE 3 3. DANDELION. 4 PILEWORT.





ND LADIES
DOWN DHE LANG
AINDD) BACK

IN SEARCH OF WILD FLOWERS

BY

Lncle Gatt



T NELSON AND SONS
London, Edinburgh, and New York



1895

PREFACE.

DEAR CHILDREN, this book is for you. I have writ-
ten it for you, to help you to learn a little more about
wild flowers than you know, and yet not to trouble
you with any more hard words than I can help.
You love flowers, and so do I; and the more you
know of them the better you will love them. I have
pointed out the way to Cissy how she was to find
out their little secrets, and what I have said to her I
say also to you. If you will follow her to do as she
did, you may learn, as she learned, that the most
common weed has a story to tell, which may be told
to a child; that nothing, to Him who made it, is
common or unclean; and that wayside weeds have
their place to fill, and their duty to do in the world,
if only—
“To comfort man—to whisper hope
Whene’er his faith is dim ;

For Who so careth for the flowers
Will much more care for him.”

M. C. COOKE.
BUTTERCUPS, ....
VIOLETS,
DANDELIONS, ....
LORDS AND LADIES,
RED CAMPION,

ST. JOHN’S WORT,
MALLOW,

GREAT BINDWEED,

CONTE NTS:



“DOWN THE LANE AND BACK.”



BULTERCURS.

“ Buttercups and daisies,
Oh, the pretty flowers,
Coming in the spring-time

To tell of sunny hours.”

HUS sang Cissy, as her uncle waited for
her to take the usual morning stroll down
the lane.

“ Buttercups are running in your head with
the sunshine,” said he, “and we must try to find
them.”

“T love buttercups,” she added, “and I love
butter, and the sunshine is so nice.”

“ And the spring-time, when ‘ children are let
loose in the fields and gardens. They hold butter-
12 BUTTERCUPS.

cups under each other’s chins to see if they love
butter.’

‘The flowers
Children hold beneath their chins,
So to learn who ‘tis that sins
When the butter wastes by night ;

And whose chin looks yellow bright,

That’s the rogue.’”

“Ts that the reason they are called ‘ butter-
cups’ ?” inquired Cissy.

“Tt may be so, and partly because it was a
belief amongst country people that when these
flowers are plentiful in pastures the cows eat
them, and it gives the yellow colour to the butter.”

“Do they ?”

“No, Cissy ; the cows leave the buttercups
alone, and do not eat them, because they are not
pleasant.”

“ And are all buttercups alike ?”

“There are about a dozen different flowers
which are called ‘ buttereups,’ and all very much
alike to look at, only that some are smaller than
others.”
34S



Fic. 1.—Mrapow Crowroor.

1, 2, Plant reduced; 8, Section of Flower; 4, Petal; 5, Anther; 6, Cluster of
Fruits ; 7, Single Carpel; 8, Section.

BUTTERCUPS. 15

“ And what is the ‘ crowfoot’ ?”

“Only another name for ‘buttercup.’ Chil-
dren call them all buttercups, because they think
them all alike.”

“T suppose there is a meadow buttercup and
a field buttercup ; is there, uncle ?”

“Well, there are two ‘meadow buttercups’—
one of them with a swollen root, like a bulb, but
it is not a bulb, like that of the wild hyacinth ;
and the other one has no swelling at the root.
Some of the others, too, are now and then found
in meadows.”

“ And in the fields ?”

“The ‘corn crowfoot, and another one with
small flowers.”

“That does not make up the dozen,” added
Cissy.

“T suppose not, because, besides the water
crowfoot, there are two sorts of ‘spearwort’
that love ditches, and the ‘goldylocks’ which
grows in woods.”

“ And the others ?”

“Not of much consequence to you or me,
y
16 BUTTERCUPS.

except the one we are going to find, which is
the ‘creeping buttercup,’ that grows in lanes
as well as in the meadows, for it loves damp
places.”

“Ts that the only one we should find in the
lane?”

“Not the only one, for another of the meadow
kinds, without the bulbous root, is mostly found
in dry places; and there is the pretty ‘celan-
dine, which I should hardly call a ‘ buttercup,
and that is dreadfully common in lanes, on banks,
and under trees.”

“What a lot!”

“Too many for our poor brains, Cissy, and so
we will leave most of them to take care of them-
selves.” .

“ And only talk about those we can find.
See, there are some; I know by their yellow
colour, it is so bright.”

“Just as I expected, that is the celandine ;
but we shall soon find another in yonder damp
corner by the ditch.”

“Oh yes. And what a lot of big leaves!”

(497)
BUTTERCUPS. 17

“The roots are a bunch of rooting threads,
not thickened as in the celandine. But you must
try to find out why it is called the creeping
buttercup.” *

“Tt is like the strawberry plant, with ‘run-
ners’ growing out from amongst the leaves, and
they poke themselves into the ground, and make
roots,” said Cissy.

“That’s a funny way of putting it; but I
know your meaning—that runners shoot out from
the old tufts, and these runners soon thrust their
ends into the ground, and make roots, while a
tuft of leaves grows upwards into a young plant.”

“ That's it.”

“And so these broad patches of plants keep
growing bigger and bigger, and creep further
and further over the ground, until they may be
a yard or two across, and include hundreds of
plants.”

“With such dull, dark-green, hairy leaves,
pale on the under side, and woolly as well as

the stalks.”

* Ranunculus repens.
(497) 2
18 BUTTERCUPS.

“The leaves are large, and so deeply divided
that it is not easy to call them by any shape
that is known, or to explain clearly what their

shape is.”




“T should call them ‘trinity leaves,” said
v4
7
er ‘A \ if i ps a
O72
oe



oY CY, i

Fic. 2.—LEar or Creeping Butrercup.
(Reduced.)

Cissy, ‘because they are like three leaves in
one.”

“Or triple leaves, or three-leaved leaves, or
three-bladed leaves, whichever you please, for they

are like three leaves joined into one. The middle
BUTTERCUPS. 19

leaflet is stalked, and each side leaflet 1s without
a stalk. Then each leaflet is cut down deeply
with a broad notch into three lobes, and each
lobe is notched again at the edge. It is so hard
to describe in words a leaf so much divided.”

“Well, uncle, I could only call it a trinity
leaf, and each one of the three is three-parted
again, and then I stop.”

‘Perhaps you would like to taste a leaf, Cissy,
because you may if you like. Nearly all the
buttercup leaves would bite your tongue, and I
would not tell you to taste them, but this one
is not unpleasant.”

“Not even the celandine ?”

“Not even that. The stalks to the leaves
you have gathered are quite long—four or five
inches—and downy ; but they do not all rise from
the root, as the flower-stem is also long and
branched, bearing smaller leaves, which have
shorter stalks.”

“And the flowers are not like the rising sun.”

“ But more like a ‘ buttercup’ as it should be.

Let us pull one of the flowers in pieces, that we
20 BUTTERCUPS.

may compare them with those of the celandine.
You will notice at once that the petals are
broader and round at the ends, not pointed as
in the celandine; and there are not so many—
only five. Then the outer circle, or calyx, has
five sepals, and these are hairy, like the stem
and leaves. So you see that there is a great
difference in the flowers of the two plants, al-
though both of them are yellow and have a large
number of stamens, said to be definite, or more
than ten.

“T think, Cissy, that it is quite time for us
to turn back and take a last fond look at the

little ‘ celandine.’

‘In the lane—there’s not a place,
Howsoever mean it be,

But ’tis good enough for thee.’ ”

“What a lot of it, and how different it looks
from the ‘buttercup’ !” said Cissy, as she began
to root up some of the plants.

“The creeping roots are very useful to the

plant, because, although so common, it seldom
BUTTERCUPS. or

bears ripe seeds, but spreads itself by means of
its roots.”

“Then these are both of them ‘creeping
buttercups' in the lane?” inquired Cissy.

“Yes, dear; but, as I told you before, this is
not a proper buttercup, and we will call it either
the ‘celandine’ or the ‘ pilewort,’ whichever you
please.”

“ And is ‘ pilewort’ one of its names ?”

“Yes; and an old one too. But you must
look at the roots well, and see how different they
are from the roots of the ‘creeping buttercup,’
for they are thick and club-shaped, like little
tubers.”

“Tubers, uncle! what do you mean by
‘tubers’ ?”

“What we call a ‘potato’ is a tuber; not a
bulb, but an underground swelling or knob,
which if planted would bud and grow into a
new plant. But it is not an underground bud,
such as a bulb is, only a thickened root, which
may bud in two or three places. A bulb isa

single bud, and only grows from the crown.”
22 BUTTERCUPS.

“T shall know better by-and-by; but I can
see how different it is, and I know it is not a
bulb, like the onion and hyacinth.”

“Now for the shining, glossy, bright ereen
leaves, they are very different too. You see

that, as well as being small, they are regular,

/

Fie. 3.—Lear or Prteworr.

and not divided at the edges with deep notches.
So that they are heart-shaped, and not more
than an inch long, or seldom longer; and the
edge all round is a little toothed with blunt,
rounded teeth.”

“Yes, I can see that; and they are rather

thick and stiff and shining, something like a
BUTTERCUPS. 23

violet leaf in shape, but thicker, and so
smooth.”

“ And they have long stalks, which come up
from the roots, so that there is no stem except
the flower-stalks.”

“The leaves all grow close to the ground, and
the flower-stalks rise up in the middle.”

“You are quite sure that you would know the
leaves again if there were no flowers ?”

“JT think so. They are so shining, and such
a lot of them grow together.”

“The flower-stalks are longer than your finger,
and a little longer than mine, some of them with
one or two little leaves growing out of them,
and a single flower on the top.”

“T see that, and the star-shaped flowers.”

“True: the flowers are more star-shaped
than in the buttercups, with eight or nine
flower-leaves, of a bright, shining yellow colour,
standing out all round and forming a golden
star.”

“What are the flower-leaves called ?”

“ Petals. Pet-als.”
24, BUTTERCUPS.

“TI can’t think of that, it is such a funny
word.”

“Indeed you will think of it, because I shall
say it over so often that you cannot forget.
Did you ever read the song to the small celan-
dine, where it is supposed to have taught the
painter of sign-boards how to paint the rising
sun?”

“T do not think so.”

“Then here it is :—

‘T have not a doubt but he,

Whosoe’er the man might be

Who the first with pointed rays
(Workman worthy to be sainted)

Set the sign-board in a blaze,
When the rising sun he painted,

Took the fancy from a glance

At thy glittering countenance. ”

“T did not think of the sun,” said Cissy
only thought of a star.”
“But when evening comes, instead of coming

out, as the stars do, the celandine closes up its
BUTTERCUPS. 25

petals, and then it can be seen how they are
tinged and striped with green beneath, as if to
conceal them.”

“What time do they open in the morning
and close at night ?”

“T think that depends so much on the weather ;
for the petals close at the coming of rain, what-
ever the hour. The celandine is almost the
earliest flower to blossom with us, even as early

as February.

‘Ere a leaf is on the bush,

In the time before the thrush

Has a thought about her nest,
Thou wilt come with half a call,

Spreading out thy glossy breast
Like a careless prodigal ;

Telling tales about the sun,

When we've little warmth, or none.’

“Perhaps in the average of years we should
say that the celandine flowers in March.”
« And before any of the real buttercups ?”

“Yes; but when the petals close you will see
26 BUTTERCUPS.

three smaller green leaves beneath the flowers,
which enclose them in the bud.”

“Tn the middle of the open flower there is a
tuft of threads, but I always forget the name of
them.”

“ Stamens,”

“O uncle, why can’t we call them something
that we can’t forget? Flowers are so pretty,
but they have so many hard names.”

“Well then, Cissy, sit down and count the
stamens, and you may call them what you please.”

“T find twenty-four in this flower. Is that

the right number ?”



Tic. 4.—Section or FrowEr or Burrercve.
a, Sepal; 0b, Petal.

“That will do. Then there are the flower-
leaves or petals.”
BUTTERCUPS. 27

“Yes; twelve.”

“Not exactly. There are twelve altogether ;
but there are three outside ones, which we call
the sepals, and nine inner ones, which are the
petals. In many flowers the sepals are green,
but in some they are coloured, as in the little
celandine.”

“Then how shall I know them?”

“Call the outer circle sepals, and the inner

petals, and you will usually be right.



Fic. 5.—Srep-VEssets oF BuTTEeRcur.

1, Petal; 2, Ovary; 3, 4, Sections; 5, Section cut through a cluster of ovaries,

“Tn all the buttereups, when the fiower-leaves
fall, the seed-vessels will be seen remaining on

the stem in a roundish cluster of about twelve.
28 BUTTERCUPS.

Some other wild flowers have only one seed-
vessel, it may be a berry, or a pod, or a capsule,
which keeps on growing after the petals fall
away; so you see that it is of importance al-
ways to find out, if we can, what kind of seed-
vessel any wild flower has, and if it is single, or
whether several of them grow in a cluster.”



Fic. 6.—ButTrercues.
VOR Eas.

id HERE, Cissy, in that quiet little nook

you should find the March violets ; but
you must use both eyes and nose, and what
you cannot see you must smell.”

“Oh, they are lovely; I hope I shall find
some.”

« And whilst you are looking I will tell you
a short story of them. You have read in your
history of Napoleon the Great, the Emperor of
France ?”

“ How he fought many battles, and was then
taken to Elba, and escaped, and came back to
France.”

“Right; but you have not said that his
friends welcomed him in on his return, on the

20th of March, by wearing bunches of violets.”
30 VIOLETS.

“T did not know that.”

“Nor that whilst he was away, before his
return, his friends used the violet as a token.
If any one was asked, ‘Do you like the violet 2’
and the answer was ‘ Well!’ he was hailed as
a friend, and was told, ‘It will appear again in
spring.’ ”

“The violet was used as a token, because it
comes in March, to tell all his friends that he
would come back in the spring, as the violets do.”

“Yes; but after the battle of Waterloo he
did not come back, and no one was allowed
to wear violets in France: so that when the
Frenchmen could no longer make war upon
men, they made war upon the violets.”

“ Now, uncle, as I have found two or three, I
shall make war upon them, and capture them
too!”

“You have no doubt that you have found the
right flower ?” *

“T should think not; just smell of it.”

“* And what does it smell like 2?”

* Viola odoratu.
VIOLETS. 31

{2

‘“ Why, violets, of course

“Yes; but that’s a girl’s answer. I want you
to tell me, as if I had never seen one, what the
scent of the violet is like.”

“ But I can’t tell you; it is like violets, and
nothing else.”

“T suppose you are right, and that there is

no other scent exactly like it.

‘A lowly flower, in secret bower,
Invisible I dwell ;
For blessing made, without parade,

Known only by my smell’ ”

“Do the sweet-violets appear first ? because
there are some violets without scent.”

“Yes, the sweet ones come first, for a short
time, and then comes the dog-violet.”

“ And they are shams!”

“No, Cissy, not exactly shams, because they
are true to their nature, and make no pretension
to be what they are not.”

“But they mimic the true violet in colour

and shape, without scent.”
32 VIOLETS.

“You might as well say that they are
naughty violets, that have done some wrong,
and lost the virtue of sweetness.”

“T don’t care, I don’t like them, for they
deceive me.”

‘ Although the fault may be your own, for
not knowing them better. We shall see. Now
you must get a plant up by the roots. Never
forget the roots !”

“Oh, they are just the same as many other
roots—little bunches of threads or fibres.”

“Just so; and you may as well call it a fibrous
root as a bunch of fibres. You are sure it is not
a creeping root ?”

“ Look, uncle, here is something like a runner
which joins two plants together !”

“T thought you were too hasty, and that
you would find, in a large patch like this, some
of the plants made runners. Do not hurry so
much to say whether the plant has a stem or
not.”

“There are flower-stalks coming up from the

root, but I cannot find one with a stem.”
VIOLETS. 33

“Then you think we may say that it has no
stem, because the dog-violet has a stem ?”

“That is another difference besides the scent.”

‘““ And now as to the shape of the leaves.”

«They are nearly heart-shaped, are they not,
with long foot-stalks ?”

‘“« And the edges are not quite even?”



Â¥ie. 7.--LEAF OF SWEET- VIOLET.

“T hardly know what to call them, but the
edge is toothed all round with blunt rounded
teeth.”

“ And the upper surface is smooth, but the
under side is sometimes a little downy, with
very fine hairs. If you lay one side by side

with a leaf of the little celandine, you will soon
(497) 3
34 VIOLETS.

see the difference, though they are nearly the
same in size and shape.”

“Yes: the violet is thinner, and not shining,
or of so bright a green colour.”

“T suppose you would say that the flower-
stalk is as long as your finger?”

“ Yes, and bent over at the top.”

“Well, Cissy, how would you explain to
Lotty what the flower is like if you had not
one to show her?”

“T should say it was of a deep violet-blue
colour.”

“Don’t you think purple would be better than
to say violet, when you are speaking of a violet?”

“Ts it not bluish-purple then?” —

“Yes; but you are not to forget that some-
times it is pinkish or white.”

“ Not often, as none of these are white.”

‘“‘ But all are paler at the centre, or eye.”

‘“ And each flower has five separate leaves—
two standing up at the top, one on each side,
and one at the bottom, and all nearly of the

same size and shape.”
VIOLETS. 35

“Perhaps the bottom one is a very little
broadest ; but turn it over and look at the back
of the flower.”

“ There is a curious little horn sticking out at
the bottom, almost like a spur. Are all violet
flowers spurred like that?”

“Yes: and the bottom leaf, or petal, of the
flower is narrowed behind and forms the spur,
which pushes aside two of the little outer green
leaves of the flower, called the calyx or cup.”

«“ And I see the little threads inside the eye
of the flower. It looks like an eye, doesn’t it?”

“Tf you will count the outside little green
leaves of the cup, you will find five; the purple
leaves are five, and the threads inside the flower
are also five—all fives.”

“ And where are the seeds ?”

« When the flowers die and fall off, they leave
behind them a little green swelling; this grows
into a capsule or seed-box, which splits into
three parts, and allows the seeds to fall out.”

« And that is called the fruit?”

“Yes, that is the regular and proper fruit.
36 VIOLETS.

In the violets and some other plants there is
another contrivance for growing seeds that
sometimes puzzles little people, and not very
long ago puzzled older people also.”

“ What is that?”

“JT don’t think we shall find any to-day ; but
there are little secret flowers—I cannot tell you
the long name they are called by—yet these
little flowers have no pretty purple leaves, and
they only look like little green buds, growing
hidden, in out-of-the-way places, about the
plant.”

“ And they don’t look pretty or smell nice?”

“No; they are for use, not beauty.”

“ And for what use?”

“They become at last changed into seed-
boxes, or capsules, containing more seeds.”

“Then if little girls were to gather all the
violet flowers they could find, there would be
no seed from the proper flowers left on the
plant ?”

“No; so that by-and-by, as the old plants
died, there would be less and less, and at length
VIOLETS. 37

no violet plants at all, unless young plants were
born in other ways.”

“ By the seeds in the secret flowers?”

“Ay, and by the runners from the old
plants ; for you must not forget the use of the
runners.”

‘“ Has the dog-violet secret flowers as well ?”

“Yes, and several other violets, but net
pansies.”

“ And are pansies a kind of violet ?”

“Indeed they are, for the wild pansy is the
common field heart’s-ease.”

“‘T should like to find the secret flowers. Do
they grow on any other plants except violets ?”

“There is another pretty little plant that we
must seek some day in the woods. It is called
the wood-sorrel, with trefoil leaves, like clover
leaves, and such pretty flowers. Secret flowers
are to be found on that plant, and also upon
some few others.

“T suppose, as you are such a lover of violets,
that you will think they have need of no other
virtue than their odour and their humility.”
38 VIOLETS.

‘What else do they need, uncle ?”
“Then you will agree that—

‘Long as there are violets

They will have a place in story.”

“Yes; but what other virtues have they ?”

“Well, the flowers were at one time given as
medicine to children, and the roots of many
species contain an active substance still used by
doctors.”

“Never mind; I won’t be set against them.”

“Not even because violet is not really an
English name, but imitated from viola, which
was the Latin name of some fragrant flower
which might not have been a violet at all.”

“JT think they deserve to be found all the
world over.”

“ And they are nearly so, but not often sweet-
scented ; and so there are many countries where
the sweet-violet and the little English daisy are
unknown.”

Cissy and her uncle found no “ dog-violets” on

that day, and not until two or three weeks later,
VIOLETS. 39

when their gossip on violets was taken up again
and made more complete.

‘“ Now that we have found the ‘dog-violet,’”
said Cissy, ‘“ I still think the other is best, because

the colour is deeper, to say nothing of the scent.”

\
\ 1

|

f \
Ny
~] :

|

Fic. 8.—Lear or Doa-VIoLet.

Ne?

“That is not the point,” said uncle: “you
called the ‘dog-violet’ a sham, and you must see
that it is not.”

“ And what must I look at?”

“ Firstly, the stem. Now the sweet-violet has
no stem at all, and this has a stem with leaves
upon it.”
40 VIOLETS.

“So it has, but that is not much.”

“ Well, then, compare the leaves.”

“Qh, they are a little different, but not
much.”

“ And the flowers ?”

“Not so pretty, and with no scent. Why
was it called the dog-violet ?”

“ Possibly the animal’s name, attached to
flowers, was meant to point them out as be-
ing less good than some other flower or plant
which was something like them. We have
dog-rose to set against the rose; dog-violet to
place against the violet ; horse-chestnut against
the chestnut ; cow-parsnip against the pars-
nip; and horse-mushroom against the mush-
room.”

“ So we have three kinds of wild violet in this

country ; and is that all?”

“By no means; there may be eight British
violets. But the bog-violet and the mountain-
violet are not likely to come in our way; and,
after all, you care most for the sweet-violet, and
very little for any other.
VIOLETS. Al

‘Smell at my violets! I found them where
The liquid south stole o’er them, on a bank
That leaned to running water. There's to me
A daintiness about these early flowers

That touches one like poetry.’ ”

“Can you tell me no other story of the
violet ?”

“Only a short one about Io, who was the
daughter of Atlas. One day she was being pur-
sued by Apollo, who was the sun, you know,
and she fled from him into a wood, where
Diana changed her into a violet. Perhaps this
is only another way of saying that violets grow
in the woods to escape the sun.

‘The trembling violet, which eyes

2

The sun but once, and unrepining dies.’
DANDELIONS.*

¢

: UNCLE, mamma says we should not
pick the nasty dandelions. But they
are not nasty, are they ?”

“Well, Cissy, some people call them nasty,
but I don’t.”

‘Why do they call them nasty ?”

“ Perhaps, my dear, because they do not smell
very nice, and perhaps because they have a
sticky juice, which makes the hands dirty.”

“Ts that ail the reason, uncle? for Lotty says
that country children will not pick dandelions,
and some of them aren’t afraid of making them-
selves dirty.”

“Indeed, Cissy, I have heard the warning
not to smell the dandelions; but I fancy the

* Taraxacum officinale.
aon

|













































































































































































































Fic. 9.—DANDELIONS.




































































































































































































































‘DANDELIONS. 45

young urchins always do it all the same, and no
harm comes of it.”

“Why are they called ‘dandelions,’ uncle?”

“Well, my child, I think we had better walk
down the lane, and find the plant growing, when
I can show you the cause for the name.”

No sooner was this plan agreed to than Cissy
and her uncle, hand in hand, were strolling
along a quiet country lane, in quest of the
humble and common plant of which they had
just been talking. Some of the leaves may be
found all the year round, but the flowers only in
summer and autumn. In some places the chil-
dren call all the yellow flowers which have the
star shape by the name of dandelion, but there
is only one kind of plant and flower which has
the right to be so called, and that is the one
which Cissy is looking after and her uncle has
already found.

“ Here is one, Cissy, without any flower ; but
we must dig it up by the root.”

After digging for some time in silence and
loosening the soil all round, Cissy complained
46 DANDELIONS.

that the root was so long and so deep that she
could not tear it up.

“T am glad that you have found what a
strong and long root the dandelion has,” replied
the uncle, “and how difficult it is to pull it
up. Some people think, when dandelions grow
amongst the grass on a lawn, that it needs
only a weed-‘spud’ and a push to clear them
all away; but the diggers only break off the
top of the root, and then they find, soon after,
that the rest of the root, still in the ground,
crows again stronger than ever.”

“Oh, never mind the root, uncle; I am in
such a hurry to know the meaning of the name.”

‘“ All in good time, Cissy. I only want the
leaves for the present; but they must be whole
leaves, and not bitten by the slugs or gnawed
by the rabbits.” __

“T can soon find some beautiful leaves, and
we need not have been digging at the roots
at all.”

“My dear Cissy, your labour has not been in
vain ; because you will not forget that if this
DANDELIONS. AT

weed has no stem, it has plenty of root. Now
you must smooth out five or six leaves and lay
them flat on this book, so as to see their
shape.”

“Yes, uncle. They are long leaves with such





Fig. 10,—DANDELION LEAF.
(Reduced)

a funny zigzagey edge that they look as if the
slugs had been biting pieces out of them all the
way down.”

‘Just so: the edges of the leaves are toothed,
and by that I mean that sharp points stick out
48 DANDELIONS.

all the way along each side, like teeth in a large
saw. Some of these teeth are large and some
are small, but all are sharp pointed, with the
points curved backwards towards the bottom of
the leaf.”

“Ah yes; I see all of them are hooked
downwards like a cat’s claw.”

“ Not quite the best likeness, Cissy. I should
have said, perhaps, like a lion’s tooth ;- but you
never saw a lion’s tooth, did you?”

“No, uncle; lions don’t grow in our woods.”

“Did you ever see pussy’s teeth? When the
cat opens her mouth do you watch her teeth—
sharp pointed, with all the points curved back-
wards, just as the lion’s teeth are; only the
lion’s are so much the largest.”

“T see now—‘ dandy-lion.’”

“Not exactly, Cissy. It was at one time
‘dent-de-leon, which means ‘tooth of lion’ or
‘lion’s teeth, but has fallen to ‘dandelion,’
which means the same thing ; because the points
of the leaf are curved backwards, ending in a
sharp point like lion’s teeth.”
DANDELIONS. 49

“Yes; but lions do not always show their
teeth.”

“True, my dear; but you remember on the
village green at Wickham what we saw as we
rode past one day. Outside the public-house
there was a large board upon which was painted a
red lion, standing on his hind legs, and pawing
with his fore feet in the air, his mouth wide
open, showing his large teeth. He always
shows his teeth. I could show you a book in
which it is written, ‘The jagged edges of the
leaf are like the rows of teeth that garnish the
jaws of the red lion which announces the head
inn of some village or town.”

“ But, uncle, would lions dance on their hind
legs, like dancing-bears ?”

“Perhaps not, Cissy, unless they are red
lions. Could you count how many leaves there
are on this dandelion plant, all bent back to
the ground and lapping each other, spreading
like rays, making a rosette of green leaves?”

“T don’t think I know what a rosette is.”

“Well, dear, a rosette is an imitation of a
497) 4
50 DANDELIONS.

rose, or supposed to be, in which a great num-
ber of leaves have their lower ends all joined
together in the centre and the other ends spread-
ing out all round, as they do in a marigold
flower, or a plant of houseleek, or London pride,
or a dandelion.”

“T like a rose better than a rosette.”

“ But each one is useful in its place.”

“QO uncle, what can be the use of the dande-
lion rosette ? it is only a common weed.” __

“Cissy, call nothing common or unclean,
until you know it well, and can find no good
Eb

“ But I do know the dandelion !”

“ Not yet, my child; you have not even tasted
ibis

“O uncle!”
© * You like lettuce, and celery, and water-cress,
and other green leaves, and call them ‘salad.’”

“Yes, I like salad; but I don’t think I shall
like this, because it tastes bitter.” »~

“ And so does endive, until it is blanched.”

‘“‘ Blanched! what is that?”
DANDELIONS. 51

“ Blanched simply means bleached-—losing its
green colour. Suppose we place a piece of tile
or slate on this dandelion plant, and leave it
there for a week or two, and then look at it
again. The leaves will be there, just as before ;
but instead of being green in colour, they will
be turned sickly white. They will be blanched,
and, if you taste them again, no longer bitter.
By shutting off the light the green colour will
not be formed in the leaves, nor will the bitter
taste, both of which require the light. So that
by blanching them these leaves become more
pleasant to eat. In this state dandelion leaves
are as good in salads as endive, and are con-
stantly eaten in that way by some people,
without being blanched at all.”

“Then shutting out the light makes them
better. Why don’t they always grow in the
dark ?”

“Yes, Cissy, shutting off the light makes
them better for eating, because more tender and
less bitter ; but at the same time they are made

what we should call sickly, unhealthy, and
52 DANDELIONS.

would be killed at last. Celery, endive, sea-kale,
etc., are all treated in a like manner for the
same purpose. So you see they cannot always
grow in the dark, and, like most little girls, do
not like to be in the dark.”

“TJ didn’t think that the dandelion was useful
to any one but slugs and rabbits.”

“And you were mistaken, because those
troublesome large roots are useful also.”

“What! to ‘people’ ?”

“Certainly to ‘people, as you call them.
The roots are dug out of the ground and washed
clean. Then they are cut in pieces and dried
in the sun, in the air, or in heated rooms.
When quite dry and hard they may be grated
or pounded, and the powder made into pills,
which are useful as a medicine.”

“Dandelion pills?”

“Yes, Cissy ; and even something more than ,
that, because when the dried roots are roasted
until they are crisp, they can be ground and
made into coffee.”

“ Not real coffee, uncle ?”
DANDELIONS. 53

“Not real coffee, of course, but dandelion.
coffee, which some people like as well as they
do real coffee ; and it is sold in the shops, some-
times pure and sometimes mixed with real coffee,
and either way makes a very pleasant, cheap,
and sober drink.”

“ But I wish you to tell me something about
the flowers, they look so curious.”

“Let us spread your white handkerchief on
the grass and pull one of the flowers in pieces,
gently and carefully pulling off every one of the
yellow leaves, so that we may count them and
not lose one of them.”

“See the little tuft of white hairs at the bot-
tom of all of them.”

“Yes, but do you know that they are not
simple leaves, such as they are in many common
flowers, but each one of those yellow florets, as
they are called, is a perfect flower ; so that there
are a great number of very little flowers, grow-
ing together into a compound or composite
flower. Just you count them and see how

many there are.”
54 DANDELIONS.

“TJ find a hundred and fifty florets in my

flower.”
“ And in mine there are one hundred and



Dandelion Clock. Pappus and Fruit. Floret.

Fic, 11.—DANDELION.

sixty ; so that we cannot call it a single flower,
but a cluster of florets, or a flower-head.”
“And is every one of these a perfect flower ?”
DANDELIONS. 55

“ Certainly it is; of which I will convince you
directly. They are all alike, too, in the dande-
lion, but they are not all alike in the daisy,
which has yellow florets in the middle, and
white ones all around them.”

“Then the daisy and the dandelion are both
of them what you call compound flowers ?”

“Yes; but the daisy has a disc of yellow
flowers, with a ray of strap-shaped white
flowers.”

“ And are these florets of the dandelion all of
them strap-shaped flowers ?”

“See, the bottom of the floret is a tiny tube
with a long, yellow, strap-shaped flower-leaf on
one side, nearly the same width all the way,
and little notches at the top end.”

“Oh, what a funny little yellow column stands
up in the middle of each floret, which is split at
the top, and each half of it curls outwards!
what is that?”

“Jt is the style, and the five stamens are
around it, but so closely glued to the column

that you cannot see them with the naked eye.”
56 DANDELIONS.

‘“‘ And where will the seeds come ?”

“The ovary, or young seed-vessel, is at the
bottom of the floret, just a little swelling, and
then it is narrowed above a little way, and then
swells again, just where the fringe of white
hairs stand up all around it.”

‘“ What are the hairs for?”

“That is the pappus. When the florets die
off and the seed-vessel grows ripe, the narrow
part above it gets longer and longer, and carries
up with it the tuft of white hairs, which spread
all round, so that when the seeds are ripe the
pappus at the top is like a parachute, which
floats in the air.”

“ And then we blow it off to see what o’clock
it is!”

“Certainly. What you do is just what is
written in the book:—‘The little girls adorn
themselves with chains and curls of dandelions,
pull out the yellow leaves to see if the schoolboy
loves them, and blow the down from the leafless
stalk to find out if their mothers want them at

99)

home.
DANDELIONS. 57

PPh

“We call them ‘ dandelion clocks.’

“But, Cissy, we are forgetting the flower-
stalk, after plucking off the florets. You must
look at it, and see that the top of the stem forms
a little cushion upon which stand the florets,
packed closely side by side; and by-and-by as
the seeds ripen they stand upon the cushion,
until they are blown away by the wind.”

“ And form a pretty globe of down.”

“You remember that in most flowers there
is a cup or a ring of small green leaves just
beneath the flower, called the calyx, which is
another word for cup. In the dandelion and
other compound flowers there is also a circle,
or two or three rings, of small scaly green leaves
just beneath the flower-head.”

“There are two rings of leaves in the dande-
lion.”

“ And the outer circle bend backwards. But
these green bracts are not a calyx or cup, but
a general involucre. Every floret has a substi-
tute for the calyx in the fringe of white hairs
or pappus. The involucre protects the young
58 DANDELIONS.

flowers in the bud, and as the seeds ripen the
whole of the leaflets bend backwards, close to
the stem.”

“Can we find a ‘dandelion clock’ with ripe
seeds ?”

“T am afraid not; but you will remember
them, and I can remind you of one or two
things. When all the fruits of the composite
flowers of the dandelion are ripe, they have a
long stiff bristle at the top which supports the
parachute or flattened pappus of white hairs.
All the combined parachutes of one receptacle
form a delicate round ball, but the fruits are
attached so slightly to the cushion that a puff
of wind will blow them away. The use of the
downy head is to cause the seeds to be floated
in the air, and thus easily scattered. When a
suitable place is reached, the seed settles and

begins to grow; and this completes our history.”
LORDS AND LADIES.*

“ C* HARP eyes, Cissy, in the hedge-bank, for

the flower of ‘lords and ladies.’ I can
see plenty of the glossy green leaves, but not
a flower as yet.”

‘Show me the leaves, uncle; I am not sure
that I know them.”

“ There they are, scores of them, rising out of
the ground without any stem—bright, shining,
arrow-shaped leaves, many of them spotted with
blackish spots.”

”?

“That's the ‘wake-robin,’” exclaimed Cissy ;
“ T know the horrid leaves.”

“Why call them horrid leaves? for I think
them handsome leaves.”

“Yes, uncle, to look at; but I bit one of

* Arum maculatum.
60 LORDS AND LADIES.

them one day, and, oh, it was horrid! it al-
most blistered my lips and tongue.”

“You were foolish, Cissy. I do not know
any leaf that would punish you so much for
tasting, and you will never wish to taste it
again.”

“That I shan’t. But why ‘lords and ladies’ ?”

“ And why ‘wake-robin,’ or ‘ cuckoo-pint,’ or
‘calves’ foot,’ or ‘starch-wort’? All are names
for the same plant.”

“Perhaps ‘cuckoo-pint’ because it comes
with the cuckoo.”

‘Perhaps ‘starch-wort’ because starch was
made from the roots, to starch the big ruffles
which were worn in the reign of Queen Eliza-
beth.”

“ Let’s dig up the roots.”

“They are almost like a bulb, but solid, and
not with one coat over another as in the onion.”

“Hach root has three, four, or five leaves on
long stalks rising from it.”

“ And in the autumn a new root grows beside

the old root, and as the berries ripen the old
LORDS AND LADIES. 61

root dies and rots, and the new root rests through
the winter, to send up green leaves and flowers
in the spring.”

« And I know it flowers in a hood.”

“There is one at last! See, this round,
greenish, spotted stalk comes up from the root
amongst the leaves, and on the top of the stalk
stands a long hollow husk or sheath, very pale
ereen, puffed out like a bladder, sharp-pointed
at the top, and split down on one side nearly to
the bottom.”

“The hood, or sheath, must be six inches
long.”

“Yes, Cissy, quite as much as that, and an
inch thick in the middle.”

« And is that sheath the flower ?”

‘No, not the flower.”

‘Nor yet the flower-cup ?”

“No; it is like nothing that we have seen.
It isa sheath or hood, sometimes called a spathe ;
but it is only a wrapper, or sheath, to protect
the flowers that are inside.”

“Then we may cut it off? H
62 LORDS AND LADIES.



Fic. 12.—SpaTHEe AND LEAF.

“Yes, and lay bare the flowers hidden within.
The upper part, for more than half its length,
is a purple club, like a pestle or clapper, rounded
LORDS AND LADIES. 63

at the top and narrowed downwards, and paler
below. Then again it becomes thicker, and around
it a ring of little knobs with hairs at the top.
Below this is a ring of male flowers, /
and lower still a broader band of female
flowers, and then follows the flower-stem,
which runs down to the root.”

“Then it is not one flower, but a host
of flowers shut up in a sheath ?”

“Yes: passing upwards from the bot-
tom there is a band of female flowers,
then a band of male flowers, then a ring of

barren flowers, and above all these the up-



right purple club, and all enclosed in a long
sheath which is split down on one side.” Fie. 18.—

ef SPADIX
“The flowers must be very small. or Lorps

“ And so they are, and as simple as they Laptes,
can be. The male flowers are only pollen-boxes,
and thé female flowers are only seed-cells, or
young fruits, containing the minute ego-like or
bud-like seeds.”

“ How many flowers are there in one of the

sheaths 2”
64, LORDS AND LADIES.

“JT know not, but perhaps scores. Only a
few, or not more than a dozen, of the fruits
ripen. Later in the season, clusters of the red
fruits, of the size of red currants, are to be seen
crowded together on a stem amongst the leaves,
quite naked—the club and all above the ring of
female flowers, and every shred of the sheath,
dead and gone.”

“They must be easily seen.”

“Tndeed they are. And it is said that phea-
sants eat them, and perhaps other birds also ;
but I do not wish you to try them.”

“Thank you; I had rather not. I have no
wish to taste again.”

“You had enough with tasting the leaves.
I am told that if the fresh leaves are bruised
and laid on the skin they will raise a blis-
ter.”

“Do you think they were called ‘cuckoo-pint’
because they come with the cuckoo ?”

“T have read that it was called ‘ pint’ because
the sheath was like a drinking-cup, and ‘ cuckoo-

pint’ because it cometh with the cuckoo in the
LORDS AND LADIES. 65

spring ; ‘friar’s cowl, because the sheath is like
a friar’s hood or cowl.”

“Yes; and ‘lords and ladies’ ? i

“Tt was fancied that the hood of the flowers
resembled the ruffs in which lords and ladies
buried their heads in olden times.”

“Did the plant make wonderful cures, like
some other wild flowers ?”

“Well, it has been said that it will do a great
- many things; but I should not like to try it, if
it can blister the skin and scorch the tongue.

«© You will love it, and ride away!”

“Yes; I will be content to remember
How sweet it used to be when April first
Unclosed the arum leaves, and into view
Its ear-like, spindling flowers their cases burst,

Betinged with yellowish white or lushy hue.” ’
Or at other times—

‘Oft under trees we nestled in a ring,

92:2:92

Culling our “lords and ladies.

(497) 5
RED CAMPION.*

ue HEN I was a boy, Cissy, that red
flower was always called ‘bachelor’s
buttons’ in Norfolk, but I have since learned
that in other places some other wild flower is
the ‘bachelor’s buttons.” »~
« And what is this one called ?”

“Sometimes ‘red campion’ and sometimes

999

‘red robin ;’ but I never forget the old name.”

“Tt is almost like a ‘ pink.’”

“Of course it is a wild pink, and so is the
‘ragged robin,’ which grows in meadows.”

“A spring nosegay is dull without the cam-
pion.”

“So I think. Although it is straggling, it
is a pretty object in the lanes at spring-time.

* Lychnis diurna.

RED CAMPION. 67

The long, thin stems are often more than half
a yard high, and velvety.”

“The roots are rather tough and stringy.”

“And do not die in the winter, but remain
in the ground, and send up a tuft of green
leaves in the spring.”

“The leaves are long, and broadest in the
middle, narrowed to each end, almost like a
boy’s ‘ tip-cat.’”

“We should call them lance-shaped, because
they are like the head of a lance, only that they
are rather too blunt at the tip.”

« And a little hairy or velvety, without any
proper foot-stalks.”

“The stems are quite round, with swollen
joints, rather wide apart, so that there is a long
naked space between one joint and the next.
The stems will break more easily at the joints.”

“There is always a cluster of root-leaves on
the ground at the bottom of the stem.”

“And not many leaves on the stem; but
these always grow at the joints, and in pairs,

one leaf opposite to another.”
68 RED CAMPION.

“And the branches come from the joints
too.”

“Yes: the stem divides into two branches
at the joint, and then each branch divides again
into two at the next joint, like a two-pronged
fork; so that it goes on forking up to the top,
each branch becoming shorter and shorter the
further it is from the root.”

“See, the last branch, with the flower at the
top, is quite short. Is that campion with quite
white flowers the same ?”

“No, Cissy; that is the white campion, or
the evening campion, which is different, but
very much like the red campion, and the flowers
smell sweet in the evening.”

“The leaves look almost the same, and the
flowers nearly of the same size and shape, only
that they are quite white.”

“True; but the flowers of the white campion
are sometimes pinkish, and those of the red
campion nearly white. You must not be guided
wholly by the colour of the flowers.”

“Then what must be the guide?”
RED CAMPION. 69

“The shape of the capsule, as we shall see
by-and-by. But we have still to look at the
flowers, ‘ each of them standing in a large green-
striped hairy husk, large and round below, next
to the stalk.’ You will remember the ‘ flower-
cup’ in other flowers, but in these it is more
distinct.”

“Oh yes; the green flower-cup, with its
toothed edge, is very plain to be seen.”

“In the red campion the teeth of the cup are
very short; in the white campion they are
longer, and with a broader notch.”

“T see the difference now; but it is such a
little one, and the teeth are always small.”

“We must pull the flower in pieces, as I
have to show you something here which we
have not seen before; but before I do so, we
must see the coloured leaves, the true flower-
leaves.”

“There are five of them again.”

« Five, deeply notched at the outer edge, and
lengthened out into a long claw at the bottom.

Pull out the pink leaves and find the claw.”
70 RED CAMPION.

“Here it is: nearly white, and as long as the
blade, sharply bent in the middle.”

“Of course you can see the reason. When
the flowers are open the top is quite flat, like
a button, with the five spreading
pink leaves ; but the long claw
must be bent sharp downwards to
pass into the flower-cup, making a
sort of elbow joint at the bend.
All the family of Pinks have these

‘clawed petals,’ as they are called.”



Fic. 14.—
Crawep Pera. ‘* Yes, [ see—the pink part quite

flat, and the white claw bent sharp downwards
into the cup.”

“Now I must tell you of the ‘something’ which
we have not met with before in other flowers.
Some of the plants of the campion have only
male flowers, and others have only female flowers.”

“« And are both sorts of flowers just the same
to look at?”

“Exactly the same; and you could not tell
the one from the other by just looking at them

outside, only by pulling them in pieces.”
RED CAMPION. a

“QO uncle, show me the difference; I should
like to know the puzzle.”

“Yes, dear; but you must have patience,
because you will hardly understand the puzzle
all at once. I have told you that the first set
of parts in a flower is the outside set of green
leaves, which we have agreed to call the flower-
cup; then the next set are the true coloured
flower-leaves, which are pink, with a long spur
or claw in these flowers; but the third set are
the threads in the middle, called stamens, and
the column in the centre, with the young seed-
vessel at the bottom.”

“T recollect all that.”

“We have always found, up to now, both the

and the centre



stamens—you call them threads
piece all in one flower; but we shall see in
these flowers, as in this one, that there are ten
stamens or threads, but no column in the centre.
Here is another just the same—only the ten
stamens, and no column. These, then, are
male flowers.”

“Tg the column of so much use?”
72 RED CAMPION.

“Certainly it is; for the young seed-capsule
grows at the bottom of the column, and if there
is no centre piece (people call it a prstil) the
plant will have no seeds.”

“Then these male flowers have no seeds?”

“That is just the point; we must hunt in
other flowers for the centre piece or pistil. All
the flowers on this one plant are male flowers,
so we must find the plant which bears female
flowers.”

“Do they grow together ?”

“Yes. Let us try this one. No; it is just
the same, and all male flowers. We will try
them on the other side of the road.”

“ Hlere’s a nice one, uncle—all a-blowing, all
a-growing.”

“ Ah, that will do; it is a female plant.”

“Tt looks just like the others.”

“But it is not the same. See here: there
are no stamens, only a column, with a swelling
at the bottom, which is the young seed-vessel,
and holds the very little dots which one day
will grow into seeds.”
RED CAMPION. 73

“The column is split into five at the top; and
these female flowers will have seeds, while the
male flowers will have none. So the male
flowers are of no use, only to look at?”

“T did not say that, Cissy; but your ques-
tion makes me tell you something more.”

“What! about the male flowers?”

“Yes; we must go back to them again. You
saw the thick tops of the threads or stamens?”

“ All powdery like.”

“These tops split lengthwise, and scatter
very fine yellow powder—the pollen; and this
pollen, if it settles on the top of the centre
column, grows, and thrusts a very fine tube
down the inside of the column into the seed-
vessel, so that the liquor that was in the pollen
grain passes down this tube into the space at
the bottom of the column, and helps the little
dots to grow into perfect seeds.”

“Wouldn’t they grow into perfect seeds
without the help of the pollen grains ?”

“They would not grow, but shrivel up.”

“Then how do the pollen grains get from the
74 RED CAMPION.

male flowers into the female flowers, that may
be growing a long way off?”

“Perhaps in more ways than one; but I will
tell you one way in which they travel. You
have seen bees and flies hovering about flowers
and sucking their juice ?”

“Very often.”

“Little fly goes to a male flower, and pushes
about and gets into it as faras he can. Doing
this, he knocks off the pollen powder, which
sprinkles all over his head and back. By-and-
by he goes into a female flower, and there he
rubs the powder from his head and back upon
the sticky top of the column, and so the pollen
travels from the male to the female flower.”

“What happens after ?”

“The male flowers die, and nothing is left;
the female flowers die, but the swelling at the
bottom of the centre column remains, and grows
bigger and bigger, until it becomes a large seed-
vessel or capsule, open at the top, with ten teeth
round the edge, so that when the seeds are ripe

they shake in the inside and fall out.”
RED CAMPION. 75

“Then they are all female plants which have
capsules ?”

“Only female plants; and in the red campion
the capsules are nearly round, with the teeth
bent back; in the white campion the capsules
are longer and almost pear-shaped, with the

teeth straight. Thus you may know the red

Fic. 15.—Caprsu.e or Fic. 16.—CapsuLE or
Rep Campion. Wuite CaMPIoNn.
from the white campion when the flowers are
all dead and gone.”

“Suppose the fly carries the powder on his
head into another sort of plant, such as a
stitchwort, and leaves it behind him, what will
happen ?”

“Nothing will happen. The tubes will not
grow, and the powder will wither and dry up.”

“Have all the pinks, and such like plants,
16 RED CAMPION.

male flowers on one plant and female flowers on
another ?”

“Oh no; only a few kinds.”

“They are very pretty flowers, and some of
the garden pinks smell so sweet; but are they
of any use?”

“T am afraid that very few of them are of
any use to man, except for his pleasure; but
some of them may be as useful to smaller ani-
mals as ‘chickweed’ is to the little birds.” __

“T know the chickweed; it has such miser-
able little white flowers.”

“The flowers are small, but rather pretty if
you see them through a glass. I would advise
you to watch the leaves of this little plant, and
that you can do easily, for it grows in every
garden. At night the upper leaves draw to-
wards each other in pairs, so that they close
over the young shoots, and protect them during
the night. This has been called ‘going to
sleep ;’ but it is rather more than that, for the
leaves rise upwards and cover up the buds, to
shelter them from cold or harm. In some other
RED CAMPION. 77

plants the leaves either rise or fall, but only to
protect themselves, and they look as if they
were going to sleep. It is not generally known
that the young plants may be boiled as a vege-
table, and are something like spinach. You
must not despise the chickweed, for it may |
remind you that little things are not mean or
miserable because they are small.”
ST. JOHN’S WORT.*

o ANY old customs, Cissy, have to do

with flowers; but some of them have
gone out of use, and others out of thought—
mistletoe at Christmas, hawthorn on Mayday,
willow on Palm Sunday, and St. John’s wort on
Midsummer Eve. We must find the St. John’s
wort, and learn its story.”

“‘ Shall we find it in the lane?”

“Tt grows on hedge-banks and by roadsides,
as well as in woods, and is in flower in July and
August.”

“What is the story ?”

“Not a long one. A Welshman says that
in Wales they have the custom of sticking St.
John’s wort over the doors on the eve of St.

* Hypericum perforatum.
ST. JOHN’S WORT. 79

John Baptist; and, without naming this plant, a
bishop wrote of olden times, when men of the
country brought into London on Midsummer
Eve branches of trees from Bishop’s Wood, and
flowers from the field, to array the houses and
make them gay.”

“Do you know why this flower should have
been called St. John’s wort, or why it should
have been chosen for that purpose ?”

“Perhaps because it is a showy plant, and
flowers at this time of year. It is a large plant,
and we cannot miss it.”

“ And the colour?”

“There are at least ten kinds of St. John’s
wort found in this country, and all of them have
yellow flowers. Our St. John’s wort, which is
probably the true species, grows more than half
a yard high, and can be seen a long way off.”

“ T hope we shall find it.”

« There’s a plant, with golden yellow flowers,
just in sight. It may be a ‘ragwort,’ but it is
the more likely to be St. John’s wort. You

had better run and look at it.”
80 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

“ How shall I know it?”

“You will know if it is the ragwort, because
the ragwort is something like the dandelion:
the flower-head, which looks to be one flower, is
made up of a host of little flowers packed close
together in the middle, and rows of strap-shaped
flowers round the edge, like the rays in a dande-
lion or daisy.”

“Yes, a composite flower; but if it is St.
John’s wort?”

“ Then it is a simple flower, and in the middle
of it a very great number of golden threads

which we call stamens.”



Fic. 17.—Srction or FLower or St. Jouy’s Wort.
At length Cissy called out, “ Here it is, and
they are simple flowers.”
“ You see that it is quite half a yard high, and
ST. JOHN’S WORT. 81

grows so stiff and upright that you should know
it again a long way off.”

“And such a number of golden yellow
flowers.”

“The stem, you can see, is distinctly two-
edged, and bright reddish brown, so slender that
if it were not tough and woody it would soon be
blown down.”

‘“‘ And such a number of branches.”

‘ Mostly in pairs, one on each side of the stem,
and opposite to each other; not spreading much,
but pointing upwards.”

“ And what little leaves.”

“ Yes; the leaves are small for the size of the
plant. Oblong, three times as long as they are
broad, with quite a smooth edge; and I don’t
think you will find hairs upon them anywhere.”

“They are rather tough, aren’t they ?”

“Yes; but what is more strange is that they
are pricked with little dots, and you must use
your best eyes to see them.”

“ And the leaves grow in pairs, too, on oppo-

site sides of the stem.”
(497) 6
82 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

“ All the branches grow out from the corner
which the leaf makes with the stem; that is to
say, the branches grow from the stem, or larger
branches, just over and close to the bottom of
the leaf, and are said to grow in the awils of the
leaves.”

“The leaves are all smaller at the top of the
plant than they are at the bottom, and smaller
on the branches than they are on the stem.”

“ That is usually the case with herbs.”

‘The flowers look very different. from butter-
cups.”

‘And yet the flowers of both have five yellow
floral leaves, and a great number of threads, or
stamens, in the middle of the flower.”

“With five little green cup-leaves close to the
outside of the flower.”

“Now then, Cissy, you must pull one flower
in pieces, very carefully, over this sheet of paper,
and be very careful with the stamens.”

“One, two, three! Such a lot of stamens—
sixty or seventy—but all grown together into
two or three tufts or bundles.”
ST. JOHN’S WORT. 88

‘ Exactly. That is just what I wished you
to be quite sure of, because that is how you may
always know St. John’s wort from any other
yellow wild flower. The stamens are always
joined in bundles. You can remember ?”

“Yes; I don’t think I can forget it now



Fic. 18.—FLower or St. Jonn’s Wort.

1, Flower; 2, Bundle of Stamens; 3, Pistil; 4, Section of Ovary ; 5, Fruit;
6, Seed ; 7, Section.

that I have seen it. And there is a large
knob in the middle where the stamens are
pulled off”

“That is the ovary, which grows into a fruit
and contains the seed. You will notice that not
only the stems, and sometimes the large veins
84 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

of the leaves, but the tips of the flower buds,
before they open, are tinged with red.”

“ And the plant is smooth all over.”

“You have been pulling the plant about,
breaking and rubbing it, so that I want to know
if you can smell any scent on your fingers.”

“Yes; I think I smell something like lemons.”

-« There is a yellow juice in the plant which

perhaps contains the scent, but sometimes it is
better to be seen than at others. Suppose we
carry some of the plant home, and put it in
water in a glass bottle: then we shall see, after
it has been standing a little while, that the
water becomes yellowish.” »~

“See, it stains my fingers, but not yellow.”

“ Tf you press some of them between blotting
paper, the juice will stain the paper yellow.”

“Ts the yellow colour of any use ?”

“T have been told that when mixed with
alum and boiled the dried plant will dye wool
a yellow colour, but I have never tried it.”

“ And yet you say that all things have their
uses.”
ST. JOHN’S WORT. 85

“Yes; but I did not tell you that I knew the
uses of all things. The St. John’s wort was
gathered in the country, when I was a boy, by
many old people, who believed it to be so useful
as a medicine that they dried it and kept some
of it always in the house.”

« And what was it good for?”

«Tt was supposed to cure the ague, and to be
good for jaundice, and T think useful for wounds
and for internal bleeding, and perhaps for many
things besides, for it was a plant of many vir-
tues.”

« And not all of them true?”

“You will think so when I tell you that in
France and Germany the common people gather
the plant on St. John’s Day, and hang it up in
their windows as a charm to protect them from
harm by storms, thunder, or evil spirits. Even
in North Wales there was at one time a similar
belief, I may tell you that there is a St. John’s
wort, with large yellow flowers, as big as half-a-
crown, often grown in gardens and shrubberies ;

but it ig not one of our wild flowers. One name
86 ST. JOHN’S WORT.

for it is ‘ Aaron’s beard,’ on account of the great
number of stamens. As the flowers are so large,
you will be able to see the bundles of stamens
better than you can do in the common St. John’s
wort; so that you had better look for it, as it
grows close to the ground in large patches, and
the large flowers stand singly, and not in bunches.
It grows in some places like a wild plant, but it
is a native of Southern Europe, and was intro-
duced into this country, therefore we cannot call

it a true British wild flower.”
MALLOW.*

‘ OU should know the mallow, Cissy, with
the pink flowers close at your feet.
But what do you call it?”

“ Oh! ‘cheeses.’ Yes, I know.”

“ Cheeses? why do you call it ‘ cheeses’ ?”

“ Because little cheeses grow all over it, and
so we play with them, and call them ‘ cheeses.’”

““« Pick-cheeses’ they are called in some places,
and are the round, flat fruits of the mallow.”

“What a sprawling plant! too lazy to grow
straight.”

«“ As some people are too lazy to walk straight.
It is a strong, tough plant; so you may grasp
it firmly, and pull with all your might to drag
it up by the root.”

* Malva sylvestris.
83 MALLOW.

“T can’t; it sticks so hard.”

“Then I will help you. Now, pull all to-
gether, and up it comes.”

“But the end of the root is broken off.”

“Never mind; there is enough for you to see
what a large, tough root it has, thicker than
your finger ; and if you rub it where it is broken,
you will find that it has a clammy juice.”

“Tt is almost like liquorice root, but not so
nice, is it?”

‘ Not so sweet, but nearly as useful.”

“Good to eat?”

“Not exactly ; but all kinds of mallow roots
are whitish and full of a slimy juice, and when
laid in water the juice runs out, and makes the
water thick and clammy. It is said that the
old Romans used mallow roots as a vegetable.”

“ But it is not used now-a-days ?”

“ Yes, it is, but not in the same way. Mallows
are one of the few common plants still used in
proper medicine, and more abroad, in Europe,
than with us.”

“« How is it used ?”


Fic. 19.—Common Matiow.

1, Part of Plant, reduced; 2, Root; 3, Section of Flower ; 4, 5, Fruits; 6, Carpel;
7, Seed; 8, Stamen.

MALLOW. 91

“The water in which it is soaked is sweetened
with sugar and drunk, or it is used outside for
bathing inflamed limbs, or made into a kind of
poultice.”

‘“Only the roots ?”

« All parts of the plant more or less, especially
the marsh-mallow, which is made into a syrup
or lozenges. French chemists sell the dried
flowers and roots under the name of ‘ guimauve.’”

“The stem is tough like the root, and strag-
ogling.”

“The common mallow is not a neat-growing
plant, but the flowers are pretty; sometimes it
is half-a-yard high, and often less.”

«Tt seems to be soft and velvety all over.”

“Yes; but the marsh-mallow is much softer
and more velvety. Let us try to name the
shape of the leaves.”

“That is not so easy. They would be rather
rounded if they were not so deeply notched at
the edge.”

“JT should call them kidney-shaped, and

notched at the edge so as to have from five to
92 MALLOW.

seven broad and almost three-cornered teeth:
too large for teeth, we might almost call them
lobes. The dwarf mallow is nearly as common,
but the leaves are more kidney-shaped, and
scarcely lobed.”

“ Lobes! what are they ?”

“The lower flap of the ear is the lobe of the
ear ; and so these are lobes, or flaps, if you like.”



Fic. 20.—Dwarr Matiow Lear.

‘Never mind what we call them, so long as
we know what it is that we mean.”

“You are right, Cissy: names mean little
until we give some meaning to them, and it is
seldom easy to state the forms of leaves in words.”

“‘ And these plants have lobed leaves.”
MALLOW. 93

“Yes; which are not opposite to each other
in pairs, but grow singly and scattered. ‘The
lower leaves, in most plants, are the most per-
fect in their form.”

“ And there are tiny leaves at the bottom of
the foot-stalks upon the stems.”

“You will see that there are a great many
flowers, or flower-buds, which have short stalks,
and spring from the inner corner or axil where
the leaf-stalk is joimed to the stem or the
branches.”

«Some are only buds, some are open flowers,
and some almost like buds, only that the flowers
have opened and fallen off.”

«“ T wish you to look carefully at these flowers.
I should tell you that in all flowers there are
three things you should always look for. You
should look for the outer green leaves close up
to the flower, and which close over and cover
the young bud: these are the flower-cup or
calyx. Then there are the coloured leaves, which
form the proper flower. And lastly, there are the

thread-like stamens in the middle of the flower.”
94, MALLOW.

“ And should we always find all these three
parts?”

“ Yes,—we should in all perfect flowers: but
sometimes one of the parts becomes very small,”

“But in the mallow the green leaves of the
flower-cup are very large.”

“They are in all the Mallow family; and
not only large, but double. The inner cup has
five divisions, and the outer one three. It is
not usual for the green flower-cup, or calyx
(which means cup), to be double, as it is in
mallows.”

“T must not forget that.”

“Not even when you see hollyhocks grow-
ing in the garden, for they are big mallows.
Now, look at the second set of parts in the
flowers.”

“Yes, the coloured flower-leaves; and there
are five, broadest towards the outer end, and
notched. Very pretty pink with purple lines.”

“Do you smell anything?”

“No; I don’t think they are scented.”

“There is a ‘musk-mallow,’ which is not so
MALLOW. 95

common, and that is supposed to smell faintly
of musk in the evening, but I never could smell
musk during the daytime in the flowers.”

«“ Now for the third set of parts in the flower.”

“Yes, Cissy; and curious they are too, for
you see they form a big bundle in the middle of
the flower, which stands up boldly.”

“And such a lot of stamens! That’s the
name.”

“ See, all of them joined together at the bot-
tom, ina sort of tube, around the column that
stands up in the middle.”

“ More than five?”

“More than five—more than ten—quite a
bunch of them, with large nodding heads. You
will not forget that in the mallow flowers the
first set and the third set of parts are different
from what they are in most flowers.”

“T shall not forget. And see how the flowers
are twisted round before they open, almost as
they are in the bindweed. But the ‘ cheeses ’-—
I want to know about them.”

“Of course you do; and here is a young one
96 MALLOW.

at the bottom of the plant, where the flower hag
fallen off and the cup-leaves have closed over
again.”
“Oh yes; there’s a little cheese inside.”
“That is the fruit, like a thick round button,
with marks all round the edge; and when quite

ripe all these little seed-vessels will break off



Fic. 21.—Fruit or Mattow.

from the core in the centre and part into sepa-
rate pieces, with a seed in each piece.”

“T eat them sometimes,” said Cissy.

“When they are green and juicy, but not
when they are dry. If we are to believe all the
good things which the mallow is said to do, we
would call it the most wonderful of plants.”

“‘T suppose some people have believed ?”

“ Hardly so much as Pliny did, who wrote
MALLOW. 97

nearly at the time of Christ, that ‘whosoever
shall take a spoonful of any of the mallows,
shall that day be free from all diseases that may
come unto him.’”

“That would be a useful medicine.”

“ Another says that the leaves bruised or
rubbed upon the place stung with bees, wasps,
or the like, presently take away the pains, red-
ness, and swellings that arise therefrom.”

“Mallows must have been known thousands
of years ago.”

“Even in the time of Job, when they were a
famine food. As he says, ‘For want and fam-
ine they were solitary ; fleeing into the wilder-
ness in former time desolate and waste: who
cut up mallows by the bushes’ (xxx. 3, 4). The
Greeks and Romans ate it boiled, or raw in
salads.”

“ And are they ever eaten now?”

“T believe that the poor inhabitants of Syria,
especially the Armenians, subsist for weeks on
herbs, of which the marsh-mallow is one of the

most common. When boiled first. and then
(497) q
98 MALLOW.

fried with onions and butter, they are said to
form a palatable dish.”

“T should not think we could eat them like
cabbage.”

“Well, Cissy, I am not so sure of that, but I
never tried them; yet there are plants in India
very nearly the same as mallows, the leaves of
which are used every day as a common pot-herb.”

“ Any way, if the mallow is a weed it is not
quite a useless one.”

“The neatest use I ever saw for the mallow
was a pretty lace collar for a little girl, made
from the stems of the common mallow.”

“Do tell me how it was done, uncle.”

“The bark was stripped off the stems, soaked
so that it could be beaten, and stripped into
very fine threads, and these threads were spun
into something like flax thread. This thread
was worked up and made into lace by some
ladies in Ireland, and sent to a great exhibition—
it might have been in 1851—and no one could
have known that it was not lace made in the

usual way.”
MALLOW. 99

“ What was it done for?”

“To prove that common things have their
uses, and that the common wayside mallow
could be made into lace that was fit to decorate
the finest lady in the land.”

“To deck the living and the dead.”

“Truly so; for the ancients used them as
funeral flowers, and it was customary to plant
them round the graves and tombs of dead

friends.”
GREAT BINDWEED.*

se HAT is the large white flower, uncle,
with the stems running all over the
hedge?”

“That is the bindweed, Cissy.”

“The large white flowers like a funnel ?”

“Tt is a wild convolvulus, something like the
purple convolvulus which grows in gardens, only
that the flowers are white.”

“ And it runs all over the bushes, with a
flower here and there.”

“Tf we track the stems down to the bottom,
we shall find the roots—and such roots !—-creep-
ing along in the soil, like underground runners.”

“Do they grow easily ?”

“Indeed they do. Some people are foolish

* Convolvulus sepium.
GREAT BINDWEED. 101

enough to move the plants into their gardens,
because the white flowers look so pretty, but
they always are sorry for it.”

«“ And why are they sorry ?”

“ Because they can never get rid of it again.
The roots run everywhere, and nearly every piece
of the root which is left in the ground continues
to grow. The stems twine over other plants
and bushes and choke them to death.”

“Ts there no other plant which has such
roots ?”

“Oh yes, there are many, but the stems are
not twiners, so that they cannot do so much
mischief. There are the ‘lily of the valley,’ and
the garden mint, and the musk plant, and the
wood-sorrel, and some others.”

“ But what are twiners ?”

“ They are plants which have long, thin stems,
so thin that they cannot stand upright of them-
selves, but twine round other plants, as the hop
does, and so does the purple convolvulus.”

“T see the stem wound round and round all

these bushes. And do they wind themselves up ?”
102 GREAT BINDWEED.

‘Like a corkscrew; for you see the stem is
not thicker than a straw, and it might be two
or three yards long, if we could unwind it.”

“ And does it wind as it grows ?”

“Yes; and if we could watch it, we should
see the top end move slowly round the branch
of the shrub that supports it, always moving in
one direction, which is against the sun, or from
the right to the left.”

“Do all twiners move from right to left ?”

“No; the hop moves in the other direction—
from the left to the right.”

“ And any others?”

“The honeysuckle and the wild bryony follow
the sun, from left to right, whilst the scarlet-
runner twines in the same direction as the bind-
weed.”

“T should like to see the tip of the stem mov-
ing round and round. How long does it take
them to get round?”

“The bindweed goes once round in about an
hour and three-quarters, and the hop in about

two hours and a half.”
GREAT BINDWEED. 108

“Then we would have to watch for two hours
to see the tip go round once.”

“Quite; because they move more slowly in
the evening and morning, or when the sun is
not shining.”

“T suppose that the quicker they grow the
faster they move.”

“The one depends upon the other. But you



Fic. 22.--Lear or BINDWEED.

must try to give me your name for the shape
of the leaves.”

“They are not heart-shaped quite, nor yet
flat-iron shape, nor yet three-cornered. I don’t

know.”
\\

104 GREAT BINDWEED.

“What do you say to arrow-shape, or like an
arrow-head ?”

“T have never seen an arrow-head, but I have
seen the top end of iron railings almost like it.”

“Well, then, I suppose they are meant for
arrow-heads or spear-heads. The leaves are
smooth, but not shining, and of rather bright
ereen.”

“With long stalks.”

“ Certainly, with rather long stalks; and the
leaves are not set close together, but rather wide
apart on the stem, and never in pairs.”

‘When are leaves ‘in pairs’ 4”

“T had forgotten to show you the St. John’s
wort, with the leaves in pairs—that is to say,
one leaf on each side of the stem, opposite to
each other, and at the same height.”

« And these are not opposite, or in pairs, but
single. Don’t you think ‘bindweed’ is a nicer
name than ‘ convolvulus,’ uncle ?”

“Well, it matters little ; for both words mean
the same thing, or nearly so.”

« And one name is English, the other foreign.”
GREAT BINDWEED. 105

“ Convolvulus is Latin, and means ‘ twining ;’
but its use is so common that it is almost as
good as English.”

“Except for little girls,” added Cissy.

“Let us leave the name for the sake of the
thing, and find something that is like the shape
of the flower.”

“T said funnel just now; but I do not like
funnel-shaped, because the sides are not straight,
but bent inwards.”

“ More like the end of a trumpet or a French-
horn.”

“Much more like, but so narrow at the
bottom.”

“Growing on flower-stalks which are thin,
and not like the leaf-stalks ; but why ?”

“ Because they are almost square,” said
Cissy.

“Let us find some flower-buds before the
flowers are open. See, here is one which is
quite a bud, closed between small heart-shaped
leaves.”

“They are funny little leaves, not like the
106 GREAT BINDWEED,.

real leaves ; but will they grow into real leaves?”
asked Cissy.

“No, dear; they are only the outer leaves
which belong to the flower. You will see them



Fic. 23.—Fnower or Great BInDWEED.

1, Flower ; 2, Pistil; 3, Section of Ovary; 4, Fruit within persistent calyx;
5, Fruit with calyx removed; 6, Section ; 7, Seed.

at the bottom of all the flowers, and not grown
any larger. They are not real leaves, but

99

‘ flower-leaves,’ called ‘ bracts.’
GREAT BINDWEED. 107

“T shall call them flower-leaves; I shall not
think of ‘bracts’ when I want to.”

«“ See, here is another bud which is older, and
you see the flower, folded lengthways and
twisted.”

“ Can we wait and see it open?”

“ Hardly, since it will not open until to-mor-
row morning.”

« At what time?”

-“The flowers of the great bindweed open at
about three or four oclock in the morning, so

that you must rise early to see them.

‘We'll gather the wild convolvulus,

?

That opes in the morning early.’’

“ And I suppose the flowers close again early
in the evening?”

“Or during a dull day. }, But you have not
noticed, Cissy, that these flowers are all in one
piece, and do not part into separate leaves as
some flowers do. The lower part is a tube,
which widens upwards, but is never parted.”

“Yes, I did notice it; and when the flowers
108 GREAT BINDWEED.

close they do not fall off readily, but wither and
die.”

“ Let me take my penknife and cut one of the

open flowers down through the middle, into two
equal portions, and then we shall be able to look
inside.”

“ And see one little thread standing up in the
middle, and five others standing around it.”

“The five little threads all alike, thick at the
top, are the stamens, and the one in the middle
is the style. You should look for these in all
flowers and count them ; because, although there
usually is one style in the middle, there may be
a great number of stamens standing around it.”

“Yes, uncle; but I must grow a little bigger
before I bother myself about them.”

“T agree with you, Cissy, that it is better to
learn a little, and learn it well, than try to learn
a great deal and learn nothing.”

“ But where is the seed ?”

‘You see that little hollow at the bottom of
the flower where it joins the stem?”

“Ves; I see it in both the halves.”
GREAT BINDWEED. 109

“Tf you were to look into that hollow with a
pocket-glass, you would see little points in it,
and they will grow and grow until they become
seeds.”

“T cannot see them.”

“ No,—and the plant does not often ripen its
seeds; but if you should find the seed-vessel
when full grown, late in the year, perhaps the
seeds would be inside.”

“Don’t the plant want the seeds?” inquired
Cissy.

“Not much, for it can spread and spread by
the roots, which live through the winter, just as
well as other plants do with a great many seeds.”

“Then it does not grow seeds because it really
wants them ?”

“Do you know the periwinkle ?”

‘“‘What—the ‘ winkles’?”

“No, not the sea-snails, but the periwinkle
plant, with blue flowers ?”

“T think not.”

“That plant spreads by the roots in the same

manner; and the fruit is so scarce that people
110 GREAT BINDWEED.

have grown it for forty years in their gardens
and never seen a single berry.”

“ And are the bindweeds of any use except
for show ?”

“Did you ever hear of such a thing as
‘jalap’?”

“JT don’t think so.”

“Tt isa physic, well known to country people,
which is brought over from America, and it is
the powdered root of a bindweed, or convolvu-
lus. Many years ago the roots of our great
bindweed were collected and dried and used for
the same purpose.”

“ But not now ?”

“T think not now at all, because other things
have been found out which serve the purpose
better.”

“ And yet the flowers are very pretty, if the
plant is of no use.”

“No, Cissy; pretty things are not always

the most useful.” )

With this page our first chats about wild
GREAT BINDWEED. 11

flowers are at an end. We have found some of
the common plants which grow in every green
lane, and have tried to learn what they can
teach us about the life of plants. There are a
great many more that we could have picked and
talked about; but we have only chosen eight,
and from all these have learned something. It is
much better for us to attempt only a little, and
to do it well, than try to do too much, and end
by learning nothing properly. You will have
found that there is a great deal to be learned
from a little wild flower, but it must be done
with patience and in order. You had to learn
the names of the different parts, and to see how
much they are alike and how much they differ.
This is the important lesson we have been seek-
ing—how to see all that there is to be seen,
and in what way to see it best; how we should
use our eyes, and study to compare one flower
with another. We know by sight a buttercup,
a violet, and a dandelion, and can tell them
by their names; but that is not enough: we

must pull them in pieces, and look at all the
112 GREAT BINDWEED.

parts by themselves, before we can understand
what are the greatest differences between them.
In learning to do this properly, we learn the
method we have to adopt with all plants; and
by following this method, we discover what to
look for, and how to turn to account what we
see. Nothing can be learned well without pa-
tience and perseverance, and making good use
of our eyes. See, mark, learn, and inwardly

digest, and you shall have your reward.
INDEX.

Aaron’s beard, 86.
Arrow-shaped leaves, 104.

Bachelor’s buttons, 66.
Bindweed, 100.
Blanched leaves, 50.
Bracts, 106.
Buttercups, 11.

Calyx, 35.

Campion, 66.
Capsule, 75.
Celandine, 20.
Cheeses, mallow, 87.
Chickweed, 76.
Clawed petal, 70.
Climbing plants, 101.
Column, or pistil, 72.
Composite disc, 55.
Composite flower, 53.
Composite ray, 55.
Convolvulus, 100.

Corn crowfoot, 15.
(497)



Creeping buttercup, 16.
Cuckoo-pint, 60.

Dandelions, 42.
Dandelion clocks, 57.
Dog-violet, 39.
Double calyx, 94.
Dwarf-mallow, 92.

Female flowers, 72.
Fibrous roots, 32.

Flies and flowers, 74.
Florets, 53.

Funnel-shaped flower, 105.

Goldylocks, 15.
Great bindweed, 100.
Guimauve, 91.

Hollyhocks, 94.

Indefinite stamens, 20.
Involucre, 57.
114
Jalap, 110.

Leaves, opposite, 104.
Leaves, trifoliate, 18.
Lobes of leaf, 92.
Lords and ladies, 59.

Male flowers, 71.
Mallow, 87.

Mallows as food, 97.
Marsh-mallow, 91.
Meadow crowfoot, 13.

Movements of plants, 102.

Musk-mallow, 94.
Napoleon and violets, 20.

Opposite leaves, 104.
Ovary, 56.

Pansy, 37.
Pappus, 56,
Periwinkle, 109.
Petals, 23, 27.
Pilewort, 21.
Pink family, 70.
Pistil, 72.
Pollen, 73.



INDEX.

Ragged robin, 66.

Ragwort, 80.

Red campion, 66.

Reniform, or kidney shape, 91.
Rosette, 49.

St. John’s wort, 78.
Secret flowers, 36.
Sepals, 27.

Sleep of flowers, 76.
Spadix, 63.

Spathe, 61.
Spearwort, 15.
Stamens, 26.
Starch-wort, 60.
Story of the violet, 41.
Style, 55.

Trinity leaves, 18.
Tubers, 21.
Twining plants, 101.

Violets, 20.

Wake-robin, 59.
White campion, 68.

Yellow juice, 84.
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