Citation
Historical tales

Material Information

Title:
Historical tales the romance of reality
Alternate title:
Greek
Cover title:
Historical tales Greek
Creator:
Morris, Charles, 1833-1922
J.B. Lippincott Company
Place of Publication:
Philadelphia
Publisher:
J.B. Lippincott Company
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
366 p., [12] leaves of plates : ill. ; 19 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Mythology, Greek -- Juvenile literature ( lcsh )
History -- Juvenile literature -- Greece ( lcsh )
Bldn -- 1896
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Title page printed in red and black.
Statement of Responsibility:
by Charles Morris ; Greek.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
026882429 ( ALEPH )
ALH5005 ( NOTIS )
232332243 ( OCLC )

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Full Text










tft Why

THE ACROPOLIS OF ATHENS.

seis |





HISTORICAL TALES

The Romance of Reality

BY

CHARLES MORRIS

AUTHOR OF ‘‘HALF-HOURS WITH THE BEST AMERICAN
AUTHORS,” ‘‘ TALES FROM THE DRAMATISTS,” ‘* KING
ARTHUR AND THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND-TABLE,” ETC.

GREEK

PHILADELPHIA

J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
1896



CopyriGHT, 1896,
BY
J. B. Lippincott Company.

ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED py J.B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, U.S.A.



CONTENTS.

How Troy WAS TAKEN .......2.006.
Tur VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS .....
THESEUS AND ARIADNE. .....-. ee.
Tur SEVEN AGAINST THEBES .......

LYcURGUS AND THE SPARTAN Laws .
ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA.. .

Soon, THE Law-GIvER or ATHENS... .
Tur ForRTUNE OF CRGSUS.........
Tue Surrors ofr AGARISTH ........
Tur TYRANTS OF CORINTH ..... 2 6
Tur RING oF POLYCRATES. .... 2. es
Tur ADVENTURES OF DEMOCEDES .....
DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS .......
Tur ATHENIANS AT MARATHON. .....

XERKES AND HIS ARMY. .......0.-
How tHe SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLA.
THE WoopEN WALLS oF ATHENS .....
Puatrma’s Famous Day. .........
Four Famous Menor ATHENS ......
How ATHENS ROSE FROM ITS ASHES ....

THe PLAGUE AT ATHENS .. 2... 2.0
Tue Envoys oF Lirz— anD DmraTH. ....
Tur DEFENCE OF PLATHA 1... 4.2.2.6.

How tur Lona WALLS WENT DOWN. ...
SocRATES AND ALCIBIADES .......6.
Tue RETREAT OF THE TEN THOUSAND. . .
Tur Rescuzn or THEBES. . 1... eee ee
Tun HUMILIATION OF SPARTA... 2. ee
TIMOLHON, THE Favorire or Fortuny. . .

PAGE

23
383
41
50
60
67
17
86
93
100
109
117
126
185
144
154
165
174
186
194
200
205
213
221
231
245
259
271



4 CONTENTS.

THE SACRED WAR As” cis iisles spac else
ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND DARIUS

THE WoRLD’Ss GREATEST ORATOR ...
Tur OLyMPICGAMES.......6.-.
PYRRHUS AND THE ROMANS ......
PHILOPG@MEN AND THE FALt or SPARTA
Tur DEATH-STRUGGLE OF GREECE...
ZENOBIA AND LONGINUS ..... :
Hyvpatia, THE MAIDEN PHILOSOPHER .

PAGE
288
296
805
315
824
8384
845
351
360



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE
THE ACROPOLIS OF ATHENS .... . . Frontispiece.
Partine or Hector AND ANDROMEDA ....... 15
GHD IBUS ANDEAN TIGO NA sven ere nese eed 2
RUINS OF THE PARTHENON. ............ 180
Tue Vicrors ar SALAMIS ............. 160
A Reunion av THE House or Aspasta ...... 190
PIR#Us, THE Port or ATHENS. ....... 2... 218
GatTE oF THE AGorRA oR O1L Market, ATHENS . . 255
Toe DwaTu or ALEXANDER THE GReaT..... . 800
Tur THEATRE OF Baccuus, ATHENS ....... . 822
REMAINS OF THT TEMPLE oF MinrRvA, Corinto. . 845
THKRUINS aOR PAL MYR Acd .sceuls methane Toth ODS







HOW TROY WAS TAKEN.

Tux far-famed Helen, wife of King Menelaus of
Sparta, was the most beautiful woman in the world.
And from her beauty and faithlessness came the
most celebrated of ancient wars, with death and
disaster to numbers of famous heroes and the final
ruin of the ancient city of Troy. The story of
these striking events has been told only in poetry.
We propose to tell it again in sober prose.

But warning must first be given that Helen and
the heroes of the Trojan war dwelt in the mist-land
of legend and tradition, that cloud-realm from which
history only slowly emerged. The facts with which
we are here concerned are those of the poct, not
those of the historian. It is far from sure that Helen
ever lived. It is far from sure that there ever was a
Trojan war. Many people doubt the whole story.
Yet the ancient Greeks accepted it as history, and
as we are telling their story, we may fairly include
it among the historical tales of Greece. The heroes
concerned are certainly fully alive in Homer’s great
poem, the “Iliad,” and we can do no better than
follow the story of this stirring poem, while adding
details from other sources.

Mythology tells us that, once upon a time, the

7



8 HISTORICAL TALES.

three goddesses, Venus, Juno, and Minerva, had a
contest as to which was the most beautiful, and left
the decision to Paris, then a shepherd on Mount
Ida, though really the son of King Priam of Troy.
The princely shepherd decided in favor of Venus,
who had promised him in reward the love of the
most beautiful of living women, the Spartan Helen,
daughter of the great deity Zeus (or Jupiter). Ac-
cordingly the handsome and favored youth set sail
for Sparta, bringing with him rich gifts for its beauti-
ful queen. Menelaus received his Trojan guest with
much hospitality, but, unluckily, was soon obliged to
make a journey to Crete, leaving Helen to entertain
the princely visitor, The result was as Venus had
foreseen. Love arose between the handsome youth
and the beautiful woman, and an elopement followed,
Paris stealing away with both the wife and the
money of his confiding host. He set sail, had a
prosperous voyage, and arrived safely at Troy with
his prize on the third day. This was a fortune very
different from that of Ulysses, who on his return
from Troy took ten years to accomplish a similar
voyage.

As might naturally be imagined, this elopement
excited indignation not only in the hearts of Mene-
laus and his brother Agamemnon, but among the
Greek chieftains generally, who sympathized with
the husband in his grief and shared his anger
against Troy. War was declared against that faith-
less city, and most of the chiefs pledged themselves
to take part in it, and to lend their aid until Helen
was recovered or restored. Had they known all







HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 9

that was before them they might have hesitated,
since it took ten long years to equip the expedition,
for ten years more the war continued, and some of
the leaders spent ten years in their return. But in
those old days time does not seem to have counted
for much, and besides, many of the chieftains had
been suitors for the hand of Helen, and were doubt-
less moved by their old love in pledging themselves
to her recovery.

Some of them, however, were anything but eager
to take part. Achilles and Ulysses, the ¢wo most
important in the subsequent war, endeavored to
escape this necessity. Achilles was the son of the
sea-nymph Thetis, who had dipped him when an in-
fant in the river Styx, the waters of which magic
stream rendered him invulnerable to any weapon
except in one spot,—the heel by which his mother
had held him. But her love for her son made her
anxious to guard him against every danger, and
when the chieftains came to seek his aid in the ex-
pedition, she concealed him, dressed as a girl, among
the maidens of the court. But the crafty Ulysses,
who accompanied them, soon exposed this trick.
Disguised as a pedler, he spread his goods, a shield
and a spear among them, before the maidens. Then
an alarm of danger being sounded, the girls fled in
affright, but the disguised youth, with impulsive
valor, seized the weapons and prepared to defend
himself. His identity was thus revealed.

Ulysses himself, one of the wisest and shrewdest
of men, had also sought to escape the dangerous
expedition. To do so ho feigned madness, and when



10 HISTORICAL TALES.

the messenger chiefs came to seek him they found
him attempting to plough with an ox and a horse
yoked together, while he sowed the field with salt.
One of them, however, took Telemachus, the young
son of Ulysses, and laid him in the furrow before the
plough. Ulysses turned the plough aside, and thus
showed that there was more method than madness
in his mind.

And thus, in time, a great force of men and a
great fleet of ships were gathered, there being in all
eleven hundred and eighty-six ships and more than
one hundred thousand men. The kings and chief-
tains of Greece led their followers from all parts of
the land to Aulis, in Beotia, whence they were to
set sail for the opposite coast of Asia Minor, on
which stood the city of Troy. Agamemnon, who
brought one hundred ships, was chosen leader of
the army, which included all the heroes of the age,
among them the distinguished warriors Ajax and
Diomedes, the wise old Nestor, and many others of
valor and fame.

The fleet at length set sail; but Troy was not
easily reached. The leaders of the army did not
even know where Troy was, and landed in the wrong
locality, where they had a battle with the people.
Embarking again, they were driven by a storm back
to Greece. Adverse winds now kept them at Aulis
until Agamemnon appeased the hostile gods by sac-
rificing to them his daughter Iphigenia,—one of the
ways which those old heathens had of obtaining
fair weather. Then the winds changed, and the
fleet made its way to the island of Tenedos, in the



HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 11

vicinity of Troy. From here Ulysses and Menelaus
were sent to that city as envoys to demand a return
of Helen and the stolen property.

Meanwhile the Trojans, well aware of what was
in store for them, had made abundant preparations,
and gathered an army of allies from various parts
of Thrace and Asia Minor. They received the two
Greek envoys hospitably, paid them every attention,
but sustained the villany of Paris, and refused to
deliver Helen and the treasure. When this word
was brought back to the fleet the chiefs decided on
immediate war, and sail was made for the neighbor-
- ing shores of the Trojan realm.

Of the long-drawn-out war that followed we know
little more than what Homer has told us, though
something may be learned from other ancient poems.
The first Greek to land fell by the hand of Hector,
the Trojan hero,—as the gods had foretold. But in
vain the Trojans sought to prevent the landing;
they were quickly put to rout, and Cycnus, one of
their greatest warriors and son of the god Neptune,
was slain by Achilles. He was invulnerable to iron,
but was choked to death by the hero and changed
intoaswan. The Trojans were driven within their
city walls, and the invulnerable Achilles, with what
seems a safe valor, stormed and sacked numerous
towns in the neighborhood, killed one of King Priam’s
sons, captured and sold as slaves several others,
drove off the oxen of the celebrated warrior Aineas,
and came near to killing that hero himself. He
also captured and kept as his own prize a beautiful
maiden named Briscis, and was even granted, through



12 HISTORICAL TALES.

the favor of the gods, an interview with the divine
Helen herself.

This is about all we know of the doings of the
first nine years of the war. What the Greeks were
at during that long time neither history nor legend
tells, The only other event of importance was the
death of Palamedes, one of the ablest Grecian chiefs.
It was he who had detected the feigned madness of
Ulysses, and tradition relates that he owed his death
to the revengeful anger of that cunning schemer, who
had not forgiven him for being made to take part in
this endless and useless war.

Thus nine years of warfare passed, and Troy re-
mained untaken and seemingly unshaken. How the
two hosts managed to live in the mean time the tellers
of the story do not say. Thucydides, the historian,
thinks it likely that the Greeks had to farm the
neighboring lands for food. How the Trojans and
their allies contrived to survive so long within their
walls we are left to surmise, unless they farmed
their streets. And thus we reach the opening of the
tenth year and of Homer’s “ Iliad.”

Homer's story is too long for us to tell in detail,
and too full of war and bloodshed for modern taste.
We can only give it in epitome.

Agamemnon, the leader of the Greeks, robs Achil-
les of his beautiful captive Briseis, and the invul-
nerable hero, furious at the insult, retires in sullen
rage to his ships, forbids his troops to take part in
the war, and sulks in anger while battle after battle
is fought. Deprived of his mighty aid, the Greeks



HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 13

find the Trojans quite their match, and the fortunes
of the warring hosts vary day by day.

On a watch-tower in Troy sits Helen the beautiful,
gazing out on the field of conflict, and naming for
old Priam, who sits beside her, the Grecian leaders
as they appear at the head of their hosts on the
plain below. On this plain meet in fierce combat
Paris the abductor and Menelaus the indignant hus-
band. Vengeance lends double weight to the spear
of the latter, and Paris is so fiercely assailed that
Venus has to come to his aid to save him from
death. Meanwhile a Trojan archer wounds Mene-
laus with an arrow, and a general battle ensues.

The conflict is a fierce one, and many warriors on
both sides are slain. Diomedes, a bold Grecian chief-
tain, is the hero of the day. Trojans fall by scores
before his mighty spear, he rages in fury from side
to side of the field, and at length meets the great
/Eneas, whose thigh he breaks with a huge stone.
But Aineas is the son of the goddess Venus, who flies
to his aid and bears him from the field. The furious
Greek daringly pursues the flying divinity, and even
succeeds in wounding the goddess of love with his
impious spear. At this sad outcome Venus, to whom
physical pain is a new sensation, flies in dismay to
Olympus, the home of the deities, and hides her
weeping face in the lap of Father Jove, while her
lady enemies taunt her with biting sarcasms. The
whole scene is an amusing example of the childish
folly of mythology.

In the next scene a new hero appears upon the
field, Hector, the warlike son of Priam, and next to

2



14 \ITISTORICAL TALES.

Achilles the greatest warrior of the war. He arms
himself inside the walls, and takes an affectionate
leave of his wife Andromache and his infant son,
the child crying with terror at his glittering helmet
and nodding plume. This mild demeanor of the.
warrior changes to warlike ardor when he appears
upon the field. His coming turns the tide of battle.
The victorious Greeks are driven back before his
shining spear, many of them are slain, and. the
whole host is driven to its ships and almost forced
to take flight by sea from the victorious onset of
Hector and his triumphant followers. While the
Greeks cower in their ships the Trojans spend the
night in bivouac upon the field. Homer gives us a
picturesque description of this night-watch, which
Tennyson has thus charmingly rendered into English:

‘‘ As when in heaven the stars about the moon
Look beautiful, when all the winds are laid,
And every height comes out, and jutting peak
And valley, and the immeasurable heavens
Break open to their highest, and all the stars
Shine, and the shepherd gladdens in his heart;
So, many a fire between the ships and stream
Of Xanthus blazed before the towers of Troy,
A thousand on the plain; and close by each
Sat fifty in the blaze of burning fire;

And, champing golden grain, the horses stood
Hard by their chariots, waiting for the dawn.”

Affairs had grown perilous for the Greeks. Patro-
clus, the bosom friend of Achilles, begged him to come
to their aid. This the sulking hero would not do, but
he lent Patroclus his armor, and permitted him to lead





THE PARTING OF HECTOR AND ANDROMACHE.



HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 15

his troops, the Myrmidons, to the field. Patroclus
was himself a gallant and famous warrior, and his
aid turned the next day’s battle against the Trojans,
who were driven back with great slaughter. But,
unfortunately for this hero of the fight, a greater than
he was in the field. Hector met him in the full tide
of his success, engaged him in battle, killed him, and
captured from his body the armor of Achilles.

The slaughter of his friend at length aroused
the sullen Achilles to action. Rage against the
Trojans succeeded his anger against Agamemnon.
His lost armor was replaced by new armor forged
for him by Vulcan, the celestial smith,—who fash-
ioned him the most wonderful of shields and most
formidable of spears. Thus armed, he mounted his
chariot and drove at the head of his Myrmidons to
the field, where he made such frightful slaughter of
the Trojans that the river Scamander was choked
with their corpses; and, indignant at being thus
treated, sought to drown the hero for his offence.
Finally he met Hector, engaged him in battle, and
killed him with a thrust of his mighty spear. Then,
fastening the corpse of the Trojan hero to his chariot,
he dragged it furiously over the blood-soaked plain
and around the city walls. Homer’s story ends with
the funeral obsequies of the slain Patroclus and the
burial by the Trojans of Hector’s recovered body.

Other writers tell us how the war went on. Hector
was replaced by Penthesileia, the beautiful and war-
like queen of the Amazons, who came to the aid of
the Trojans, and drove the Greeks from the field.
But, alas! she too was slain by the invincible



16 ‘HISTORICAL TALES.

Achilles, Removing her helmet, the victor was
deeply affected to find that it was a beautiful woman
he had slain.

The mighty Memnon, son of godlike parents, now
made his appearance in the Trojan ranks, at the
head of a band of black Ethiopians, with whom
he wrought havoc among the Greeks. At length
Achilles encountered this hero also, and a terrible
battle ensued, whose result was long in doubt. In
the end Achilles triumphed and Memnon fell. But
he died to become immortal, for his goddess mother
prayed for and obtained for him the gift of immortal
life.

Such triumphs were easy for Achilles, whose flesh
no weapon could pierce; but no one was invulnerable
to the poets, and his end came at last. He had
routed the Trojans and driven them within their
gates, when Paris, aided by Apollo, the divine
archer, shot an arrow at the hero which struck him
in his one pregnable spot, the heel. The fear of
Thetis was realized, her son died from the wound,
and a fierce battle took place for the possession of
his body. This Ajax and Ulysses succeeded in
carrying off to the Grecian camp, where it was
burned on a magnificent funeral pile. Achilles,
like his victim Memnon, was made immortal by
the favor of the gods. His armor was offered
as a prize to the most distinguished Grecian hero,
and was adjudged to Ulysses, whereupon Ajax,
his close contestant for the prize, slew himself in
despair.

We cannot follow all the incidents of the cam-



HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 17

paign. It will suffice to say that Paris was himself
slain by an arrow, that Neoptolemus, the son of
Achilles, took his place in the field, and that the
Trojans suffered so severely at his hands that they
took shelter behind their walls, whence they never
again emerged to meet the Greeks in the field.

But Troy was safe from capture while the Pal-
ladium, a statue which Jupiter himself had given to
Dardanus, the ancestor of the Trojans, remained in
the citadel of that city. Ulysses overcame this diffi-
culty. He entered Troy in the disguise of a wounded
and ragged fugitive, and managed to steal the Pal-
ladium from the citadel. Then, as the walls of Troy
still defied their assailants, a further and extraordi-
nary stratagem was employed to gain access to the
city. It seems a ridiculous one to us, but was ac-
cepted as satisfactory by the writers of Greece.
This stratagem was the following:

A great hollow wooden horse, large enough to
contain one hundred armed men, was constructed,
and in its interior the leading Grecian heroes con-
cealed themselves. Then the army set fire to its
tents, took to its ships, and sailed away to the island
of Tenedos, as if it had abandoned the siege. Only
the great horse was left on the long-contested battle-
field.

The Trojans, filled with joy at the sight of their
departing foes, came streaming out into the plain,
women as well as warriors, and gazed with astonish-
ment at the strange monster which their enemies
had left. Many of them wanted to take it into the
city, and dedicate it to the gods as a mark of' grati-

1.—d 2*



18 HISTORICAL TALES.

tude for their deliverance. The more cautious ones
doubted if it was wise to accept an enemy’s gift.
Laocoon, the priest of Neptune, struck the side of
the horse with his spear. A hollow sound came from
its interior, but this did not suffice to warn the in-
discreet Trojans. And a terrible spectacle now filled
them with superstitious dread. Two great serpents
appeared far out at sea and came swimming inward
over the waves. Reaching the shore, they glided
over the land to where stood the unfortunate La-
ocoon, whose body they encircled with their folds.
His son, who came to his rescue, was caught in the
same dreadful coils, and the two perished miserably
before the eyes of their dismayed countrymen.

There was no longer any talk of rejecting the
fatal gift. The gods had given their decision. A
breach was made in the walls of Troy, and the
great horse was dragged with exultation within the
stronghold that for ten long years had defied its foe.

Riotous joy and festivity followed in Troy. It
extended into the night. While this went on Sinon,
a seeming renegade who had been left behind by
the Greeks, and who had helped to deceive the
Trojans by lying tales, lighted a fire-signal for the
fleet, and loosened the bolts of the wooden horse,
from whose hollow depths the hundred weary war-
riors hastened to descend.

And now the triumph of the Trojans was changed
to sudden woe and dire lamentation. Death fol-
lowed close upon their festivity. The hundred war-
riors attacked them at their banquets, the returned
fleet disgorged its thousands, who poured through



HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 19

the open gates, and death held fearful carnival
within the captured city. Priam was slain at the
altar by Neoptolemus. All his sons fell in death.
The city was sacked and destroyed. Its people were
slain or taken captive. Few escaped, but among
these was Aineas, the traditional ancestor of Rome.
As regards Helen, the cause of the war, she was re-
covered by Menelaus, and gladly accompanied him
back to Sparta. There she lived for years after-
wards in dignity and happiness, and finally died to
become happily immortal in the Elysian fields.

But our story is not yet at an end. The Greeks
had still to return to their homes, from which they
had been ten years removed. And though Paris
had crossed the intervening seas in three days, it
took Ulysses ten years to return, while some of his
late companions failed to reach their homes at all.
Many, indeed, were the adventures which these
home-sailing heroes were destined to encounter.

Some of the Greek warriors reached home speedily
and were met with welcome, but others perished by
the way, while Agamemnon, their leader, returned
to find that his wife had been false to him, and per-
ished by her treacherous hand. Menelaus wandered
long through Egypt, Cyprus, and elsewhere before
he reached his native land. Nestor and several
others went to Italy, where they founded cities,
Diomedes also became a founder of cities, and various
others seem to have busied themselves in this same
useful occupation. Neoptolemus made his way to
Epirus, where he became king of the Molossians.
ineas, the Trojan hero, sought Carthage, whose



20 HISTORICAL TALES.

queen Dido died for love of him. Thence he sailed
to Italy, where he fought battles and won victories,
and finally founded the city of Rome. His story
is given by Virgil, in the poem of the “ Aneid.”
Much more might be told of the adventures of the
returning heroes, but the chief of them all is that
related of the much wandering Ulysses, as given by
Homer in his epic poem the “ Odyssey.”

The story of the “Odyssey” might serve us for a
tale in itself, but as it is in no sense historical we
give it here in epitome.

We are told that during the wanderings of Ulysses
his island kingdom of Ithaca had been invaded by
a throng of insolent suitors of his wife Penelope,
who occupied his castle and wasted his substance in
riotous living. His son Telemachus, indignant at
this, set sail in search of his father, whom he knew
to be somewhere upon the seas. Landing at Sparta,
he found Menelaus living with Helen in a macnifi-
cent castle, richly ornamented with gold, silver, and
bronze, and learned from him that his father was
then in the island of Ogygia, where he had been
long detained by the nymph Calypso.

The wanderer had experienced numerous adven-
tures. He had encountered the one-eyed giant Poly-
phemus, who feasted on the fattest of the Greeks,
while the others escaped by boring out his single
eye. He had passed the land of the Lotus-Eaters,
to whose magic some of the Grecks succumbed. In
the island of Circe some of his followers were turned
into swine. But the hero overcame this enchantress,
and while in her land visited the realm of the de-



HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 21

parted and had interviews with the shades of the
dead. He afterwards passed in safety through the
frightful gulf of Scylla and Charybdis, and visited
the wind-god Afolus, who gave him a fair wind
home, and all the foul winds tied up inabag. But
the curious Greeks untied the bag, and the ship was
blown far from her course. His followers after-
wards killed the sacred oxen of the sun, for which
they were punished by being wrecked. All were
lost except Ulysses, who floated on a mast to the
island of Calypso. With this charming nymph he
dwelt for seven years.

Finally, at the command of the gods, Calypso set
her willing captive adrift on a raft of trees. This
raft was shattered in a storm, but Ulysses swam to
the island of Pheacia, where he was rescued by
Nausicaa, the king’s daughter, and brought to the
palace. Thence, in a Pheacian ship, he finally
reached Ithaca.

Here new adventures awaited him. He sought
his palace disguised as an old beggar, so that of
all there, only his old dog knew him. The fnithful
animal staggered to his feet, feebly expressed his
joy, and fell dead. Telemachus had now returned,
and led his disguised father into the palace, where
the suitors were at their revels. Penelope, instructed
what to do, now brought forth the bow of Ulysses,
and offered her hand to any one of the suitors who
could bend it. It was tried by them all, but tried
in vain. Then the seeming beggar took in his hand
the stout, ashen bow, bent it with ease, and with
wonderful skill sent an arrow hurtling through the



22 HISTORICAL TALES.

rings of twelve axes set up in line. This done, he
turned the terrible bow upon the suitors, sending its
death-dealing arrows whizzing through their midst.
Telemachus and Eumeus, his swine-keeper, aided
him in this work of death, and a frightful scene of
carnage ensued, from which not one of the suitors
escaped with his life.

In the end the hero, freed from his ragged attire,
made himself known to his faithful wife, defeated
the friends of the suitors, and recovered his kingdom
from his foes. And thus ends the final episode of
the famous tale of Troy.



THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGO-
NAUTS.

We: are forced to approach the historical period
of Greece through a cloud-land of legend, in which
stories of the gods are mingled with those of men,
and the most marvellous of incidents are introduced
as if they were every-day occurrences. The Argo-
nautic expedition belongs to this age of myth, the
vague vestibule of history. It embraces, as does the
tale of the wanderings of Ulysses, very ancient ideas
of geography, and many able men have treated it
as the record of an actual voyage, one of the earliest
ventures of the Greeks upon the unknown seas.
However this be, this much is certain, the story is
full of romantic and supernatural elements, and it
was largely through these that it became so cele-
brated in ancient times.

The story of the voyage of the ship Argo is a
tragedy. Pelias, king of Ioleus, had consulted an
oracle concerning the safety of his dominions, and
was warned to beware of the man with one sandal.
Soon afterwards Jason (a descendant of AMolus, the
wind god) appeared before him with one foot un-
sandalled. He had lost his sandal while crossing a
swollen stream. elias, anxious to rid himself of
this visitor, against whom the oracle had warned

; 23



24 HISTORICAL TALES.

him, gave to Jason the desperate task of bringing
back to Ioleus the Golden Fleece (the fleece of a
speaking ram which had borne Phryxus and Helle
through the air from Greece, and had reached Col-
chis in Asia Minor, where it was dedicated to Mars,
the god of war).

Jason, young and daring, accepted without hesita-
tion the perilous task, and induced a number of the
noblest youth of Greece to accompany him in the
enterprise. Among these adventurers were Hercules,
Theseus, Castor, Pollux, and many others of the
heroes of legend. The way to Colchis lay over the
sea, and a ship was built for the adventurers named
the Argo, in whose prow was inserted a piece of
timber cut from the celebrated speaking oak of
Dodono.

The voyage of the Argo was as full of strange
incidents as those which Ulysses encountered in his
journey home from Troy. Land was first reached
on the island of Lemnos. Here no men wore found.
It was an island of women only. All the men had
been put to death by the women in revenge for ill-
treatment, and they held the island as their own.
But these warlike matrons, who had perhaps grown
tired of seeing only each other’s faces, received the
Argonauts with much friendship, and made their
stay so agreeable that they remained there for
several months.

Leaving Lemnos, they sailed along the coast of
Thrace, and up the Hellespont (a strait which had
received its name from Helle, who, while riding on
the golden ram in the air above it, had fallen and



THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 25

been drowned in its waters). Thence they sailed
along the Propontis and the coast of Mysia, not, as
we may be sure, without adventures. In the country
of the Bebrycians the giant king Amycus challenged
any of them to box with him. Pollux accepted the
challenge, and killed the giant with a blow. Next
they reached Bithynia, where dwelt the blind prophet
Phineus, to whom their coming proved a blessing.

Phineus had been blinded by Neptune, as a pun-
ishment for having shown Phryxus the way to
Colchis. He was also tormented by the harpies,
frightful winged monsters, who flew down from the
clouds whenever he attempted to eat, snatched the
food from his lips, and left on it such a vile odor
that no man could come near it. He, being a prophet,
knew that the Argonauts would free him from this
curse. There were with them Zetes and Calias,
winged sons of Boreas, the god of the north winds;
and when the harpies descended again to spoil the
prophet’s meal, these winged warriors not only
drove them away, but pursued them through the
air. They could not overtake them, but the harpies
were forbidden by Jupiter to molest Phineus any
longer.

The blind prophet, grateful for this deliverance,
told the voyagers how they might escape a dreadful
danger which lay in their onward way. This came
from the Symplegades, two rocks between which
their ships must pass, and which continually opened
and closed, with a violent collision, and so swiftly
that even a bird could scarce fly through the open-
ing in safety.. When the Argo reached the danger-

B 38



26 HISTORICAL TALES.

ous spot, at the suggestion of Phineus, a dove was
let loose. It flew with all speed through the open-
ing, but the rocks clashed together so quickly be-
hind it that it lost a few feathers of its tail. Now
was their opportunity. The rowers dashed their «
ready oars into the water, shot forward with rapid
speed, and passed safely through, only losing the
ornaments at the stern of their ship. Their escape,
however, they owed to the goddess Minerva, whose
strong hand held the rocks asunder during the brief
interval of their passage. It had been decreed by
the gods that if any ship escaped these dreadful
rocks they should forever cease to move. The
escape of the Argo fulfilled this decree, and the
Symplegades have ever since remained immovable.

Onward went the daring voyagers, passing in
their journey Mount Caucasus, on whose bare rock
Prometheus, for the crime of giving fire to mankind,
was chained, while an eagle devoured his liver.
The adventurers saw this dread eagle and heard the
groans of the sufferer himself. Helpless to release
him whom the gods had condemned, they rowed
rapidly away.

Finally Colchis was reached, a land then ruled
over by King etes, from whom the heroes de-
manded the golden fleece, stating that they had
been sent thither by the gods themselves. Actes
heard their request with anger, and told them that
if they wanted the fleece they could have it on one
condition only. He possessed two fierce and tame-
less bulls, with brazen feet and fire-breathing nostrils.
These had been the gift of the god Vulcan. Jason



THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 27

was told that if he wished to prove his descent from
the gods and their sanction of his voyage, he must
harness these terrible animals, plough with them a
large field, and sow it with dragons’ teeth.

Perilous as this task seemed, each of the heroes
was eager to undertake it, but Jason, as the leader
of the expedition, took it upon himself. Fortune
favored him in the desperate undertaking. Medea,
the daughter of Metes, who knew all the arts of
magic, had seen the handsome youth and fallen in
love with him at sight. She now came to his aid
with all her magic. Gathering an herb which had
grown where the blood of Prometheus had fallen,
she prepared from it a magical ointment which,
when rubbed on Jason’s body, made him invulner-
able either to fire or weapons of war. Thus pre-
pared, he fearlessly approached the fire-breathing
bulls, yoked them unharmed, and ploughed the field,
in whose furrows he then sowed the dragons’ teeth.
Instantly from the latter sprang up a crop of armed
men, who turned their weapons against the hero.
But Jason, who had been further instructed by Me-
dea, flung a great stone in their midst, upon which
they began to fight each other, and he easily subdued
them all.

Jason had accomplished his task, but Aetes proved
unfaithful to his words. He not only withheld the
prize, but took steps to kill the Argonauts and burn
their vessel. They were invited to a banquet, and
armed men were prepared to murder them during
the night after the feast. Fortunately, sleep over-
came the treacherous king, and the adventurers,



28 HISTORICAL TALES.

warned of their danger, made ready to fly. But
not without the golden fleece. This was guarded
by a dragon, but Medea prepared a potion that
put this perilous sentinel to sleep, seized the fleece,
and accompanied Jason in his flight, taking with
her on the Argo Absyrtus, her youthful brother.

The Argonauts, seizing their oars, rowed with all
haste from the dreaded locality. Metes, on awaken-
ing, learned with fury of the loss of the ficece and
his children, hastily collected an armed force, and
pursued with such energy that the flying vessel was
soon nearly overtaken. The safety of the adven-
turers was again due to Medea, who secured it by a
terrible stratagem. This was, to kill her young
brother, cut his body to pieces, and fling the bleed-
ing fragments into the sea. Metes, on reaching the
scene of this tragedy, recognized these as the remains
of his murdered son, and sorrowfully stopped to col-
lect them for interment. While he was thus engaged
the Argonauts escaped.

But such a wicked deed was not suffered to go un-
punished. Jupiter beheld it with deep indignation,
and in requital condemned the Argonauts to a long
and perilous voyage, full of hardship and adventure.
They were forced to sail over all the watery world
of waters, so far as then known. Up the river
Phasis they rowed until it entered the ocean which
flows round the earth. This vast sea or stream was
then followed to the source of the Nile, down which
great river they made their way into the land of

Egypt.
Here, for some reason unknown, they did not fol-



SSS

aT TT





THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 29

low the Nile to the Mediterranean, but were forced
to take the ship Argo on their shoulders and carry
it by a long overland journey to Lake Tritonis, in
Libya Here they were overcome by want and ex-
haustion, but Triton, the god of the region, proved
hospitable, and supplied them with the much-needed
food and rest. Thus refreshed, they launched their
ship once more on the Mediterranean and proceeded
hopefully on their homeward way.

Stopping at the island of Mea, its queen Circe—
she who had transformed the companions of Ulysses
into swine—purified Medea from the crime of mur-
der; and at Corcyra, which they next reached, the
marriage of Jason and Medea took place. The cav-
ern in that island where the wedding was solemnized
was still pointed out in historical times.

After leaving Corcyra a fierce storm threatened
the navigators with shipwreck, from which they
were miraculously saved by the celestial aid of the
god Apollo. An arrow shot from his golden bow
crossed the billows like a track of light, and where
it pierced the waves an island sprang up, on whose
shores the imperilled mariners found a port of refuge.
On this island, Anaphe by name, the grateful Argo-
nauts built an altar to Apollo and instituted sacrifices
in his honor.

Another adventure awaited them on the coast of
Crete. This island was protected by a brazen sen-
tinel, named Talos, wrought by Vulean, and pre-
sented by him to King Minos to protect his realm.
This living man of brass hurled great rocks at the
vessel, and destruction would have overwhelmed the

8%



30 HISTORICAL TALES.

voyagers but for Medea. Talos, like all the invul-
nerable men of legend, had his one weak point.
This her magic art enabled her to discover, and,
as Paris had wounded Achilles in the heel, Medea
killed this vigilant sentinel by striking him in his
vulnerable spot.

The Argonauts now landed and refreshed them-
selves, In the island of Mgina they had to fight to
procure water. Then they sailed along the coasts
of Eubcea and Locris, and finally entered the gulf
of Pagase and dropped anchor at Tolcus, their start-
ing-point,

As to what became of the ship Argo there are
two stories. One is that Jason consecrated his ves-
sel to Neptune on the isthmus of Corinth. Another
is that Minerva translated it to the stars, where it
became a constellation.

So ends the story of this earliest of recorded voy-
ages, whose possible substratum of fact is overlaid
deeply with fiction, and whose geography is similarly
a strange mixture of fact and fancy, Yet though
the voyage is at an end, our story is not. We have
said that it was a tragedy, and the denouement of
the tragedy remains to be given.

Pelias, who had sent Jason on this long voyage
to escape the fate decreed for him by the oracle,
took courage from his protracted absence, and put
to death his father and mother and his infant brother.
On learning of this murderous act Jason determined
onrevenge. But Pelias was too strong to be attacked
openly, so the hero employed a strange stratagem,
suggested by the cunning magician Medea. He and



THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 31

his companions halted at some distance from Iolcus,
while Medea entered the town alone, pretending
that she was a fugitive from the ill-treatment of
Jason,

Here she was entertained by the daughters of
Pelias, over whom she gained great influence by
showing them certain magical wonders, In the end
she selected an old ram from the king’s flocks, cut
him up and boiled him in a caldron with herbs of
magic power. In the end the animal emerged from
the caldron as a young and vigorous lamb. The
enchantress now told her dupes that their old father
could in the same way be made young again. Fully
believing her, the daughters cut the old man to
pieces in the same manner, and threw his limbs into
the caldron, trusting to Medea to restore him to life
as she had the ram.

Leaving them for the assumed purposo of invok-
ing the moon, as a part of the ceremony, Medea
ascended to the roof of the palace. Here she
lighted a fire-signal to the waiting Argonauts, who
instantly burst into and took possession of the
town.

Having thus revenged himself, Jason yielded the
crown of Iolcus to the son of Pelias, and withdrew
with Medea to Corinth, where they resided together
for ten years. And here the final act in the tragedy
was played.

After these ten years of happy married life, dur-
ing which several children were born, Jason ceased
to love his wife, and fixed his affections on Glauce,
the daughter of King Creon of Corinth. The king



32 HISTORICAL TALES,

showed himself willing to give Jason his daughter
in marriage, upon which the faithless hero divorced
Medea, who was ordered to leave Corinth. He
should have known better with whom he had to
deal. The enchantress, indignant at such treatment,
determined on revenge, Pretending to be recon-
ciled to the coming marriage, she prepared a poi-
soned robe, which she sent as a wedding-present to
the hapless Glauce. No sooner had the luckless
bride put on this perilous gift than the robe burst
into flames, and she was consumed; while her father,
whe sought to tear from her the fatal garment, met
with the same fate.

Medea escaped by means of a chariot drawn by
winged serpents, sent her by her grandfather Helios
(the sun). As the story is told by Huripides, she
killed her children before taking to flight, leaving
their dead bodies to blast the sight of their horror-
stricken father, The legend, however, tells a dif.
ferent tale. It says that she left them for safety
before the altar in the temple of Juno; and that the
Corinthians, furious at the death of their king,
dragged the children from the altar and put them
to death. As for the unhappy Jason, the story goes
that he fell asleep under the ship Argo, which had
been hauled ashore according to the custom of the
ancients, and that a fragment of this ship fell upon
and killed him.

The flight of Medea took her to Athens, where
she found a protector and second husband in Agcus,
the ruler of that city, and father of Theseus, tho
great legendary hero of Athens,



THESEUS AND ARIADNE.

Minos, king of Crete in the age of legend, made
war against Athens in revenge for the death of his
son. This son, Androgeos by name, had shown
such strength and skill in the Panathenaic festival
that Aigeus, the Athenian king, sent him to fight
with the flame-spitting bull of Marathon, a mon-
strous creature that was ravaging the plains of
Attica. The bull killed the valiant youth, and
Minos, furious at the death of his gon, laid siege to
Athens.

As he proved unable to capture the city, he prayed
for aid to his father Zeus (for, like all the heroes of
legend, he was a son of the gods). Zeus sent pesti-
lence and famine on Athens, and so bitter grew the
lot of the Athenians that they applied to the oracles
of the gods for advice in their sore strait, and were
bidden to submit to any terms which Minos might
impose. The terms offered by the offended king
of Crete were severe ones. He demanded that the
Athenians should, at fixed periods, send to Crete
seven youths and seven maidens, as victims to the
insatiable appetite of the Minotaur.

This fabulous creature was one of those destructive
monsters of which many ravaged Greece in the age

¢ 83



34 HISTORICAL TALES.

of fable. It had the body of aman and the head
of a bull, and so great was the havoc it wrought
among the Cretans that Minos engaged the great
artist Dedalus to construct a den from which it
could not escape. Dedalus built for this purpose
the Labyrinth, a far-extending edifice, in which were
countless passages, so winding and intertwining that
no person confined in it could ever find his way out
again. It was like the catacombs of Rome, in which
one who is lost is said to wander helplessly till death
ends his sorrowful career. In this intricate puzzle
of a building the Minotaur was confined.

Every ninth year the fourteen unfortunate youths
and maidens had to be sent from Athens to be de-
voured by this insatiate beast. We are not told on
what food it was fed in the interval, or why Minos
did not end the trouble by allowing it to starve in
its inextricable den. As the story goes, the living
tribute was twice sent, and the third period came
duly round. The youths and maidens to be devoured
were selected by lot from the people of Athens, and
left their city amid tears and woe. But on this oc-
casion Theseus, the king’s son and the great hero of
Athens, volunteered to be one of the band, and
vowed either to slay the terrible beast or dic in the
attempt.

There seem to have been few great events in those
early days of Greece in which Theseus did not take
part. Among his feats was the carrying off of Helen,
the famous beauty, while still a girl. He then took
part in a journey to the under-world,—the realm
of ghosts,—during which Castor and Pollux, the



THESEUS AND ARIADNE. 35

brothers of Helen, rescued and brought her home.
He was also one of the heroes of the Argonautic
expedition and of an expedition against the Amazons,
or nation of women warriors; he fought with and
killed a series of famous robbers; and he rid the
world of a number of ravaging beasts,—the Caly-
donian boar, the Crommyonian sow, and the Mara-
thonian bull, the monster which had slain the son of
Minos. He was, in truth, the Hercules of ancient
Athens, and he now proposed to add to his exploits
a battle for life or death with the perilous Minotaur.

The hero knew that he had before him the most
desperate task of his life. Jiven should he slay the
monster, he would still be in the intricate depths of
the Labyrinth, from which escape was deemed impos-
sible, and in whose endless passages he and his com-
panions might wander until they died of weariness
and starvation. He prayed, therefore, to Neptune
for help, and received a message from the oracle at
Delphi to the effect that Aphrodite (or Venus) would
aid and rescue him.

The ship conveying the victims sailed sadly from
Athens, and at length reached Crete at the port of
Knossus, the residence of King Minos. Here the woful
hostages were led through the streets to the prison
in which they were to be confined till the next day,
when they were to be delivered to death. As they
passed along the people looked with sympathy upon
their fair young faces, and deeply lamented their
coming fate. And, as Venus willed, among the spec-
tators were Minos and his fair daughter Ariadne, who
stood at the palace door to see them pass.



36 HISTORICAL TALES.

The eyes of the young princess fell upon the face
of Theseus, the Athenian prince, and her heart
throbbed with a feeling she had never before known.
Never had she gazed upon a man who seemed to her
half so brave and handsome as this princely youth.
All that night thoughts of him drove slumber from
her eyes. In the early morning, moved by a new-
born love, she sought the prison, and, through her
privilege as the king’s daughter, was admitted to see
the prisoners. Venus was doing the work which
the oracle had promised.

Calling Theseus aside, the blushing maiden told
him of her sudden love, and that she ardently longed
to save him. If he would follow her directions he
would escape. She gave him a sword, which she
had taken from her father’s armory and concealed
beneath her cloak, that he might be armed against
the devouring beast. And she provided him besides
with a ball of thread, bidding him to fasten the end
of it to the entrance of the Labyrinth, and unwind
it as he went in, that it might serve him as a clue to
find his way out again.

As may well be believed, Theseus warmly thanked
his lovely visitor, told her that he was a king’s son,
and that he returned her love, and begged her, in
case he escaped, to return with him to Athens and
be his bride. Ariadne willingly consented, and left
the prison before the guards came to conduct the
victims to their fate. It was like the story of Jason
and Medea retold.

With hidden sword and clue Theseus followed the
guards, in the midst of his fellow-prisoners. They



THESEUS AND ARIADNE. 37

were led into the depths of the Labyrinth and there
left to their fate. But the guards had failed to ob-
serve that Theseus had fastened his thread at the en-
trance and was unwinding the ballas he went. And
now, in this dire den, for hours the hapless victims
awaited their destiny. Mid-day came, and with it a
distant roar from the monster reverberated fright-
fully through the long passages. Nearer came the
blood-thirsty brute, his bellowing growing louder as
he scented human beings. The trembling victims
waited with but a single hope, and that was in the
sword of their valiant prince. At length the creat-
ure appeared, in form a man of giant stature, but
with the horned head and huge mouth of a bull.

Battle at once began between the prince and the
brute. Itsoon ended. Springing agilely behind the
ravening monster, Theseus, with a swinging stroke
of his blade, cut off one of its Jegs at the knee. As
the man-brute fell prone, and lay bellowing with
pain, a thrust through the back reached its heart,
and all peril from the Minotaur was at an end.

This victory gained, the task of Theseus was easy.
The thread led back to the entrance. By aid of
this clue the door of escape was quickly gained.
Waiting until night, the hostages left the dreaded
Labyrinth under cover of the darkness. Ariadne
was in waiting, the ship was secretly gained, and the
rescued Athenians with their fair companion sailed
away, unknown to the king,

But Theseus proved false to the maiden to whom
he owed his life. Stopping at the island of Naxos,
which was sacred to Dionysus (or Bacchus), the god

4



38 HISTORICAL TALES.

of wine, he had a dream in which the god bade him
to desert Ariadne and sail away. This the faithless
swain did, leaving the weeping maiden deserted on
the island. Legend goes on to tell us that the de-
spair of the lamenting maiden ended in the sleep of
exhaustion, and that while sleeping Dionysus found
her, and made her his wife. As for the dream of
Theseus, it was one of those convenient excuses
which traitors to love never lack.

Meanwhile, Theseus and his companions sailed on
over the summer sea. Reaching the isle of Delos,
he offered a sacrifice to Apollo in gratitude for his
escape, and there he, and the merry youths and
maidens with him, danced a dance called the Geranus,
whose mazy twists and turns imitated those of the
Labyrinth.

But the faithless swain was not to escape punish-
ment for his base desertion of Ariadne. He had
arranged with his father Aigeus that if he escaped
the Minotaur he would hoist white sails in the ship
on his return. If he failed, the ship would still
wear the black canvas with which she had set out
on her errand of woe.

The aged king awaited the returning ship on a
high rock that overlooked the sea. At length it hove
in sight, the sails appeared, but—they were black.
With broken heart the father cast himself from
the rock into the sea,—which ever since has been
called, from his name, the Aigean Sea. Theseus,
absorbed perhaps in thoughts of the abandoned
Ariadne, perhaps of new adventures, had forgotten
to make the promised change, And thus was the



THESEUS AND ARIADNE. 39

deserted maiden avenged on the treacherous youth
who owed to her his life.

The ship—or what was believed to be the ship—
of Theseus and the hostages was carefully preserved
at Athens, down to the time of the Macedonian con-
quest, being constantly repaired with new timbers,
till little of the original ship remained. Every year
it was sent to Delos with envoys to sacrifice to
Apollo. Before the ship left port the priest of Apollo
decorated her stern with garlands, and during her
absence no public act of impurity was permitted to
take place in the city. Therefore no one could be
put to death, and Socrates, who was condemned at
this period of the year, was permitted to live for
thirty days until the return of the sacred ship.

There is another legend connected with this story
worth telling. Dedalus, the builder of the Laby-
rinth, at length fell under the displeasure of Minos,
and was confined within the windings of his own
edifice. He had no clue like Theseus, but he had
resources in his inventive skill. Making wings for
himself and his son Icarus, the two flew away from
the Labyrinth and their foe. The father safely
reached Sicily ; but the son, who refused to be gov-
erned by his father’s wise advice, flew so high in his
ambitious folly that the sun melted the wax of which
his wings were made, and he fell into the sea near
the island of Samos. This from him was named the
Icarian Sea.

There is a political as well as a legendary history
of Theseus,—perhaps one no more to be depended
upon than the other. It is said that when he be-



40 HISTORICAL TALES.

came king he made Athens supreme over Attica,
putting an end to the separate powers of the tribes
which had before prevailed. He is also said to
have abolished the monarchy, and replaced it by a
government of the people, whom he divided into the
three classes of nobles, husbandmen, and artisans.
He died at length in the island of Scyrus, where he
fell or was thrown from the cliffs. Ages later, after
the Persian war, the Delphic oracle bade the Athe-
nians to bring back the bones of Theseus from Scy-
rus, and bury them splendidly in Attic soil. Cimon,
the son of Miltiades, found—or pretended to find—
the hero’s tomb, and returned with the famous bones.
They were buried in the heart of Athens, and over
them was erected the monument called the Theseium,
which became afterwards a place of sanctuary for
slaves escaping from cruel treatment and for all
persons in peril. Theseus, who had been the cham-
pion of the oppressed during life, thus became their
refuge after death.



THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES.

Amona the legendary tales of Greece, none of
which are strictly, though several are perhaps
partly, historical, none—after that of Troy—was
more popular with the ancients than the story of
the two sieges of Thebes. This tale had probably
in it an historical element, though deeply overlaid
with myth, and it was the greatest enterprise of
Grecian war, after that of Troy, during what is
called the age of the Heroes. And in it is included
one of the most pathetic episodes in the story of
Greece, that of the sisterly affection and tragic fate
of Antigone, whose story gave rise to noble dramas
by the tragedians Aischylus and Sophocles, and is
still a favorite with lovers of pathetic lore.

Asa prelude to our story we must glance at the
mythical history of Gidipus, which, like that of his
noble daughter, has been celebrated in ancient drama.
Anoracle had declared that he should kill his father,
the king of Thebes. He was, in consequence, brought
up in ignorance of his parentage, yet this led to the
accomplishment of the oracle, for as a youth he,
during a roadside squabble, killed his father not
knowing him. For this crime, which had been one
of their own devising, the gods, with their usual

4* 41



42 HISTORICAL TALES.

inconsistency, punished the land of Thebes; afflicting
that hapless country with a terrible monster called
the Sphinx, which had the face of a woman, the
wings of a bird, and the body ofa lion. This
strangely made-up creature proposed a riddle to the
Thebans, whose solution they were forced to try and
give; and on every failure to give the correct answer
she seized and devoured the unhappy aspirant.
Cidipus arrived, in ignorance of the fact that he
was the son of the late king. He quickly solved
the riddle of the Sphinx, whereupon that monster
committed suicide, and he was made king. He
then married the queen,—not knowing that she was
his own mother.

This celebrated riddle of the Sphinx was not a
very difficult one. It was as follows: “A being
with four feet has two feet and three feet; but its
feet vary, and when it has most it is weakest.”

The answer, as given by Cidipus, was “ Man,” who

‘ First as a babe four-footed creeps on his way,

Then, when full age cometh on, and the burden of years

weighs full heavy,

Bending his shoulders and neck, as a third foot uscth his

staff.”?

When the truth became known—as truth was apt
to become known when too late in old stories—the
queen, Jocasta, mad with anguish, hanged herself,
and Cidipus, in wild despair, put out his eyes. The
gods who had led him blindly into crime, now handed
him over to punishment by the Furies,—the ancient
goddesses of vengeance, whose mission it was to
pursue the criminal with stinging whips.





CEDIPUS AND ANTIGONE.





OT a Se

bee:

FST

aaa



THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. 43

The tragic events which followed arose from the
curse of the afflicted Gidipus. He had two sons,
Polynikes and Eteocles, who twice offended him
without intention, and whom he, frenzied by his
troubles, twice bitterly cursed, praying to the gods
that they might perish by each other’s hands.
Cidipus afterwards obtained the pardon of the gods
for his involuntary crime, and died in exile, leaving
Creon, the brother of Jocasta, on the throne. But
though he was dead, his curse kept alive, and brought
on new matter of dire moment.

It began its work in a quarrel between the two sons
as to who should succeed their uncle as king of Thebes.
Polynikes was in the wrong, and was forced to leave
Thebes, while Eteocles remained. The exiled prince
sought the court of Adrastus, king of Argos, who
gave him his daughter in marriage, and agreed to

- assist in restoring him to his native country.

Most of the Argive chiefs joined in the proposed
expedition. But the most distinguished of them
all, Amphiaratis, opposed it as unjust and against
the will of the gods. He concealed himself, lest he
should be forced into the enterprise. But the other
chiefs deemed his aid indispensable, and bribed his
wife, with a costly present, to reveal his hiding-
place. Amphiaraiis was thus forced to join the ex-
pedition, but his prophetic power taught him that it
would end in disaster to all and death to himself,
and as a measure of revenge he commanded his
son Alkmaon to kill the faithless woman who had
betrayed him, and after his death to organize a sec-
ond expedition against Thebes.



44 HISTORICAL TALES.

Seven chiefs led the army, one to assail each of
the seven celebrated gates of Thebes. Onward they
marched against that strong city, heedless of the
hostile portents which they met on their way. The
Thebans also sought the oracle of the gods, and
were told that they should be victorious, but only
on the dread condition that Creon’s son, Menceceus,
should sacrifice himself to Mars. The devoted
youth, on learning that the safety of his country
depended on his life, forthwith killed himself before
the city gates,—thus securing by innocent blood the
powerful aid of the god of war.

Long and strenuous was the contest that suc-
ceeded, each of the heroes fiercely attacking the
gate adjudged to him. But the gods were on the
side of the Thebans and every assault proved in vain.
Parthenopeeus, one of the seven, was killed by a stone,
and another, Capaneus, while furiously mounting the
walls from a scaling-ladder, was slain by a thunder-
bolt cast by Jupiter, and fell dead to the earth.

The assailants, terrified by this portent, drew back,
and were pursued by the Thebans, who issued from
their gates. But the battle that was about to take
place on the open plain was stopped by Eteocles, who
proposed to settle it by a single combat with his
brother Polynikes, the victory to be given to the
side whose champion succeeded in this mortal duel.
Polynikes, filled with hatred of his brother, eagerly
accepted this challenge. Adrastus, the leader of the
assailing army, assented, and the unholy combat
began.

Never was a more furious combat than that be-



THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES, 45

tween the hostile brothers. Hach was exasperated
to bitter hatred of the other, and they fought with
a violence and desperation that could end only in the
death of one of the combatants. As it proved, the
curse of Cidipus was in the keeping of the gods, and
both fell dead,—the fate for which their aged father
had prayed. But the duel had decided nothing, and
the two armies renewed the battle.

And now death and bloodshed ran riot; men fell
by hundreds; deeds of heroic valor were achieved
on either side; feats of individual daring were dis-
played like those which Homer sings in the story of
Troy. But the battle ended in the defeat of the
assailants. Of the seven leaders only two survived,
and one of these, Amphiaraiis, was about to suffer
the fate he had foretold, when Jupiter rescued him
from death by a miracle. The earth opened beneath
him, and he, with his chariot and horses, was re-
ceived unhurt into her bosom. Rendered immortal
by the king of the gods, he was afterwards wor-
shipped as a god himself.

Adrastus, the only remaining chief, was forced to
fly, and was preserved by the matchless speed of his
horse. He reached Argos in safety, but brought
with him nothing but “his garment of woe and his
black-maned steed.”

Thus ended, in defeat and disaster to the assailants,
the first of the celebrated sieges of Thebes. It was
followed by a tragic episode which remains to be
told, that of the sisterly fidelity of Antigone and
her sorrowful fate. Her story, which the dramatists
have mado immortal, is thus told in the legend.



46 HISTORICAL TALES.

After the repulse of his foes, King Creon caused
the body of Kteocles to be buried with the highest
honors; but that of Polynikes was cast outside the
gates as the corpse of a traitor, and death was
threatened to any one who should dare to give it
burial. This cruel edict, which no one else ventured
to ignore, was set aside by Antigone, the sister of
Polynikes. This brave maiden, with warm filial
affection, had accompanied her blind father during
his exile to Attica, and was now returned to Thebes
to perform another holy duty. Funeral rites were
held by the Greeks to be essential to the repose of
the dead, and Antigone, despite Creon’s edict, deter-
mined that her brother's body should not be left to the
dogs and vultures. Her sister, though in sympathy
with her purpose, proved too timid to help her. No
other assistance was to be had. But not deterred
by this, she determined to perform the act alone,
and to bury the body with her own hands.

In this act of holy devotion Antigone succeeded ;
Polynikes was buried. But the sentinels whom
Creon had posted detected her in the act, and she
was seized and dragged before the tribunal of the
tyrant. Here she defended her action with an ear-
nestness and dignity that should have gained her
release, but Creon was inflexible in his anger. She
had set at naught his edict, and should suffer the
penalty for her crime. He condemned her to be
buried alive.

Sophocles, the dramatist, puts noble words into
the mouth of Antigone. This is her protest against
the tyranny of the king:



THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. AT

‘¢ No ordinance of man shall override
The settled laws of Nature and of God;
Not written these in pages of a book,
Nor were they framed to-day, nor yesterday ;
‘We know not whence they are; but this we know,
That they from all eternity have been,
And shall to all eternity endure.”’

And when asked by Creon why she had dared dis-
obey the laws, she nobly replied,—

‘ Not through fear
Of any man’s resolve was I prepared
Before the gods to bear the penalty
Of sinning against these. That I should die
I knew (how should I not?) though thy decree
Had never spoken. And before my time
If I shall die, I reckon this a gain ;
For whoso lives, as I, in many woes,
How can it be but he shall gain by death?”

At the king’s command the unhappy maiden was
taken from his presence and thrust into a sepulchre,
where she was condemned to perish in hunger and
loneliness. But Antigone was not without her ad-
vocate. She had a lover,—almost the only one in
Greek literature. Hemon, the son of Creon, to
whom her hand had been promised in marriage, and
who loved her dearly, appeared before his father
and earnestly interceded for her life. Not on the
plea of his love,—such a plea would have had no
weight with a Greek tribunal,—but on those of mercy
and justice. His plea was vain; Creon was obdu-
rate: the unhappy lover left his presence and sought
Antigone’s living tomb, where he slew himself at



48 HISTORICAL TALES.

the feet of his love, already dead. His mother, on
learning of his fatal act, also killed herself by her
own hand, and Creon was left alone to suffer the
consequences of his unnatural act.

The story goes on to relate that Adrastus, with
the disconsolate mothers of the fallen chieftains,
sought the hero Theseus at Athens, and begged his
aid in procuring the privilege of interment for the
slain warriors whose bodies lay on the plain of
Thebes. The Thebans persisting in their refusal
to permit burial, Theseus at length led an army
against them, defeated them in the field, and forced
them to consent that their fallen foes should be
interred, that last privilege of the dead which was
deemed so essential by all pious Greeks. The tomb
of the chieftains was shown near Hleusis within late
historical times.

But the Thebans were to suffer another reverse.
The sons of the slain chieftains raised an army,
which they placed under the leadership of Adrastus,
and demanded to be led against Thebes. Alkmzon,
the son of Amphiaraiis, who had been commanded to
revenge him, played the most prominent part in the
succeeding war. As this new expedition marched,
the gods, which had opposed the former with hostile
signs, now showed their approval with favorable
portents. Adherents joined them on their march.
At the river Glisas they were met by a Theban
army, and a battle was fought, which ended in a
complete victory over the Theban foe. A prophet
now declared to the Thebans that the gods were
against them, and advised them to surrender the



THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. 49

city. This they did, flying themselves, with their
wives and children, to the country of the Illyrians,
and leaving their city empty to the triumphant foe.
The Epigoni, as the youthful victors were called,
marched in at the head of their forces, took posses-
sion, and placed Thersander, the son of Polynikes,
on the throne. And thusends the famous old legend
of the two sieges of Thebes.



LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN
LAWS.

Or the many nations between which the small
peninsula of Greece was divided, much the most in-
teresting were those whose chief cities were Athens
and Sparta. These are the states with whose doings
history is full, and without which the history of
ancient Greece would be little more interesting to
us than the history of ancient China and Japan.
No two cities could have been more opposite in
character and institutions than these, and they were
rivals of each other forthe dominant power through
centuries of Grecian history. In Athens freedom
of thought and freedom of action prevailed. Such
complete political equality of the citizens has scarcely
been known elsewhere upon the earth, and the intel-
lectual activity of these citizens stands unequalled.
In Sparta freedom of thought and action were both
suppressed to a degree rarely known, the most rigid
institutions existed, and the only activity was a war-
like one. All thought and all education had war for
their object, and the state and city became a com-
pact military machine. This condition was the re-
sult of a remarkable code of laws by which Sparta
was governed, the most peculiar and surprising code
which any nation has ever possessed. It is this

60



LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 51

code, and Lycurgus, to whom Sparta owed it, with
which we are now concerned.

First, who was Lycurgus and in what age did he
live? Neither of these questions can be closely an-
swered. Though his laws are historical, his biogra-
phy is legendary. He is believed to have lived
somewhere about 900 or 1000 Bc. that age of
legend and fable in which Homer lived, and what
we know about him is little more to be trusted than
what we know about the great poet. The Greeks
had stories of their celebrated men of this remote
age, but they were stories with which imagination
often had more to do than fact, and though we may
enjoy them, it is never quite safe to believe them.

As for the very uncertain personage named Ly-
curgus, we are told by Herodotus, the Greek his-
torian, that when he was born the Spartans were
the most lawless of the Greeks, Every man was a
law unto himself, and confusion, tumult, and injustice
everywhere prevailed. Lycurgus, a noble Spartan,
sad at heart for the misery of his country, applied
to the oracle at Delphi, and received instructions as
to how he should act to bring about a better state
of affairs.

Plutarch, who tells so many charming stories
about the ancient Greeks and Romans, gives us the
following account. According to him the brother
of Lycurgus was king of Sparta. When he died
Lycurgus was offered the throne, but he declined
the honor and made his infant nephew, Charilaus,
king. Then he left Sparta, and travelled through
Crete, Ionia, Egypt, and several more remote coun-



52 HISTORICAL TALES.

tries, everywhere studying the laws and customs
which he found prevailing. In Ionia he obtained a
copy of the poems of Homer, and is said by some
to have met and conversed with Homer himself.
If, as is supposed, the Greeks of that age had not
the art of writing, he must have carried this copy
in his memory.

On his return home from this long journey Ly-
curgus found his country in a worse state than be-
fore. Sparta, it may be well here to say, had always
two kings; but it found, as might have been ex-
pected, that two kings were worse than one, and
that this odd device in government never worked
well. At any rate, Lycurgus found that law had
nearly vanished, and that disorder had taken its
place. He now consulted the oracle at Delphi, and
was told that the gods would support him in what
he proposed to do.

Coming back to Sparta, he secretly sSenoreHe a
body-guard of thirty armed men from among the
noblest citizens, and then presented himself in the
Agora, or place of public assembly, announcing that
he had come to end the disorders of his native land.
King Charilaus at first heard of this with terror,
but on learning what his uncle intended, he offered
his support. Most of the leading men of Sparta
did the same. Lycurgus was to them a descendant
of the great hero Hercules, he was the most learned
and travelled of their people, and the reforms he
proposed were sadly needed in that unhappy land.

These reforms were of two kinds. He desired
to reform both the government and society. We



LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS, 53

shall deal first with the new government which he
instituted. The two kings were left unchanged. But
under them was formed a senate of twenty-eight mem-
bers, to whom the kings were joined, making thirty
in all. The people also were given their assemblies,
but they could not debate any subject, all the power
they had was to accept or reject what the senate had
decreed. At a later date five men, called ephors,
were selected from the people, into whose hands fell
nearly all the civil power, so that the kings had
little more to do than to command the army and
lead it to war. The kings, however, were at the
head of the religious establishment of the country,
and were respected by the people as descendants of
the gods.

The government of Sparta thus became an aris-
tocracy or oligarchy. The ephors came from the
people, and were appointed in their interest, but they
came to rule the state so completely that neither the
kings, the senate, nor the assembly had much voice
in the government. Such was the outgrowth of the
governmental institutions of Lycurgus.

It is the civil laws made by Lycurgus, however,
which are of most interest, and in which Sparta
differed from all other states. The people of Laconia,
the country of which Sparta was the capital, were
composed of two classes. That country had origi-
nally been conquered by the Spartans, and the
ancient inhabitants, who were known as Helots,
were held as slaves by their Spartan conquerors.
They tilled the ground to raise food for the citizens,
who were all soldiers, and whose whole life and

5*



54 HISTORICAL TALES.

thought were given to keeping the Helots in slavery
and to warlike activity. That they might make the
better soldiers, Lycurgus formed laws to do away
with all luxury and inequality of conditions, and to
train up the young under a rigid system of discipline
to the use of weapons and the arts of war. The
Helots, also, were often employed as light-armed
soldiers, and there was always danger that they
might revolt against their oppressors, a fact which
made constant discipline and vigilance necessary to
the Spartan citizens.

Lycurgus found great inequality in the state. A
few owned all the land, and the remainder were
poor. The rich lived in luxury; the poor were
reduced to misery and want. He divided the whole
territory of Sparta into nine thousand equal lots,
one of which was given to each citizen. The terri-
tory of the remainder of Laconia was divided into’
thirty thousand equal lots, one of which was given
to each Pericecus. (The Periceci were the freemen
of the country outside of the Spartan city and dis-
trict, and did not possess the full rights of citizen-
ship.)

This measure served to equalize wealth. But
further to prevent luxury, Lycurgus banished all
gold and silver from the country, and forced the
people to use iron money,—each piece so heavy that
none would care to carry it. He also forbade the
citizens to have anything to do with commerce or
industry. They were to be soldiers only, and the
Helots were to supply them with food. As for com-
merce, since no other state would accept their iron



LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 55

money, they had to depend on themselves for every-
thing they needed. The industries of Laconia were
kept strictly at home.

To these provisions Lycurgus added another of
remarkable character. No one was allowed to take
his meals at home. Public tables were provided, at
which all must eat, every citizen being forced to be-
long to some special public mess. Each had to sup-
ply his quota of food, such as barley, wine, cheese,
and figs from his land, game obtained by hunting, or
the meat of the animals killed for sacrifices. At
these tables all shared alike. The kings and the
humblest citizens were on an equality. No distinc-
tion was permitted except to those who had rendered
some signal service to the state.

This public mess was not accepted without pro-
test. Those who were used to luxurious living were
not ready to be brought down to such simple fare,
and a number of these attacked Lycurgus in the
market-place, and would have stoned him to death
had he not run briskly for his life. As it was, one
of his pursuers knocked out his eye. But, such was
his content at his success, that he dedicated his last
eye to the gods, building a temple to the goddess
Athene of the Eye. At these public tables black
broth was the most valued dish, the elder men eat-
ing it in preference, and leaving the meat to their
younger messmates.

The houses of the Spartans were as plain as they
could well be made, and as simple in furniture as
possible, while no lights were permitted at bedtime,
it being designed that every one should become ac-



56 HISTORICAL TALES.

customed to walking boldly in the dark. This, how-
ever, was but a minor portion of the Spartan dis-
cipline. Throughout life, from boyhood to old age,
every one was subjected to the most rigorous train-
ing. From seven years of age the drill continued,
and every one was constantly being trained or seeing
others under training. The day was passed in pub-
lic exercises and public meals, the nights in public
barracks. Married Spartans rarely saw their wives
—during the first years of marriage—and had very
little to do with their children; their whole lives
were given to the state, and the slavery of the
Helots to them was not more complete than their
slavery to military discipline.

They were not only drilled in the complicated
military movements which taught a body of Spartan
soldiers to act as one man, but also had incessant
gymnastic training, so as to make them active,
strong, and enduring. They were taught to bear
severe pain unmoved, to endure heat and cold,
hunger and thirst, to walk barefoot on rugged
ground, to wear the same garment summer and
winter, to suppress all display of feeling, and in
public to remain silent and motionless until action
was called for.

Two companies were often matched against each
other, and these contests were carried on with fury,
fists and fect taking the place of arms. — Hunting
in the woods and mountains was encouraged, that
they might learn to bear fatigue. The boys were
kept half fed, that they might be forced to provide
for themselves by hunting or stealing. The latter



LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 57

was designed to make them cunning and skilful,
and if detected in the act they were severely pun-
ished. The story is told that one boy who had
stolen a fox and hidden it under his garment, per-
mitted the animal to tear him open with claws and
teeth, and died rather than reveal his theft,

One might say that he would rather have been
born a girl than a boy in Sparta; but the girls were
trained almost as severely as the boys. They were
forced to contend with each other in running, wrest-
ling, and boxing, and to go through other gymnastic
exercises calculated to make them strong and healthy.
They marched in the religious processions, sung and
danced at festivals, and were present at the exercises
of the youths. Thus boys and girls were continually
mingled, and the praise or reproach of the latter did
much to stimulate their brothers and friends to the
utmost exertion.

As a result of all this the Spartans became strong,
vigorous, and handsome in form and face. The
beauty of their women was everywhere celebrated.
The men became unequalled for soldierly qualities,
able to bear the greatest fatigue and privation, and
to march great distances in a brief time, while on
the field of battle they were taught to conquer or to
die, a display of cowardice or flight from the field
being a lifelong disgrace. |

Such were the main features of the most singular
set of laws any nation ever had, the best fitted to
make a nation of soldiers, and also to prevent in-
tellectual progress in any other direction than the
single one of war-making. Even eloquence in speech



58 HISTORICAL TALES,

was discouraged, and a brief or laconic manner sedu-
lously cultivated. But while all this had its advan-
tages, it had its defects. The number of citizens
decreased instead of increasing. At the time of the
Persian war there were eight thousand of them.
Ata late date there were but seven hundred, of whom
one hundred possessed most of the land. Whether
Lycurgus really divided the land equally or not is
doubtful. At any rate, in time the land fell into a
few hands, the poor increased in number, and the
people steadily died out; while the public mess, so
far as the rich were concerned, became a mere form.

But we need not deal with these late events, and
must go back to the story told of Lycurgus. It is
‘said that when he had completed his code of laws,
he called together an assembly of the people, told
them that he was going on a journey, and asked
them to swear that they would obey his laws till
he returned. This they agreed to do, the kings, the |
senate, and the people all taking the oath.

Then the law-giver went to Delphi, where he
offered a sacrifice to Apollo, and asked the oracle
if the laws he had made were good. The oracle
answered that they were excellent, and would brin g
the people the greatest fame. This answer he had
put into writing and sent to Sparta, for he had re-
solved to make his oath binding for all time by never
returning. So the old man starved himself to death.

The Spartans kept their oath. For five hundred
years their city continued one of the chief cities of
Greece, and their army the most warlike and dreaded
of the armies of the earth. As for Lycurgus, his





LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 59

countrymen worshipped him as a god, and imputed
to him all that was noble in their institutions and
excellent in their laws. But time brings its in-
evitable changes, and these famous institutions in
time decayed, while the people perished from over-
strict discipline or other causes till but a small troop
of Spartans remained, too weak in numbers fairly
to control the Helots of their fields.

In truth, the laws of Lycurgus were unnatural,
and in the end could but fail. They were framed to
make one-sided men, and only whole men can long
succeed. Human nature will have its way, and
luxury and corruption crept into Sparta despite
these laws. Nor did the Spartans prove braver or
more successful in war than the Athenians, whose
whole nature was developed, and who were alike
great in literature, art, and war.



ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF
MESSENTA,

We have told by what means the Spartans grew
to be famous warriors. We have now to tell one
of the ancient stories of how they used their war-
like prowess to extend their dominions. Laconia,
their country, was situated in the southeast section
of the Peloponnesus, that southern peninsula which
is attached to the remainder of Greece by the narrow
neck of land known as the Isthmus of Corinth. Their
capital city was anciently called Lacedemon; it was
later known as Sparta. In consequence they are
called in history both Spartans and Lacedemonians.

In the early history of the Spartans they did not
trouble themselves about Northern Greece. They
had enough to occupy them in the Peloponnesus.
As the Romans, in after-time, spent their early
centuries in conquering the small nations immedi-
ately around them, so did the Spartans. And the
first wars of this nation of soldiers seem to have
been with Messenia, a small country west of Laconia,
and extending like it southward into the blue waters
of the Mediterranean Sea.

There were two wars with the Messenians, both
full of stories of daring and disaster, but it is the
second of these with which we are specially con-

60



ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA., 61

cerned, that in which the hero Aristomenes won his
fame. We shall not ask our readers to believe all
that is told about this ancient champion. Much of
it is very doubtful. But the war in which he took
part was historical, and the conquest of Messenia
was the first great event in Spartan history.

Now for the story itself. In the first Messenian
war, which was fought more than seven hundred
years B.c., the leader of the Messenians was named
Aristodemus. A quarrel had arisen between the
two nations during some sacrifices on their border
lands. The Spartans had laid a snare for their
neighbors by dressing some youths as maidens and
arming them with daggers. They attacked the
Messenians, but were defeated, and the Spartan
king was slain.

In the war that ensued the Messenians in time
found themselves in severe straits, and followed the
plan that seems to have been common throughout
Grecian history. They sent to Delphi to ask aid
and advice from the oracle of Apollo. And the
oracle gave them one of its often cruel and always
uncertain answers; saying that if they would be
successful a virgin of the house of Mpytus must
die for her country. To fulfil this cruel behest
Aristodemus, who was of that ancient house, killed
his daughter with his own hand,—much as Aga-
memnon had sacrificed his daughter before sailing
for Troy.

Aristodemus afterwards became king, and had a
stirring and tragic history, which was full of por-
tents and prodigies. Thus an old blind prophet sud-

6



62 ‘ HISTORICAL TALES,

denly recovered his sight,—which the Messenians
looked upon to mean something, though it is not
clear what. its brazen shield; which meant something more,—
probably that the fastenings had given way; but
the ancients looked on it as a portent. Then the
ghost of his murdered daughter appeared to Aris-
todemus, pointed to her wounded side, stripped off
his armor, placed on his head a crown of gold and
on his body a white robe,—a sign of death. So, as
it seemed evident that he had mistaken the oracle,
and killed his daughter without saving his country,
he did the only thing that remained for him: he
went to her grave and killed himself. And with
this tragedy ends all we need to tell about the first
champion of Messenia.

The war ended in the conquest of Messenia by the
Spartans. The conquered people were very harshly
treated by the conquerors, being forced to pay as
tribute half the produce of their fields, and to humble
themselves before their haughty masters. As a re-
sult, about fifty years afterwards, they broke out
into rebellion, and a second Messenian war began.

This war lasted for many years, the Messenians
being led by a valiant hero named Aristomenes, who
performed startling exploits and made marvellous
escapes. Three great battles took place, with vari-
ous results, and three times Aristomenes made a re-
markable sacrifice to the king of the gods. This
was called the Hekatomphonia, and could only be
offered by one who had slain, with his own hands,
one hundred enemies in battle,



ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA. 63

But great battles were not all. There were years
of guerilla warfare. At the head of a band of brave
followers Aristomenes made his way more than once
to the very heart of Laconia, surprised two of its
cities, and on one occasion ventured into Sparta
itself by night. Here he boldly entered the temple
of Athene of the Brazen House and hung up his
shield there as a mark of defiance to his enemies,
placing on it an inscription which said that Aris-
tomenes presented it as an offering from Spartan
spoil.

The Messenian maidens crowned their hero with
garlands, and danced around him, singing a war
strain in honor of his victories over his foes. Yet
he found the Spartans vigorous and persistent ene-
mies, and in spite of all his victories was forced at
length to take refuge in the mountain fastnesses,
where he held out against his foes for eleven years.

We do not know all the adventures of this famous
champion, but are told that he was taken prisoner
three times by his enemies. Twice he made marvel-
lous escapes while they were conveying him to
Sparta. On the third occasion he was less fortu-
nate. His foes bore him in triumph to their capital
city, and here he was condemned to be cast from
Mount Taygetus into the Keadas, a deep rock cavity
into which they flung their criminals.

Fifty Messenian prisoners suffered the same fate
and were all killed; but the gods, so we are told,
came to their leader’s aid. The legend says that an
eagle took Aristomenes on its outspread wings, and
landed him safely in the bottom of the pit. More



64 HISTORICAL TALES.

likely the bodies of the former victims broke his
fall. Seeing no possible way out from the deep
cavity, he wrapped himself in his cloak, and re-
signed himself to die. But, while thus lying, he
saw a fox prowling among the dead bodies, and
questioned himself how it had found its way into
the pit. When it came near him he grasped its tail,
defending himself from its bites by means of his
cloak. Holding fast, he followed the fox to the
aperture by which it had entered, enlarged it so
that he could creep out, and soon appeared alive
again in the field, to the surprise of his friends and
the consternation of his foes.

Being seized again by some Cretan bowmen, he
was rescued by a maiden, who dreamed that wolves
had brought into the city a chained lion, bereft of
its claws, and that she had given it claws and set it
free. When she saw Aristomenes among his captors,
she believed that her dream had come true, and that
the gods desired her to set him free. This she did
by making his captors drunk, and giving him a
dagger with which he cut his bonds. The indiscreet
bowmen were killed by the warrior, while the es-
caped hero rewarded the maiden by making her the
wife of his son.

But Messenia was doomed by the gods, and no
man could avert its fate. The oracle of Delphi de-
clared that if the he-goat (Tragos) should drink the
waters of the Neda, the god could no longer defend
that fatal country. And now a fig-tree sprang up
on the banks of the Neda, and, instead of spreading
its branches aloft, let them droop till they touched



ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA. 65

the waters of the stream. This a seer announced
as the fulfilment of the oracle, for in the Messenian
language the fig-tree was called Tragos.

Aristomenes now, discouraged by the decree of
the gods, and finding himself surrounded, through
treachery, by his enemies in his mountain strong-
hold, decided to give up the hopeless struggle. He
broke fiercely through the ranks of his assailants
with his sons and followers, and left his country to
the doom which the gods had decreed.

The end of his career, like its earlier events, was,
according to the legend, under the control of the
deities. Damagetes, the king of the island of
Rhodes, had been told by an oracle that he must
marry the bravest of the Hellenes (or Greeks).
Believing that Aristomenes had the best claim to
this proud title, he asked him for the hand of his
daughter in marriage, and offered him a home in
his island realm. Aristomenes consented, and spent
the remainder of his days in Rhodes. From his
daughter descended the illustrious family of the
Diagoride.

This romantic story of the far past resembles
those of King Alfred of England, of Wallace and
Bruce of Scotland, and of other heroes who have
defended their countries single-handed against a
powerful foe. But we are not done with it yet.
There is another singular and interesting episode to
be told,—a legend, no doubt, but one which has
almost passed into history.

The story goes that the Spartans, losing heart at
the success of the Messenians in the early years of

é 6%



66 HISTORICAL TALES.

the war, took the usual method then adopted, and
sent to the oracle at Delphi for advice. The oracle
told them to apply to Athens for a leader. They
did so, sending an embassy to that city; and in
response to the oracle the Athenians sent them a
lame schoolmaster named Tyrteus. They did not
dare to resist the command of the god, but they had
no desire to render any actual aid to the Spartans.

However, Apollo seems to have been wiser than
the Athenians. The lame schoolmaster was an able
poet as well, and on reaching Sparta he composed a
series of war-songs which so inspirited the army
that they marched away to victory. Tyrteus was
probably not only an able poet; very likely he also
gave the Spartans good advice in the conduct of the
war, and though he did not lead their armies, he
animated them by his songs and aided them with
his advice until victory followed their career of
defeat.

For many years afterwards the war-songs of Tyr-
teus remained highly popular at Sparta, and some
of them have come down to our own days. As for
the actual history of this war, most of what we
know seems to have been written by Tyrteus, who
was thus not only the poet but the historian of the
Messenian wars.



SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF
ATHENS.

We have told how Sparta came to have an aris-
tocratic government, under the laws of Lycurgus.
We have now to tell how Athens came to have a
democratic government, under the laws of Solon.
These formed the types of government for later
Greece, some of whose nations became aristocracies,
following the example of Sparta; others became
democracies, and formed their governments on the
model of that of Athens.

As before Lycurgus the Spartan commonwealth
was largely without law, so was Athens before
Solon. In those days the people of Attica—of
which Athens was the capital city—were divided
into three factions,—the rich, the middle class, and
the poor. As for the poor, they were in a condition
of misery, being loaded down with debt, and many
of them in a state of slavery to the rich, who owned
nearly all the land.

At that period what law existed was very severe
against debtors. The debtor became the slave of
his creditor, and was held in this state until he
could pay his debt, either in money or in labor.
And not only he, but his younger sons and his un-
married daughters and sisters, were reduced to
slavery. Through the action of this severe law

67



68 HISTORICAL TALES,

many of the poor of Attica were owned as slaves,
many had been sold as slaves, some had kept their
freedom only by selling their own children, and
some had fied from the country to escape slavery.
And this, too, had arisen in many cases through in-
justice in the courts and corruption of the judges.
In the time of Solon the misery and oppression
from these laws became so great that there was a
general mutiny of the poor against the rich. They
refused to submit to the unjust enactments of their
rulers, and the state fell into such frightful disorder
that the governing class, no longer able to control
the people, were obliged to call Solon to their aid.
Solon did not belong to the rich men of Athens,
‘though he was of noble birth, and, like so many of
the older Greeks, traced his family line back to the
gods. Neptune, the ocean deity, was fabled to be
his far-off ancestor. He was born about 638 B.o.
His father had spent most of his money, largely in
kind deeds to others, and the son found himself
obliged to become a merchant. In this pursuit he
travelled in many parts of Greece and Asia, and
in his journeys paid more heed to the gaining of
knowledge than of money, so that when he came
back his mind was fuller than his purse. Men who
seek wisdom rarely succeed in gaining much money,
but Solon’s story goes to show that wisdom is far
the better of the two, and that a rich mind is of
more value than a rich purse. When he returned
to Attica he gained such fame as a poet and a man
of learning and wisdom that he has ever since been
classed as one of the Seven Wise Men of Greece.



SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS. 69

Of these wise men the following story is told.
Some fishermen of Cos cast their net into the sea,
and brought up in its meshes a golden tripod, which
the renowned Helen had thrown into the sea during
her return from Troy. A dispute arose as to whom
the tripod should belong. Several cities were ready
to go to war about it. To prevent bloodshed the
oracle of Apollo was applied to, and answered that
it should be sent to the wisest man that could be
found.

It was at first sent to Thales of Miletus, a man
famous for wisdom. But he- decided that Bias of
Priene was wiser than he, and sent it to him. And
thus it went the round of the seven wise men,—
Solon among them, so wé are told,—and finally
came back to Thales. He refused to keep it, and
placed it in the temple of Apollo at Thebes.

An evidence alike of Solon’s wisdom, shrewdness,
and political skill arose in the war for the island of
Salamis, which adjoined the two states of Megara
and Attica, and for whose possession they were at
war. After the Athenians had been at great loss of
men and money in this conflict, Megara gained the
island, and the people of Athens became so dis-
gusted with the whole affair that a law was passed
declaring that any man who spoke or wrote again
about the subject should be put to death.

This Solon held to be a stain on the honor of
Athens. He did not care to lose his life by break-
ing the law, but was not content that his country
should rest under the stigma of defeat, and should
yield so valuable a prize, He accordingly had it



70 HISTORICAL TALES.

given out that he had gone mad; and in pretended
insanity he rushed into the public square, mounted
the herald’s stone, and repeated a poem he had com-
posed for the occasion, recalling vividly to the people
the disgrace of their late defeat. His stirring appeal
so wrought upon their feelings that the law was re-
pealed, war was declared, and Solon was placed in
command of the army.

Megara sent out a ship to watch the proceedings,
but this was seized by Solon’s fleet and manned by
part of his force. The remainder of his men were
landed and marched towards the city of Salamis,
on which they made an assault. While this was
going on, Solon sailed up with the ship he had cap-
tured. The Megarians, thinking it to be their own
ship, permitted it to enter the port, and the city
was taken by surprise. Salamis, thus won, con-
tinued to belong to Athens till those late days when
Philip of Macedon conquered Greece.

To Solon, now acknowledged to be the wisest and
most famous of the Athenians, the tyrants who had
long misruled Athens turned, when they found the
people in rebellion against their authority. In the
year 594 B.c. he was chosen archon, or ruler of the
state, and was given full power to take such meas-
ures as were needed to put an end to the disorders.
Probably these autocrats supposed that he would
help them to continue in power; but, if so, they did
not know the man with whom they had to deal.

Solon might easily have made himself a despot,
if he had chosen,—all the states of Greece being
then under the rule of despots or of tyrannical aris-



SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS. 71

tocrats. But he was too honest and too wise for
this. He set himself earnestly to overcome the
difficulties which lay before him. And he did this
with a radical hand. In truth, the people were in
no mood for any but radical measures.

The enslaved debtors were at once set free. All
contracts in which the person or the land of the
debtor had been given as. security were cancelled.
No future contract under which a citizen could be
enslaved or imprisoned for debt was permitted.
All past claims against the land of Attica were can-
celled, and the mortgage pillars removed. (These
pillars were set up at the boundaries of the land,
and had the lender's name and the amount of the
debt cut into the stone).

But as many of the creditors were themselves in
debt to richer men, and as Solon’s laws left them
poor, he adopted a measure for their relief. This
was to lower the value of the money of the state.
The old silver drachmas were replaced by new
drachmas, of which seventy-three equalled one hun-
dred of the old. Debtors were thus able to pay
their debts at a discount of twenty-seven per cent.,
and the great loss fell on the rich; and justly so, for
most of them had gained their wealth through dis-
honesty and oppression. Lastly, Solon made full
citizens of all from whom political rights had been
taken, except those who had been condemned for
murder or treason.

This was a bold measure. And, like such bold
measures generally, it did injustice to many. But
the evil was temporary, the good permanent. It



72 HISTORICAL TALES.

put an end to much injustice, and no such condition
as had prevailed ever again arose in Athens. The
government of the aristocracy came to an end under
Solon’s laws. From that time forward Athens grew
more and more a government of the people.

The old assembly of the people existed then, but
all its power had been taken from it. Solon gave
back to it the right of voting and of passing laws.
But he established a council of four hundred men,
elected annually by the people, whose duty it was
to consider the business-upon which the assembly
was to act. And the assembly could only deal with
business that was brought before it by this council.

The assemblies of the people took place on the
Pnyx, a hill that overlooked the city, and from
which could be seen the distant sea. At its right
stood the Acropolis, that famous hill on which the
noblest of temples were afterwards built. Between
these two hills rose the Arcopagus, on which the
Athenian supreme court held its sessions. The
Athenians loved to do their business in the open air,
and, while discussing questions of law and justice,
delighted in the broad view before them of the
temples, the streets, and the crowded marts of trade
» of the city, and the shining sea, with its white-sailed
craft, afar in the sunny distance.

Solon’s laws went further than we have said. He
divided the people into four ranks or divisions, ac-
cording to their wealth in land. The richer men
were, the more power they were given in the state.
But at the same time they had to pay heavier taxes,
so that their greater authority was not an unmixed



SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS, 73

blessing. The lowest class, composed of the poorest
citizens, had no taxes at all to pay, and no power in
the state, other than the right to vote in the assem-
bly. When called out as soldiers arms were fur-
nished them, while the other classes had to buy their
own arms.

Various other laws were made by Solon. The old
law against crime, established long before by Draco,
had made death the penalty for every crime, from
murder to petty theft. This severe law was re-
pealed, and the punishment made to agree with the
crime. Minor laws were these: The living could
not speak evil of the dead. No person could draw
more than a fixed quantity of water daily from the
public wells. People who raised bees must not have
their hives too near those of their neighbors. It
was fixed how women should dress, and they were
forbidden to scratch or tear themselves at funerals.
They had to carry baskets of a fixed size when they
went abroad. A dog that bit anybody had to be
delivered up with a log four feet and a half long
tied to its neck. Such were some of the laws which
the council swore to maintain, each member vowing
that if he broke any of them he would dedicate a
golden statue as large as himself to Apollo, at Delphi.

Having founded his laws Solon, fearing that he
would be forced to make changes in them, left
Athens, having bound the people by oath to keep
them for ten years, during which time he proposed
to be absent.

From Athens he set sail for Egypt, and in that
ancient realm talked long with two learned priests

D 7



74. HISTORICAL TALES.

about the old history of the land. Among the storics
they told him was a curious one about a great island
named Atlantis, far in the western ocean, against
which Athens had waged war nine thousand years
before, and which had afterwards sunk under the
Atlantic’s waves. It was one of those fanciful
legends of which the past had so great a store.

From Egypt he went to Cyprus, where he dwelt
long and made useful changes. He is also said to
have visited, at Sardis, Croesus, the king of Lydia, a
monarch famous for his wealth and good fortune.
About this visit a pretty moral story is told. It is
probably not true, being a fiction of the ancient story-
tellers, but, fiction or not, it is well worth the telling.

Croesus had been so fortunate in war that he had
made his kingdom great and prosperous, while he
was esteemed the richest monarch of his times. He
lodged Solon in his palace and had his servants
show him all the treasures which he had gained.
He then, conversing with his visitor, praised him
for his wisdom, and asked him whom he deemed to
be the happiest of men.

He expected an answer flattering to his vanity,
but Solon simply replied,—

“Tellus, of Athens.”

“ And why do you deem Tellus the happiest?” de-
manded Croesus.

Solon gave as his reason that Tellus lived in com-
fort and had good and beautiful sons, who also had
good children; and that he died in gallant defence
of his country, and was buried by his countrymen
with the highest honors.



SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS. 75

«And whom do you give the second place in hap-
piness?” asked Croesus.

“ Cleobis and Bito,” answered Solon. “These were
men of the Argive race, who had fortune enough for
their wants, and were so strong as to gain prizes at
the Games.

“ But their special title to happiness was,” continued
Solon, that in a festival to the goddess Juno, at Ar-
gos, their mother wished to go ina car. As the oxen
did not return in time from the fields, the youths,
fearing to be late, yoked themselves to the car, and
drew their mother to the temple, forty-five furlongs
away. This filial deed gained them the highest
praise from the people, while their mother prayed
the goddess to bestow upon them the highest bless-
ing to which mortals can attain, After her prayer,
the youths offered sacrifices, partook of the holy
banquet, and fell asleep in the temple. They never
woke again! This was the blessing of the goddess.”

“ What,” cried Croesus, angrily, “is my happiness,
then, of so little value to you that you put me on a
level with private men like these ?”

“You are very rich, Croesus,” answered Solon,
“and are lord of many nations. But remember
that you have many days yet to live, and that any
single day in a man’s life may yield events that will
change all his fortune. As to whether you are
supremely happy and fortunate, then, I have no
answer to make. I cannot speak for your happiness
till I know if your life has a happy ending.” *



* The sequel to this episode will be found in the tale en-
titled “The Fortune of Croesus.”



76 HISTORICAL TALES.

Solon, having completed his travels, returned to
Athens to find it in turmoil. Pisistratus, a politi-
cal adventurer and a favorite with the people, had
gained despotic power by a cunning trick. He
wounded himself, and declared that he had been
attacked and wounded by his political enemies. He
asked, therefore, for a body-guard for his protection.
This was granted him by the popular assembly,
which was strongly on his side. With its aid he
seized the Acropolis and made himself master of the
city, while his opponents were forced to fly for their
lives.

This revolutionary movement was strenuously op-
posed by Solon, but in vain. Pisistratus had made
himself so popular with the people that they treated
their old law-giver like a man who had lost his
senses. As a last appeal he put on his armor and
placed himself before the door of his house, as if on
guard as a sentinel over the liberties of his country!
This appeal was also in vain.

“T have done my duty!” he exclaimed; “I have
sustained to the best of my power my country and
the laws.”

He refused to fly, saying, when ales on what he
relied for protection, “On my old age.’

Pisistratus—who proved a very mild decpomeneny
his aged opponent unharmed, and in the next year
Solon died, being then eighty years of age.

His laws lived after him, despite the despotism
which ruled over Athens for the succeeding fifty
years,



THE FORTUNE OF CRGSUS.

Tue land of the Hellenes, or Greeks, was not con-
fined to the small peninsula now known as Greece.
Hellenic colonies spread far to the east and the
west, to Italy and Sicily on the one hand, to Asia
Minor and the shores of the Black Sea on the
other. The story of the Argonauts probably arose
from colonizing expeditions to the Black Sea. That
of Croesus has to do with the colonies in Asia Minor.

These colonies clung to the coast. Inland lay
other nations, to some extent of Hellenic origin.
One of these was the kingdom of Lydia, whose
history is of the highest importance to us, since the
conflicts between Lydia and the coast colonies were
the first steps towards the invasion of Greece by
the Persians, that most important event in early
Grecian history.

These conflicts began in the reign of Crcesus, an
ambitious king of Lydia in the sixth century before
Christ. What gave rise to the war between Lydia
and the Greek settlements of Ionia and Molia we
do not very well know. An ambitious despot does
not need much pretext for war. He wills the war,
and the pretext follows. It will suffice to say that,
on one excuse or another, Croesus made war on

ie 17



78 HISTORICAL TALES.

every Ionian and AXolian state, and conquered them
one after the other.

First the great and prosperous city of Ephesus
fell. Then, one by one, others followed, till, by the
year 550 B.c., Croesus had become lord and master
of every one of those formerly free and wealthy
cities and states. Then, having placed all the col-
onies on the mainland under tribute, he designed
to conquer the islands as well, and proposed to build
ships for that purpose. He was checked in this plan
by the shrewd answer of one of the seven wise men
of Greece, either Bias or Pittacus, who had visited
Sardis, the capital of Lydia.

“What news bring you from Greece?” asked
King Creesus of his wise visitor.

“T am told that the islanders are gathering ten
thousand horse, with the purpose of attacking you
and your capital,” was the answer.

“What!” cried Croesus. “Have the gods given
these shipmen such an idea as to fight the Lydians
with cavalry ?”

“T fancy, O king,” answered the Greek, “that
nothing would please you better than to catch. these
islanders here on horseback. But do you not think
that they would like nothing better than to catch
you at sea on shipboard? Would they not avenge
on you the misfortunes of their conquered brethren ?”

This shrewd suggestion taught Croesus a lesson.
Instead of fighting the islanders, he made a treaty
of peace and friendship with them. But he con-
tinued his conquests on the mainland till in the end
all Asia Minor was under his sway, and Lydia had



THE FORTUNE OF CRSUS., 79

become one of the great kingdoms of the earth.
Such wealth came to Croesus as a result of his con-
quests and unchanging good fortune that he became
accounted the richest monarch upon the earth,
while Sardis grew marvellous for its splendor and
prosperity. At an earlier date there had come
thither another of the seven wise men of Greece,
Solon, the law-giver of Athens. What passed be-
tween this farseeing visitor and the proud monarch
of Lydia we have already told.

The misfortunes which ‘Solon told the king were
liable to come upon any man befell Creesus during
the remainder of his life. Herodotus, the historian,
tells us the romantic story of how the gods sent
misery to him who had boasted overmuch of his
happiness. We give briefly this interesting account.

Croesus had two sons, one of whom was deaf and
dumb, the other, Atys by name, gifted with the
highest qualities which nature has to bestow. The
king loved his bright and handsome son as dearly as
he loved his wealth, and when a dream came to him
that Atys would die by the blow of an iron weapon,
he was deeply disturbed in his mind.

How should he prevent such a misfortune? In
alarm, he forbade his son to take part in military
forays, to which he had before encouraged him; and,
to solace him for this deprivation, bade him to take a
wife. Then, lest any of the warlike weapons which
hung upon the walls of his apartments might fall and
wound him, the king had them all removed, and stored
away in the part of the palace devoted to the women.

But fate had decreed that all such precautions



80 HISTORICAL TALES.

should be in vain. At Mount Olympus, in Mysia,
had appeared a monster boar, that ravaged the
fields of the lowlands and defied pursuit into his
mountain retreat. Hunting parties were sent against
him, but the great boar came off unscathed, while
the hunters always suffered from his frightful tusks.
At length ambassadors were sent to Croesus, beg-
ging him to send his son, with other daring youths
and with hunting hounds, to aid them rid their
country of this destructive brute.

“That cannot be,” answered Croesus, still in terror
from his dream. “My son is just married, and can-
not so soon leave his bride. But I will send youa
picked band of hunters, and bid them use all zeal to
kill this foe of your harvests.”

With this promise the Mysians were quite con-
tent, but Atys, who overheard it, was not.

“Why, my father,” he demanded, “do you now
keep me from the wars and the chase, when you
formerly encouraged me to take part in them, and
win glory for myself and you? Have I ever shown
cowardice or lack of manly spirit? What must the
citizens or my young bride think of me? With
what face can I show myself in the forum? Hither
you must let me go to the chase of this boar, or
give a reason why you keep me at home?”

In reply Croesus told the indignant youth of his
vision, and the alarm with which it had inspired him.

“Ah!” cried Atys, “then I cannot blame you for
keeping this tender watch over me. But, father, do
you not wrongly interpret the dream? It said I
was to die stricken by an iron weapon. A boar



THE FORTUNE OF CRESUS. 81

wields no such weapon. Had the dream said I was
to die pierced by a tusk, then you might well be
alarmed; but it said a weapon. We do not propose
now to fight men, but to hunt a wild beast. I pray
you, therefore, let me go with the party.”

“You have the best of me there,” said Croesus.
“Your interpretation of the dream is better than
mine. You may go, my son.”

At that time there was at the king’s court a
Phrygian named Adrastus, who had unwittingly
slain his own brother and had flown to Sardis,
where he was purified according to the customs of
the country, and courteously received by the king.
Croesus sent for this stranger and asked him to go
with the hunting party, and keep especial watch
over his son, in case of an attack by some daring
band of robbers.

Adrastus consented, though against his will, his
misfortune having taken from him all desire for
scenes of bloodshed. However, he would do his ut-
most to guard the king’s son against harm.

The party set out accordingly, reached Olympus
without adventure, and scattered in pursuit of the
animal, which the dogs soon roused from its lair.
Closing in a circle around the brute, the hunters
drew near and hurled their weapons at it. Not the
least eager among the hunters was Adrastus, who
likewise hurled his spear; but, through a frightful
chance, the hurtling weapon went astray, and
struck and killed Atys, his youthful charge. Thus
was the dream fulfilled: an iron weapon had slain
the king’s favorite son.

gf



82 HISTORICAL TALES.

The news of this misfortune plunged Creesus into
the deepest misery of grief. As for Adrastus, he
begged to be sacrificed at the grave of his unfortu-
nate victim. This Crossus, despite his grief, refused,
saying,—

“Some god is the author of my misfortune, not
you. I was forewarned of it long ago.”

But Adrastus was not to be thus prevented, Deem-
ing himself the most unfortunate of men, he slew
himself on the tomb of the hapless youth. And for
two years Croesus abandoned himself to grief.

And now we must go on to tell how Croesus met
with a greater misfortune still, and brought the
Persians to the gates of Greece. Cyrus, son of
Cambyses, king of Persia, had conquered the neigh-
boring kingdom of Media, and, inspired by ambition,
had set out on a career of wide-spread conquest and
dominion. He had grown steadily more powerful,
and now threatened the great kingdom which Croesus
had gained.

The Lydian king, seeing this danger approaching,
sought advice from the oracles. But wishing first
to know which of them could best be trusted, he
sent to six of them demanding a statement of what
he was doing at a certain moment. The oracle of
Delphi alone gave a correct answer.

Thereupon Croesus offered up a vast sacrifice to
the Delphian deity. Three thousand oxen were
slain, and a great sacrificial pile was built, on which
were placed splendid robes and tunics of purple,
with couches and censers of gold and silver, all to
be committed to the flames. To Delphi he sent



THE FORTUNE OF CRGSUS. 83

presents befitting the wealthiest of kings—ingots,
statues, bowls, jugs, etc., of gold and silver, of great
weight. These Herodotus himself saw with aston-
ishment a century afterwards at Delphi. The en-
voys who bore these gifts asked the oracle whether
Croesus should undertake an expedition against the
Persians, and should solicit allies.

He was bidden, in reply, to seek alliance with the
most powerful nations of Greece. He was also told
that if he fought with the Persians he would over-
turn a “mighty empire.” Crcesus accepted this as
a promise of success, not thinking to ask whose em-
pire was to be overturned. He sent again to the
oracle, which now replied, “ When a mule shall be-
come king of the Medes, then thou must run away,
—be not ashamed.” Here was another enigma of
the oracle. Cyrus—son of a royal Median mother
and a Persian father of different race and lower
position—was the mule indicated, though Croesus
did not know this. In truth, the oracles of Greece
seem usually to have borne a double meaning, so
that whatever happened the priestess could claim
that her word was true, the fault was in the inter-
pretation.

Croesus, accepting the oracles as favorable, made
an alliance with Sparta, and marched his army into
Media, where he inflicted much damage. Cyrus
met him with a larger army, and a battle ensued.
Neither party could claim a victory, but Croesus re-
turned to Sardis, to collect more men and obtain
aid from his allies. He might have been successful
had Cyrus waited till his preparations were com-



84 HISTORICAL TALES,

plete. But the Persian king followed him to his
capital, defeated him in a battle near Sardis, and
besieged him in that city.

Sardis was considered impregnable, and Creesus
could easily have held out till his allies arrived had
it not been for one of those unfortunate incidents
of which war has so many to tell. Sardis was
strongly fortified on every side but one. Here the
rocky height on which it was built was so steep as
to be deemed inaccessible, and walls were thought
unnecessary. Yet a soldier of the garrison made
his way down this precipice to pick up his helmet,
which had fallen. A Persian soldier saw hin, tried
to climb up, and found it possible. Others followed
him, and the garrison, to their consternation, found
the enemy within their walls. The gates were
opened to the army without, and the whole city
was speedily taken by storm.

Croesus would have been killed but for a miracle.
His deaf and dumb son, seeing a Persian about to
strike him down, burst into speech through the
agony of terror, crying out, “Man, do not kill
Cresus!” The story goes that he ever afterwards
retained the power of speech.

Cyrus had given orders that the life of Croesus
should be spared, and the unhappy captive was
brought before him. But the cruel Persian had a
different death in view. He proposed to burn the
captive king, together with fourteen Lydian youths,
on a great pile of wood which he had constructed,
We give what followed as told by Herodotus, though
its truth cannot be vouched for at this late day.



THE FORTUNE OF CRG@SUS. 85

As Croesus lay in fetters on the already kindled
pile and thought of this terrible ending to his
boasted happiness, he groaned bitterly, and cried in
tones of anguish, “Solon! Solon! Solon!”

“What does he mean?” asked Cyrus of the in-
terpreters. They questioned Creesus, and learned
from him what Solon had said. Cyrus heard this
story not without alarm. His own life was yet to
end; might not a like fate come to him? He
ordered that the fire should be extinguished, but
would have been too late had not a timely down-
pour of rain just then come to the aid of the captive
king,—sent by Apollo, in gratitude for the gifts to
his temple, suggests Herodotus. Crcesus was after-
wards made the confidential friend and adviser of
the Persian king, whose dominions, through this
victory, had been extended over the whole Lydian
empire, and now reached to the ocean outposts of
Greece.



THE SUITORS OF AGARISTE.

Srcyon, the smallest country of the Peloponnesus,
lay on the Gulf of Corinth, adjoining the isthmus
which connects the peninsula with the rest of Greece.
In this small country—as in many larger ones—the
nobles held rule, the people were subjects. The rich
and proud rulers dwelt on the hill slopes, the poor
and humble people lived on the sea-shore and along
the river Asopus. But in course of time many of
the people became well off, through success in fish-
eries and commerce, to which their country was well
adapted. Weary of the oppression of the nobles, they
finally rose in rebellion and overthrew the govern-
ment. Orthagoras, once a cook, but now leader of
the rebels, became master of the state, and he and
his descendants ruled it for a hundred years. The
last of this dynasty was Cleisthenes, a just and
moderate ruler, concerning whom we have a story
to tell.

These lords of the state were called tyrants; but
this word did not mean in Greece what it means to
us. The tyrants of Greece were popular leaders who
had overthrown the old governments and laws, and
ruled largely through force and under laws of their
own making. But they were not necessarily tyran-

86



THE SUITORS OF AGARISTS. 87

nical. The tyrants of Athens were mild and just in
their dealings with the people, and so proved to be
those of Sicyon.

Cleisthenes, who became the most eminent of the
tyrants of Sicyon, had a beautiful daughter, named
Agaristé, whom he thought worthy of the noblest
of husbands, and decided that she should be married
to the worthiest youth who could be found in all the
land of Greece. To select such a husband he took
unusual steps.

When the fair Agaristé had reached marriageable
age, her father attended the Olympic games, at which
there were used to gather men of wealth and emi-
nence from all the Grecian states. Here he won
the prize in the chariot race, and then bade the
heralds to make the following proclamation:

“ Whoever among the Greeks deems himself wor-
thy to be the son-in-law of Cleisthenes, let him come,
within sixty days, to Sicyon. Within a year from
that time Cleisthenes will decide, from among those
who present themselves, on the one whom he deems
fitting to possess the hand of his daughter.”

This proclamation, as was natural, roused warm
hopes in many youthful breasts, and within the
sixty days there had gathered at Sicyon thirteen
noble claimants for the charming prize. From the
city of Sybaris in Italy came Smindyrides, and from
Siris came Damasus. Amphimnestes and Males made
their way to Sicyon from the cities of the Ionian Gulf.
The Peloponnesus sent Leocedes from Argos, Ami-
antus from Arcadia, Laphanes from Pseus, and Ono-
mastus from Elis. From Huboa came Lysanias;



88 HISTORICAL TALES.

from Thessaly, Diactorides; from Molossis, Alcon;
and from Attica, Megacles and Hippoclides. Of the
last two, Megacles was the son of the renowned
Alcmzon, while Hippoclides was accounted the
handsomest and wealthiest of the Athenians.

At the end of the sixty days, when all the suitors
had arrived, Cleisthenes asked each of them whence
he came and to what family he belonged. Then,
during the succeeding year, he put them to every
test that could prove their powers. He had had a
foot-course and a wrestling-ground made ready to
test their comparative strength and agility, and took
every available means to discover their courage,
vigor, and skill.

But this was not all that the sensible monarch
demanded in his desired son-in-law. He wished to
ascertain their mental and moral as well as their
physical powers, and for this purpose kept them
under close observation for a year, carefully noting
their manliness, their temper and disposition, their
accomplishments and powers of intellect, Now he
conversed with each separately; now he brought
them together and considered their comparative
powers. At the gymnasium, in the council chamber,
in all the situations of thought and activity, he tested
their abilities. But he particularly considered their
behavior at the banquet-table. From first to last
they were sumptuously entertained, and their de-
meanor over the trencher-board and the ,wine- aD
was closely observed.

In this story, as told us by garrulous old Herodotus,
nothing is said of Agaristé herself. In a modern ro-



THE SUITORS OF AGARISTE. 89

mance of this sort the lady would have had a voice
in the decision and a place in the narrative. There
would have been episodes of love, jealousy, and
malice, and the one whom the lady blessed with her
love would in some way—in the eternal fitness of
things—have become victor in the contest and car-
ried off the prize. But they did things differently in
Greece. The preference of the maiden had little to
do with the matter; the suitor exerted himself to
please the father, not the daughter; maiden hands
were given rather in barter and sale than in trust
and affection; in truth, almost the only lovers we
meet with in Grecian history are Hemon and An-
tigone, of whom we have spoken in the tale of the
“Seven against Thebes.”

And thus it was in the present instance. It was
the father the suitors courted, not the daughter.
They proved their love over the banquet-table, not
at the trysting-place. It was by speed of foot and
skill in council, not by whispered words of devotion,
that they contended for the maidenly prize. Or, if
lovers’ meetings took place and lovers’ vows were
passed, they were matters of the strictest secrecy,
and not for Greek historians to put on paper or
Greek ears to hear.

But the year of probation came in due time to its
end, and among all the suitors the two from Athens
most won the favor of Cleisthenes. And of the two
he preferred Hippoclides. It was not alone for his
handsome face and person and manly bearing that
this favored youth was chosen, but also because he
was descended from a noble family of Corinth which

g*



90 HISTORICAL TALES,

Cleisthenes esteemed. Yet “there is many a slip
between the cup and the lip,” an adage whose truth
Hippoclides was to learn.

When the day came on which the choice of the
father was to be made, and the wedding take place,
Cleisthenes held a great festival in honor of the occa-
sion. First, to gain the favor of the gods, he offered
a hundred oxen in sacrifice. Then, not only the suit-
ors, but all the people of the city were invited to a
grand banquet and festival, at the end of which the
choice of Cleisthenes was to be declared. What tor-
ments of love and fear Agaristé suffered during this
slow-moving feast the historian does not say. Yet it
may be that she was the power behind the throne,
and that the proposed choice of the handsome Hip-
poclides was due as much to her secret influence as
to her father’s judgment.

However this be, the feast went on to its end, and
was followed by a contest between the suitors in
music and oratory, with all the ‘people to decide.
As the drinking which followed went on, Hippo-
clides, who had surpassed all the others as yet,
shouted to the flute-player, bidding him to play a
dancing air, as he proposed to show his powers in
the dance.

The wine was in his weak head, and what he con-
sidered marvellously fine dancing did not appear so
to Cleisthenes, who was closely watching his pro-
posed son-in-law. Hippoclides, however, in a mood
to show all his accomplishments, now bade an at-
tendant to bring in a table. This being brought, ho
leaped upon it, and danced some Laconian steps,



THE SUITORS OF AGARISTE. 91

which he followed by certain Attic ones. Finally,
to show his utmost powers of performance, he stood
on his head on the table, and peg to dance with
his legs in empty air.

This was too much for Cleisthenes. He had
changed his opinion of Hippoclides during his light
and undignified exhibition, but restrained himself
from speaking to avoid any outbreak or ill feeling.
But on seeing him tossing his legs in this shameless
manner in the air, the indignant monarch cried out,—

“Son of Tisander, you have danced your wife
away.”

“What does Hippoclides care?” was the reply of
the tipsy youth.

And for centuries afterwards “ What does Hippo-
clides care?’ was a common saying in Greece, to
indicate reckless folly and lightness of mind.

Cleisthenes now commanded silence, and spoke as
follows to the assembly :

“Suitors of my daughter, well pleased am I with
you all, and right willingly, if it were possible,
would I content you all, and not, by making choice
of one, appear to put a slight upon the rest. But
as it is out of my power, seeing that I have only one
daughter, to grant to all their wishes, I will present
to each of you whom I must needs dismiss a talent
of silver * for the honor that you have done in seek-
ing to ally yourselves with my house, and for your
long absence from your homes. But my daughter
Agaristé I betroth to Megacles, the son of Alemzon,



* Equal to about one thousand dollars,



92 HISTORICAL TALES.

to be his wife, according to the usage and wont of
Athens.”

Megacles gladly accepted the honor thus offered
him, the marriage was solemnized with all possible
state, and the suitors dispersed,—twelve of them
happy with their silver talents, one of them happier
with his charming bride.

We have but further to say that Cleisthenes of
Athens—a great leader and law-giver, whose laws
gave origin to the democratic government of that
city—was the son of Megacles and Agaristé, and that
his grandson was the famous Pericles, the foremost
name in Athenian history.



LHE TYRANTS SOR“CORINTH.

We have already told what the word “tyrant”
meant in Greece,—a despot who set aside the law
and ruled at his own pleasure, but who might be mild
and gentle in his rule. Such were the tyrants of
Sicyon, spoken of in our last tale. The tyrants of
Corinth, the state adjoining Sicyon, were of a harsher
character. Herodotus, the gossipping old historian,
tells some stories about these severe despots which
seem worth telling again.

The government of Corinth, like most of the gov-
ernments of Greece, was in early days an oligarchy,
—that is, it was ruled by a number of powerful aris-
tocrats instead of by a single king. In Corinth these
belonged to a single family, named the Bacchiade
(or legendary descendants of the god Bacchus), who
constantly intermarried, and kept all power to them-
selves.

But one of this family, Amphion by name, had a
daughter, named Labda, whom none of the Bacchiadse
would marry, as she had the misfortune to be lame.
So she married outside the family, her husband being
named Aétion, and a man of noble descent. Having
no children, Aétion applied to the Delphian oracle,
and was told that a son would soon be borne to him,

93



94 HISTORICAL TALES.

and that this son “would, like a rock, fall on the
kingly race and right the city of Corinth.”

The Bacchiade heard of this oracle, and likewise
knew of an earlier one that had the same signifi-
cance. Forwarned is forearmed. They remained
quiet, waiting until Aétion’s child should be born, and
proposing then to take steps for their own safety.

When, therefore, they heard that Labda had borne
a son, they sent ten of their followers to Petra (the
rock), where Aétion dwelt, with instructions to kill
the child. These assassins entered Aétion’s house,
and, with murder in their hearts, asked Labda, with
assumed friendliness, if they might see her child.
She, looking upon them as friends of her husband,
whom kindly feeling had brought thither, gladly
complied, and, bringing the infant, laid it in the arms
of one of the ruffianly band.

It had been agreed between them that whoever
first laid hold of the child should dash it to the ground.
But as the innocent intended victim lay in the mur-
derer’s arms, it smiled in his face so confidingly that
he had not the heart to do the treacherous deed.
He passed the child, therefore, on to another, who
passed it to a third, and so it went the rounds of the
ten, disarming them all by its happy and trusting
smile from performing the vile deed for which they
had come, In the end they handed the babe back
to its mother, and left the house.

Halting just outside the door, a hot dispute arose
between them, each blaming the others, and nine of
them severely accusing the one whose task it had
been to do the cruel deed. He defended himself,



THE TYRANTS OF CORINTH. 95

saying that no man with a heart in his breast could
have done harm to that smiling babe,—certainly not
he, In the end they decided to go into the house
again, and all take part in the murder.

But they had talked somewhat too long and too
loud. Labda had overheard them and divined their
dread intent. Filled with fear, lest they should re-
turn and murder her child, she seized the infant,
and, looking eagerly about for some place in which
she might conceal it, chose a cypsel, or corn-bin, as
the place least likely to be searched.

Her choice proved a wise one. The men returned,
and, as she refused to tell them where the child was,
searched the house in vain,—none of them thinking
of looking for an infant in a corn-bin. At length
they went away, deciding to report that they had
done as they were bidden, and that the child of
Aétion was slain.

The boy, in memory of his escape, was named
Cypselus, after the corn-bin. He grew up without
further molestation, and on coming to man’s estate
did what so many of the ancients seemed to have
considered necessary, went to Delphi to consult the
oracle.

The pythoness, or priestess of Apollo, at his ap-
proach, hailed him as king of Corinth. “He and
his children, but not his children’s children.” And
the oracle, as was often the case, produced its own
accomplishment, for it encouraged Cypselus to head
a rebellion against the oligarchy, by which it was
overthrown and he made king, For thirty years
thereafter he reigned as tyrant of Corinth, with a



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FILES
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MESSAGE_DIGEST ALGORITHM 'MD5' 8cc954a073b15427c8b54a09692364a4
'SHA-1' 6548611346022b3c1267bdc232404562f1dd590d
EVENT '2011-11-18T10:49:01-05:00' OUTCOME 'success'
PROCEDURE describe
'163714' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYLY' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
ee7c6cf3d6bb1b2cacb32db7f914cd4b
c6c663bfa9eafe3d2d5e60e1316bd373f10127af
'2011-11-18T10:48:11-05:00'
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYLZ' 'sip-files00001.pro'
eed9997a9d0e699c04d2f3fadde7cc79
f8790014230ec0796cba2cc91da47d608fb7adf4
'2011-11-18T10:52:51-05:00'
describe
'35544' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMA' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
85d2646a1bc2d792f2e9414e6867db50
d31505418d710e54e8fde805687992a011e10a22
'2011-11-18T10:45:56-05:00'
describe
'8501884' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMB' 'sip-files00001.tif'
514da684f20e4453219a3cb9ff890b63
303e0bab2468e4adbe8db131648217449fe6b4ab
'2011-11-18T10:53:47-05:00'
describe
'3' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMC' 'sip-files00001.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2011-11-18T10:54:27-05:00'
describe
'8378' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMD' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
7ed5fd33bd7d86c381c922d6c0c0945d
1312357bdc2ba5b92dbb3e928a118348f9789111
'2011-11-18T10:52:03-05:00'
describe
'392521' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYME' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
85cb8ddbe6705e06077711af045e4afd
6616b60e4e8e3c94131e40d80cc765bde71e566d
'2011-11-18T10:54:12-05:00'
describe
'85599' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMF' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
b10a299446d3593f3473d2ebbfe353cd
b53e9e550ee3e3231b7d61decee490f866c583da
'2011-11-18T10:47:53-05:00'
describe
'1257' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMG' 'sip-files00002.pro'
3191acef612a9406f8ac4a3803917b6c
6cc9087f922b3ca6ec9e235487e1de4b243cc705
'2011-11-18T10:52:15-05:00'
describe
'18343' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMH' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
819800ea5813787c7223512ff472c177
d43984ce89ab5518844f2dc882d5c4d69b1980a1
'2011-11-18T10:49:06-05:00'
describe
'9436008' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMI' 'sip-files00002.tif'
8aefac5fbd7cf0726a4980098341286d
d190bb7b0f595ae714ca5c859a4306dba04ed4e4
'2011-11-18T10:54:04-05:00'
describe
'143' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMJ' 'sip-files00002.txt'
d435780aeab64462c6263c8b1e607e7e
795c38948a303ea8b1570dcfdc554911e0e83b11
'2011-11-18T10:51:20-05:00'
describe
'4566' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMK' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
c8f39fd29ff250a97ff17b96395de993
6e74bd70790086cb1345719189785cfcbce5d5be
'2011-11-18T10:50:35-05:00'
describe
'314036' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYML' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
1e1d4531026ae76113b90ea9e77cea4f
05d11d10599eab983d6bdc797d5ad4bfde2d33ce
'2011-11-18T10:47:17-05:00'
describe
'55853' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMM' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
75d9378eb39e98911900277b0699fc46
578c9069ead535f8821a0af7fb2e383a3b1ecc2a
'2011-11-18T10:52:55-05:00'
describe
'911' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMN' 'sip-files00006.pro'
cb97c7277bc9f663d6e1bb57ff944b83
fd4e76cbed7e3391bd685cf1384c2d406a6fe6d3
'2011-11-18T10:53:15-05:00'
describe
'13560' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMO' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
92a2f44b1447874ffab6f453c675fca2
7dfdcccbbe087ce4a90310e961069942bc5b37f3
describe
'2530088' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMP' 'sip-files00006.tif'
4f402528746eccc45eb290e25ee8492f
00c6cadfa691cf29ca02cbe9b9aa1db14e6a0924
'2011-11-18T10:47:56-05:00'
describe
'113' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMQ' 'sip-files00006.txt'
1587a4505e3e5c839975514fdbc945dd
857a82925f7425807a8da4f3c797d20d65337a27
'2011-11-18T10:47:59-05:00'
describe
'4315' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMR' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
094003b0419a44dc1857ce3a017c1104
45d9822c8f49de0c81c96c07dca0bbf5c4263593
'2011-11-18T10:50:03-05:00'
describe
'323477' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMS' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
cdb1f30eed25a762d9a8ba734c320f38
1937d12b0698167608b6235317d17f07c432772b
'2011-11-18T10:52:47-05:00'
describe
'84901' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMT' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
b00519abb0e87be0c92b3fd9063c655a
b6c2e9df012737c301dd64f1f37cf2b5c9e7bb36
describe
'6799' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMU' 'sip-files00007.pro'
e0fb48695fd3df50f976c1578d3ef116
5baa2c656a09d2fd2f6b063f042a4acffcfe07d2
'2011-11-18T10:48:34-05:00'
describe
'19509' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMV' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
7c40561b809b7c76c15eda15213b0c85
d3db88300c222c94e63f766fdbd25beceae30ed8
'2011-11-18T10:53:45-05:00'
describe
'7780692' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMW' 'sip-files00007.tif'
2f11594824a9301549e91e49e930e843
28acd44c4762804b63ba7827b0e893e526e9f521
'2011-11-18T10:54:02-05:00'
describe
'359' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMX' 'sip-files00007.txt'
05592930aa7ec82e7d601653ff596519
0f120f64a0ab86db0cb525c928cd13caf3dd4140
'2011-11-18T10:53:29-05:00'
describe
'5434' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMY' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
654878064c55e45bee02b1dfab207233
ab531b2d514e4bba582c5222d00d13e62705c8c2
'2011-11-18T10:54:30-05:00'
describe
'320658' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYMZ' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
424a16730ff8bcaeefc4e85b4060c3bd
2a6c0c8624add5eb404662547e78ce81defae406
'2011-11-18T10:50:48-05:00'
describe
'14897' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNA' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
972a6129c7fa9a7efa6b1f29ad9fe42b
ededf96d73d4c0cc58ab17477285076d5508380c
'2011-11-18T10:47:43-05:00'
describe
'3382' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNB' 'sip-files00008.pro'
8587843a5129e397222ed60d79e97c91
89ad5b92e44c64f71c8b2946744785c9639c0318
'2011-11-18T10:54:36-05:00'
describe
'4676' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNC' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
bab6ba01b607c9fbb90331b0f391a8f7
d46b56bf609bb80627642b11ddf04afcee233fe7
'2011-11-18T10:48:41-05:00'
describe
'2581620' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYND' 'sip-files00008.tif'
e9d489a793598a0a7f0813bc5cbd0d8d
1affde543367451466f32914d2a7fc224f003a94
'2011-11-18T10:51:15-05:00'
describe
'302' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNE' 'sip-files00008.txt'
d0e85af9f59a1e46cebcfc9ce78a0bbd
df8cf907c03fffac2db10fd88d5e447ca0d5f586
'2011-11-18T10:52:48-05:00'
describe
'1593' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNF' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
b72fb3978086a297a2640d5165c7f928
373d0aab71e58fa91d1ca8e96d9d4b5573518c70
'2011-11-18T10:55:05-05:00'
describe
'319436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNG' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
94c5a0196d9a617fd5b9b233f480bc4f
e8e035bc20b5786026ae81c4f10eb946bc2362a4
'2011-11-18T10:50:57-05:00'
describe
'88368' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNH' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
8fe7131be61c374fef5b21a6db8afc93
c5b9da8a88bd8a21404e28b9dfe5f01fe84a957f
'2011-11-18T10:52:02-05:00'
describe
'37464' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNI' 'sip-files00009.pro'
fadb645298daba7e067de9baa271bb75
a8b650bc93aaef774e1eef6ebc8a440f8c5bcae3
'2011-11-18T10:46:23-05:00'
describe
'29573' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNJ' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
f33f184ba802c1edc63882f6913f0e7e
f160916927d480b8954cb27a8141903b441a25ed
'2011-11-18T10:46:54-05:00'
describe
'2573388' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNK' 'sip-files00009.tif'
363213cfe9ed323cf2d688ac9ee70b1b
dbe6ab17dc441d96248426ba27f81f8816e57e76
'2011-11-18T10:50:56-05:00'
describe
'1578' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNL' 'sip-files00009.txt'
6845303af3c66dd67cbce000dfb39bf2
3534e8cf0c4bc0e46e301c70ccf689d48b63ec0e
'2011-11-18T10:50:10-05:00'
describe
'7947' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNM' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
73123c0604de441e9549aba1425d9711
71d13c5b85ba0e0c8b1a4c2c6c3c6998712ebb6c
describe
'308020' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNN' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
ec51e40daa579e84dd59aa6d7764b0c4
7e0a4ab24cf53e5f68b8ed567571a66feafacad8
'2011-11-18T10:46:44-05:00'
describe
'36327' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNO' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
c37f53915362d80248abc0c0985a8ce5
e92e9f7a6dcde09aa5a18fd85984a1e035a45a93
'2011-11-18T10:49:33-05:00'
describe
'13443' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNP' 'sip-files00010.pro'
454738fb47879c9e281337dafb9fbe2b
b6dd989d78b7d547d771c42f4c1e049a4362d7d0
'2011-11-18T10:54:05-05:00'
describe
'11937' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNQ' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
5b35c7c3f3906dcdf76f202bad819246
705dc30125ecfe03faf1eded3fb3ab983257b5ab
'2011-11-18T10:46:36-05:00'
describe
'2480724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNR' 'sip-files00010.tif'
3297e8a86958bc59800cc1efe0bb2b63
f5c275e3c984d64bec02eb86b24b49f9d89aa0d4
'2011-11-18T10:45:37-05:00'
describe
'529' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNS' 'sip-files00010.txt'
2db7f4f5fdbc0fe314fa94035750cfe0
e05df56b954e8d654cf05ce0bf060da81c18f157
'2011-11-18T10:52:28-05:00'
describe
'3515' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNT' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
a775c8d909b00e36d0f920abb058f3ee
203976241539eca2bf51ba30802b940c696944ed
'2011-11-18T10:46:49-05:00'
describe
'313471' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNU' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
2ee2221b1ec066d46ca0a7ab80239783
45ac14c55adea0d3bfd11059b954888bdae92af1
'2011-11-18T10:46:25-05:00'
describe
'47323' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNV' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
dfd172fcc9e9c9dc385d59a72c3657d4
ef7de11090cf1bb868240ba5116f385164a6e5c3
'2011-11-18T10:50:41-05:00'
describe
'16226' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNW' 'sip-files00011.pro'
59c3261892146dfec87c079e2a907da5
fe7f775c438e9046da19837e87309d86e98d593b
'2011-11-18T10:51:32-05:00'
describe
'16097' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNX' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
13ebea5eafdcca27263aed628aa873e6
42c827651588730f37b7d48ec072d2b9983de4f0
'2011-11-18T10:50:54-05:00'
describe
'2524328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNY' 'sip-files00011.tif'
6c5514ddcd8135bbb77a3a81f56d1280
655b0731f6071a99a4f444c6ec4fbf1a836b6ca8
describe
'739' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYNZ' 'sip-files00011.txt'
dab80c14376dbdf0154c0dd228b12a9f
1c5b99d8f02d9345162a4b4e7af3e109d35b79c3
'2011-11-18T10:48:29-05:00'
describe
'4203' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOA' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
3c92f1118f251cf6c87b40b2c4668775
e79738afb0fb4e243ef26ccb61d81f96fdb04d8b
'2011-11-18T10:51:37-05:00'
describe
'299129' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOB' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
cd680f33182a94a42c228987eb68984d
91237d00e6251ebb2cacb4ae36931f7242e1e784
'2011-11-18T10:54:48-05:00'
describe
'11226' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOC' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
cf2535b9050cd6dedf8b77f11f54b4f0
72531fdb0be0427a788e3c783b7b0d0c3a6f5aaa
'2011-11-18T10:50:58-05:00'
describe
'2970' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOD' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
5540df60c90e52b54dcc479348005caa
11f9fe15a03f447c08245be26dc6b886cdd58f77
'2011-11-18T10:45:59-05:00'
describe
'2410548' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOE' 'sip-files00012.tif'
4762e96ce0131ffc379089ca8ba83d8e
f4439b0a8687b630d172d76a817b26651394b5bd
'2011-11-18T10:53:32-05:00'
describe
'1084' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOF' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
b66ab4e6c5171429f86f5a5e5dfc4910
08a98b648558310410db5ef1731a164a71e7a8de
'2011-11-18T10:53:43-05:00'
describe
'314986' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOG' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
c382c7039168ba21c20707469afb5d70
88247d9fb6adac608358f9fd733444b91358945d
'2011-11-18T10:49:59-05:00'
describe
'99300' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOH' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
bba620e385bc26807b9f2281f4a6625e
f34c5377fa1b9adcd7ab3b503b1ff9f7693ce3d9
'2011-11-18T10:53:40-05:00'
describe
'31364' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOI' 'sip-files00013.pro'
41ad04978715d499934a36c6bae1e5d0
a44d5b0c016ff6b6d91e820bedaf45bbe9227ee3
'2011-11-18T10:45:50-05:00'
describe
'31822' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOJ' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
767565389f4f27d354e8c728ef738a4d
20c4c1ad9add5e5e4fa798dd7a8a2bcc223eb85d
'2011-11-18T10:54:43-05:00'
describe
'2537476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOK' 'sip-files00013.tif'
2d97c6f0f69791b6304b13112fa857b4
dbc3208735f0177d3817d703eb8fed1e8be0c851
'2011-11-18T10:48:47-05:00'
describe
'1315' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOL' 'sip-files00013.txt'
d892500d2ff5b100ed18056dc67ab64a
df3e6ded6cc7e0a30a313124d1e2de89757d02d6
'2011-11-18T10:47:37-05:00'
describe
'9233' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOM' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
31bf15ecf2f1309ea0242381fa127799
36e7752a7e1cfbb413ff0d439b8335ad6c068aa5
'2011-11-18T10:53:57-05:00'
describe
'319066' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYON' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
acdc8e9bddb3afa5e391f24598e80467
063fac9d5d045e38a28ca0ff5eb2ed615d78b7e9
'2011-11-18T10:54:06-05:00'
describe
'129396' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOO' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
ecad2a10da3c336e67d056fd3b326bfa
caf1af1c28f05cd5b9b22f589f473a3c394fd270
'2011-11-18T10:48:18-05:00'
describe
'41583' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOP' 'sip-files00014.pro'
07730049457214df6ecd229fa81ce5c4
ea244db08899aaebaf573f4b9eca5fb8b1e49c32
'2011-11-18T10:46:13-05:00'
describe
'40671' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOQ' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
2f52bfd10ae2f1b6f0a57045d1d1ff2c
f523f8b872fe6c61479e21e8d5e7ee0ecaa4a8fd
'2011-11-18T10:48:38-05:00'
describe
'2569008' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOR' 'sip-files00014.tif'
bdd3d73e59c98f75a3a45627766c579c
bb5a2761310eb7b63b9828e6e83af920a42548b2
'2011-11-18T10:48:53-05:00'
describe
'1632' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOS' 'sip-files00014.txt'
f0be07d858cac9edac83a5962fedf851
8280a3d0cd52724a486bce658789364c78500360
'2011-11-18T10:46:07-05:00'
describe
'10974' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOT' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
d9fe02a463f895f154863972e9fa8aa0
6f58c405434dd44590722b57614d8ef233ef9434
'2011-11-18T10:47:39-05:00'
describe
'312133' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOU' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
29851ae53a34ff0792bcb906857f091f
1db569abe7f372206d07ec0a188cf1a73dd3ac26
'2011-11-18T10:47:38-05:00'
describe
'147557' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOV' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
c1830a50c5554f396e08b619a62f810d
aaad964f583c6728b949bd7202388bf84aef6089
'2011-11-18T10:50:26-05:00'
describe
'41237' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOW' 'sip-files00015.pro'
d5b6120c0ca2255ba13feced60f411ca
4240595a8fb85215b54bc61bc54948ffd98a5763
describe
'46485' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOX' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
7d459f7f8947b25d5e9da3461f96439d
635af4dd0eb1a1f7bd1cf2886978b1fdf01cb790
'2011-11-18T10:46:01-05:00'
describe
'2513600' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOY' 'sip-files00015.tif'
aacf398df4161d80ed90b8c33caa9502
bebd1291842574fb41c2cafe1198ca41de8034a9
'2011-11-18T10:52:34-05:00'
describe
'1626' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYOZ' 'sip-files00015.txt'
32d8bc897f2741fcb39570f2f3795229
247ff785881aa3e8ee9caee542b13dad08232bb6
'2011-11-18T10:52:32-05:00'
describe
'11240' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPA' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
acd22d32511bec0082ece898b40a4153
8881a4ddd1b5b49cd4b9465d45b7ab4daa64aeda
describe
'341171' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPB' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
f6c170b0572f4c75089180d7f32b105d
64a6b42f4bb206ba5a864e02f5bb82e5c79ab148
describe
'126847' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPC' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
1a5b49e0df464e9e16e077b229768bc9
f60707550140e692a5809156382696c87dfcc875
'2011-11-18T10:47:23-05:00'
describe
'39392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPD' 'sip-files00016.pro'
4f59c964f0da61d0aabc2a86267c8687
7387422299fd1005b46cdd832eb70f5757e79303
describe
'40449' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPE' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
6691a0ad1f710d8790211744ea82c86d
cc9339e800daa5b50dfb1a20efadf263988579f3
'2011-11-18T10:49:05-05:00'
describe
'2746004' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPF' 'sip-files00016.tif'
b1925f28471a8561b82eea22d5d1c4b9
47a8069cd1d1d6052be7b15ac9b53cf5d6bffa96
'2011-11-18T10:46:27-05:00'
describe
'1586' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPG' 'sip-files00016.txt'
53e621afce680fa30674997dafd67728
b679e135e8874df3b2d4dafb9274e829e2054fb1
'2011-11-18T10:52:23-05:00'
describe
'9634' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPH' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
a960fc6d34d91ecf79760797fc7272b4
5ac12a16a04f084259403489442729829678b1a0
'2011-11-18T10:48:17-05:00'
describe
'332934' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPI' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
0c8fd243c4ba02fc301dd41240ef45d2
6db8c05c633f298c57aea4ebf6791b6de848e5e9
'2011-11-18T10:50:23-05:00'
describe
'128301' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPJ' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
9064422a6a87bcf9a6e5f0c1474f094d
258b2ca409a9ec4d75a361314b438f289b6b0212
'2011-11-18T10:50:02-05:00'
describe
'41747' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPK' 'sip-files00017.pro'
51beb83c7144c01554cb3aef6a901a7b
b83a068218445466c8ccc6d601eb779618073c58
'2011-11-18T10:53:58-05:00'
describe
'40134' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPL' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
d8db2350c7d8396ad4e4bef0b16a8873
0fe8f0a949764b7eeb7fc81fa2072a0cb79d1b61
'2011-11-18T10:47:30-05:00'
describe
'2680412' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPM' 'sip-files00017.tif'
6855bac45f8d990a59b5177123f2f9b5
327cf4e07622f6f49c62c8be05f48888f215d2af
'2011-11-18T10:51:25-05:00'
describe
'1647' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPN' 'sip-files00017.txt'
abd976b40250a587be85f55e35b97018
aa6c62e887f5ecee990bb3edb5f0cda9acb9bd42
'2011-11-18T10:54:28-05:00'
describe
'9908' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPO' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
ab4d85722599f38b7823acfffd8efe41
aea4c019d47dc109acf734d173ee12cc2b0b0311
'2011-11-18T10:51:01-05:00'
describe
'330770' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPP' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
c05fb18c2edc9bd74baeb7ef82665a55
4f92f0dad3e0275ac4a7f4172a6e74f8ed69071e
'2011-11-18T10:48:43-05:00'
describe
'127274' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPQ' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
00dd28f9419904f520acbd3412b53dd7
833e3ffe057790befe6ee4ddf687777665785919
'2011-11-18T10:52:38-05:00'
describe
'40007' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPR' 'sip-files00018.pro'
fc001c60b38d3e6e6602a1f2ccff1a43
e5325b076e22f4f29c622bb8d2db6185ef3feb2b
'2011-11-18T10:52:17-05:00'
describe
'40850' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPS' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
1d6968e83de85cbf607dbc35a8af2d15
c61c29f87bb5a72013be42f942eff4a6f9d0969a
'2011-11-18T10:51:26-05:00'
describe
'2662656' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPT' 'sip-files00018.tif'
d04b539b2fe47d2891c0976051af0553
5cf45480d785b91b527486245ba11d39701aee2a
'2011-11-18T10:47:26-05:00'
describe
'1577' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPU' 'sip-files00018.txt'
7cf667063e7b4435cbd71d442e24cece
5703b9e181c5233e1f45f183ff6d6b116dc99c62
'2011-11-18T10:51:03-05:00'
describe
'9707' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPV' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
1247fdf30e12fcd64e0e510e3b774b41
dd2725eca20f1fa501132c1baf6aa440dcb1e035
'2011-11-18T10:54:14-05:00'
describe
'318198' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPW' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
17c8b628512d42439ae260ca4a0b8966
be42ff756e040b8cf41c9804686ad2ec84be7e89
'2011-11-18T10:48:06-05:00'
describe
'129475' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPX' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
2bef6ba56601e9379b0bdbfa35fd9925
e7350a140d2aaa013330755e58d9a1426122b708
'2011-11-18T10:53:10-05:00'
describe
'41888' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPY' 'sip-files00019.pro'
9e1fb7cf324a87708a54aeda31d74833
992a45f265348502562f496da58d6b3e41102f90
'2011-11-18T10:47:24-05:00'
describe
'41319' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYPZ' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
9323a75539cc7584cf74869b077e6842
0e9ebb5156e6750757bbc85f60f661b292695049
'2011-11-18T10:49:03-05:00'
describe
'2562508' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQA' 'sip-files00019.tif'
22d2f7fb14c0c8903497cee045ffb0d4
afd8cc4f4e9a6fc59f1dbc395d1e66ae667f84be
'2011-11-18T10:54:24-05:00'
describe
'1655' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQB' 'sip-files00019.txt'
342e6935efdd68786e88368f3acf1b3f
1792a972c3f9102852822441676878fc22a2b1b4
'2011-11-18T10:45:53-05:00'
describe
'10474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQC' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
8039919e71f581648b376e4bf2610e2b
832684285605dd2c3d367a3a506207c7f93c56ec
'2011-11-18T10:49:23-05:00'
describe
'342728' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQD' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
034d50cb70f2581fabded6f516a73e46
270da7be27ad65ab60fdd35a93430ee0ccdb89ba
'2011-11-18T10:48:25-05:00'
describe
'124030' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQE' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
8d8bce56c4122f0f5aa9780a9e549fae
3b33683c65e9cc2bce2e881abc56d97e168c2db0
'2011-11-18T10:45:33-05:00'
describe
'40679' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQF' 'sip-files00020.pro'
db384d433dc5664ef10f2f7911b1e016
71b640c86dafba1d6730c604326c9e496fe23d72
'2011-11-18T10:51:05-05:00'
describe
'36952' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQG' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
ded7aa671e80fae31df945b3e520d6f5
29d3bc5011fee949c9b93966d01aba1c3c6d139d
describe
'2758188' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQH' 'sip-files00020.tif'
0178b53bbac0149a44c2b6868b3c8281
ea2c77c5db9b6e566f77e826031f7ff923abe4ea
'2011-11-18T10:51:22-05:00'
describe
'1696' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQI' 'sip-files00020.txt'
358d2b1a6e8db262bb1cab224fa8cc8b
62e0a155075cf63e530cda37f1cb5bf8ffec1e59
'2011-11-18T10:46:55-05:00'
describe
'9062' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQJ' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
7c6058396a46d8fe23aac9a81d78d95a
078a06dbfabf6d603bba1eb5a899dd21cd642db7
'2011-11-18T10:51:29-05:00'
describe
'322464' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQK' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
1c0cd3b7f08b460ad602282d5e70e457
e0106866c9faa980749ed5ea35b211bc8228d533
'2011-11-18T10:49:14-05:00'
describe
'67796' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQL' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
f76d7419c0802f1f50c880bf8ff3324f
ca612299f806be31bdaa6c604fce429641c75243
'2011-11-18T10:52:45-05:00'
describe
'2914' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQM' 'sip-files00021.pro'
51c919e408f623f3ca2cebda8c20957d
df481122cd1776b95bbf59979d7f01b2964164cd
'2011-11-18T10:48:21-05:00'
describe
'16711' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQN' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
283d444ea1cf1925f7d9eaf693d8320c
e2a91d2c4c913bda0a2eba74dd05309e5b86ed13
describe
'2596224' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQO' 'sip-files00021.tif'
86f6430c044aca4045d3082ec56c37c4
f463401a2c6b0f8c0e3d1a4938154b0b4af1d362
'2011-11-18T10:49:20-05:00'
describe
'155' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQP' 'sip-files00021.txt'
f8c7def33f3ea73d59f336aa5c11bd9b
0eb111fedbc616496a98c3bae424bdfbb4a36a09
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'4374' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQQ' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
361cc9f45e12085a20c0082630903e63
ee1a1b7aadff327616ee64c68295264a3789ce16
'2011-11-18T10:46:03-05:00'
describe
'312454' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQR' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
77320ccbf2a87b10f3f00b63cf1168f3
26518d5fc553d895ab69a77f4aeeebd5be4b674d
'2011-11-18T10:52:21-05:00'
describe
'136158' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQS' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
b30d98829682f71779409474997db922
9dd2393b22ecfa6fa3d148c0684fc153422e5f32
describe
'40971' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQT' 'sip-files00023.pro'
b5a6b306931d1aec4560223d00342382
0524b85d8b6b9bb4c41dab43409139a6a0c97748
'2011-11-18T10:47:02-05:00'
describe
'43243' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQU' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
9a7581d1737a90e4b22ce8fb9c9ecb5f
263f3a7258f3cf451a3b2ba52052ae00759ba407
'2011-11-18T10:53:08-05:00'
describe
'2517040' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQV' 'sip-files00023.tif'
b176e6bba64af61b91ecb01acba58fee
19bef2d48c236265cfe52a2a22fa5e1e50973883
'2011-11-18T10:54:26-05:00'
describe
'1690' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQW' 'sip-files00023.txt'
f85f98a57be38b0af90ef6a5475ebf83
93030ec6f598acc9cc373330316899795116f514
'2011-11-18T10:48:32-05:00'
describe
'11374' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQX' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
4a09cecedbc60f93e56a5934f731eb52
165f4414ed483f4026b74d530d573c3c9ba45e20
'2011-11-18T10:49:25-05:00'
describe
'309671' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQY' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
8fafbffac7dc561ea05e71a2f4e41f00
8c93220cc4b464a108545ebf18b7b9c064edfc9e
'2011-11-18T10:54:16-05:00'
describe
'127555' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYQZ' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
4180ab2246ef820a3969cf31b3d11f12
95c5b87d1b4841cc848221d7d2ab29fbb9121fb2
'2011-11-18T10:48:54-05:00'
describe
'38442' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRA' 'sip-files00024.pro'
acdaa2560a4c7ada7262b1fa0559611d
b8fc38dd49d0e6e58d39d891026870dd2f24180d
'2011-11-18T10:53:16-05:00'
describe
'41371' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRB' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
a7bd85cddab7ebd66d1036c0a4b68f9c
7f55f51307da889b532158b51fbed990ecb3f7cf
describe
'2493780' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRC' 'sip-files00024.tif'
340cd67780ca46d7ec1df03c0755350c
36ad86cd8042da926527e603306fa44ee58017b0
'2011-11-18T10:50:21-05:00'
describe
'1514' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRD' 'sip-files00024.txt'
d7e119dbac889f59ad4f212fa8861268
0908af5c5a11fe957a023fbeff131dd64d5a216c
'2011-11-18T10:50:24-05:00'
describe
'10265' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRE' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
a07aa3a341ce8102a8da72164a8212b3
33b0877051927af939c26e9763130884995e487b
'2011-11-18T10:48:01-05:00'
describe
'322474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRF' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
9d0455965fabe2d096151a1446be1b65
e16558632550812161c192928e33effdb866d93c
'2011-11-18T10:49:04-05:00'
describe
'125998' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRG' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
526a60b560eb6acd6419b3d0f84ae579
35372a1093a21ffedf801c748812ca2da02a76a7
'2011-11-18T10:46:43-05:00'
describe
'41505' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRH' 'sip-files00025.pro'
c65109b37db6a1db2c7dffcf417f8aa9
b069daaa582cabbf4ddf8fef0ee8a2c2b114ddcf
'2011-11-18T10:50:59-05:00'
describe
'41000' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRI' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
2bfd85cdbb6d5c84f071f4d9c531e44d
663a7ec256e0b9b1b722680951efd5c9583b4690
describe
'2596332' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRJ' 'sip-files00025.tif'
84bf052f79bf1423cd109dac71ecb1b8
9c555e58a10f0349edf96e26bfecc496b674f25f
'2011-11-18T10:47:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRK' 'sip-files00025.txt'
60e1a292da93eb54c6a726d38d81735a
d27ed677cfafad8bc2852272e7ff34acfe483688
'2011-11-18T10:52:39-05:00'
describe
'11201' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRL' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
85a9ff14d493df75ebebaf069655b615
25c439ffcc121341621c20bec840f0d8e70d722f
'2011-11-18T10:51:10-05:00'
describe
'313853' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRM' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
4fdc900e9ea2b665fbf1a129fcd3654f
7a55d2cb1d0e31d8085bc29084ce571186426131
'2011-11-18T10:54:13-05:00'
describe
'138296' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRN' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
8c660924ee393bcecafb56ef5c67dd6e
514427dc04b4223181800828301b32a6374e107a
'2011-11-18T10:49:41-05:00'
describe
'40360' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRO' 'sip-files00026.pro'
23b6c56b6416d0e381ebc89ad3adc729
9ac333c2d7a8c0b81705bd38b24a10231d91f1fe
describe
'44922' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRP' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
584e3a9efc13450811a2c1f4657e7b92
b7ee46fc2282473302c8cd4cffea4963196ec5e9
'2011-11-18T10:54:19-05:00'
describe
'2527136' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRQ' 'sip-files00026.tif'
3d251bfb6c73fa176d9f155853630ffe
7ac6f4b84c4457cf3bd45ba3acbedc0b876ec27a
'2011-11-18T10:47:18-05:00'
describe
'1645' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRR' 'sip-files00026.txt'
42298e2013e46de3244e6642ec82cac2
6f806e3ad80f1e09dddb4f766b3af391f2a84cd9
'2011-11-18T10:53:34-05:00'
describe
'10839' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRS' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
600196a52e086c95a15c72e7d6d94500
141226833113ccb9627a91cec3983cbe756b54d4
'2011-11-18T10:47:11-05:00'
describe
'312253' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRT' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
be30158146547f0f43fa1a1d12fce555
0b1335c04e652edf9c4fbf1d4070ce202d23f67a
'2011-11-18T10:49:07-05:00'
describe
'133133' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRU' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
b285d53042a7ea71fbcccdd8a013ff54
90db4489ccbee9fde0b6e1907cca2189be77e43c
'2011-11-18T10:46:41-05:00'
describe
'40523' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRV' 'sip-files00027.pro'
643a8c6f37becaea0bed482109985016
a986c2f143cd50a77a1d8e399c6dd275105f223c
'2011-11-18T10:46:40-05:00'
describe
'42354' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRW' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
7bab48fcc94f9ca5e4047d8677f013c7
c20ae54504d3d9ca490dbdd100ed781441aa660c
'2011-11-18T10:47:35-05:00'
describe
'2514936' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRX' 'sip-files00027.tif'
fc503dd8d90751f44da9b66e3b230b62
62b8be5b77fba5c833a8d141b13c5ed074ce4403
'2011-11-18T10:48:08-05:00'
describe
'1656' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRY' 'sip-files00027.txt'
417d24e71bc8df7a78ec2e6054c09686
24c6c95aebaeedc345acb7f9eebf867a69e6326f
'2011-11-18T10:54:33-05:00'
describe
'11358' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYRZ' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
1ac04fef9cb2a180d8d1885534b68133
7d4e4596d386f9b31fa38dd180bc3c05640891f7
'2011-11-18T10:48:23-05:00'
describe
'311436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSA' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
4ed5f4ac5f4a0f533142aa5d5dc32ff6
562ccf85d243ae77433fb1887edb8c164dabd9ba
'2011-11-18T10:52:09-05:00'
describe
'135641' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSB' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
bd4e6ae3d7e011add45966b6e88d5b25
8477cfe9f367d26f773fbce54dfb7e5077c401ce
'2011-11-18T10:45:40-05:00'
describe
'40748' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSC' 'sip-files00028.pro'
3b155b3288fb31c85684ddae20e9cd93
82663bc5826c8f97fb2d08b3f0313a8372400529
describe
'43383' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSD' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
7a42a88f137d11c4507a75f7d5cbbc15
f27a6d066924454917533e45e8898d79ff99dead
'2011-11-18T10:53:55-05:00'
describe
'2507988' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSE' 'sip-files00028.tif'
e31fed211779371cdfa117f0fd494773
d291a0336e17ba9e371146070a71cbbcf41918ca
'2011-11-18T10:48:22-05:00'
describe
'1636' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSF' 'sip-files00028.txt'
a0160212a9ce052d17aca53f4185d19c
24be49a9d5d2f7e264fe0b726120b5a3c22657d9
describe
'11031' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSG' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
9b18685cc627cba2ffe5ae985753803c
bbd52612b9dae8e3902837b7953a6c0803a7a40a
'2011-11-18T10:48:14-05:00'
describe
'311135' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSH' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
5ece84c602bf8cc333cd42ebc0ea6cb2
416a0bcc137d7c59d9ec5c4ebf15692e441903b3
'2011-11-18T10:51:49-05:00'
describe
'127651' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSI' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
76190f95afeb4450331d84ffbb9dfd69
2fda856fb9599a75af1ccdbb30c0867d61855993
'2011-11-18T10:46:04-05:00'
describe
'39032' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSJ' 'sip-files00029.pro'
9000a2d965958ac8935527f7f164a944
b5c2ea16a8497ead5f7ed999378244acd7291eaa
'2011-11-18T10:54:55-05:00'
describe
'40907' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSK' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
4af021178d2534a898b5af687cfc5a83
1c9a70f7ca745ed1007253691dbd72954510cde9
'2011-11-18T10:51:23-05:00'
describe
'2505424' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSL' 'sip-files00029.tif'
a5a8400ad88799616c1918e4ffbcf310
fe7f06543b48417e154442f42429956a3720608d
'2011-11-18T10:52:41-05:00'
describe
'1606' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSM' 'sip-files00029.txt'
5305468f192ee3b242b4abc55bcd2fa2
702c9618f78824b82edc0d07fbaf0125ed524aa2
'2011-11-18T10:52:05-05:00'
describe
'11475' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSN' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
aa8ccca9ce86c8c4227436e8e57b3b4f
d0c198ed36110d177e6a64c1045b274ecafe852c
'2011-11-18T10:47:47-05:00'
describe
'318037' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSO' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
8f09d9418f5a55d6cf8c731691c8d12d
6f050f41cf7d7ba23b948211b55faddb95369dac
describe
'53652' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSP' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
56470b733d99b38823c8def7ee5f7025
a92447b9da813cc45f39b10d61c5960c99718a9b
'2011-11-18T10:48:12-05:00'
describe
'14985' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSQ' 'sip-files00030.pro'
478df7216639f9f225ed6cf18dbf12cb
68fc6db93a81f012012782a2543a94a83cc1beb1
'2011-11-18T10:51:27-05:00'
describe
'16970' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSR' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
d9f84732c4a4f2a7df96cf397cbe5451
ec5430e5560db0140af5d2e4838151f4251f9750
'2011-11-18T10:54:21-05:00'
describe
'2560860' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSS' 'sip-files00030.tif'
26c5bbabf91fd3b2dc5c30241d69122f
6f1bc2fe284fc9f81fdcdcf36781ed9ac5ac36a9
describe
'624' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYST' 'sip-files00030.txt'
01057dc758684a3c040484b7904725bf
f367862920e1f874d534a31c02e4fed833546d22
describe
'4862' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSU' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
3c0a0c4d1c911cc9c7db5958075a91da
0041ac7a866a392511998142f69b2a2fe12fd060
'2011-11-18T10:47:21-05:00'
describe
'312844' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSV' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
72bf180feb0f63953190b0de0511cce4
77342e0a4bd264197e257fddb279d65189e5f157
'2011-11-18T10:49:13-05:00'
describe
'106345' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSW' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
08b093283f58e0c7a855853f1267e71b
d11cb66b2b61a131674436b0ee086f5651f59536
'2011-11-18T10:49:55-05:00'
describe
'31886' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSX' 'sip-files00031.pro'
ebaa0d8add5ea03402e57f18a94b8c05
bc8250edfe460c080ac46855c02fd1e42d5318a3
'2011-11-18T10:53:53-05:00'
describe
'34117' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSY' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
7cabe6cb76f4a2dd28a7a975a52af009
6b3e432da8c1accf747f5547640e3d90bc812339
'2011-11-18T10:49:58-05:00'
describe
'2519804' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYSZ' 'sip-files00031.tif'
320e37d7aa2d62280b660f950a2a0b7d
0312a88b10bd27bfeea6b88b38b327f165bbf6d6
describe
'1338' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTA' 'sip-files00031.txt'
232150434ea628f20a0144fedd4f7ebe
cdae152b8996ead8e438b22382fe9c443faadec1
'2011-11-18T10:51:45-05:00'
describe
'8590' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTB' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
8f9de812567301d6904f162f5a9fd412
3e3a9c29854dcf60f24736cd4135ecd6e4ea1db5
'2011-11-18T10:53:39-05:00'
describe
'320837' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTC' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
b2acaa2cf02ecf7d314348099a624e9d
fbfbea2ef98e532b2cf90d80796caa3c0f5b7dd5
'2011-11-18T10:46:14-05:00'
describe
'121627' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTD' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
d5c60b582d3dbaf34d7d276e82170581
539baaa0e638a2de1b4a8282dee1dc7db73f50b8
describe
'39322' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTE' 'sip-files00032.pro'
3ce9db37ad42967b0d3d5d80de171289
ef1e6426e263c33845e925a7e16e4dc1369181eb
'2011-11-18T10:46:28-05:00'
describe
'38559' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTF' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
004c293743fc92d401f4db161a42d05e
fac8722bf6adb0f465f07dba5a69418a5776fb2a
'2011-11-18T10:53:33-05:00'
describe
'2583720' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTG' 'sip-files00032.tif'
5bb8410920a996c9db123a108302be71
ba75c0cd008723f539ed00f8c9a06dc7219f78f7
'2011-11-18T10:47:16-05:00'
describe
'1549' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTH' 'sip-files00032.txt'
162b4c3913e76c9957d53513b604c66f
eafc0a9533f023c260bba8a61c5d6cf56406a5aa
describe
'10961' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTI' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
bd3ba23e984b9c2a8fc0d1c103999fce
99a7e0e1e1134306a4afdb2e584f47d38e08f5c7
'2011-11-18T10:50:50-05:00'
describe
'317532' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTJ' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
5f726cb1cec731f79c34f99d03985b39
b80adb41156b50071649fa61aa2044db7c971498
'2011-11-18T10:49:09-05:00'
describe
'126833' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTK' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
fa80410f12552b1c389e9f6d4e2ee87a
0ebe39a64c5632f9d2863ab3773b5a851789dee8
'2011-11-18T10:53:36-05:00'
describe
'41042' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTL' 'sip-files00033.pro'
43c93e3fba7c54f5d28a21a70878ed16
0156ed94d020b5feb947bda5cbf89486c516c1da
describe
'39940' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTM' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
99690ca59f8c7f87188dd2c3c90d716b
1dca1d68b36a79e0ef4c8609d54e1206c0ae6603
'2011-11-18T10:50:19-05:00'
describe
'2556708' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTN' 'sip-files00033.tif'
1d749c23c845ecce847602793c872701
c0298e28de078a8a1eb6f985d3ee33b1c6f54f96
'2011-11-18T10:47:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTO' 'sip-files00033.txt'
52fed6f330c908457a019d3472417943
10571e1a9a5c40347d0e7fd097585e3812acca73
'2011-11-18T10:51:42-05:00'
describe
'10790' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTP' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
d95877428af18618038decda94a960d4
342890c09f17564de21086e22362f02a26f22607
'2011-11-18T10:45:44-05:00'
describe
'331669' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTQ' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
62cb3d0018cc29552856367a1edb773f
23e40c39aa084e0a3ca76867a5aee9f0326d1539
'2011-11-18T10:48:33-05:00'
describe
'127865' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTR' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
3064385f78e2c9d77dafa0b082ce5505
3d0b8fa5a4c37005b5a62cb3e33517750ddb74e3
'2011-11-18T10:53:21-05:00'
describe
'40098' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTS' 'sip-files00034.pro'
e9c461a88d2543160776e5f50c70fc81
c90c6dfbe25b5f9dc9151b7c6165f66fa5035e12
describe
'40176' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTT' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
036e95970f1c25dc341d006321de7187
58b85dbfbb0ad1c9885c11b5e9b7834b83d9309c
'2011-11-18T10:46:37-05:00'
describe
'2669904' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTU' 'sip-files00034.tif'
a0c1ebfc269c63bab0f76f7ef6a046d6
ceeac209492b906150a5aa550c21525375f6f21e
'2011-11-18T10:47:41-05:00'
describe
'1630' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTV' 'sip-files00034.txt'
f587ab144dd20b095d7b34b8388c516e
4ff3d0c56c0df45e5a48d33edb0e5f6903ace5fa
'2011-11-18T10:49:39-05:00'
describe
'10206' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTW' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
629f538877a99c96a69d3417e23599b1
651384902c5ef8a94b9186800326702b9a67c78f
'2011-11-18T10:47:06-05:00'
describe
'312831' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTX' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
655a4edea1953d2ebaf0d1e26eb7bad8
56177bc1a4ffd636e7fd32488592b637d861ee78
describe
'135782' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTY' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
1ce5af282b0359e76efbd92a30221666
1491687ecde997033edcdeefae95081cbcf838cd
'2011-11-18T10:47:44-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYTZ' 'sip-files00035.pro'
d64b7c0e9cf0b2baf88da45162557c3e
a61799e0c3bf954e019a740a705adab0f43a05be
describe
'42625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUA' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
6abef3c3e8e7f94327ca00196a21cb17
b4af0c717bd9ccfbcfd3cb30af08bbc3e09fb057
'2011-11-18T10:50:33-05:00'
describe
'2519000' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUB' 'sip-files00035.tif'
fbba2a734e673c0b780d989908c1841e
9dc55b3ee7a2834f8f34c4e88b25f48a704a7d00
'2011-11-18T10:49:31-05:00'
describe
'1638' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUC' 'sip-files00035.txt'
069f5b2601aaf9618231b295bf8fdbf3
cf18c66424d50632856d65d7db67e92de1a2cf89
describe
'10624' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUD' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
d0d9e9ce2cb93ac0197d2133bf9ec2cd
8a3d05d4f1b919da1c5de8f07cab2fc4b8c75ca3
describe
'328798' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUE' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
63912ad852392c90b9dc6168d1034abb
63d2a6b0649e408084cf3869ec9c32a6e7b02e48
'2011-11-18T10:54:46-05:00'
describe
'124866' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUF' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
c000ee2606e39eadd503ddb54e9868c9
39e6fcfb849ad46a88c2b4a4d7006f9f86c45f2b
describe
'41317' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUG' 'sip-files00036.pro'
3775951916c99fe66374b7198ef0267b
d843966b44c94d7403582e1e8d193e72011bddc6
'2011-11-18T10:46:31-05:00'
describe
'40365' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUH' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
bc87956de1d45542bfb8367e800a4b8e
ce55fa7d3e1dd4b8907ed4e40d8a95d759028301
'2011-11-18T10:52:44-05:00'
describe
'2646780' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUI' 'sip-files00036.tif'
e52973eb13e89f2ef7228e46a5e51251
00bed176350145db7d3787695cde7a6f33685862
describe
'1622' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUJ' 'sip-files00036.txt'
5964d40b2cd685700e4ea73ab1cde2c6
7a2e595672b36bdab4723eb7ff84e2e82c6a2c5e
'2011-11-18T10:46:50-05:00'
describe
'10438' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUK' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
5e92324ba926a68fc0f277fea727d586
fc5bd8bf1e89c2f6840a52a5cd7380fdb03e0b9f
'2011-11-18T10:50:06-05:00'
describe
'311804' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUL' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
f39d4c959fb55e742b24ab2b4189ec52
35c02b9122cb39e93ddc3fe60848fbe2e3f5d64d
'2011-11-18T10:54:37-05:00'
describe
'135908' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUM' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
24234a0efd98999a23006b9870f80836
a2c777b1bc8f9c60c6680b86675fcbe40e6585fb
'2011-11-18T10:50:04-05:00'
describe
'39858' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUN' 'sip-files00037.pro'
7f43bed34d7e73b0a922d2d9fe5234cf
e9768d22bdda9bff2081316ab24030adf244c417
'2011-11-18T10:54:50-05:00'
describe
'42492' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUO' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
924df4e3f8b9978e9d5e2c956cdc6e04
d39f3293ccb26b116f1083be61c44dbf53e76706
'2011-11-18T10:51:07-05:00'
describe
'2510864' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUP' 'sip-files00037.tif'
a2aa7cc03121d2e12758b289caa3caf1
0c6422333fc7a70f832d887890bed133b2866f25
'2011-11-18T10:50:49-05:00'
describe
'1679' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUQ' 'sip-files00037.txt'
ea81e2b9c8d1dcb15f90e6a6cc750225
1e0db5bc2b043edd076c4bf6678b582f0754d458
describe
'10989' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUR' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
9c2092ddcaca9c9bff9813ed78d0f220
adc245396ce45e939acebe88394cb856a1f74869
'2011-11-18T10:46:48-05:00'
describe
'323754' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUS' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
fab183426a70edb9a1086d9b67a4ca7b
31b342e597b418f1921d27ea6df8a1fd00ea4cf1
'2011-11-18T10:47:03-05:00'
describe
'129374' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUT' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
28dcac15739c79ec01fe0c8a18fdd040
0e58cdce448720e79eca49460f3837c4d35aa9d3
'2011-11-18T10:52:42-05:00'
describe
'39925' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUU' 'sip-files00038.pro'
e2d2ffdda2b35a06403ec2af87208652
f376dd6d738d98515165063385b5b16cbea6d154
describe
'40571' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUV' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
b6551a0ae56b86d9defe90077b3a7054
04cbdb76b07e7c25fb7fc6bf9f24b1c99403d608
'2011-11-18T10:48:24-05:00'
describe
'2606600' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUW' 'sip-files00038.tif'
867c57babf9cf4d7e127b0edd507975e
106d52539eb484c9281ca2423933abceef520562
'2011-11-18T10:46:05-05:00'
describe
'1584' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUX' 'sip-files00038.txt'
5a08dfc3603bc956a6feb28116bf64e4
0e0be66bec74edb137f59ce06706f63306133110
'2011-11-18T10:48:26-05:00'
describe
'10077' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUY' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
784cdaccad21c3739dbd1bb7b7c3eebf
f547471c85f62cc9202d74f7cb750b2660093cc0
'2011-11-18T10:50:18-05:00'
describe
'315272' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYUZ' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
719747278f6e8a2e6d5328d7ce06d07f
dd792eba573661a64dbd3b24bd9354c3f1958698
'2011-11-18T10:53:35-05:00'
describe
'122810' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVA' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
1a08057c0798acc7f623f9843a6cb317
18eec1f176f9b58e22a988bc7a67fbc28db1f049
describe
'38115' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVB' 'sip-files00039.pro'
2108cc200a85a31f495c2b0b51e5d074
1b50230485b6821c928bb14851bb3c6ca89bb6b7
'2011-11-18T10:50:47-05:00'
describe
'39488' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVC' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
f34b2f1de2fa943867af197f5d7ea399
45873b0da856fa133296cc40d8b0deb4a6b134d6
'2011-11-18T10:47:01-05:00'
describe
'2538480' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVD' 'sip-files00039.tif'
32d655865c94292a3cb430106c83561e
6abe8ccf07ed1242b07a029859298685f783e64e
'2011-11-18T10:52:06-05:00'
describe
'1519' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVE' 'sip-files00039.txt'
cfbc4e0035d74831297f4a384e08c726
ea817142f55ae236244186efd4d2b6107572fc6a
describe
'10476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVF' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
bc5b9c8fb6c842bdc36f576f57944499
3e0767914bda470036cd45e477a20abb9726057a
'2011-11-18T10:52:00-05:00'
describe
'320977' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVG' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
db9a0485ce93b17e10ad68e9c87ed9b5
1424be49c1e25bff6764e2e6429b2aa0e9150e01
'2011-11-18T10:52:46-05:00'
describe
'126753' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVH' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
383d3757ab947e6c5ff813d69b076e5e
a978c8dae01acbb5ef36dca4c17381dfdbac1a0b
'2011-11-18T10:45:43-05:00'
describe
'40670' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVI' 'sip-files00040.pro'
6f8e32621d56fa3b9e3f7131fbc36ce8
4d611aa192bbd64926f50c4d95ea96288772bfbe
'2011-11-18T10:49:08-05:00'
describe
'40978' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVJ' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
78b221a1ca2346f71f4f292b28d9cf4f
6a58cc7790853883f53318b2f0311fcc125369f3
describe
'2584284' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVK' 'sip-files00040.tif'
979abdcec6845dd9455bc3dad240626f
1468316c47379fa402fc755690bf7d07656387cb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVL' 'sip-files00040.txt'
165ed1e2e14bf4c5ad43b8ff1befe323
129939d1d2cc9e83c6a4d44e265f1f1b3278d3fa
'2011-11-18T10:46:34-05:00'
describe
'10511' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVM' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
5b8caf7816363d0b5f80733e40867ed0
03335bc67162c27f20a3d0cb00b00823bfb1387e
describe
'318298' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVN' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
de40b688d805d091a371a4b9655e1e0e
a8a6c982bf01dc2ba83dbc5c5ffb781a0018585e
'2011-11-18T10:54:35-05:00'
describe
'101052' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVO' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
0baf691db6be5e756bb21cf7aeef4fe4
dca829ecea8b59d2b43ae437cbacf92005cfd5e2
'2011-11-18T10:54:20-05:00'
describe
'30122' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVP' 'sip-files00041.pro'
5d29f4d1d28f0934bd8d37457a2a5ac8
d3627c5614c6270a983c81efb62b15cd2f73725a
'2011-11-18T10:51:14-05:00'
describe
'32248' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVQ' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
dbf37866eeed941d2ddced4fa182c01d
04f3800514a0848b097d1837bb753c2e864d7c3b
'2011-11-18T10:51:57-05:00'
describe
'2562800' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVR' 'sip-files00041.tif'
63340bac3541b68c452012f373d623d5
005e872139139ed36d8cb626d4b06b0ba631f361
'2011-11-18T10:48:30-05:00'
describe
'1285' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVS' 'sip-files00041.txt'
409a0eb21c1cba06cace679efb2ba137
c87bb9ef5d6f51aaaf0bef8758612f47cad5643d
'2011-11-18T10:45:47-05:00'
describe
'8576' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVT' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
d38dde7404d6365321b7f94191039080
78a684ebc5bb5b116635e7ff4f0a2269ba8cd297
describe
'313583' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVU' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
387401daec31caead42d38c3ad8db869
4e1e316697c4c0fb0746af5dfcf39bc975303e6b
describe
'132453' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVV' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
2f5cc52bbc1bfb8b2e8aa73fba15d598
5f67c088db33e2ce4b98f722b12dc39a33cc684b
'2011-11-18T10:50:12-05:00'
describe
'41876' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVW' 'sip-files00042.pro'
f19a8325d75d997ce43458198c08c7b6
f3dc06283051b236b6aa23dc27415d8d59f6c29e
'2011-11-18T10:49:34-05:00'
describe
'41732' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVX' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
be689bab61d946798c60df19fb778a61
45e838b44b4478377133e216b88fc8007d9c07fa
'2011-11-18T10:47:25-05:00'
describe
'2525112' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVY' 'sip-files00042.tif'
115fd14f59516f9a8e4d83eae87f9d2b
a7e307fdb1a0c44fc88a803a35a90661d454657d
'2011-11-18T10:52:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYVZ' 'sip-files00042.txt'
5706ab4c1ff9f3992214fcb41fec26bf
bd2bd9c2cbcd5c9c2aa946571b88769bc945f728
'2011-11-18T10:50:30-05:00'
describe
'10893' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWA' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
21dc9c2e45d2ab7ba9f19cfe08dab137
d866dd117a48eae3984e68226509fcd02a603ba6
'2011-11-18T10:52:59-05:00'
describe
'303189' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWB' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
d0eae3636e4aaba1f678e30dd8115004
a60395ee22279d494d7654be41d006ff9aa1fe90
'2011-11-18T10:48:39-05:00'
describe
'130974' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWC' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
6d97d12f8398975c1926663e00608522
91557e9078a13a160c97ba31c834ce86ead16ea5
'2011-11-18T10:46:59-05:00'
describe
'41716' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWD' 'sip-files00043.pro'
0f9ce4944a8c5cbf252fc7b0ac28c695
6e1919abd93330c8c43441e6b2a2bee4d8dab8b6
'2011-11-18T10:50:07-05:00'
describe
'42392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWE' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
3ccfaa8cb2cabedd443319c44a707060
f29eed805374a43363cc2e8615e392e529f4fb1f
'2011-11-18T10:45:39-05:00'
describe
'2442876' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWF' 'sip-files00043.tif'
b652985acae17548b4ed6dba94c100a1
a729456a38fd1ed21189ffe7eddcfd0f6f7f04fe
describe
'1661' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWG' 'sip-files00043.txt'
62fb710646767a777bc743fef35db490
f42793ab8e44274dcac4ac9b6a08d0a7faa6de8a
'2011-11-18T10:46:02-05:00'
describe
'11330' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWH' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
e49d89163322da2357174cca3b3d7588
10e434c00fb6c7a5f9f525639040e48b8e3aeb8a
'2011-11-18T10:46:39-05:00'
describe
'322833' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWI' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
4a210a3408e7c295dbc10901b54900e5
bf520fe2b13dce345edc7b765142423664b283f2
describe
'126360' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWJ' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
4f7f31ba93e9d466adb7b8f040a64d44
96e9259ecf5ba0f3dc418b8bc99eaaa57c664e49
describe
'40723' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWK' 'sip-files00044.pro'
962d96ee08b6f9fe892fad4e2dac4765
14b34ad99f5fba125369340d3a924addc8fb066d
describe
'40207' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWL' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
7560fe96d1ed342d8609c2d13b5c7aa2
82f67b3e68731e371ff319ec0810a1fc9b1c1c97
'2011-11-18T10:46:06-05:00'
describe
'2599256' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWM' 'sip-files00044.tif'
724819e0f556ad0349e15a4efdfcf251
9063753038487e7b41f57ebab9beffc195d41aa3
describe
'1603' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWN' 'sip-files00044.txt'
2cec4dc7189ff32b5c3c27e62bbc978c
83fb52cd89f9c921cb5fcc4c2629317432792225
'2011-11-18T10:52:53-05:00'
describe
'10287' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWO' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
7de19f6658dfe03a01c2e3f3601b7884
4c8915a285a83e797db270803b82e255a168734b
'2011-11-18T10:52:52-05:00'
describe
'305281' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWP' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
0d472d2d04b1e9a8bde90ec1fd9472c7
257091bfe98a9133ae12992ba168a84e33f912ef
'2011-11-18T10:46:30-05:00'
describe
'131773' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWQ' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
d922ff7c9bd65835368cfa3e025abc13
b81f9f40a775225216517db80861c5a6e28eaed6
describe
'42081' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWR' 'sip-files00045.pro'
1d1634b74a1176b8475f205ee6bc8ae7
04a78c535676f4855b272c12c7749df3a3057db6
'2011-11-18T10:55:02-05:00'
describe
'41916' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWS' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
a3a420df5c0c65b28c5b19fa7744275f
685fa4a20c265da8460cd15d8d4709a523b3acba
'2011-11-18T10:51:28-05:00'
describe
'2459192' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWT' 'sip-files00045.tif'
2d1ab59675909fc52ed9a306edfe939c
2c6b3ffc8d2cb8ecddc9897fec5e0b483c8a6160
'2011-11-18T10:53:24-05:00'
describe
'1695' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWU' 'sip-files00045.txt'
434661a88cab8e9e043c4a2c6037e5c3
a004a2159b4654e563c03aad56f36c9968fd7220
'2011-11-18T10:51:11-05:00'
describe
'11232' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWV' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
de40bb43145b7aee6369b18dddec2834
382c6e4a73c2ad4e16a3d5652b0508addd8406cf
'2011-11-18T10:54:58-05:00'
describe
'313590' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWW' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
9ac855cf9e21eb87f4649a1d8908bb01
87d2d0267257058f95e0622ab39059d18ed032e7
'2011-11-18T10:52:11-05:00'
describe
'129703' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWX' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
f6da456ea36d8c0ff0f2956820b9ff46
c8648b858f1023aef62fd1e5a7c8494beed76520
'2011-11-18T10:48:44-05:00'
describe
'40152' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWY' 'sip-files00046.pro'
32cf84dec45ea47444aebe4f72bce4d3
4d4d8e234d3286136b0d403e1de2505612187042
'2011-11-18T10:51:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYWZ' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
2b62daaf1ca09cfa982fc6602f2df82c
61f919f6875290b1f964818a8c9671491b503bb9
'2011-11-18T10:52:12-05:00'
describe
'2525108' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXA' 'sip-files00046.tif'
75742d0df27c700ed1de3451547272a5
32a580bf1cf9b9d9da12ce9a2df7f7bde886a7f2
'2011-11-18T10:48:27-05:00'
describe
'1580' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXB' 'sip-files00046.txt'
f8246f8d4584d3f180474881f7f40bd1
e806170da34072b50a4c4911273ab7b593ece21a
'2011-11-18T10:52:19-05:00'
describe
'10486' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXC' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
ce234496c19ede989f57f91a762f6586
216b87dde44d4812297d03df19d15272c722bd7e
'2011-11-18T10:49:21-05:00'
describe
'303174' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXD' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
32479f2ab05c7129cb56161d9ace26ed
570241d2ce9ccf0ac66323748c9ffd3a9ad7d6d2
'2011-11-18T10:49:02-05:00'
describe
'127588' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXE' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
886aa15c634f3f36760c4b6145634902
22982af7e70df9daf0df48a732ef1bf645ad26ea
'2011-11-18T10:51:56-05:00'
describe
'41062' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXF' 'sip-files00047.pro'
569526c95d5b96ac8faf859a334c8599
3caf7798501e8675dfc4bd833c030cd3eca32aef
'2011-11-18T10:48:57-05:00'
describe
'40471' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXG' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
389ff9e49a3258eddfef326825ad9335
31b6a2b43ac39f35bfe9fa7bdaf7898fda49fab3
'2011-11-18T10:49:52-05:00'
describe
'2442664' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXH' 'sip-files00047.tif'
a49a294b89a15475b2bb80e6243ea4da
7213d62de32b25d3eeaf4bcd2a9af941ac6085a8
describe
'1633' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXI' 'sip-files00047.txt'
072eb69abeeacbb5ed4b2f0aa9572f4e
50ebd801292e582a696e2b00a9e458cad2c4d173
describe
'11282' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXJ' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
e6ad376c4a6195375c5919941594c7ba
36da29a72728cb9caf74ffecdf335b8f4af9a570
'2011-11-18T10:48:50-05:00'
describe
'312211' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXK' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
d4305a930ed4c5578f0bb23b5c8ddc09
9611895bbdd3639c5e2c57d98292bc70e9a59abd
'2011-11-18T10:51:36-05:00'
describe
'88832' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXL' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
2cdfa561df5393ea0494d50565375fef
ca5ac1018018e14e569868cbb815b4608ec15c5d
'2011-11-18T10:46:53-05:00'
describe
'26433' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXM' 'sip-files00048.pro'
58d9f946aa1e1b194959ad615bbf529a
75008a69c30a03caf0d672340b96bb111f097682
'2011-11-18T10:52:49-05:00'
describe
'28005' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXN' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
584e77c6dc7f0f572dd94d45a4398b74
b6c38a9f5599b41a5338dfeb5b83efef3320ad29
'2011-11-18T10:52:54-05:00'
describe
'2515352' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXO' 'sip-files00048.tif'
0674f9c67578d751652e902d54ba306e
1d96990ee2abde4d1efd129bbf50ebd1f34b0500
'2011-11-18T10:52:13-05:00'
describe
'1040' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXP' 'sip-files00048.txt'
c6aa6c97b0cabffc67fa5cb01940c9e1
7d65ea0998979d8ed57f79b6fe20b9fd3ce6664b
describe
'7128' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXQ' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
283cfc7432b5bdbc262fabde111a8f4d
72eac357edf41c7e52b7d96ba558a751fea79546
describe
'308136' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXR' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
4e44e33aaf4039e792381cffea6b363f
7ecafa54a2a31df135f128873f6cad259134486a
'2011-11-18T10:53:27-05:00'
describe
'105634' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXS' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
fdfd0cc63b0bdb8cdca6eea69445d17d
66d8a2abe58d7fa0286700dc8d1ffa77e5c391d1
'2011-11-18T10:53:52-05:00'
describe
'32448' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXT' 'sip-files00049.pro'
90ae615f3a27773b43a701da52c5cdc9
332fd415313ba2377901bce1add5ac127cde9628
describe
'33248' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXU' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
0ec5ab3c767f6bf996de086191082da1
fd24a7fd16f61e393a14cfdd31beac43acd1dc90
'2011-11-18T10:48:02-05:00'
describe
'2481680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXV' 'sip-files00049.tif'
5db78f73c0bed4c2b6b69e8cb7ac9b43
8e0da67cb85faffbae419e6e5dabe64d5fd48e64
'2011-11-18T10:51:24-05:00'
describe
'1340' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXW' 'sip-files00049.txt'
bb6b7e523786e424c8e3828dddf4577c
ba11a7cb4556b874592cd34999ac5f7e5b232b5a
'2011-11-18T10:46:29-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'9060' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXX' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
08152dbceeadf7d1260f79acade9a175
46ed3680b6e9cdbbbda3af2d9837a8241ab7e5be
'2011-11-18T10:45:48-05:00'
describe
'312980' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXY' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
a225bb22e8bcc90bba99723415b9e868
be421307fef1cf6985d8069981e2e9b314100a6c
describe
'122187' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYXZ' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
08bfe466497ad9fb3035401df496a9e4
e1feedc79f83d85aeb5ace080a92aeecfbe60b6b
'2011-11-18T10:46:15-05:00'
describe
'39005' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYA' 'sip-files00050.pro'
bfed269b3db77aa6ccd85e63f5844c3a
85c8accb2e654edad6d0677c5e3d2d8aff09e117
'2011-11-18T10:46:57-05:00'
describe
'39232' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYB' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
4b9bb5ecd0b25d4b4f140dd0f181ba11
9ef133fa3251fd95a1ddc96e463c85f963159a95
describe
'2520260' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYC' 'sip-files00050.tif'
3b696b62c3bad32ace1a11bb70472b11
8fd43750b19eb3360b761d4088066817342e91d9
'2011-11-18T10:50:37-05:00'
describe
'1572' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYD' 'sip-files00050.txt'
bbf357416a71f2ccd9e96a3bb761c1b5
5d58fe721b8a76b0a6984430005d97191d9e26f7
'2011-11-18T10:47:45-05:00'
describe
'10135' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYE' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
8d25c9854f78e154192f37c1ab423c38
8f8864789b86f3622f08c3af361db95be531ef10
'2011-11-18T10:48:59-05:00'
describe
'308917' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYF' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
6f5de8c4fad13ad6084ab8a6ee173784
60d1ccf489762d2d010548ef0fc3e7a9748c6b9c
describe
'102225' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYG' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
7dc31bb47598a87f32cebbdeaec219e2
3a8408e3d350adf35a26590901569e84a73da417
describe
'1931' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYH' 'sip-files00051.pro'
8e574c1e25583410bd1c9c1fcd3d9e42
3dae1e8db5ec21164e05de70002f9c7fa8efad59
describe
'24612' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYI' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
af21c74a142bcac84ab0c8f08c9fe08d
7a108cca43647bdf0ac2498b5e7c961dcfc27f3a
describe
'2487788' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYJ' 'sip-files00051.tif'
234d62ae00d0c4e55224e9ff02b7b6d2
4ba9329831c2c9d459450853db5d8b40d63ab875
'2011-11-18T10:50:11-05:00'
describe
'115' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYK' 'sip-files00051.txt'
757852a846b94231a98a5cbae277f3a1
7948befa3b369233a568f5eeac85cb8c62917bdc
'2011-11-18T10:49:32-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'7429' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYL' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
345530f75a72a154b3bbc86633a3f586
01e508e23032bdd7d225f4133d0709fb9fdfec4a
describe
'306586' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYM' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
b003dc059e380e18c8cb0a1ccbba978c
446e41d2d087e7b11258fd75a1c31cd4d79abef4
'2011-11-18T10:45:45-05:00'
describe
'134055' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYN' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
a3e9899e183a3c1079fa12b030ce0fdf
2064a65e3d55c2a008b69d71f11a1a5e78bcddad
describe
'40066' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYO' 'sip-files00053.pro'
6e49ddcc3bbfb2200bac9f09762603f4
188ee8223e8b8d9ac0d313360f40772b230f2a88
describe
'42546' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYP' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
bf719ee245f9ea17ea3859c44e30ece6
c8157e1ba4ecb872c662963c41466d1644ede538
describe
'2469520' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYQ' 'sip-files00053.tif'
f589217d0393bac8846606485e411175
a83cd83696d95d852614d0f112ef3891f76875b0
'2011-11-18T10:50:39-05:00'
describe
'1653' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYR' 'sip-files00053.txt'
e51a5c9bcabc74385b9a24b5c6f070bc
a55be5a9875d247dfbd5c73ea0444b8dd3a4811a
describe
'11410' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYS' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
74748ca1ae14d877cad8a6facd3a2ecf
1d9326b6e2f61cf8511dd174a8e47ae9d1615e33
describe
'314583' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYT' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
e2c38dbb0320a8cae01dde16b215c409
676d29df87601708237d7de784ef8683a8aeafdd
'2011-11-18T10:46:20-05:00'
describe
'132941' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYU' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
84afd12408c216823ec4647149b07d26
0422dd94e817a907a62d96accd66bd0dc87b1b4d
'2011-11-18T10:53:02-05:00'
describe
'41424' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYV' 'sip-files00054.pro'
3dcab7a271191e0dc0c66c876609acc4
0656b5df9a35774442d10e56b0d7738a4aed2dd4
'2011-11-18T10:48:46-05:00'
describe
'42526' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYW' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
ebc87dd9ac6af9816522b8b9ec24b734
2c4337d56f32ce66185e9f3cde352c4f8fe2f9c1
'2011-11-18T10:50:34-05:00'
describe
'2533276' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYX' 'sip-files00054.tif'
9a13f1b1bfcfb3563ab308b77a0871b8
a3cd7e5e668436cd4e6138ee6751fccc8ef4dba8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYY' 'sip-files00054.txt'
260d77e8ab785344199eb45069836247
f9ea6d0026d4c00dbcad88c14780730488d46e8a
'2011-11-18T10:52:29-05:00'
describe
'10906' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYYZ' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
c63d1dd8613fef01922a6d5642e87381
462104502a364743bb0564bf99b6179ec523ec49
describe
'319927' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZA' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
b7c3603ba8954fdd4db5efe8c1dc3828
5c991135f13c51a3def774412756cd2d6080a4c4
'2011-11-18T10:46:52-05:00'
describe
'126888' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZB' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
868d8fac40a392365c567a06afed82a1
b088e510ab5305d242ad62fe460b114d4336ef48
describe
'41186' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZC' 'sip-files00055.pro'
85e18e4f6c7ebe3178f31c2062086f1c
cfe4b3621afe95947cea1d0ff08e53c1e8d8fa63
'2011-11-18T10:47:46-05:00'
describe
'40344' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZD' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
d7458fbd3793be90e7fd8c4b702b3eda
a871852d5a82a51fa105affbc90a006008caaf6a
describe
'2575840' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZE' 'sip-files00055.tif'
ab373694caa78626efba673b08256754
ea4ff527278a15a4d19379acb25ccada5de67c3d
describe
'1631' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZF' 'sip-files00055.txt'
78ae776f12815fc30126611fc3ee697c
f7f0eff6a5299cd530d5b8215e8b27a019a6df39
describe
'10885' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZG' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
be1d148f510c36dd31ab088e7848e0c4
fe71e559ad74122a0228b6a02a4300568cbd40e5
describe
'320681' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZH' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
1ad17e68df0a41783d5a653e7dd1d3ed
72853239de04a95a40ff90c0099345e03060f90f
'2011-11-18T10:50:29-05:00'
describe
'125640' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZI' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
f2d53731b9b2e1b0877a4e19af5c65fd
e84592bff0eb65335ace7ac833501a82cccecf8f
describe
'40839' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZJ' 'sip-files00056.pro'
86b0908ee66157619b587943a8c208e5
812095a40f8135c5f9c7e3cfdeda07f7eb30f5ed
'2011-11-18T10:51:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZK' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
3c21f0836e6314473bd1cf9acb6d9388
595bea4e2e741512d627252bd7b6e56c7d999550
describe
'2581820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZL' 'sip-files00056.tif'
62cbbd7ae2c39461f36094217c753550
980a280cd6574ce82ebd097ee34d180826c753ff
'2011-11-18T10:50:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZM' 'sip-files00056.txt'
f57411d4b4954c2ccb65ab8018a2ac61
aedeb63a42426e28587661dff16b6733ed0cb235
describe
'10405' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZN' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
48df6c312c76bf6dcb927cae1e83c001
8e46957d498d9abe4e1e35d7c5ad8d6546f08108
describe
'322194' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZO' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
3f573cee152eb4dc6ceaeb844a3d0c06
ed60aa20cb367a29afade4e64622b2012dbca4df
'2011-11-18T10:49:11-05:00'
describe
'104257' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZP' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
bf975d75199c523e4c501d3bbfb77e2f
c98e72378a55ef560ad2e1866aa4bb19c0aca188
describe
'35644' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZQ' 'sip-files00057.pro'
b01f9720254acaab69ecc1fd69e23e1a
3b906dbfd6148aec7fe4f69543a9a172d331e136
describe
'33012' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZR' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
b067ff0d0d5bfb293d1d9807e9a8ba2b
4ead5afdf592811f20b30510379cb55adc99b780
describe
'2594232' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZS' 'sip-files00057.tif'
b0cf2812c060e5e571ad0fd3b8595d61
ffca066a27fc947ff797aab33f802eada1a37a45
'2011-11-18T10:51:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZT' 'sip-files00057.txt'
4fdffdd6bb1ae776d023d9002f24c092
c8527e063c49979e26d79947b6dc95a213a1924a
describe
'9271' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZU' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
c4e12777f38c5c718362be034b9b78b9
3da5b017ab6d0e5a0ee14c58e0fc65d0c12f84d2
'2011-11-18T10:47:22-05:00'
describe
'325604' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZV' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
f1d7185ee117513f56d85aa26df21d83
14fec9c2ba285a709a4ec1c6c92f2a5dbc0d35ec
describe
'127660' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZW' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
5b35b36678019e731e97decc0c4c818f
f730f0e6892a871bcaf978243e0a0611fca9ac89
describe
'39644' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZX' 'sip-files00058.pro'
f4e522051a3b95d99ffbe20c74fc8888
21b77ab370dfb55deb27ef9fe703750d03ac7826
'2011-11-18T10:50:32-05:00'
describe
'41522' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZY' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
0d70f331242e72c28bd9a969317aa63a
20a2736a88818a1e2e9efd663d19dca492efc131
'2011-11-18T10:47:51-05:00'
describe
'2621556' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAYZZ' 'sip-files00058.tif'
40edcda8fa9104c31899c80e16cc15cf
3163684d98c401af7650d5479c528a7289ef8f5e
describe
'1613' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAA' 'sip-files00058.txt'
f3fb55e01a0d36e813a809417fab14a0
d067c48b0e00d261c2ac5020ee45dade6d771fb0
'2011-11-18T10:53:42-05:00'
describe
'10584' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAB' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
e90b11cfae005e8a4f7e991b43c53b9a
0f2fa6e85d6d4672b0f284b71663293bee2caf71
'2011-11-18T10:53:03-05:00'
describe
'314028' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAC' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
7566d3b428434415ddafd477349563f8
8a594758c03775b255916c53c32bf93d83a65640
describe
'41700' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAD' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
9eaed15f51d1b80cd133cddb873f20dd
88b4190887c7e0f092d7f97334dda5cc06703def
'2011-11-18T10:49:43-05:00'
describe
'11124' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAE' 'sip-files00059.pro'
af3c00ebcf829ca9c098f615f43db5cd
b869e2c856f067d0aabaf2218c5f5bb84fdf6718
describe
'13193' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAF' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
bb5138f7ea516f3d5b4c0493785ae8e3
6240077705b468bd1016f7cf65dbf54eafdb7059
describe
'2529068' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAG' 'sip-files00059.tif'
d860714227dd1f49fd908a365d9c66ba
968b9753a6f3a08f63b947cea72393dc7dbb03a5
'2011-11-18T10:53:17-05:00'
describe
'505' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAH' 'sip-files00059.txt'
fa92fb136420491dee460310ce1ef022
f35b2836b18eebdf11da73bd43690c94c4dfb663
'2011-11-18T10:45:41-05:00'
describe
'4071' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAI' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
26a2c7bdd25c6c77758da1bec05bf9f1
b55164e81d0a0e7d0a1105a9d02a75b47cad42aa
'2011-11-18T10:50:28-05:00'
describe
'325562' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAJ' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
758dc4764f45f48890c9b34facafa85a
741cc42c653985e8ab4d7d087330b64ac244edf2
describe
'106619' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAK' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
63156da3aa2a9f68b4cae839f2d06d10
304eced0120c4f4f643815eedfab3a01744f05ed
'2011-11-18T10:45:49-05:00'
describe
'33028' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAL' 'sip-files00060.pro'
91c60158d040aaddc73b5120cd2877a7
7241a5d395f9bbbc2a74bc27227d76652600a5c1
describe
'34059' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAM' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
5c9f457e284a5ca433e2bfec1b7a05b8
9c469923966f6a985b58f1728dab445a9d6ea509
'2011-11-18T10:47:58-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAN' 'sip-files00060.tif'
99c64a23c9e8e34ab7c30e54be3eb911
d9c48aaf8ac3d7ac9169db2c09677c74dcdd902a
'2011-11-18T10:54:29-05:00'
describe
'1335' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAO' 'sip-files00060.txt'
e6d48da3973f734c0302eec5116ab58a
a7b4f304c772170fbd6c2007daf816a2acf0439c
describe
'8798' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAP' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
7a9eb5e2ca2082b14dab0cdefbd2a6fd
c51f6938e358cb44732cd2ad2fd883f5025bdff5
describe
'327759' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAQ' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
e154c8e8910d7811ffbca9fb157b1a49
2d604df601517821ee34b9bc5cb0a74a130f3c9d
'2011-11-18T10:47:00-05:00'
describe
'125209' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAR' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
b3667fe90e123b336a6336fe73f4e9d5
3d589a4bef650eec6c49f2fc281ec843130b8605
'2011-11-18T10:53:18-05:00'
describe
'39039' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAS' 'sip-files00061.pro'
a0034347713d206ab8ce1d3db3b90043
0338612ddca53a6df5f052ea7f9d4075835331e4
'2011-11-18T10:46:21-05:00'
describe
'40167' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAT' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
a6ae089909d5aa6194fe1be5104f64b7
120cc611b0231a0f23dc0345fecb7760722c4091
'2011-11-18T10:47:20-05:00'
describe
'2638372' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAU' 'sip-files00061.tif'
37eeb63c1b2330bb49214aa9de400299
61fbb0121e3a60d6fdb6f39bc8b689ffad94b693
describe
'1608' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAV' 'sip-files00061.txt'
2e1d02f1d52dfe8f5e2e630218c390d4
a3152e7d132619dadbadd0ce99102d14aba569bc
'2011-11-18T10:45:54-05:00'
describe
'10443' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAW' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
3e29666b7b4f7aae31f0aa8b10b9dd2c
e3f4335d02015dcc210937c8258da3ceda58269a
'2011-11-18T10:53:44-05:00'
describe
'335103' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAX' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
cbc217b81d5bbc7d2348e469f3f8c886
1ba58bd186bedd50366df8b93c68530ee22c1007
'2011-11-18T10:54:23-05:00'
describe
'126343' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAY' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
6819077de09d9b12158c264d3dc849db
1484d8af0b98f0d2cbc8b112b33e05061961298e
'2011-11-18T10:47:14-05:00'
describe
'40155' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZAZ' 'sip-files00062.pro'
89b22787ce6b496991bec41d1f1b4c2c
47aca64ebe5af5c74607350c482802458dcd4723
'2011-11-18T10:55:00-05:00'
describe
'40203' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBA' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
12753ea962bb1df799db3984f94131a6
bdbc8649766fa1e3a67c084835a7c16c9b6ccdda
'2011-11-18T10:55:04-05:00'
describe
'2697228' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBB' 'sip-files00062.tif'
a630313ef363e714db43160bba3f2111
934690b749acf7a492e7cabcd643249e3e7fef86
'2011-11-18T10:53:59-05:00'
describe
'1579' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBC' 'sip-files00062.txt'
1d9ca8b1b9033671501844a45ec77f11
ab2a9441ee9ada6010538fc1ae48c53250ceec75
describe
'9692' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBD' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
94577c01c2977b52394e5cbd4390d1a6
9f3440df23cefc3cbd7a3642c304e6956c0d3565
describe
'328787' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBE' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
29e284122044cd158e60e1316ec292f9
9092a8bb79636094f853b7cb91984610eb5c5d94
describe
'127410' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBF' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
39e1d7d9a5aa1d4f19107943c87fca49
a355992bede64f3533ffa643d5be28b847fbbcbe
describe
'41685' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBG' 'sip-files00063.pro'
9c5a843aca0ea5069a3aa04639e72304
623ef4b58599515d1932b371e390ba7a278912ee
'2011-11-18T10:51:47-05:00'
describe
'40529' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBH' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
e9141dec54639fb1de093fae0585fbad
46d09728c598c4d0599fa9d482effc37b8b32e43
'2011-11-18T10:47:28-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBI' 'sip-files00063.tif'
379d4e4411de0195ece8935184d388bb
98f2d5f5ba0f72759732a3aa9debd9d4459475ad
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBJ' 'sip-files00063.txt'
865f89eb4cd106d420c4c64de5efbd67
2d1ca16bbb34dbe7d878c3d63f98d36df98f73e4
describe
'10185' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBK' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
b16bdf0b96eee768690e7a36fd657a6e
8c38a42b99a607f96a798f5f907a4a1dd5e9375d
describe
'324618' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBL' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
f7b7e21382cf588193c21730506442ea
d8de8bb8e5cbea7dd6a75574a5f9b9ad85f5aefe
'2011-11-18T10:53:20-05:00'
describe
'131067' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBM' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
01ef257a992092c14865d254830f0133
f5c2b8f649a89db60aa79cbdbee72f0bc32cd427
'2011-11-18T10:54:42-05:00'
describe
'40672' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBN' 'sip-files00064.pro'
57894066833ebc9b67f6bb9b12bf3ee4
ed9330787d27494febfb942ffb7dd5a450307496
describe
'41697' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBO' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
344ac2e0dc6ae226af0eb6e5ba8cef86
773de7ab7dc93ac398531a9816cf69b8f9e62d30
describe
'2614140' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBP' 'sip-files00064.tif'
86a921e58033fa9754496ab8db7ab632
bd1da16f37cec28002e3dcad1d7005f69d7e5ce3
describe
'1599' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBQ' 'sip-files00064.txt'
20ff0c28ef3f7c3e8f0aa7c579694e03
b13fbb08921903afa6222179ff0ff7e24e485fdd
describe
'10711' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBR' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
469fa40d0403b86b8143e8770e13c9e8
cd384e8c16d7047ab0e277b4c23f3fa08f03c196
'2011-11-18T10:46:33-05:00'
describe
'335870' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBS' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
1e93efc6f26383f3629ee6baed528f77
f1ff77716b35ee472b5856a797734cdf4cbabeb2
'2011-11-18T10:46:10-05:00'
describe
'122183' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBT' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
3843091c41b53de5cee9917648f2429e
17b97a769c59d868b10f357d858f0945275d9c99
describe
'41268' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBU' 'sip-files00065.pro'
44269934bcf535760967422c8adbfcc1
9f0407d3f2232147dcc43e491e6ca4a2be34f8eb
'2011-11-18T10:46:17-05:00'
describe
'38657' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBV' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
e2a4c7fd4e8e87042aa7ff1eee4cdac5
fd57ca77757eb7ceaee986ca01ffa03f20c346bb
'2011-11-18T10:49:19-05:00'
describe
'2703528' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBW' 'sip-files00065.tif'
47936c26467ec22a317000372c4e9ae6
e56c792c38c3dc55127df2e4a6afa51c438b677c
'2011-11-18T10:47:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBX' 'sip-files00065.txt'
e503450fd1506cf38acd33881952986e
32d1aeda1a35cb8ffc124e9517a4c0d4bc90b71f
describe
'9868' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBY' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
9e64babb51c4db4d9b599eaec44ed64e
d4c477b3c6a1a95b9d7ddc8b55bb5c2857f5b39f
describe
'333215' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZBZ' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
7074530260c7dc36e05005060774c272
c858cc6fe5172923428268913e7949de81a90eb2
'2011-11-18T10:53:38-05:00'
describe
'127278' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCA' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
d6af7e35069a58215c7aa86fe435ed66
8c28bbd72acc55727754820bc6e18cbe80b86b06
'2011-11-18T10:48:55-05:00'
describe
'40792' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCB' 'sip-files00066.pro'
b261b9ee0d08d5ec64e437fc34edaa0b
e17586a6dbe2e3496b497420984e0f6e1b4eaf5f
'2011-11-18T10:52:57-05:00'
describe
'41255' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCC' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
61a7cf3750374ebad02fcc7f0686b515
4c62a6c305d69b922709e4f35cf1e10d88f1aba4
'2011-11-18T10:52:25-05:00'
describe
'2682516' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCD' 'sip-files00066.tif'
740e84c9f67e3b6949154d9c610cca72
3b7f1f248596ac664818ed0c8d0ff3d877f93771
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCE' 'sip-files00066.txt'
942c8d1910d565141ff925ca37d045b3
fd5971b037d24555b4a52166257742987a0eca6e
'2011-11-18T10:53:25-05:00'
describe
'10204' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCF' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
7c87a72d9476748b0379c579fdca65ba
6754a0cd5e3591ed94c4e5b39167fbbfdc87a850
'2011-11-18T10:49:28-05:00'
describe
'326303' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCG' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
c59a6b7fc1bf76b14b52cdafd3b5c0b1
05390de37ca18327292c5ec8efa283a0e1e498da
describe
'127893' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCH' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
caa347c43df62ccb80a40c1e97b0dda5
5d5840a10bd801cb4a427459d6869614367838ac
'2011-11-18T10:49:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCI' 'sip-files00067.pro'
00b34b13eda6bdd40057d17659f4f8f7
3a0b66baf4c0bdcf06c000f525c4b5f027dfd651
'2011-11-18T10:49:38-05:00'
describe
'41024' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCJ' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
e3e3e8b42e4ea7c45090dee095b2a15c
eb6a8bfa1bbc1d237dfb686e402c80abf681be6a
'2011-11-18T10:49:24-05:00'
describe
'2626752' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCK' 'sip-files00067.tif'
18bd02521faa3054a93cbd1ea86ebc13
634ee6aae899521e2953eecf7e42e8816e6db5ae
describe
'1657' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCL' 'sip-files00067.txt'
d9ed324d83a7f9e3ad51f6a4eae89192
51b7cbfa204ad677dfa0eca69cf7cbb0c7cf7c8d
'2011-11-18T10:53:23-05:00'
describe
'9943' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCM' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
20b0b69c5ee278a219b8e665f8123e38
ae6e7a8155ae6e21e10f5f3d8fe63ba6ec35f3e0
describe
'339845' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCN' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
7dfdcd12e5646ff961238d15a9b2be39
dd51c49c9769b4fc1a3a2edf9888b5c61441c227
'2011-11-18T10:54:59-05:00'
describe
'133681' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCO' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
e256648d52c957c1e73001108abf4c3a
30799c9546f4c2cef0ff217e71b882c299adb203
describe
'42988' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCP' 'sip-files00068.pro'
84360f6552e08cf214255b9f19595d3f
d5d9e5d42e7a6bc50bcef5329c1509f3dc57b24b
describe
'42311' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCQ' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
9606a3ddf9f2214b766a16aeb77c050f
f14c3986c80862f26f102523de290cf743c2dc95
'2011-11-18T10:53:07-05:00'
describe
'2735064' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCR' 'sip-files00068.tif'
7d5b4cb00b0cac0fa2caa689dd84aa87
694e5d5de5f98eb33732b4acb88181ff5d53bdc0
'2011-11-18T10:50:45-05:00'
describe
'1685' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCS' 'sip-files00068.txt'
0ad9ea4fb77d69a8ac9862a5cf183422
828eadff124c4569dc3c9ecce100d9aa80c401fc
describe
'10273' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCT' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
6c7fbd1cddf7cf270ae3eca5353892dc
617f485a6ac50b6302cbc04c2d938b480e7ae528
'2011-11-18T10:54:47-05:00'
describe
'311772' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCU' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
e0079a7ab6ad03b3e5dc93b51d4f4220
3dc38babede772a2aa95707f40f8648ccc427e23
describe
'73758' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCV' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
97b902463a5593a767a91e6d3d9c7a39
2a10fa625991f11b3bb188d64bc2f0740324a677
describe
'21481' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCW' 'sip-files00069.pro'
f71c570bdf2823827d5251c50b587730
c0117059edd249bd5a0f27e5dd4471ceecc29d6f
describe
'23717' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCX' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
d9adcfae7b6fc883e9a332bb9103749a
3010f3b52fb9c1342830ca3ba6d60021029a90bc
describe
'2510836' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCY' 'sip-files00069.tif'
3a8a80683058437e9470d1cc31999bbe
621554925cc17bf3b130fc8c351389077cbc26e9
'2011-11-18T10:49:36-05:00'
describe
'909' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZCZ' 'sip-files00069.txt'
9c65a5d97481730e4ad8cff8a9c11e25
46fae4a035ef00cf4f804d1dcea7df73be8f72ab
'2011-11-18T10:53:30-05:00'
describe
'6701' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDA' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
4aba7512a55ad6431ee2138cb2cd80d5
84ea0d38ba0d7def86f29c031702eed794652e1c
'2011-11-18T10:47:10-05:00'
describe
'333533' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDB' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
58ff72a4650080d137130ea2c2c159d1
ae07d8e9d4ce609047e7a2c4708cf1a9d7be9d33
'2011-11-18T10:47:31-05:00'
describe
'103784' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDC' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
3d7ff4f916501736c401a65a15fdd34f
aa2b598f1cc7b2cbeb81bba7b15df543ac589aed
'2011-11-18T10:53:06-05:00'
describe
'30759' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDD' 'sip-files00070.pro'
f764b471c2ffe7693873802c47d6347b
6af1f1714bc56ad3808ac5e891b9724fb51707c9
describe
'32640' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDE' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
cb2fb292a28117004cc2feafd8ec0067
991f19981ccb1454813b7c480fbcad8001f515aa
describe
'2684616' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDF' 'sip-files00070.tif'
5bb066c1a06a5b5ff01ecba4d208c2cf
ab2137e745c690f31178979818f2a0fc4038a6c6
'2011-11-18T10:51:06-05:00'
describe
'1286' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDG' 'sip-files00070.txt'
88d65be37fd5d592afd19be97f819927
fab364ea2d7aac4a8c97cfc4e97207deb62b190f
'2011-11-18T10:46:46-05:00'
describe
'8351' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDH' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
39f69cd0e46914ba5923b6db4b973923
7bc3c1cb2023a6c8f884d5bad1b9b784ac2ceebd
'2011-11-18T10:46:18-05:00'
describe
'326694' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDI' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
b5628f2a33498bd8f9f5c8f7c0a60ffd
94cbc279665ae33f7f733e012a38ad62b08796fc
'2011-11-18T10:52:35-05:00'
describe
'124843' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDJ' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
9c37310e8f19b43746f5cb429efff929
064354b2519a1ec324e8012cf726a3faee6768f8
describe
'39918' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDK' 'sip-files00071.pro'
20b0d51a0b4ae5dc3fb49281b5e29ffd
b39ab29a83f1c5fc034cc63f5d6cefe240d22173
'2011-11-18T10:49:57-05:00'
describe
'40627' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDL' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
0c2562fdd31c4063d52c52a55bc0cc36
072d2c769f64305b9e82d180d15ef200f50b11de
describe
'2630044' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDM' 'sip-files00071.tif'
43fec3f43686779a87afefd5c3a15c0f
b0d3dbe576333a93ffe72c421d19f9f07333b7bb
'2011-11-18T10:48:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDN' 'sip-files00071.txt'
04d8c7463c574e763fd71c00f918d14d
82d36a1f96649ec121d4ac0bf06d5f3618733f36
'2011-11-18T10:46:09-05:00'
describe
'10067' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDO' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
b57584e195f6413dba5ac392da551d95
7499c45591abdce4847d4ae79fc09362090e4e28
describe
'338266' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDP' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
e313a2af894d44899bca27e0eb988fe7
e9e239a6f0c6ffe95df9094963ca23aa20045f60
describe
'129073' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDQ' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
90e52c2d60da368c8863e726c266d402
835681d89cd383c763ee02fe5dba4c1fca7d1d8c
'2011-11-18T10:52:07-05:00'
describe
'39869' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDR' 'sip-files00072.pro'
f6fbc8ba9a49f9766f1ce9fd328f824f
b74ee58e0dc852d95da06d98124db746d6831605
describe
'40931' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDS' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
5c465410604f2441c99b8dc37cf9795e
6e84a21d2e5cca34728acb40de5a16b475a872cf
describe
'2722452' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDT' 'sip-files00072.tif'
e25e5d61ffbbd5cc542f7eabbd1b1016
924615a82a82e3dcc59ab32737670e2e79fdb60a
describe
'1623' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDU' 'sip-files00072.txt'
1112528bea2428c1b288884c22b270ed
af3d244b60f2518e0f7a1afe16edc433fef1cd70
describe
'9845' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDV' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
2e20cbfce95be2db28cb0617bfa6193c
12b26a83b70d47a438a9d4386620a08e9645cd3a
describe
'320308' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDW' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
29951213525be96525e21692399915b6
470b548d28c9c45ecbdc63c2581c34b744badfda
'2011-11-18T10:53:01-05:00'
describe
'127542' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDX' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
76b8d0cb1bb4d9aaede0ba95d3eb62cd
98748aa4bb9b4b46fb8da41649617715435c23a4
describe
'39854' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDY' 'sip-files00073.pro'
d43237e6a4f52d01e276f1f94433919c
51b2d235d94b3d7665c85f65d640ddfaa20dd519
describe
'41110' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZDZ' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
458c6d0e77216cf7c5d642bc06065b7e
75acaad8cb8f6e44210f5b3d807f6faf4de65e90
'2011-11-18T10:50:36-05:00'
describe
'2578964' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEA' 'sip-files00073.tif'
651f1226588a10798f42b3fe0582653c
cd747fc2a4ae11ee13d4d56ecfa0aaba1fea5784
'2011-11-18T10:51:02-05:00'
describe
'1651' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEB' 'sip-files00073.txt'
ff8acb150ec2a1b327cb139095eb44f8
25e632adb18d48f5e0c65142f6c9ac7765510a60
describe
'10350' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEC' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
9aef84307d3aea501b9dd410855bb5bc
ed64b8b2a285b165a2d97b2c56b0757c843fe28e
'2011-11-18T10:53:28-05:00'
describe
'333210' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZED' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
ef930e5d6f492b1b517c56097510aad8
b8560501617c5267bcbd39bb7515684653065bc6
describe
'128827' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEE' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
11921bc972e1ff332a3003f2fd9764bc
4b9aabc212eb8b363f051703f8b8aa9f8aed3ca5
describe
'39607' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEF' 'sip-files00074.pro'
ac4dac75794eefee9d8bd1c943b728b0
2b5eb6333df19aa0bd2b5a2fe0b102bbe6c5e924
'2011-11-18T10:54:00-05:00'
describe
'41301' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEG' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
f5c3ee816622bc6f135794cef0a861bb
2137ab9aecc852dab766dc12c1c9f5fc1c9d5c26
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEH' 'sip-files00074.tif'
444495f8d7f1661cfa0e1f25a86be659
18903476c765cfb3d6a6fcf03e5d4386e5ab7746
describe
'1611' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEI' 'sip-files00074.txt'
ab4a2062e96f635a2a87fe5a873af991
c9b5d3dc2b955b64631b74e566536b78a5cda802
describe
'10040' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEJ' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
5c5d95d80a570859bc670a984d51c557
85ff9389319e59b5e3043b318de9a580bc0852c9
describe
'326120' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEK' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
7c797a2f312adf7e45a7bd8faf5f50ea
85daa69d27b8a94f33fb2858b7e5e1fed51b9f8c
describe
'125746' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEL' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
afd3c5a03741e329a1e1b2c254381b01
bcaea4fd73552b5524157fe630d97f612bf0621e
'2011-11-18T10:46:24-05:00'
describe
'39082' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEM' 'sip-files00075.pro'
b9055bc4c0cc655f56aa73dc7c00e4a1
ffdbb2423ef0b4192ecfa7a68e063316d3359211
describe
'41344' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEN' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
2f007cb8054b1633fe0fd5d97a441559
9ad2e53ef5729f6d26198771b7f26d57856aab02
describe
'2625608' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEO' 'sip-files00075.tif'
e2d717a05ab2b3a1ee42f476263cb0b0
a5081fd27f144ada6b060422974a196a2c543ef9
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEP' 'sip-files00075.txt'
6ad7a3b7db2469d80844d86b5cc201ae
2162ea96a20ceb8d382cb9847c2faa3a08cabb79
describe
'10163' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEQ' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
39b4c8bf3c5defa4bb956ad3d0dbb4e9
0fb72eb9eb175818845c1bc81d56af8489e2c737
'2011-11-18T10:45:34-05:00'
describe
'330371' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZER' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
d839526247a4426956f5b38dc8ed66d7
6aebdf030e0b55f0de0d997da24029f3343aae82
'2011-11-18T10:49:22-05:00'
describe
'102080' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZES' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
452845ceb4d234b4176f31624088bc03
81cff5b03d0fbbe63e1937f39530f70e208bf7b5
describe
'32263' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZET' 'sip-files00076.pro'
204472ee0f513a62455acc47e361910a
62f52ae8222aad916251ac9c1e19662447af09b3
describe
'32557' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEU' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
558fd421370a6b33e56d046b9cc71d39
d070b06a91f64c7bdb917d05864d39bd5aa42217
describe
'2659392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEV' 'sip-files00076.tif'
af99bbf031584553d58aafecac6ccfa4
d2b5e03645269efcc01c9fed305be544b1a59b01
'2011-11-18T10:49:53-05:00'
describe
'1271' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEW' 'sip-files00076.txt'
4870812d750a294859e4b8b1ca71c2c0
34b0318633e81c791443d32448bcb91c6f2c830b
'2011-11-18T10:50:22-05:00'
describe
'9430' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEX' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
6b4dec3c62fa1d01ceea0f357357b6ac
f865b5b3e32917c81000971ca3d2480df35c70fe
'2011-11-18T10:46:00-05:00'
describe
'317278' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEY' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
b9e5cfb5af566a8f62d040c43ed36fc6
86964d527d3124693a2bb99da3f7265a659b39fa
describe
'101122' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZEZ' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
a124cfba80db0f1f40a7c83bdb8a7158
e106c1ca85f17bf1bcfa906fa0ad3d474cab4e29
'2011-11-18T10:54:15-05:00'
describe
'30471' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFA' 'sip-files00077.pro'
61385bb229270c8e3c77f9c221f97061
434494ce8e012f6937d56d071f6c0a3e00e77ff5
describe
'33526' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFB' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
23d41762ed54174ee17a590db1f271ca
0484172b1b38553af97cadcebfa4b1f66692c3f0
describe
'2554692' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFC' 'sip-files00077.tif'
2d65cd8c0cc26983393c314a9afd4597
96545e2d5525aa79aa27092914c217a7f934695d
'2011-11-18T10:50:09-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFD' 'sip-files00077.txt'
00626bf2f67b57a0668cfbfd81b89c59
a4b5aeffeeff98b93a6d44245b5fa19c60043f71
describe
'9548' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFE' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
2d30e1344c8917e58731268b08a43ed7
7ba24c5a195a690bbc1ec300ccca5c7ee3bfeab0
describe
'339843' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFF' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
7c3aed314d554d728e0b6fe7a8501ac1
a69a9842fa3c573aad057b8f72a169d5e66a6663
'2011-11-18T10:48:56-05:00'
describe
'129253' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFG' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
2dbb1c5f6987a132c388e0970c9165a4
c7bd7e3503571ea0c9df6360a771843dd2da156d
describe
'42538' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFH' 'sip-files00078.pro'
9221ce43c972064862f6f1674f6af042
5df17a86687107603e485aafb84bb5afd1d7069f
describe
'40650' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFI' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
4a50c6c780b275f088940174ceef22f5
88356c66c4d97bf5208916ebfce81f3983abb8dd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFJ' 'sip-files00078.tif'
0f2060231f167b31ed53c399d2399520
a8a61b5e4bdcf8f43061cfa8807c86d897a65ccd
describe
'1677' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFK' 'sip-files00078.txt'
64ff0da1b1faeb196348f61f05c6c9fc
0d4113d6137120475b20c3d04fe22e8ca1e23480
'2011-11-18T10:48:15-05:00'
describe
'9936' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFL' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
53497f98415c833a875c43c973b79d63
ac6c3b76f8de7cf4505250cfca477708e0163f19
'2011-11-18T10:52:04-05:00'
describe
'317631' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFM' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
0155dfe9c01f5c35523769b4b7c9a044
44b6eaf59206ce291581f47edf30b219121dac06
'2011-11-18T10:49:00-05:00'
describe
'124746' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFN' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
2e4bc2b0b4f23db23b5408433f5ed651
fc4702987350adb682fe6b3f7a6389c7857f894a
describe
'39351' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFO' 'sip-files00079.pro'
0d06223dc29e263b91e0b925f6bd4265
182a763bf7bd168f4412adeb112647e363681a9c
describe
'41200' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFP' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
495849d469be025cbbf817130ebee6f6
25bee6acef04eaf04f27ba4eca552fe6cbebdea2
'2011-11-18T10:49:50-05:00'
describe
'2557452' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFQ' 'sip-files00079.tif'
7724055ca17525d05cb1bfa726884a34
79e6d8c95018b93f98b5ee1737a70a578097f5bf
describe
'1620' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFR' 'sip-files00079.txt'
0fbddf317e7cd92ec59b040f044a071a
3829c05242f3a2cfffc9dec1c9e5c4b6841daa41
describe
'10827' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFS' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
9866f262bb657c65e098e998944b4dab
a3a1826526762d3731d0e970f0134f0f580d39ce
'2011-11-18T10:48:35-05:00'
describe
'335039' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFT' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
ad5ba5474fd41fa53fe244a92fb7e5e4
4e53436ccc50c51f3e2c3221fec46e1e9b16b557
describe
'127462' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFU' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
e1ff3cbd9add26f7562e75827179320f
7bc32907ef1965a7abb942b88db610a7b9dc828c
describe
'41729' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFV' 'sip-files00080.pro'
dafcdb56a3f8a3478c3faf2debf8023b
5c110313a1cf8c6a0aae4c8284ced554a8347c69
'2011-11-18T10:52:58-05:00'
describe
'40415' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFW' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
bf5fe947dbf0f1c2dda6a23ecec06cb2
790fee89cfa4a887762bbbd0c269a98309a84ab7
'2011-11-18T10:46:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFX' 'sip-files00080.tif'
4eee67f2c3ad3d3c091f8e66dcbba59f
1a78354c80e55f6dda2f1a0278e2cb4220731261
'2011-11-18T10:51:58-05:00'
describe
'1642' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFY' 'sip-files00080.txt'
558b03d4760842fc841498e324d57cfa
7525fde5dfc039bceb901b0e09ceaa450d476598
describe
'9629' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZFZ' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
47b38064fca97230f480888000e7ad0d
8c5f6bb09a7b18e4f45b7d377ad77478b2e8d52a
describe
'320114' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGA' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
9ba6b652bae575104ce97e50962ae43b
72e1b4c8a208821d7b86ed4fbf13e4fe5d05f72d
'2011-11-18T10:53:09-05:00'
describe
'122847' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGB' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
f53046564661d9398b96c95ec7980899
f36f1b83728fe3d7b15c8584c0079d1d31de1091
'2011-11-18T10:54:38-05:00'
describe
'39023' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGC' 'sip-files00081.pro'
5a99f66d912ff50c48dd2b271fce583f
85849fd165d3b90312f4198623bab8e990fa99dd
describe
'40251' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGD' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
8f55fdff3ea3cc753c5a6b016b6759d5
e375945c37331a2e392824f77ab3ee2a10c4d385
'2011-11-18T10:55:01-05:00'
describe
'2577268' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGE' 'sip-files00081.tif'
9c732f9149baa8a94e44fbb84b2e3d0d
ed8fcee85a72ee7a547238fbc1e447836dcf6148
'2011-11-18T10:51:50-05:00'
describe
'1643' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGF' 'sip-files00081.txt'
b867b54d7bf1a27f4da1d1d752c1779d
80db2d473b10bbf83e453ec6eb7b9d841816652f
describe
'10604' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGG' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
13c25c94a7e03c814993b0d1f8d976ba
34cbef41c768641b261ccaed01e68a9d379ed17e
'2011-11-18T10:51:30-05:00'
describe
'335059' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGH' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
def5b4d257ff30d7d26e25c0435a0a82
8b5e041679e3a42665462f05144d7430ab856635
describe
'129584' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGI' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
5d02cf6f8ca7e87a71b460db4d48afda
b7986af98f86e20d9c154240aa522f933378239e
'2011-11-18T10:54:18-05:00'
describe
'42203' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGJ' 'sip-files00082.pro'
9fa929ea630fa6d93a1e7aef6ae81775
0fc73cabd5bf148c0dea92ab68c86c9b6d1d226f
describe
'41337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGK' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
024a6b181a83bc3f5eebbbfaf61414ff
72d5582e591f5bf18dc22abf9b09dd8d0a7f1dd1
'2011-11-18T10:54:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGL' 'sip-files00082.tif'
0b004bb3d1b058f8e85d4197255e9df0
2afcf8380c822d91a3fa59af2aa6158167ff99de
'2011-11-18T10:53:54-05:00'
describe
'1662' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGM' 'sip-files00082.txt'
be5fca56a8f3a870b1d53cff1edbbce3
fd023ce148bee2f3d435239776dfe775e8bc6eee
describe
'10449' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGN' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
96c024d246161223bce77d2babb89e13
f870282683820a03850c662126a70ee0e7b13a42
'2011-11-18T10:54:57-05:00'
describe
'325899' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGO' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
d4cf760900cc554ac07a5a4669d60d19
b13ac3784df1340923d636260d92df9543137649
describe
'125401' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGP' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
177e4719f345fd48019b87d0fcad2a72
cdb2c58b79eb5928f107d3781cedf2b29802887f
'2011-11-18T10:50:31-05:00'
describe
'40642' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGQ' 'sip-files00083.pro'
d1ca534bc30569a8fd1ebcf25591e6a9
578f48ca9cd6ed936756d3cfb9573ae35a8b2d04
describe
'40337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGR' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
75b2f7c5e2067937ad46713e03c2600a
86bb76be148ebbd6951f974d70698a52249e79bf
'2011-11-18T10:53:11-05:00'
describe
'2623812' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGS' 'sip-files00083.tif'
1dcc558dbdd7de83f6eb7cc3af01247f
5a8fc61f03d3ca8083472069491e2301a35be55d
'2011-11-18T10:53:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGT' 'sip-files00083.txt'
b597bfa7b6e0b0a361c2853a6b27b749
16f1d59d11eac9cdd99560a8395afc0014a14f37
describe
'10397' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGU' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
2bf981785d51c5e17a47cdcc2365e4a4
c46bce49656f2a8dfba668ada7a78123ce4adcb3
'2011-11-18T10:50:16-05:00'
describe
'334404' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGV' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
2eddfcaace4e1ec39f5c450e89879d43
286448f34e7313bcd74132f8807993f93124767d
describe
'121673' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGW' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
d466ab93a8e003023f3859c0e8bcb98f
2d3632a07bd65dc47e1972f44aaaf6e86c356769
'2011-11-18T10:47:57-05:00'
describe
'39138' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGX' 'sip-files00084.pro'
a934c9ad6403c2e4bee50fd709d51c19
887de6ff431cb9f7250405c84e415cd00e95825b
'2011-11-18T10:54:41-05:00'
describe
'39028' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGY' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
c31825783baba4c48a4d6c6fcfde7ec2
bf40ae9f07bb8c80e5d437727f9d1a09f7f1694b
describe
'2691564' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZGZ' 'sip-files00084.tif'
06cafc1924b521f11e6549a649b55f4c
12281b5704d440c3a111ec48fe03f81894e5c1d4
describe
'1543' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHA' 'sip-files00084.txt'
da220508feabd9d9a508e63747aa77ab
f4648a8023949d8957f16d38a2f0724dd1a2afbd
describe
'9470' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHB' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
37243cc1b9b62cb692d6558c1342aa76
67163b00e73cb8cfbbec32e3629649fba6219fb2
'2011-11-18T10:54:22-05:00'
describe
'313888' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHC' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
a54b58b330fc00ac6e82760d21ea093c
1751a43ed5bf1cc6feddcc5ff2000195f7f79f6a
'2011-11-18T10:49:46-05:00'
describe
'124819' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHD' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
78d6f779340ab50de5199f4d2f6a6797
b815e88f64614dd6512665b555481b32dad56c6f
'2011-11-18T10:51:43-05:00'
describe
'40923' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHE' 'sip-files00085.pro'
51cf2dfd4e7d2b2fd26f8902bbb0ca34
f84b2ae913dfd9ea76f1ec366f9fa8b3b16afcc8
describe
'40261' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHF' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
4b291fc8545a36aaed47c9f8ae6c891e
8517a295768226ebbf62912b9db4a2e1f1d63c43
describe
'2527476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHG' 'sip-files00085.tif'
ceefba119686723decceb90217c9a79b
403d94f9b57ca76b5ab5e54c70e21065f5374bf7
describe
'1650' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHH' 'sip-files00085.txt'
cf61c34031c0985d1f06a13acbb4cdd9
53d9b253d79ceed8b172932c4e59a7373a8cd878
'2011-11-18T10:50:17-05:00'
describe
'10421' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHI' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
2f0fc6123a9105ce64535cf4d5e6e615
7140c3c686dc54fd8b37b50dfb3e0cc8847e65fa
'2011-11-18T10:54:40-05:00'
describe
'325988' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHJ' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
9ef95320934c6dda0a3987a08430d58e
12919a33e760227aed393da991c9d3e9e96952bc
describe
'119571' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHK' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
65660ed807c5f38e03c2c17d6ae9fc60
9be325574132b33cda67f04c07cd524f72048148
describe
'35719' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHL' 'sip-files00086.pro'
f53124aa7c0b19024f9a31b6953a613c
3ca8e4353a4e2ed6b4f2b46e00bb3701c5303488
describe
'38034' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHM' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
501f855314e47c5de59cb85c77e58a4e
fcfafb1ea9a011effe75c585b829b268e4fca861
describe
'2624472' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHN' 'sip-files00086.tif'
7c888d6cc5f73700a6030d309a63ebb8
39e56a135dbf0ed196edcc58368c0b9dddff0a14
describe
'1466' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHO' 'sip-files00086.txt'
9f05e2d85aa32a7347060d49047b6bb4
dc9c48a199082dc02fb9e7519aeb9ce593648956
'2011-11-18T10:55:06-05:00'
describe
'10100' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHP' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
9adc9aa1f3da6fbee5e8cc1262f16335
f1dec38cdb47e2f3868046c2c8bf41a690f8c606
describe
'324014' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHQ' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
52161beaab41ffe824242afe800249bb
4dac02841c441394f479002e87f58e3808ac7b9f
'2011-11-18T10:49:42-05:00'
describe
'100270' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHR' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
822c3703d8d8ed14a1f8289e5a37daef
916c93086cb2ba3c096b30e5bc9d6c021a6a74b7
describe
'29881' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHS' 'sip-files00087.pro'
78086a43e379084e9cc6a80f7ac2625e
3923b96ff60df22714b88a0872a5a17be9c63503
describe
'32153' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHT' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
d9dad551efd4544a86262fcc33571cfe
101a641023966c0e0336260d2b2a90ced4836127
describe
'2608428' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHU' 'sip-files00087.tif'
2f16b90ee0c04ab9be1b3aa273b04a12
04871d61c432fb1f693c967ac16369abaa2e83b1
describe
'1250' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHV' 'sip-files00087.txt'
444e19dcc0e776e54682e27483b76232
948aa154db1cce698d8aa836b8dcc5f3f33d6b17
describe
'7758' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHW' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
e5474414aa9305a8b55b7b5cb754d8ba
9370aa8e27fbfeea814f5719e191c19f389eec02
'2011-11-18T10:45:51-05:00'
describe
'330375' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHX' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
70938832519e5fa1cc9efc0a4cb938ce
eecaaba88913dc49b40dc847b2aced1fadc6fd9b
'2011-11-18T10:54:31-05:00'
describe
'120053' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHY' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
3af7171ff4358c7ac5cfba9d3eb20e14
c8636d68966666c5d0a2f141ab82b8d5f8371591
describe
'39312' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZHZ' 'sip-files00088.pro'
ab701155c62ab431cc40ac05088da80c
973cbf10384cbae44f3c7df324cce992eeaeb375
describe
'39042' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIA' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
553e427015447bd8cc7ca6b6d460840a
5729ba1c98a3af53b65dd5bdfbbd08ad23b4ca9f
'2011-11-18T10:49:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIB' 'sip-files00088.tif'
8d44a3ae432d3bdab3e263dfaf8fc7d6
82f84cdcc1b10fbff27fc649722430cbfb6bd614
describe
'1561' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIC' 'sip-files00088.txt'
f41f5684256fe5878edaa8e17af27965
c03d6cfbca7daab0bf7c1458ac3f2f6a4489eedf
describe
'11043' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZID' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
74c971602127e82c7551e8c19d50b896
8e823bbadf756f2b1e9ab67527aa33ebf882ea85
describe
'325650' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIE' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
403993cb541ce5e455def3b46ac8bb71
b9f9a903389448dc8de4c11fca75a12ae1eb7ea5
describe
'126179' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIF' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
c23c48b3544632313cef7bef720bbdef
01729293d867af345641f387d98b12dd30c64393
describe
'41348' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIG' 'sip-files00089.pro'
3e0180680dd05df6ae1a33ef0bed851a
3eb912d9978eb2df5cb1e60b7d8007afee27f740
'2011-11-18T10:48:20-05:00'
describe
'40820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIH' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
dea4b8ee279ba425febbb7d27dfe5a1b
e133509ab207818bc8dc12c50948743a96440617
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZII' 'sip-files00089.tif'
0141687b1326903443481548c40b64a1
c7050bd8256c1d518ef4c365f4566b0237dc94f5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIJ' 'sip-files00089.txt'
ce4a8dfbd60d032534aab4707e4a5801
753ab0225b9b933e32f3809dce70c0b4ac97c8ca
describe
'10518' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIK' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
5e1f2a055e7c41ba32d870b80e8d7064
49c7bd33f5ce01dac4a9fee91dda7f02963ea0ff
describe
'324085' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIL' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
1c1e728022f32a136d7772acf3df74a3
b3802c3aad9b441158079879434d85ba4a1de98d
'2011-11-18T10:46:56-05:00'
describe
'131641' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIM' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
de02840eec42d3aaced9159eab3629db
e2600e50033bf26301d940287b5084ef6cf5267b
'2011-11-18T10:49:45-05:00'
describe
'40777' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIN' 'sip-files00090.pro'
269dbd449149c03a8e821bcaa63001d0
0cb843b9d867ad32a6ff536f78ea03b2c449f95c
describe
'41829' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIO' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
d5bcb8db497d00fc3bb96e4f9c592911
1dfee0c1c7bc76032bcad61e6d70a8de4ff71fd3
describe
'2609644' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIP' 'sip-files00090.tif'
b5695272bd9023da09e82ac14fdcef0c
b5eec95acee998646d80b9819dbfd18fdcec90ce
'2011-11-18T10:52:22-05:00'
describe
'1604' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIQ' 'sip-files00090.txt'
28e73026ec0d5128d3d5fc2bf721140f
d03f837cfa72aa70f45f782bdf030954db9a7e64
describe
'10158' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIR' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
0326ef772d67cfeb9e52ef82fee856cf
fa14bcc76d086667e2185c872d818f943114bef0
describe
'313346' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIS' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
30ac478a56f5a52f39775e9832451379
48af07175bc15fbf91dcdfdbbcf933ae7a68ac1f
describe
'123036' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIT' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
1762e6befeff4ffcc4f6e138a594b48d
44c855361bb735a9d027867dd7ac81c7fda56e0b
'2011-11-18T10:51:04-05:00'
describe
'39213' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIU' 'sip-files00091.pro'
ffc4d6fb258e9f18b4c1cbd256ed962f
4e5ddc9fc1e8a9fce05302267b4947368ba9d9fd
'2011-11-18T10:52:40-05:00'
describe
'39957' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIV' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
a2b435d17a2027b328ff61a932349da5
6c68469fd6baca71944e7e038b11a5bfb27ca133
describe
'2523088' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIW' 'sip-files00091.tif'
46664f55d5c988212027c8e113ad83a2
0c18d114ca5cabad6dc0afa772cda56bec9e2962
describe
'1566' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIX' 'sip-files00091.txt'
16932c007bbadde7cfbf5631646c5ea0
1a4ee21a57ec200c41d65d058a869d9e9f8c61df
describe
'10740' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIY' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
143f0676c46811cd119c6acf89bb0c44
5ac5371ac16e9a7a1fcfeba5f0e773e247db68b4
describe
'320187' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZIZ' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
fba788dab000fafea00a4cce10c54c32
68a35175b6767f6967e0b2d675c13373f0369f65
describe
'123513' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJA' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
38833739fe50f741dabbcaa732e7223b
6019e65d1247ef807777f0d404559aae0101b4e4
describe
'39490' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJB' 'sip-files00092.pro'
80bb03b4b7038479edd2f8e4d7d16976
946449c611aa7ee8e648cb474bd018ae78e24b23
describe
'39906' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJC' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
4789aa8cb27bc227c4dbea25e7ee295e
70346f0303b938c4947662251ab38b36e875c05c
'2011-11-18T10:48:52-05:00'
describe
'2577928' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJD' 'sip-files00092.tif'
0a6842e96ce16b3ac255d031f6d54cc1
a172cd278bbff01131269f636a04fa0fa2d40f1b
'2011-11-18T10:48:58-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJE' 'sip-files00092.txt'
6680a13c60b4decefed9fbefbeb2c535
9cee6ce993f79675bb9242d45b12d11ae3937496
'2011-11-18T10:48:45-05:00'
describe
'11035' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJF' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
2de63a6534ef2987afc5caa497d1d4d4
64b39f1ea2eee93d52c7ce4af7a3af4a5795fc83
describe
'328803' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJG' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
2b05a8337c738ba8ba8cb222526a9884
ec86de67bfedb3fd9b13416cddf3878f06362bbb
describe
'126008' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJH' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
9498f64594e4b65c4211ee43c3ac2d6a
4b4771e92f7f5b88ffdc260860f803cdc8b1353d
'2011-11-18T10:50:25-05:00'
describe
'41028' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJI' 'sip-files00093.pro'
9f1de411dee3ff9eb637f7200b1ec2c2
8e874b8cfe8fe219299d8407b77fe99c3db040ae
describe
'40377' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJJ' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
fb65406c0fa055694b30f8f24e6306d5
0c0f589d40f408c6bacbbe6e9f34c15d7a005c0c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJK' 'sip-files00093.tif'
1d12bec54cf303699acca52069e6334d
302331ea864c5fa79b20ae008be4b6ef053cbd1e
describe
'1628' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJL' 'sip-files00093.txt'
4306ffe8e20861e786246707d39f92f0
d21f3843cb35368ab48d29bdb7091425d5142d4f
'2011-11-18T10:53:50-05:00'
describe
'10392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJM' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
9bec129d11416d79566c7d23fab982c4
c1d91430ba204f49cfd09f518436d3830e9b3d3b
'2011-11-18T10:47:50-05:00'
describe
'333530' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJN' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
9eab95c69db8aaa25ac26faaf27a2bdd
747b4a7afa12e180e0ed9d698843846fe513d01b
'2011-11-18T10:49:18-05:00'
describe
'129623' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJO' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
e95bb529f0410cc521ae9494e1dd5c3b
a9bffb390d043dfb4a0374e27a0f2d000a1c0944
'2011-11-18T10:51:52-05:00'
describe
'40554' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJP' 'sip-files00094.pro'
bd4cfb0ec9d705fd2cd45fdbb799aaf0
2679084e777bd0455590f74a8bbc0ad31386105c
'2011-11-18T10:51:33-05:00'
describe
'41567' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJQ' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
fd6c5465a6748a9df80113db11be76da
671ca1b7301319cc89e103fa2883c62395580167
'2011-11-18T10:51:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJR' 'sip-files00094.tif'
19903714b3f750c0628792ddfab746cd
fe56ed98625a710991fdb76a8348e786bfc9f607
describe
'1594' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJS' 'sip-files00094.txt'
a909942d211e334ff0300266e74c2e80
a464e11160308b50346e93f32cc266366c88adc5
describe
'10191' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJT' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
28597b16301708db7f532d0c7126ca08
2d0e3c153c693f9a88f1a40080626e0fb0674a94
'2011-11-18T10:51:21-05:00'
describe
'324069' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJU' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
2b3f9dc67f808a80ba2c575603d706e9
bfe8ffc5a5871c2cb9bf3f8914012a6efeebd881
'2011-11-18T10:48:28-05:00'
describe
'81778' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJV' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
94db83d5545460f3b23f138f93ec789a
c0ff91ee2e92461816e1ba3ac8410315c38171f6
'2011-11-18T10:45:55-05:00'
describe
'24017' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJW' 'sip-files00095.pro'
de2f546d5130503891ac3d1a3d3891dc
c6b2d41024fd7b3a3ae9ba8d02738e2cf8505600
'2011-11-18T10:51:39-05:00'
describe
'26223' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJX' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
e452c5c6e3c27009572f27173061492d
83bdcdb04fb660df7bb209a89e1ffcfadc39e6ee
'2011-11-18T10:53:04-05:00'
describe
'2609680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJY' 'sip-files00095.tif'
479bdc224f1a38ada57e1274c7c3395f
a40b7b79310284799260a7a204728b5d14627eb2
describe
'955' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZJZ' 'sip-files00095.txt'
cb0966bba29c36dc777142a85e5c6a76
3a16c733d0e7f812c782db8fda592e4df95d5dc9
'2011-11-18T10:54:49-05:00'
describe
'6793' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKA' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
ba4c3b527e27d463fbb185648bf4caf1
4104371e9370a30d2617e0b6f16bc4fd4b0bfd73
'2011-11-18T10:49:10-05:00'
describe
'335092' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKB' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
5548b2bbd6959f7e6401739b65bef585
7567c26b1bf47a988ec9122b3292e88a5f0c5f74
describe
'104726' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKC' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
bbff3784d95648ec7c911a42bbcf2186
5dc7572782cad68d9ea226640202e72faf96209d
describe
'30831' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKD' 'sip-files00096.pro'
95b9ebd98e4773be5dd13b47933a527d
57092e0bb82b7539cd5885e6a3c24eb50c83f1aa
describe
'33337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKE' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
40abd140196ca6f1571ab36fd94d5044
37587de35c5a83ab0e103444caf652036d50d4c1
'2011-11-18T10:53:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKF' 'sip-files00096.tif'
91565f1b96a49a3e61bebba6f853a901
f8e2655769d9bfe7c2f6dd4ba29aebba793aff68
'2011-11-18T10:50:15-05:00'
describe
'1283' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKG' 'sip-files00096.txt'
efbc1f1cda67bfc19c37eb5bfedd635f
1ee4bf8b5c7da44ddb25d050226b929de26eca8a
describe
'8645' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKH' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
c84e1aa2c27f88d384943a2d6740aacc
b89bdc6b6c2ba6fcbcd3010b9321f3b5a410e046
describe
'322104' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKI' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
2a73577402273ec3971a2c51668f6b64
ec9be0f598a86623b0073fbd51db130822c2dd1a
describe
'131526' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKJ' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
85d7d80b255be02f47c13dd6f7dcddb2
c63442f9d4fc26b203147147a426b9f8167b5081
'2011-11-18T10:45:36-05:00'
describe
'40236' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKK' 'sip-files00097.pro'
2e166525cd58a87b5e2b0993fbc99dc6
9fe6da01cba2e96400a7951d514542623cfbb4c3
describe
'41164' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKL' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
eeefa4a9ad0593668556dc254b1f3e43
98aa0da983ec20d40bbf35eb1f20ef3f0d64af61
describe
'2593480' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKM' 'sip-files00097.tif'
80ad8cba73a40728bff4871d5db77aba
7956b783de57635d84ec22dc58b11e84c87302d6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKN' 'sip-files00097.txt'
6f1e38eec2670ddbd2cde3be1f7002c9
007bcd26c909f10cb1a1f643f907adee25ae28db
describe
'10138' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKO' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
a02705d008d53a5f682f6e52bb51134d
be95a6eef0568c3f0f6702523d6bb2e5546143ce
describe
'328145' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKP' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
1a99cb9c8e02d9875761cabd430cf88a
2cc751225103e87c940e1e6b44817a01c780eae2
describe
'130365' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKQ' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
1f72991b7d7fa0789f729035e45e79d7
339a9cfe8a0b39f531c7f6cce0f022dbf92b0132
describe
'40860' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKR' 'sip-files00098.pro'
f5eb63877f334e563dfd3a7168910339
6b3b40f92279b38d226dc55d15295034309d1382
'2011-11-18T10:49:16-05:00'
describe
'41220' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKS' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
472a90de648bfe064fb33b33b1e33ce9
23cc91219a4a589b8f7467261719f77ad136b9f7
describe
'2641692' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKT' 'sip-files00098.tif'
bd9d490cb42fb5e7e9b48a8191600ca5
4c13016d8605664b99995b7acefb7d077e17bd7f
describe
'1605' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKU' 'sip-files00098.txt'
7cc33b04140c5c490dfc3897665e6351
1fa6ca56ed679366da798e7a808755c8eb55602f
describe
'9851' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKV' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
a76c686dd91fd9a4aef093f848f83516
cc995f04b34410da20d1c2b35d3f91eb97d31e81
describe
'315640' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKW' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
6bb4d47b68fceb8dd446eff85c6f7257
7e414ce56cb87ecfe7117fb9edec28ce432bf18a
'2011-11-18T10:51:18-05:00'
describe
'129330' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKX' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
19e90594c5dcf5075adc988dee50d89a
09493be838b9442146cffb7340c8ae59a9419823
describe
'41288' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKY' 'sip-files00099.pro'
34866703a69277130e25fa1431e064fb
7db889f73aa236d59aad71a5931ffb4f20f09663
'2011-11-18T10:47:36-05:00'
describe
'42606' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZKZ' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
ef8eebce9cba3c1cd270faaf07efd473
3872bd304eea2f35521649862599e879d1da66fc
describe
'2541512' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLA' 'sip-files00099.tif'
db25791acda24ae9eff32a59d45b2ac0
7f765d06d2d0b6221ade4d9c4ba57463ca599f22
describe
'1637' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLB' 'sip-files00099.txt'
8aace26974b85a9c25924e767b475e70
2d2d3c975fc3bc50e9d13b41cafdcad0915046c1
'2011-11-18T10:48:16-05:00'
describe
'10650' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLC' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
bbfcf0d3ba4d9219ace367c41e57f3d3
bdf56e9d8b732e2547343dddbf1a5510be1bc55e
'2011-11-18T10:51:55-05:00'
describe
'335081' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLD' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
71b0d3bf4ac80b4ea5584027d4d7c14b
6539685e61e85780b84da56895ef1fefc95de766
'2011-11-18T10:54:52-05:00'
describe
'128023' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLE' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
afc66102f74ac51857e3a93dff2450e1
127ca9cfa2000b7de868c076308a283ddffff150
describe
'40996' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLF' 'sip-files00100.pro'
ca78038c8c4d7395547f77a5fa363e01
a5f33ce58d1e2cc4d8e24c184e009b87a59edbfb
describe
'40016' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLG' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
ce15f433d379c7bed547eb1aa8d187a1
19c9c78c1a9af7b56359ac15bc536a818932a8c3
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLH' 'sip-files00100.tif'
b05cf0ee0fd0d8bf6d6496168351aad3
daca380399589b578eeecf42c425083235c1bcf3
'2011-11-18T10:54:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLI' 'sip-files00100.txt'
415ec2bd336aea6c7401d59855fbd3ad
8d145c14ed767917ba5311b053c33ae64805b258
'2011-11-18T10:53:41-05:00'
describe
'10075' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLJ' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
8026eb90e3eb84d59825b8a78ff0aeb3
0c4bc30da5aef945833ca0b21cf72b365a9f3e4c
describe
'316773' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLK' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
bb8738b56814ef8de496f5c7b6469a71
52973885acb09e87670aa2e617fd6eec871a2d1e
describe
'123192' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLL' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
92da092393bcf3e7ca90b5098ebd75d3
00532f1023fbf7ea9a41258901c06ac739eb4684
describe
'37503' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLM' 'sip-files00101.pro'
087a8120acc4c7cc7edf871c2f5bcaab
a509b70b902148e13d2eccec9c25c62af1d5fede
describe
'38565' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLN' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
261a2514db2936d654b4f28f66474668
99111227c229f19ab5e73e4f08d79d54794275ee
describe
'2550576' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLO' 'sip-files00101.tif'
9bd6c1f400b219a1b20292bada77fab5
09a4720463aaef84c5d40fab9230bb888d94c07e
describe
'1500' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLP' 'sip-files00101.txt'
53e08b7a9b9a6ffeb782fc145e7f4496
e278f81fe4acd16051e4e9b12a3b95e495395784
describe
'10818' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLQ' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
84e46740fa8019c1d45ac1897265618b
edf180e4ecb17528bc6f0026e114a3b42a54be45
describe
'316081' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLR' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
2e1e86f7a46d2b9151a19d3cb0a0957a
9998ac012b46092d4259f026837b02e73cc49433
'2011-11-18T10:46:35-05:00'
describe
'56762' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLS' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
f58f138953fa9c088017f8a0b4023d7c
fcaefa75ab737f68abbb8500d3c875f7de88dc8c
'2011-11-18T10:54:56-05:00'
describe
'15016' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLT' 'sip-files00102.pro'
e8e0a45598a288a8587a5247c178fd15
b4b578379d7810e70ee0b393cc433974699949bd
describe
'17872' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLU' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
44ca3d940521e05301fc97063c1610d1
695c9a97035cf8f7dadb294d6da5aa52e29b000f
'2011-11-18T10:54:08-05:00'
describe
'2545192' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLV' 'sip-files00102.tif'
bf2a5c5f20206ce7a1bef64d58d7fed9
f44fc691f3942948db8086aa2084f329198f452f
describe
'625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLW' 'sip-files00102.txt'
ba26626070b5fdb03f6745d9b2301fc4
c68cc3794ba9d99e127ad1ba631b43450c9108f6
describe
'4920' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLX' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
d3f7e53d43a88819d0cd35cd8bb28fb7
11e248b1cea2f04b9146113fac9bb4355e6f3807
describe
'314849' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLY' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
0c7815dff56bceea98329acd04d0bf1e
5d99304f188333e3687578a542dca261f6a71d0e
describe
'101442' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZLZ' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
0648460f94eb823c6a6a98f1be7970b9
7023b55d7430f24156a0a063c0abad6812142e96
describe
'29799' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMA' 'sip-files00103.pro'
5a0486c49502ed4da2487cfaa40ed6d5
9538f05dae53d819333670c3b88493cea05f7493
describe
'32440' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMB' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
9f34eb633a2574620eb3cbe835853096
9f5e86131aa4aa7653b40298992c5de8faaca49d
describe
'2535400' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMC' 'sip-files00103.tif'
9700507a5b38d4f0df582fcfc4601ed6
95c1bd3680c3ee56191ee2b414283da4685eb29a
describe
'1290' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMD' 'sip-files00103.txt'
a68024132b4bf534f93f7419261b0055
dcde779318610fabb21b462b110a20b449ec7e1a
describe
'9334' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZME' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
57d5d54beca471a61b3631bcf4060bb8
44f929c21550dc1f67ae02f208ade54654625a52
'2011-11-18T10:46:11-05:00'
describe
'325572' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMF' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
c623c2eb2b4f59c168dc1adc0d1d9ee1
c2de3053811704daf45bf95ef23137876dcac064
describe
'132678' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMG' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
44bc8daf774670966e419c6ba1fe9eae
3eb8554737c11d026e70a03200cecc6025135ab6
describe
'42375' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMH' 'sip-files00104.pro'
3bcfbd60a0585038d5ba28e73b8a881f
96ebd5947288f571a8ef98e616219bac7a88d7f0
'2011-11-18T10:53:51-05:00'
describe
'41698' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMI' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
67b5ec8ce63cbcad58a846c7e563f75d
dfbc73dfbc65e108bdf67d85c7f3b24475b70e59
describe
'2621684' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMJ' 'sip-files00104.tif'
a02377c5076121de31058728c42de95c
f91b445b1fb09ea48c3431001e1b5511bc33a8b6
'2011-11-18T10:54:09-05:00'
describe
'1666' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMK' 'sip-files00104.txt'
40c98b9990221c78cbdc2fc5b9b12435
655967403ca6248253c371a934aad2e2990a7f40
describe
'10355' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZML' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
82967b8c4a2cadb071809e5a2983d6c4
dfe75a3e38fe7b57d9d190e4f90dae9634b0fca5
describe
'312925' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMM' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
ebdeaa7a7b95b36bc2269981535845e2
a8659a7474eeb7603d540d529f2be43cf78346d1
describe
'125328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMN' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
1e02616a2fd9435d25dbf98ba85f2eae
e7f81a390261eb5cf416d3006a569123d6455cf6
describe
'39864' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMO' 'sip-files00105.pro'
ccfda3efa159473534a5b3ef771253fb
4c01c27320293a2c226a049c88bec6e9438b578e
describe
'39950' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMP' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
1279d5ab38e3fe6b20ed0b07203548e9
0d739936d688673229d60f94bb0134fa1e9cbb6d
describe
'2520496' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMQ' 'sip-files00105.tif'
c6bca3bdf115d77cb8db0c9d878b0c8f
c6485019bdd0de8486d57b61c22f01a0899cc2a7
describe
'1585' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMR' 'sip-files00105.txt'
8b4d854d815831ff6cd6ead53032fa90
87fef3c210888c79f6125ca8520ec7841011d1b9
describe
'10669' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMS' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
7db477048891170e28930cd2f4c637cd
a760aa11a6400bb24f98b66669e7d8385702ab1a
'2011-11-18T10:52:37-05:00'
describe
'322458' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMT' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
d4c6a81e8b4c9a584de94023ca2c96ad
1af4fdd079218a4063604f5b15e50571726e0552
describe
'123835' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMU' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
063d4ad4fb81750a4f1dde427be53e68
a665bb9a599faebf8cd7bc8a76260c315c25ce84
'2011-11-18T10:53:19-05:00'
describe
'40852' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMV' 'sip-files00106.pro'
3398523baef2919b5dbaad824e685a30
944cdcad80002c6cb10e185f4ac0e40632e2de89
describe
'39555' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMW' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
b51cb24202e987164e367fb0b59a95d8
e1957f3fad38dd065a45e99f89cb905743406b5a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMX' 'sip-files00106.tif'
60f25246f173458ebd24aa8091a03dfb
64207de154f8bed8131d2bc47bb01a67f6464034
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMY' 'sip-files00106.txt'
8651a6fae5a399237035becfb2673363
429bc7906a48abc43fe5ce39a9cd8dfb459e064c
describe
'10701' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZMZ' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
6dcb95e1d39ca727350c51fda4a79954
a4763137117d90be992b36f106d2ba50d9ae9813
describe
'323530' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNA' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
3893b269094bb828966726aec9c5b503
abacef9034c63572198860d3eedf1985b5e1c6de
'2011-11-18T10:47:32-05:00'
describe
'126885' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNB' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
c973bf2225c85ba67c7a71791d4a09ed
64dad109b4d80874555861631df2aefb4b2b86c2
describe
'42917' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNC' 'sip-files00107.pro'
0e7f8d180bbf1179c055ed3ddae3410a
1b025b582a7cb8d90a8ee2ec9cd5a810180c4cb4
describe
'40169' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZND' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
2706f7ded7ae57f91a91687086ef8b16
ff9827078816fd23f4a087fc600444459bab5245
describe
'2604740' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNE' 'sip-files00107.tif'
e339a476e23501df56833080175f9222
31fb377c5c3d2a20dafbe40429be23d3069fe047
'2011-11-18T10:52:31-05:00'
describe
'1710' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNF' 'sip-files00107.txt'
7fe4cce0503739f3b22a46c62eb81472
bcab6e5d461adb51db7235dd9f6f25f96ade7151
describe
'10765' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNG' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
cafa53c659c17e1fa0c39c1e18b6a0b5
f47531da68b5aadbe5d191c2a76c0c72d8ce0335
describe
'328781' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNH' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
aadce2545f789a362bd0d347872a1888
cf8c77f2756906a0e3fa6c4eca9c98399e3a495b
describe
'124020' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNI' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
a92b59626e3bf8da8771c273dcd60e5f
745a9999236387e76e770704d21e1b066844d5ce
describe
'39915' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNJ' 'sip-files00108.pro'
2702fa374d33298aa9a36cba8081b2d5
365403e16ea1cbd7e93a2e4d9f3f0ce4dedc5c65
describe
'39816' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNK' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
40bdfc8498a2da9426784b106c60cbfc
dd1654f35702e3cde58135b20f1665fd7b46fff5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNL' 'sip-files00108.tif'
ad6cdbbf6826bcae32e87e45bf39aa0f
f346ce905b8b22a691c21e5010710e11dafafa76
'2011-11-18T10:45:35-05:00'
describe
'1600' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNM' 'sip-files00108.txt'
d6982ae5f80faf4a1a727b6360a6481a
009cce165951fdb7fc619d81a9cf2b59bb8a1eb8
describe
'10234' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNN' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
b60a86fb1464bf965c4df930408b2817
500085e6a28deee3f7bfaf7bb11a5145430159f2
describe
'316108' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNO' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
2e2940cb5824cd18f389a3425242116c
afd00ec31e216637716f3fdb3498a92a3d37811f
describe
'61707' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNP' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
34e5a37411f09a2a332b61f80d7bd03c
cd345bda463b5089a9808fc0997d275bd7a5b28b
describe
'17125' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNQ' 'sip-files00109.pro'
4fcfd4804f59b724595d56606f9aae5f
e97094c2cd176cadeca70145ec00da37f11adf87
describe
'19769' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNR' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
62dcc2bbc7ed1b866005aa9b299b2154
27a3170a4bf1f4c8f852941709f56a867b1f625d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNS' 'sip-files00109.tif'
5287ea118fc379a2c4356bb373812aed
4d12d8bf1989c8056107951d9caf6ebd7bb8966f
'2011-11-18T10:50:46-05:00'
describe
'728' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNT' 'sip-files00109.txt'
f762e45aab67a5bc5e48353cf4387b6c
5f43df8f4ddddc9fec3d07bcab0a0265ff50117c
describe
'5372' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNU' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
fefab4d9c190ea361d687a128275c4f2
bf98b5f7bdf61d318939ed537ed428f8cec164b3
describe
'320981' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNV' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
3c178b74f28abe11c1e921e8f3396bb1
cf2402c31a3d4aba2bb0d94f7cc2f670a429b127
describe
'103046' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNW' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
24a51aa895e646f0896c763f83407a93
c7cec1d22832f1fa83966d2bad7c4e8e7de99caf
describe
'29581' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNX' 'sip-files00110.pro'
5f99e0a612d628106b94dd311f9c99f4
aaae1bf02ca9f483ad82c4c90d0a0ef3de64fbf3
describe
'32639' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNY' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
f62be5390ed19c907e6a027d710690f6
2b0c52cc707e88fd91bdda92f0ef71e0e947e8a1
describe
'2584388' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZNZ' 'sip-files00110.tif'
382ec6afaa861800821f5729ddbaef13
8a8aa43cbeb12b190d66b65b9db2b8d3fc06ee90
'2011-11-18T10:47:34-05:00'
describe
'1234' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOA' 'sip-files00110.txt'
e01c54dcb3db7ed91f4ef5994ed62f75
cb09d6d7f77c0181ea786e11dc873e5c7cdc161b
describe
'8159' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOB' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
7f98cb694e64f1219433560ea78447d2
3dfa16845451769c7badaa2df45982e7085da531
describe
'318048' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOC' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
0655d26ce5145e538ab437d850946150
d77c22fa59f08974479b34136d704430426317e0
'2011-11-18T10:54:39-05:00'
describe
'129806' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOD' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
666076400f73f5d4c15d298c7f1b66e0
1defe44fbe811dfb60a0278bfb5bd8091c60fc15
'2011-11-18T10:46:19-05:00'
describe
'41274' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOE' 'sip-files00111.pro'
91ac2f8af5f39eee6a0a094cd8beaeaf
309d341c16f65d885545f46fca2ae3a031c227c8
describe
'41770' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOF' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
f6ad12f77a9f521bbf2276fb274a3afc
0020e893a1077243e668bc800a9093d8943cdff2
describe
'2560820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOG' 'sip-files00111.tif'
c181a33ef80a657cf64334bc5621bee0
04c1139c856b6d86eb5d9aa9097250142bc77c6d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOH' 'sip-files00111.txt'
c0f0486666e801fe15be32094f3ab1f2
df58c5a6064b4c619bd27113ff61f12cc42c8c1c
describe
'10634' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOI' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
e363a355cbe9da6d50d1f00cce9a6735
1967272b2bdd6e7ae23167d3ebdd363ee78b365a
'2011-11-18T10:48:13-05:00'
describe
'324056' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOJ' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
e9c4cfaf5418a23f514c111113cc2917
7109f0bd945e560dae6665aea027aa0dd01c9f78
describe
'128021' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOK' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
af5038822943bd6cadbe4e2df9ba38ea
387d5a7ca7c29494b5c2c8064052533ca2a122b9
'2011-11-18T10:54:07-05:00'
describe
'41278' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOL' 'sip-files00112.pro'
96c4880619f0689caacb8b5e8c9e2a53
e09e36e4c1c3f0b5b5a689a5a1676075c305b5d4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOM' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
61d8147fd00391cd93fc78a2bf0081a8
00656efc3365011d6304622f7f39db28c34abe83
describe
'2608944' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZON' 'sip-files00112.tif'
d4a710be71c3f026436b336f48703e7b
fd681cf9a8351e3873de6f26bc11fd332793d935
'2011-11-18T10:50:42-05:00'
describe
'1648' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOO' 'sip-files00112.txt'
4a894896e83b51554d41d68b30e04a2b
479a46129410716faf0d7beca102ed1e39cf8de1
describe
'10674' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOP' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
aad15e43101eda4257ad08d5465594c2
49a91d9f1ab5ffa23b9256c893377e2fba396bb0
'2011-11-18T10:50:00-05:00'
describe
'329858' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOQ' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
cedeaa77d902f4d62fe8426b0211c25f
adee031610c36201b9b08ca2d32bb89c27342b56
describe
'127514' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOR' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
141f4bd2daad7b60c3b12d1c08db1c13
d14796f9330f94b35e1fd9469b17818feb19a08b
describe
'41827' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOS' 'sip-files00113.pro'
4c3238c84a243132777c2296802d20c6
4011b662a65275ba2ca8ffb01312a4e991e42494
describe
'41445' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOT' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
7fc82996bdb518494a873ae2e97891a2
4218dc624e7df74ffe9470f5b61ac452edb9ecb1
'2011-11-18T10:51:51-05:00'
describe
'2655188' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOU' 'sip-files00113.tif'
d9e6a7a8ae0f7bcb9a29ca05d795b8cf
685b73de61c178210cc7605d0e3cd7555c480213
describe
'1663' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOV' 'sip-files00113.txt'
68129589f151499e1603022848286688
95407503b05f3f598792743b67450ecf3aebe2a2
describe
'10328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOW' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
614dd041a2e30122a2e243c62f963557
bc9567e86a0d59364d5918393754948d2dca3f46
describe
'319428' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOX' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
268ffdb10c0c510af8fc4e7bcf3dbea3
6e057ca618df56473808766f40559fab1b73d563
'2011-11-18T10:52:01-05:00'
describe
'128962' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOY' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
682843904dc6889bf4ea508b3d290cba
12a0a592db10d94232c2290dde55aa9e293a28ec
describe
'40186' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZOZ' 'sip-files00114.pro'
9140a528235e95e318359f3cf44d232e
87f97f56497b6001a74d1a673edf9fb2b6768445
describe
'41227' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPA' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
3895a029014f8e73ce9ed5fbe763b782
b789d78ea0d9b5b7207f57854145651915020ea6
describe
'2571956' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPB' 'sip-files00114.tif'
12ede14f0589d485bd90bfdd7e9f75af
8cafa968c6a45e63df56626b26c4402169f89f3f
'2011-11-18T10:47:29-05:00'
describe
'1581' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPC' 'sip-files00114.txt'
bd6f94d221857fa4e4ad513dacb0072f
c76cf7c1090e54bf30454729aa3392fc32dab332
describe
'10722' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPD' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
bab3b624c7d3eda5dfdab61d288ed16f
5c69d38344b7ca8e575bc23ab7ef8096591fbf9c
describe
'327696' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPE' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
2ca9257e721857ef9d690f53a61935f0
7924566be680cbadc2225c218e1311bedb6f68e4
describe
'129819' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPF' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
7d1a9a625a9bb25285351ff76a04b622
4a46e81723329331dc33f90d2eb2f6ca6fce6814
describe
'42236' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPG' 'sip-files00115.pro'
d21d93202c5743bac7eba0ec6c50d679
d36b5d93f8623f6ba0d6ecd61fb4845f46934500
describe
'41022' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPH' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
199d51f2a5f5852773a734252a234d09
eb3722c45414b66beea6b1cce6ded9abb2783642
'2011-11-18T10:53:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPI' 'sip-files00115.tif'
f3aa0b758e3796f9213e54f821c03596
ffa0551cbafb1ea9f5e58d38c2e0d0f3110f888e
'2011-11-18T10:47:33-05:00'
describe
'1671' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPJ' 'sip-files00115.txt'
23bcdb9a490c26156691eb7c33ca2c15
2f4c8b61399dd103acaac4313f3063ab55fb9019
describe
'10805' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPK' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
b48a7ed25c52e9c7a85b8438f260f92b
ffc1118bddbc7bc3bf3d7bcd08fd49831c37d94e
'2011-11-18T10:47:55-05:00'
describe
'326966' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPL' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
52425f1e68a8a21395bd0ed4b48682cc
d0307ce20a68180638a850a4661599b42bcf0c20
'2011-11-18T10:46:51-05:00'
describe
'126540' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPM' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
d3c8cfc5b53482fa44f07f6ef6d1ed4b
2cd97c6b69fbca47ebb2869a912404805b739b2b
describe
'41474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPN' 'sip-files00116.pro'
95f23cc755debcc7cb617c8a88a6b564
fd4b2ef8bb02313cab521a6ebc333f5f139edd0d
describe
'39730' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPO' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
59f7838e99ba86c9f00742e9d91ee947
9e4b15c06ac8e6359afd547d15948a44a5e7eded
describe
'2632068' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPP' 'sip-files00116.tif'
f5679d8833b01ec0c349c69b7291242f
ecfb312372fd541cb5079c1a1f25cdc897a1a4ed
'2011-11-18T10:46:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPQ' 'sip-files00116.txt'
7efccd98707ad9b401724df73b687469
b6dca0d26457d87d49246b4081226b733200a77c
describe
'10387' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPR' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
9d852e2d8a9ff75fe203529c2230eef7
3262fc1414588ffa61c3ea1965642010d8d5bdb0
'2011-11-18T10:46:26-05:00'
describe
'314534' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPS' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
ac767394b371dc4a0ccc36330210b476
6c53704b825e0fcbe1e828bbcb263b46329769f7
'2011-11-18T10:47:08-05:00'
describe
'124203' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPT' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
ede51745ba1c2e46e67c1cef1e2656be
7acb089a0d1bc52d4e4e1a314e1581d14d130b64
describe
'39973' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPU' 'sip-files00117.pro'
2b418b0b9dae0befdc15c2ad84cc796b
221cbda21f14f2e3fb8b675f4a30e86f8b8b0b5f
'2011-11-18T10:51:19-05:00'
describe
'38993' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPV' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
42b66ddf0906a7ec65e00a0943f21639
6d67fedadce568cb3b7749a85eaa030dbb39fe78
describe
'2532768' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPW' 'sip-files00117.tif'
56a295aa3c70d95c5a681683b0e729fc
451b48186b05efe688a05ab0192209176d1af039
'2011-11-18T10:53:22-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPX' 'sip-files00117.txt'
2e1b64b485f028c6cd54c40b31c2fbb8
1264ad813853e211abaae7c24e345395ab65791d
describe
'10824' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPY' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
5c764401bf51b0a74cdfea8c02e0f63f
e4a007959a99c2af111dc4cb688613fe8c571254
describe
'330118' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZPZ' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
45ca19a3dd8e1d3115a21c2c72626d0b
b26fa63b86151be3d46328084eb824ad4fb62ec8
describe
'114607' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQA' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
5829ec1dd3918fc58f8a1154f182e1d2
59deb81627ca2acb248e861c891cee3198d61ecd
describe
'36667' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQB' 'sip-files00118.pro'
3d84f66ed5c54a5dc648c0f91f7ad3ff
878e5c4092feacecc0dd13905c388037b0813c7c
'2011-11-18T10:51:09-05:00'
describe
'36487' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQC' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
b238a0959441efb73e796d1866e28add
dbcfab62a77b86680295fc10e92dcae2127c2809
describe
'2657292' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQD' 'sip-files00118.tif'
dfeecc9611f217f27d4c63c44d47ca2b
25f1a864685d1f045a253f3d1590614d4066dc00
describe
'1447' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQE' 'sip-files00118.txt'
bdc79269218c546f196956125f5e56e9
827c87620978b7e66e22056735068d56167f9e1b
'2011-11-18T10:51:53-05:00'
describe
'9110' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQF' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
4ad9e55ea33f98562d9a029f0f48c5f7
4e6d45ad246be64133b2ebe2fcede6ee979f42bf
describe
'325656' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQG' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
90b3cc29643cb783db0aef5b8e76b21e
3d675404bb353ac78b952498338a01a08f165f1c
describe
'103706' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQH' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
0b8d1449f4fbf4935eb92946baf1c6cc
f6898a99f645325010d0032a368b17f00cc48356
describe
'31582' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQI' 'sip-files00119.pro'
e8f62247d8a699fc677b1a2f75cb5010
d4ca013c8625f58ebe6c88c03fe0674c5a49c081
describe
'32888' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQJ' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
b944d65d57c6cf885999d13fb50b3886
6cb3035d14ab12d0119c3d689d797ea9e71ce668
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQK' 'sip-files00119.tif'
8627df0257f77f3ce213f4be670ba739
1d10e6d912258d4cb0e939bdd9268a50c9cba08f
describe
'1361' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQL' 'sip-files00119.txt'
5023d33320ef2c9a153592ebc6458979
034c33020e858fecfc1705f9f367251184d5366a
'2011-11-18T10:50:08-05:00'
describe
'8688' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQM' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
82dd3a7e9463c7edfed7617ca851e0bd
57da34a158247fa3797062aeb8ed7b1340ea4c4a
describe
'328797' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQN' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
12663fd357cbf80a220edb686e558ebd
b00a32ab1f352e419b154177677e47804071d441
describe
'129303' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQO' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
fcb770c1d8dfb66cd2a5666d5d614a80
c8f1aee75c9f6b7a448b81391eb1f2feef46f215
'2011-11-18T10:46:22-05:00'
describe
'42517' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQP' 'sip-files00120.pro'
70db77da0db3c3780a5c8e93a072a598
aca57b35c7586fd7acd73b74acce0e1bb269f806
describe
'40851' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQQ' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
c5a451b6838234dac76c2901ed9f07b5
e16c512f0cf03ceeb95d7447a1744d1a9f2ae414
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQR' 'sip-files00120.tif'
4afc823fa9dba5facc632af5e24e9381
540cd04a91c1421e5f30980153f523b6ae278669
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQS' 'sip-files00120.txt'
343f436d621fcbffeebf3d266642196c
ea5e52961e7b58f2a7ed3bb529c6b352c96f4fc7
describe
'10012' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQT' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
15b324779cccf3105633b7fd020971d5
47aa127162c918f45c8d60086ec6a13e722995a6
'2011-11-18T10:54:51-05:00'
describe
'321550' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQU' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
fc5f7c43e270b95c084ece0168ac2bde
8da97a805df80982db8cde129f7a8a44446762cb
describe
'126309' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQV' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
80d74f1ddcd013e0fc12564c316bd214
c107611d5c7a0a581f1329f1706f55db4eafd599
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQW' 'sip-files00121.pro'
ad483c3981cd668e3a84806925b4acd6
9a520992b28f34b9d312780ee10fa6f0243347e3
'2011-11-18T10:47:07-05:00'
describe
'40382' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQX' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
ee4a66aaf26b56669a05d4edc083ad90
e99f1c749564604facd6a2ba9105255565243702
describe
'2588836' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQY' 'sip-files00121.tif'
067a402dc56b16cd270cec1e86b5f099
54ca128aa235f0b251bc953841b80930674cec5b
'2011-11-18T10:47:09-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZQZ' 'sip-files00121.txt'
4a1ad1d3ea05996fe668e34bb0b6da4e
6f24e483aea4026f53df84776ee53eb62109c3e1
'2011-11-18T10:53:26-05:00'
describe
'10477' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRA' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
604f83a8e9b10293254874c4d805da50
17d9f7bb03464b709410cde6859c221141ad2460
describe
'323320' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRB' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
1bd068006c5c394e8f724a1966a86bf0
3b613cfa5b743775a684ef17704c65dd621e5b4f
describe
'131104' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRC' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
087833692cdea4ad5dfdb79826f7aa3d
f6f3b8ac6fd3e3eac320e32f6376f3d93c33be5c
describe
'41891' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRD' 'sip-files00122.pro'
a81cc7d5401936c1a150e56d4cbd281f
d1494664ddffdab7f527bb2b0e08c40e3da7370b
describe
'41869' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRE' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
278d35e79afc33f2ab38ca1079c00fff
c8d02427f42e156eb8da9dce726728174bde5225
describe
'2603044' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRF' 'sip-files00122.tif'
204b87e6a8c1659a78d158185575c67c
a6afedeb8d6cf0c6a381809461698cf0a5048d55
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRG' 'sip-files00122.txt'
d73b59d107220ab6e200f57b143c3c5f
2d62e68a50ee47e52880f17c6787f97455844ea2
describe
'11563' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRH' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
cc35afc7584827f0206bff6d5c54669a
fc438b2a699cb6fd6aae467433a868e84cfb9463
describe
'325236' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRI' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
176c61c58a7c6ee41b2629c338d33412
699e7a5700bf34460671b6323121e2e7027463a6
describe
'128027' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRJ' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
e0fa7152d4307f84bfdae287cbde3b54
0298c93c94ba864c8976babf66dcadef9da76476
describe
'41513' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRK' 'sip-files00123.pro'
681dc605578b2fda5d43eddc5a2dec0c
7310c21e12856c1d9bf2c958504672348c835dfd
'2011-11-18T10:52:10-05:00'
describe
'40530' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRL' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
06556473515fdc4ea248dd91c794f159
7fd0d8ad53be9900718e308b0ba79e7919d85851
describe
'2618428' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRM' 'sip-files00123.tif'
08a0940d34cd44f8ae52c02628fe3b46
18f3658ac9e6c5b587a2ccb47134cdb612826dde
'2011-11-18T10:47:12-05:00'
describe
'1664' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRN' 'sip-files00123.txt'
e064832931251f10269fb29ae8cbb509
1f793137f9179409cfd3fe3d0308a798411b8e95
describe
'9865' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRO' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
ef26d73c73027de03ae1428c861781a4
7a291b31ded20814f72d982a159a74e0cff5f91a
'2011-11-18T10:51:44-05:00'
describe
'322475' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRP' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
4fae204897923f64f81aee7572d6650b
967a9e54c418c1f045f994a4903d40536d6bd012
describe
'125926' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRQ' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
cdd283bbae99d2c30369a6da8327fde8
7215921b5018b62a8a7b9c1e9563dfdb5a0e874f
describe
'41649' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRR' 'sip-files00124.pro'
7d9423428e0426868bdd228928075eb7
2103e06135cafe4fd996b4e4cc6da022e2812ebb
describe
'40368' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRS' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
6d0ca5a7cdaf17e092015162bad09440
3338ae56863779242be41cf4acf76cc95d852aa4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRT' 'sip-files00124.tif'
0dd6e4699fc71b732c32e07126125c63
eb0e153ec9ce1f4a4d97638d3c9b34148a5cce95
'2011-11-18T10:51:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRU' 'sip-files00124.txt'
30f4982477644284de28fe39257483e8
28da6a6f1b53f746a8165ffbfc3e4ca907e347e2
'2011-11-18T10:49:54-05:00'
describe
'11173' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRV' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
0db85ff0f1d2a12c38d17b1b37b805e1
0efcda4a02bd48a86ad8a773e290c181e3a66215
describe
'320347' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRW' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
ed304bcd2a0e5a335c358f1c90bab250
6d6c3bcf6d92aca6de572d4803512f3700bd9359
describe
'127735' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRX' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
bb8307ed79300f59e9b556ebbae896b1
4aa92858d717d2b1d45f75d398826cfbcc05b1d7
describe
'41389' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRY' 'sip-files00125.pro'
fc14a46b15eee21483be25f9dfc05d94
ee8b24049a9d2d9eb8934571b0729006904f164f
describe
'40725' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZRZ' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
8b2bb6b198f8b4a8db12527005ca0840
a258b25730445b878460907e599745da4ba52ddd
'2011-11-18T10:49:35-05:00'
describe
'2579268' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSA' 'sip-files00125.tif'
a6039ab4c15b5ae8f5a43ee134142765
0d23583a54cea547569b162fdd2099f64f259149
describe
'1639' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSB' 'sip-files00125.txt'
fcb7abaa9cb03d9c3c7c9739afeb8056
74d66f96c100c1213933bf4da50b2f40473fe5bd
describe
'10746' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSC' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
3d9b303f6d1b9cc20147af60f7801ee4
d9984b9d8202ad3c7387a993286966392577d0eb
describe
'330589' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSD' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
297f65f2de454faca699a40feaf23e45
4e914ea854513a69bfaaee7fef353938855a8d20
describe
'71885' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSE' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
b47701e0fa527f8b50d349b239ef6c06
4aa8ee3f7435b53313dbbc4c340c614230bcde76
'2011-11-18T10:54:44-05:00'
describe
'21236' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSF' 'sip-files00126.pro'
2ac457c8a88575c3afd2debf262b1006
260e33072fbaa20bc2f3fae0a76d2c2436f10697
describe
'22680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSG' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
ea5fce2fec20c905be6f36906c3a2f43
b19976ae62a315c1f3767d1a0d07923b4c8212c7
'2011-11-18T10:48:04-05:00'
describe
'2661496' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSH' 'sip-files00126.tif'
8366caff58bd9ede6d89e6d63bfedee5
d728e914a428de2599afe34b44df0c083652686b
'2011-11-18T10:49:30-05:00'
describe
'854' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSI' 'sip-files00126.txt'
97e6d11818c255f1a91448a8b0622f55
6b39848b844311f9f33ccc3cf7b4535b1875586e
'2011-11-18T10:50:38-05:00'
describe
'6498' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSJ' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
9337bf207e7f6aa98c7f328218a60fe7
1f40eb19a858f4fc869f43a820e752381ce558f8
describe
'320514' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSK' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
699a7512a7d8a9b6f288abca8c13b4bc
291b54ad5dbd118dc31a84f250ff7be83be9373e
describe
'97283' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSL' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
95a468473bb0e3af32eafa3a776af587
f4f4648421faa9113d362441bd133391f603ca35
'2011-11-18T10:54:10-05:00'
describe
'28771' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSM' 'sip-files00127.pro'
4eee7c66da91a0f3e856a7707c621669
bd63b15da1330ff38e5ab26d0a810ddf0b201787
describe
'31164' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSN' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
b893aa4a3ce9cd90fbe90cfa5dfb4546
53f23b44d08f724f2d9452e5dfe061e799d17db5
'2011-11-18T10:48:19-05:00'
describe
'2580500' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSO' 'sip-files00127.tif'
72b679a253ca11a92d8fbe07bf39a710
dd67b67455fd01eff5a7631915ff8e5a0ba2937a
describe
'1202' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSP' 'sip-files00127.txt'
1c63238f940a67750c9e65657bca5160
a6374964edcf368e74328991e655fe36c6c670e8
describe
'8820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSQ' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
ed07d7c6016e42e989d35f3c80cd255f
406c2131569443e9043b4b4c0e9664428413ffb3
'2011-11-18T10:52:14-05:00'
describe
'320124' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSR' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
c54a73d92c2b3b0fb1d780ddd7f0720d
2fa7e44982cb809e7dfbbdaf34636188e3863516
'2011-11-18T10:49:37-05:00'
describe
'128101' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSS' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
297b8be2a209fc3701b50f0d7dbdc65a
00ba2fa8e650da9b9f697b374ad59fbdd23e589a
'2011-11-18T10:49:56-05:00'
describe
'40587' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZST' 'sip-files00128.pro'
74be2a0f10e98599320bf19936758305
d50cc22a4c419972d324515d429fef4cd0728a94
describe
'42174' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSU' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
db305127e1144f968fa9b9a1ec589c9e
89202d427f37ac05a0b471f3da90d0b18ad9c855
describe
'2577520' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSV' 'sip-files00128.tif'
8d41366d4c00d94d3ef0037476d8ac86
5d32e6999d6767b6bb0533c8800f9d7951974739
'2011-11-18T10:47:42-05:00'
describe
'1601' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSW' 'sip-files00128.txt'
42c6fc2660704dbc29aed508046ddd79
657e57c1f725df6293e5dcee61d5c55158bae2a9
describe
'10459' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSX' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
cb08b4a2075d0ef843cabe3c1b1392d1
34d05df37b5ced80be156eb6a6e042ca4cedf8e5
describe
'328712' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSY' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
1a3b38b08ee11a8cccbcb64d7ab8b365
84985e564cfba67575cc0f40b7185e79ca508a86
'2011-11-18T10:51:13-05:00'
describe
'124950' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZSZ' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
672f6eb7c77cbb33637bba31129bdac4
06152a11ba63df4ba4efa62f5e68577e65b30528
describe
'38165' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTA' 'sip-files00129.pro'
edbc7d2913e53a046459e4cbbe0665b6
eb81c6ac9cb264138bb707d040c6d4824ea9b50c
'2011-11-18T10:53:37-05:00'
describe
'39687' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTB' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
ae64f0f8d7f9fc27a2ab85323194048c
e1589d836c61cbca8a2db7dedc3c39cff88bc04c
'2011-11-18T10:51:38-05:00'
describe
'2646228' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTC' 'sip-files00129.tif'
f9609b4b9326502f8c7d45a5a2daac05
2054a743aaf83a981362af526da0c18ae5030bd0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTD' 'sip-files00129.txt'
3bb40abd7847033c14b42752f7ceee2f
6c558aec9c946d57cec220cf5bb78bd655767989
describe
'9946' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTE' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
8d8d624ec11031268af44a2d415a5b9f
3d83ca5d7d386cc88d6ad6cbfeb4f4ea5c7a6060
describe
'319348' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTF' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
51745249749edce336d3b4bebf006353
96ebf3d76faaf4835f606ba81ec628f864c9ead9
describe
'125222' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTG' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
27b2590b717542162a895108723cca4f
c8a00b2d7ad712f2fac6ad4d9f5bd08ab1284e85
describe
'40168' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTH' 'sip-files00130.pro'
fb4c08c03d4529026e524a192ae8dd7f
c281432d18e7b5a2330f5010d1e7ec96d3cd86b3
describe
'39531' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTI' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
043f29af8576ebc4949152ac2384b222
073950198506f169a274326f468c2ef3ad0d6913
describe
'2571108' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTJ' 'sip-files00130.tif'
61204cd2ed4259ab6d88eb87b5174cd0
6986517ea6f760e35cfdf9d7580dc0c784dda83b
'2011-11-18T10:49:44-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTK' 'sip-files00130.txt'
2c66fa104e432c00e7e6e9942894a7fe
e3ec5a5616083b9aa08b5eb30277902c85cebeb8
describe
'10779' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTL' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
411af79fdd8002e4168aedb659ac73bf
679bc8b198c08877ec688da188376fd131c6d569
describe
'325601' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTM' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
ef1d95c962f5b392a268ee6683e51aa5
c9cf2a974ef74ecd1101091fb4ca9fe15e1e55cc
describe
'123154' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTN' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
006b9dd48838277d8f24fbb4d60967b8
11641ab6da4541094f164d0a705ee8b05248a8fe
describe
'40806' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTO' 'sip-files00131.pro'
a43ed104232086f5c068b0bacd7127c4
2e84642374080dda8db78f59dc46fd8bcae92ea7
'2011-11-18T10:53:05-05:00'
describe
'38643' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTP' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
181480b28b7486a887a828e0a63513c1
9f53952a0c43ed88e96e743523e995e89d77c498
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTQ' 'sip-files00131.tif'
300bfbfa051c5c4c173b2b8a6b99ed72
64973e7c0a2f334d334b3637db86551c3a4050ad
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTR' 'sip-files00131.txt'
e943cd3633c5b9e637c58b0468fecf89
191c9cc9379e0bf544d85dae990850798bea2de5
describe
'10453' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTS' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
94cd3a7816a590a0f926a6cd63f88aba
81d50f05f39a406366c5c96094e61ee2fa51381e
describe
'322698' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTT' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
3b7854fd3018151c97c075176792c3ec
fe9661a78c9c9063a17f4c89bbb82c96c214fc45
describe
'126205' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTU' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
e09bd33c2665d809a45e39f15374269b
633d3cb409348d6ce98b6defb01431125ba1218a
describe
'40399' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTV' 'sip-files00132.pro'
4e2744813a439818c274419a413c21d2
1495b5e652db7ca289945dc82cc11d428259b9e8
'2011-11-18T10:49:15-05:00'
describe
'40428' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTW' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
94f5832a8948f558b47340a0eed091da
a494e7e4c315a53b0412a416dc2df7639daa7aa0
describe
'2597992' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTX' 'sip-files00132.tif'
7968c837b960572abc1eb42ad62cb35c
0b77467797b01c5e1e0499a67fe26d066f48ccf4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTY' 'sip-files00132.txt'
c9fb9538a669618c5b7e2a5a7e02d503
5d9dd6eca64b3d6eb765b9876220048260ccfc47
describe
'10269' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZTZ' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
b5dd4e7ef826dcc57a5601f8ce8393f0
7d369415795f22a4c1b1057770f3e4cac64ef9ba
describe
'328705' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUA' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
69dbb480d01f7cadf508be8efe7662fb
92a1d766062372ec9cb48d7c1885fc98193bbdfc
describe
'125707' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUB' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
98dbfd7acf3bc8ce00b00aadaa49d606
55b417fcfaffe18ed37c89f2d25fe496de6a699b
describe
'39361' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUC' 'sip-files00133.pro'
3ac2df71e489f489eee6a7cbebfa09a3
2856ebf25fd2273d3cb6198ac9195571caecfdb6
'2011-11-18T10:51:35-05:00'
describe
'41368' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUD' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
6e9810a06dd0119356dcd8b1a4c09c8e
3fe2c0563bd957f5ac38b75bb37b7dbdc346efd4
'2011-11-18T10:46:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUE' 'sip-files00133.tif'
980f6c1fc27061506f31709c3a3aef2c
547b3cd2db501ab31f89f51c8af5c087d04830f0
describe
'1616' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUF' 'sip-files00133.txt'
4e541870e2fca1049bf2d025f082b84c
32dad35ef6158140ad277e292d31413ec0ee591a
describe
'10506' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUG' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
36998c0c3bd346bfcaf21e6991e93502
ce8bede21484d3075326e4b6885ab44cd32b220d
describe
'325390' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUH' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
87982ed5c58678931d0d43e05d7e7613
e613fc851024b11a90174f1562da730e43689271
describe
'121583' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUI' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
231d63605f1c276499eef8c48195b140
f54dcd05cbb718df5726b65416e84f777ef48cb6
describe
'39883' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUJ' 'sip-files00134.pro'
8791840d878cd16ff11d9001085b1818
76aa536732676bd25545132e7378845fbf8627fc
describe
'38428' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUK' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
8dda509e55b45663668aa548384b8f54
6fd5632a072510f55142f792ded1af3bfa669a0c
'2011-11-18T10:48:48-05:00'
describe
'2619456' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUL' 'sip-files00134.tif'
557fda1d3a2b0be420b288bd4a3c765d
ba952e1e0145b3c5b208ab069b4847b967915c25
describe
'1574' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUM' 'sip-files00134.txt'
88e55415878a7db5193c59f047d07666
09d263c147eadea4099d0fb2c084646109c6a43a
describe
'10569' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUN' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
3720eb9370991065ff76eb9b65e60093
7c21a0e8ebb24ba9ba1d0c2a5cd96bdbb959b148
describe
'328294' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUO' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
5a526ea251cd709109027395959b72d0
9c7a83b0e1fc1cf8b57dc9a7924db318e621b094
describe
'120259' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUP' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
48cb3f71dc2fd7fd7de377bfe507e1c6
a4e1392d1847d8386b7655a2d6651b6c526bf3db
describe
'37792' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUQ' 'sip-files00135.pro'
bb2035ff38754b5e35b21d8951a6bf79
becddb55ef373b05e16210c738f51064bfe2c786
describe
'38706' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUR' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
8edbe4335634bd81f7311046b0d1b98f
66238b3ca321729576f2edfa9c99fa73763c8e88
describe
'2643540' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUS' 'sip-files00135.tif'
872e1d8e9136fc98ac52cde6b8595b96
29b3de77e822fafddad5b2eeca0f44d24e4bed95
describe
'1495' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUT' 'sip-files00135.txt'
8fbf081a868aa16a74f2a75ddf756bf3
7647e23d22261168987ce6cab938dc8e6d79838c
'2011-11-18T10:48:51-05:00'
describe
'9631' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUU' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
a18db9fee4a76f34ab2261c17235dc91
691d6853e668718a1030b7adaa93f580fb8fc699
describe
'325349' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUV' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
36d0dbbc89d91beb24f775a2051e4625
e64476dfa2c099caa7586e9846396207cd36e9a5
describe
'105011' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUW' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
0f8d3f89c0392665056d54bc6359457f
3a5989151d96de51fc2948b3a33db69c423245f6
describe
'33473' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUX' 'sip-files00136.pro'
2689f9bbf3960ad7d4480d0fed5295a3
3cf5ddbc03c59a2138b5b13242370c9fe2a8c5a8
describe
'32798' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUY' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
e3fc7c58225bb3e218bfcc3e436c1201
9736e8053045f6eea96c190218afd23f02239578
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZUZ' 'sip-files00136.tif'
c7ad42b85bd90c2fcd2a829e49995ba6
d3c4ab5227c747df653a4a606219f69659102f4e
'2011-11-18T10:45:52-05:00'
describe
'1359' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVA' 'sip-files00136.txt'
bfbacdc7965ba257d14d96e3ad300963
9a2e25d0ad2c9d756b29ef6beaafdf4f1090696f
describe
'9218' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVB' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
eedba2430f89e88595bb49840ffb2c2e
8247d534a5fc642713840fcbb52d1eac3297f9c8
describe
'327685' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVC' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
3972b43bb076b4abd9226c2eece076fc
fd76cc5200c2a5f92c7101391dd7032ca4d7cf14
describe
'128291' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVD' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
8cf2099e1fc63ade36b235aa11567580
dff912aec224ef8d2a252923ba34beb7195c9f5b
'2011-11-18T10:48:40-05:00'
describe
'41442' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVE' 'sip-files00137.pro'
1bf77e496d022611360d8ea5ca986e9d
9248d2f86eb686c31ad8ae1a9d10162d2738daa7
describe
'39949' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVF' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
fa8d71b844040755ed68746f0c63b825
9b9e64297b5ef66fde6c62a73da7e667d8954586
'2011-11-18T10:52:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVG' 'sip-files00137.tif'
0fc1b4857f0159fb8fc3ddbaa76e4efa
e685478ce38cdda9e55c4f0b4e0a378eb2592378
describe
'1646' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVH' 'sip-files00137.txt'
1871ca4c5a2b00e09274695cedd0eb9f
375d38734fb54e642f82c28f3351447037485710
'2011-11-18T10:48:07-05:00'
describe
'10220' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVI' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
032cb7ac494700dd9fb7f7c7374db79c
71ce7efc5b514bd1a5a5ddcf6f45a99c11bb04dc
describe
'322229' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVJ' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
4064a58532fe707d9bb71d19a9246876
2bcc52936b1a66be7cdd9770df5cc256fa4ae496
describe
'128577' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVK' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
b4448479d98fbf11c8cabef1c8cab6f8
2f0317b0ecaad58db2a738ab4c378cc0ea99da87
describe
'41983' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVL' 'sip-files00138.pro'
19fef5cf5d5a78b7b6ba35e4d9e4e1d3
cda8ba78e435ffe3cf711fa2ca54c5fa3ff56ee5
describe
'40990' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVM' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
622e5682c354cdc02470c657584a42fd
dfdec62667566069d0637d7b4fb6bfc964a4e378
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVN' 'sip-files00138.tif'
56711486a453d34bb46120ae80df7f84
6fdd33c82c508292974c4aa073873d5be9da170a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVO' 'sip-files00138.txt'
710a60c9b269bd5b8c346812cabf9d08
6bbeb62109ea2647909401ae5e83a60c6184d65a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVP' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
2108f966da76d258a35449168e9ca0df
34f5754fa8647441bafbd971db30be9325e960b0
describe
'328621' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVQ' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
8dec27eec4bee8015030bf61a11d4c72
6aa8ac163ff8d4e91f5e893b8294db2b26aae6c2
describe
'131879' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVR' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
59b2aefd7aeb286975c97cf37fdcaf7a
560c943941ecb470aaec5de80ff344843d71ea30
describe
'41414' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVS' 'sip-files00139.pro'
cf94c789c260672a4a21b1cab801466e
feb0d71cd505d4b5641b7e675b64234b5e2a55fa
'2011-11-18T10:52:18-05:00'
describe
'41589' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVT' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
fe9c703ea36ed88ce4869df556e930b5
63b7ecea7cf942e781884b117f85d7bbb0da5ebd
describe
'2645396' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVU' 'sip-files00139.tif'
40bdf244ec0fcc16cb7f2c60273fe600
c72e9a55453a85b0c837fe343c95315dff065bf3
describe
'1670' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVV' 'sip-files00139.txt'
5300c5e2dfc00b4eaf8d3e4db7e0adc9
fdde6ac4eba31e691e0c7116ee81439ee4c3edc7
'2011-11-18T10:45:58-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVW' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
59d63d91924211b7971330c317acdd98
f10f6c64b71fd4402a3a93f99e8f12bc849de415
'2011-11-18T10:52:36-05:00'
describe
'317738' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVX' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
9125b5c4e321f6f89b601e236ca38671
9fc4b7c374bafa00c616ef638502c87f160c31a5
'2011-11-18T10:49:48-05:00'
describe
'131185' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVY' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
ff1f7bccdcfa44c7ba5d62949383994c
0d1b7aa0810cc2b47b51ae6f0d903164fb7ee5aa
'2011-11-18T10:52:20-05:00'
describe
'42476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZVZ' 'sip-files00140.pro'
5854efa2431d6ecd5a0b769a40235f7e
f99a5a02906c8937e96656b12fdfcd9c7f315da5
describe
'41345' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWA' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
70b6414c8919c2aa4dd2a36ab785135b
d3da1294bb6c966d780e9f840bbd84d3ce20bead
describe
'2558496' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWB' 'sip-files00140.tif'
15b55253ffe9cf32e914823ed65d24c5
e0714edb0ae68bab725e72faa4aaab546833405d
'2011-11-18T10:54:45-05:00'
describe
'1667' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWC' 'sip-files00140.txt'
4929a1a6fa522fdbefa5698a793748a4
7d34340081d7a3f4ffa9f7cb9abb306042cf4668
describe
'11315' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWD' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
50d49dcd2f1e39c9e03ffe441df05329
18ed2eca3437ea38fbe277c4263219c1276c6bb2
describe
'316609' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWE' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
70d58ad335a24fbcc1a24fab47d8ff47
2f062a1c6aa7a5a9153e326047e87b3f8eff6572
'2011-11-18T10:50:20-05:00'
describe
'47835' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWF' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
6a2b1eeb28e7025dd6d6aa5c85d96ec2
eb316e4843e4bae9029832e76f9814149b652a0e
describe
'1550' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWG' 'sip-files00141.pro'
bea41152f831e38bdba001aab4009f5d
961845c48191a463503a886f377ae2477d0b3386
describe
'10184' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWH' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
d8ad285d5ecce0dd4e92947af9247e38
789a372de48cf558b3f3c70ee2156745fc5e90b4
describe
'2549756' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWI' 'sip-files00141.tif'
0bb15032cf20ceb41b83a4f6a219a3f9
802e84734490041d8805e06dbea11cc4d781ce48
describe
'161' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWJ' 'sip-files00141.txt'
a476737a9a1d342d6bd9c6901475e27c
70b8b9bb4e1c91f44fc9d510a7304226aa7a7a00
describe
'2662' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWK' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
7930c619995c7f285df078947150911b
7717ee85bda94f5cb6c54ed9ae286d89c809a9c2
describe
'333789' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWL' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
8ec93657c46c3adbec42b2a6ca9746c8
b9f887f574db82c56a03a250bd00c2a04e92f9cd
describe
'122070' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWM' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
cc63713e4d7e2de6484a86154ad7d995
b6170774ab7cc70c240b9c3231cc7f11fb98e323
describe
'39535' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWN' 'sip-files00143.pro'
f4a72cf941d8652d90d9f04bb3e40013
e1673f11ae552c24aad12e80e18e239753cfee4d
describe
'39173' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWO' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
1e77d970e58ca26ac9710d1ce32a8eef
d7dcbd644d97ae63b50827b7ca3f7d4ea6e33160
describe
'2686720' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWP' 'sip-files00143.tif'
b54ef675b1e53257d4c1927d4e5241b1
030e5e2b47e03b2fbc51a37058a9b0d95a2d3346
describe
'1571' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWQ' 'sip-files00143.txt'
534035b9f214252f5708f4b3b0c1fd3d
e853b61a9a6e9960ca706d0ed225e367872d2a9b
describe
'9566' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWR' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
7d567a4e99d765c27d61b8aae2f1a984
cc30514ae150058c0a8bc18b8f8deba4c98705b2
describe
'331693' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWS' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
06d69e88a261fbaee0133e39d1b287a5
78188bc5a5b560c139913dbaa5021838f93c2787
describe
'125723' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWT' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
99ee1fdb552324373920e294d37845cc
cad4cd576b9f0fd9cddc1c124a639f7787cefe09
describe
'40817' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWU' 'sip-files00144.pro'
893c16012a92f93aff722ecee3bcc49a
6de01f3e4d13f64940d976ebfb0cb19fc70b6420
describe
'40456' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWV' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
b69d3496eb4f6d263c791a40ca6b3dce
7056364a6f371a4ed4c9963e9159c007a658546d
'2011-11-18T10:51:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWW' 'sip-files00144.tif'
bc9a1259aa3a7f2eac942f9e10a5a16a
4e842c7ba29417b0e4788c4dfe2230898ef39db9
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWX' 'sip-files00144.txt'
c1de53e01c5e479f33eb46e1e595d7a9
3e3e0e7998e22bdf2676fea9f2c3bc669e5bba8c
describe
'10195' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWY' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
6d35a424e1a61c8d1bb5cfcd981d1597
15df4ec02b5dcdd855e0263c464e6db834a3d9be
describe
'328719' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZWZ' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
e83fef41aa38f2e9b09d2903dce94f2c
6f4c6e3b53860f8b95f6c92d5eb5aa444663bf18
describe
'126059' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXA' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
88c1ebfb2a1987e8fce33c4d1e4d915b
6856171c2832f0a0a647f22498e67109198d406a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXB' 'sip-files00145.pro'
5cf91eb290e1b95944fc0831c0e76ccd
192d015ed82676d815f36ddbdb109116d899322f
describe
'40103' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXC' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
246fb452f3ebb65a0f9f30ca1522ee5f
2bfe2cf68858cb8e3dad31460a12d8d317b11f85
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXD' 'sip-files00145.tif'
bbc37e8beb0e5756f555f0c50ae346b5
9a56f71b4b59281027236fe7fe98100425652206
'2011-11-18T10:47:04-05:00'
describe
'1635' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXE' 'sip-files00145.txt'
06154e0381cd20b9cd01c205b88121bd
8149dce0b4b5025e304fac607b74cf27a4cfcc77
describe
'10327' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXF' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
f93a6974cec3ff3d8de1da16da534b63
14e7f3499dd3e172e1a9eeb183923f38757e4384
describe
'314219' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXG' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
edbf17f7562f057cf3e50c8552957825
1f2338e7e12048ce924385480c0e06211d6f72ba
describe
'127961' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXH' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
402ef3eb6ff05ba77c6f84bcba2146d8
6d6224607c495cf6748c80c86a3c060f3201a5f7
describe
'41124' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXI' 'sip-files00146.pro'
3cdb8e810dd56b71ed136803ab42f11a
9a207d0090f64eb6fff28bdf79be0c2c6d88326b
describe
'41305' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXJ' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
3ddff187e4125355141629c45cbed6fa
624e99afeed8a74d90434451218ec0dadf119a35
describe
'2530380' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXK' 'sip-files00146.tif'
b4ab3393407dd02071533ea6051361d1
8c38260b4f079b1aa7182b40627c5b53d30532a2
describe
'1624' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXL' 'sip-files00146.txt'
0468cc81e1e0e2ae229da2a58cf39ebe
b1462250dbb4e8225ce77f48aa7b0b607a08f4ca
describe
'10636' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXM' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
4e8231623a1cb54ce24ff3885109179e
9272ef6194203e372da7efb669af674b9214ee3a
describe
'329508' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXN' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
cdf642bcffd9cd84146fa532a28c5d1c
b97cbf2f737af10056a1bd1ed74998e71c0806a0
'2011-11-18T10:54:03-05:00'
describe
'100792' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXO' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
dcae13167bf5ea65abccc8bccd2b5d05
3142a5fda592bb2a4bb7b84df5385c8188acb259
describe
'29099' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXP' 'sip-files00147.pro'
c8c87862d74c887e2748e66234f34ede
9531d59d790b92dbf15a915783ac79afa5ce7a90
'2011-11-18T10:47:49-05:00'
describe
'32711' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXQ' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
a8c34163d9c71ef24e139026be793450
358c2442f9572c4bd550929dec80c839fdd3ae75
describe
'2652460' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXR' 'sip-files00147.tif'
6e6ea5fe097be7120897191cc9e06200
1c44b2b1440743d630713e36f24041e415f05a17
describe
'1215' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXS' 'sip-files00147.txt'
0b72ae95835635abf7d2a309e8599f81
90f9ba4a7981bec7d9c75b2863303fc7aee6b21d
describe
'8231' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXT' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
8905a4fa63123e6c445aea3b4ad4cc8b
95b36fc6f36f08815d882633e671958ae520aee7
describe
'319283' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXU' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
6c3f3b6681d203364940d9443442c03d
db88a228cceae129301eb5b8b97b0b6dd99c3e8d
describe
'130314' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXV' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
e7a12632bf146291f8436118f2684ab5
0e6e5c857e6b8cb522f390fe981bee96789c1f5d
describe
'40954' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXW' 'sip-files00148.pro'
1984aa4f9101b8a65f39d399f1b5deea
a2dc252477a7f251b17af12dfd897881df0cfbc0
describe
'41599' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXX' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
929dccde633191f220a3d83819d48f5c
ae0d55e07ce86a9f6bde2cdd92bc204fb08888ae
describe
'2570724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXY' 'sip-files00148.tif'
c241f31ad7385b8d93f1dd4d76a5f7e9
f3b6c0b3e35696564502a5e166260ba6e4ffb86e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZXZ' 'sip-files00148.txt'
4a230be02feb874c15b3b9967ccf080a
561fced7bffa18bf9447e7e0049ab1f308d39a0f
'2011-11-18T10:52:56-05:00'
describe
'10710' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYA' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
970f48c3fd6344dbbdc3b567cdd2240d
9d01bcac3067c1a57d72c45a947f390365ce71cc
describe
'326803' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYB' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
7b3f4599a62129d8058b34c58ccd2bb4
5e4d4ca7639422b5719253adfecc3af6d5e8611d
'2011-11-18T10:48:09-05:00'
describe
'126337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYC' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
4c9e509c0afb720534c333f938f91b58
7bfd6552a31e48ec525f1c14199106f5ef9d58b3
describe
'40026' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYD' 'sip-files00149.pro'
c7c8243f06bab5a1fdb190f2eb45c471
83bc2eb2353566f4a2f1deea5c5a535b798e0ce8
describe
'40653' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYE' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
c082ae5dfe058de9fa9ef95a54b1f935
6d113387cfaed2ad66ce40233db95b411294bda8
describe
'2631304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYF' 'sip-files00149.tif'
da20496b848278e529c5c02e8422865c
f57f68b32647861b6486b86692b6a74d4557e2ea
describe
'1619' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYG' 'sip-files00149.txt'
a17ac02a9897ca195a95da6cb96bfb53
79018de7d2b28f084ed8359c4319393b855c4de5
describe
'10095' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYH' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
3bf5627976b23b5596e36195d877f6e6
920e0c8e742224018c24a17ab1495094397c3703
describe
'303560' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYI' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
0fa2c7d6289320c9a4cb5e6af272c9be
e04b19d2e2048186770b315c2d3c0267d79aec75
describe
'131535' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYJ' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
af99e110470b4529262f565586e4d7fd
4c7bfe94bf4be109bb38d027fb3d0f7826f17dae
describe
'40296' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYK' 'sip-files00150.pro'
959cd31d6c54c78b1264cc54d0f6e8bf
9df3e11551e342a55abd710b28efb7fab3239e1d
describe
'42036' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYL' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
c742dd2210403e538e5a041ae1ca87e4
ff809361308e072efec2b5ba5a4ee899b30a59f7
'2011-11-18T10:49:51-05:00'
describe
'2445288' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYM' 'sip-files00150.tif'
39a20c19c77bc2093efd56e2d7b5e19c
f451db3879b8328c487e9b0a48a2b09a62a086b4
describe
'1652' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYN' 'sip-files00150.txt'
e671472d384415f09bf6338014538311
ba2b1cd9739f61fb58b4cad661e79285e91fe305
describe
'12088' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYO' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
679db9fb9133e841c1d5a87ab3047226
da61f6f425a0e96b0410f46e426cb5fac3064633
describe
'333013' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYP' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
b90d59f7d2feb14ff375da3aca7a4b96
65a5f3f722dac224db916fd29a8a317cc23d66cf
describe
'129869' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYQ' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
b043b0985af8a8fad5086b53cc43600a
6dad55e377b7fb2960a139f37bb9be9354135bab
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYR' 'sip-files00151.pro'
c5ab4c0ef04411187fb40b1c8af6d9d2
8b0b95d13982e34dd47f49d42739738e1e75490e
describe
'40383' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYS' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
03ba9d65154b7aa1c2687d7e4c06fdd6
f23b33e8b0d2a157b92317badebdb58fddd52ddc
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYT' 'sip-files00151.tif'
97fcf545c9b4dd72956010aaab59d801
1eef28200a23455f3d60e731a0d855c8c84f82b7
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYU' 'sip-files00151.txt'
24bf3f6666ec4b837e7a8f6482f516c4
a3824607118e500a4bd8578a72ed313327e1055e
'2011-11-18T10:51:17-05:00'
describe
'9838' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYV' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
0aca77f432c1711faa31ef578cc73795
31f82c13a2ce364db5200447e1d529ce8c2318ea
'2011-11-18T10:47:54-05:00'
describe
'312227' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYW' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
3f9129e25cb6bbbb47fa5166d439be63
947126ac51570ea83c4dd6ca235f53320348877b
describe
'129749' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYX' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
eac67ece6d6b3c39e24eae73b7e18b1c
2c8a38db7df4221f99db98a27b0432e35f385bda
describe
'41587' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYY' 'sip-files00152.pro'
3b2dad641618d938577423abb3053027
085d65e366983c75b2e0edde3d87bae74a452c2b
describe
'42222' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZYZ' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
4a7788492695ba72b667f4c5a26a4645
9192bfd054968c51b196aa0caa094e8a1c272981
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZA' 'sip-files00152.tif'
71f9afb94db165c89e073a961222b2a5
70d96299a2e24a567d1e20b9b030d11d5c1b6680
describe
'1634' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZB' 'sip-files00152.txt'
7784281ba03cc44d769a628ea88116a4
5dc2484a0e0d8040d55baa26a7ffd1393b0c48aa
describe
'11086' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZC' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
5c82e9c8249f8685a7cf61d56426e902
dd06360c92b7332ff0c9ea0859536681dfb61674
describe
'321845' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZD' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
d46b811e64324f3dfff666f692607deb
7e82306805fa4af4fd1474401a792a9fac319a8f
describe
'133717' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZE' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
e0d73601d1b967b3f02a5db554be467a
2791d1eb0613a897582f3ac6122ad90a0fd48c59
describe
'40068' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZF' 'sip-files00153.pro'
8c475ffb0e2818b90ec20e97d5f07c71
d4b5eeb67e944ba615229a7f4df1fa5bc9180ae0
'2011-11-18T10:47:13-05:00'
describe
'42184' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZG' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
b91fa0ed8739c615db1efd2185b429a7
5864f3752d0ab2203381740655397b6090a53015
describe
'2591736' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZH' 'sip-files00153.tif'
e1c337593fc900a8b92273f39c1096f3
a7bce6964a6dd516dc3c280d37c24fe7d733b401
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZI' 'sip-files00153.txt'
71428bdbe493f0912b2c7ff9e6f75b74
13b8ff51a8d2bf67566577fe90866b3d0f42d456
describe
'10305' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZJ' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
4834e3bcb29abe94a76667a762717b97
2341e2b4ba63007ee4f7966e28c4d30809905e94
'2011-11-18T10:47:19-05:00'
describe
'311350' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZK' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
3d5788fcea3fc1bcec27630571c45cf1
883ea58ef11287bbdb76480d45c5f1deea1164a1
describe
'133310' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZL' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
3b15f6d39261f0344ef75f6fe2ed9660
f171379cfc5354683d72cdbedf37b693f16c0bcf
describe
'41245' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZM' 'sip-files00154.pro'
fe4bc411f7ecc69bf3ceaf71fdbc2643
cb5f9e1bcf43919731310541f2b000875b147a0c
describe
'42297' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZN' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
2ed235edae4d6ea25fe961eea8e2cae4
58f1825fd2012186c6f2dd5ae74c8d68274bb910
describe
'2507208' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZO' 'sip-files00154.tif'
93602d9aff1dec5b9cd8af3e0f823569
e2e253a625787053eb833ef5f1976bbf648b784f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZP' 'sip-files00154.txt'
fe2ddc7fff4c52b69b2bc2e5418a83e0
0c7d84777cb57003afc08848b6efd3751a8dc140
describe
'10613' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZQ' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
a9af1c634ed0217aa996445201ed5850
14a5053fdd87d6dc987fbb762834ce73f0cbcb99
describe
'323798' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZR' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
7cadb0445d228494b618090cde49107f
691dcf97b9dd65c44b7d087b73796ec78792f1f5
'2011-11-18T10:45:38-05:00'
describe
'73370' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZS' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
c52aade529396cde0c9a728f80cdcd12
154eb5656a870b3be5192e1c032ca3b0e3c5bc15
'2011-11-18T10:48:37-05:00'
describe
'21055' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZT' 'sip-files00155.pro'
523ba0a704d44130393f17024cdc13c3
7a4401b8492a796367cab6d4b6f407840ee17442
describe
'22839' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZU' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
d650acfeb9f097454937a09951887afb
d6158fdeb8173c712849ca0e6da910c26f18159d
'2011-11-18T10:51:41-05:00'
describe
'2606748' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZV' 'sip-files00155.tif'
ef0e7ca6d809bcdf758e5753492c9015
95ce3178f2342bc1257efc5591f5bd64b5f35ba7
describe
'855' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZW' 'sip-files00155.txt'
1e3b234815ee6d99efd359713d975c41
58f0c4b8a09c3c3a8892756c3ae9e64c73ff177a
describe
'5994' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZX' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
7dd26cb8e5d0f10be0ac8241471d9dcc
51578affd7e720fa596cfcbda651622db74ae220
describe
'319058' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZY' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
63994296ea5744f5d15fb90b0d1ccf64
2b0b5fda2d7ff848e0cfd5018c9b8dbaa4fd7812
describe
'107214' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AAAZZZ' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
fe8fa6464a82e5cf8c2dbeb78101c441
3a27e825b798cc328c3e3f978bee25ae091aa36b
describe
'32281' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAA' 'sip-files00156.pro'
d1bb63848aac144cf8badbf090b98253
56f665c12b85abc40a955379be4504be01e5e48f
describe
'34494' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAB' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
c3549d1a44936dbf08868dcb0d1bf26f
271e4f36d0e06c92179064f7cc797866ed575187
describe
'2569884' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAC' 'sip-files00156.tif'
7669272e9ecfb031d2212c96d86ead36
fe0d07d12ce6fa8bb72a2e21bdbdd99803a2d443
'2011-11-18T10:46:38-05:00'
describe
'1302' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAD' 'sip-files00156.txt'
52aebb20c81c8409ce99dc2494ab1438
464db0a1e98b2ce71a6a3f2b0ad3ecccb4effbfa
describe
'9061' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAE' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
9c5ba24178e4f66081b6afb2ad56c2cc
5fc37e941435e501fc5e07e2c513bf0268b0d2f8
describe
'336091' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAF' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
1899151fb181d7e48955e63d053c24bf
79f9392b1d31172507581b17e13e497cbd5ba9d2
'2011-11-18T10:54:32-05:00'
describe
'127209' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAG' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
8b1cacb37b04893e087d158f3b1118bd
dc733c8bc56d92e6956176f4dcc9fcd40ef74996
describe
'39872' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAH' 'sip-files00157.pro'
0ae67a5a57d74f7b74095f4bfcae768a
55d83774da1b6cf3d2171169c1924f72bedd055b
describe
'40200' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAI' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
4d71646f9d2177cb48ab89519e37c6d6
9fa7263a4675c37cc9869069aba4fa794ff0456e
describe
'2705636' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAJ' 'sip-files00157.tif'
48ab543ee79ee024d0f727c9ce91507a
e0ac5819cd47bd40c729724266abac1262a24ded
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAK' 'sip-files00157.txt'
2a76cab5d20402c1101f140c480571dd
2dfe6a4936767e67b8452e9f20c675527bd4b12f
describe
'9933' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAL' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
670d2dec2ab41d4f942b2ecf4d9e94bf
d60633aefccd931df6b28dd502a9b447546c6d31
describe
'320948' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAM' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
9d8b6799f6f51e3f85b3e09d090f9bad
eadf045f6f7aca401b807242de0865cead8e3bae
describe
'131440' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAN' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
67b631389e30e5e6acd13ec16f739557
14485075788fa0f1abc3f536c1097740d00cf644
describe
'40012' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAO' 'sip-files00158.pro'
27bf5905c32dbca1231d24ac2f863704
b766b974a1fb95d9dec01df3ba15777e290a186c
describe
'42097' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAP' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
c6b88ee60ac1c78a63e3f68f29f9a77b
aef96cc32c06a8814953c69a3f9bb26a8379afa4
'2011-11-18T10:49:40-05:00'
describe
'2583972' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAQ' 'sip-files00158.tif'
2bed8d0a57a8fe6c7a399a7bc6028164
ac7b3cce3a351a0109760de6c90a8e75d2418346
describe
'1573' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAR' 'sip-files00158.txt'
ecb7d194a73bb50c916d37af8e83daa3
b7dd48f15329fdf7d4cbbdc82e187276be408b7a
describe
'10572' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAS' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
ad3c9588fff1f372a18c20f8ae35695e
f0fd6fdeafe46937e803ddcaf86bf2effbaa155e
'2011-11-18T10:51:48-05:00'
describe
'325811' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAT' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
8bdacccf3988f591902e6d46b1e2c69c
7bc7c066fb4175a46a1f9e85e466283ce7e3847d
describe
'129089' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAU' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
b32380e809786354802813882ae379e2
90a683ec0488025e103c81b8113af5f420289c84
describe
'39831' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAV' 'sip-files00159.pro'
e1c479967bd5df477d54c5bbadf5ce3c
1ee487308bfb92833380fb44cb459c0d44d10037
describe
'41390' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAW' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
e365f1040cedd29a95e78d4fc8f56580
4521cc5169c45025bfe039eaa7be265160f6ebcd
describe
'2622992' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAX' 'sip-files00159.tif'
6158400626846b2901835ff5e745d264
14d5cd18fb0661d929bfa857d2bf10aaf35a456d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAY' 'sip-files00159.txt'
608376e87654af3548a7eef68cb7cf1f
1d2d1f499ce89c7ee035442de88786aaa5b46f8e
describe
'10213' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAAZ' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
77b2cedd0248763dfdbf3a8cf49d48e3
4b12f249e85d22297393b88335b416cbd3996c13
describe
'319807' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABA' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
c3cc734bc706a2d4cf45f21eff6e85b6
f2e261f59c41b0e61f83171b48968810f460f0dd
describe
'130213' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABB' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
536d2d2f250294c8543d46020c17726a
fecd8b09231016b1d3d960ea9117e77fbd2fb597
'2011-11-18T10:49:12-05:00'
describe
'41476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABC' 'sip-files00160.pro'
2a029ba045399e248e3e8231fc37fffc
346be7bb4c2f777801c12410c155397a8bcfdf97
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABD' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
e06589c31cddc985ad846d3828047e90
d8266504564052cbb6da33e72017ba9ca614e354
describe
'2574888' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABE' 'sip-files00160.tif'
2544694a659429965037fc88f68a3fd4
a76599944702fb7145728e71863048fc7b8f5108
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABF' 'sip-files00160.txt'
7790549f7d1086976061660db8e1e5a4
0a897a74ec3ccdb6209e43195d9a2c5f37c80123
describe
'11420' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABG' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
9d4df035707569de3381ce40d0b83f24
6dfdff03b2d099998875e844325099260858e55f
describe
'331479' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABH' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
705399ee82e3a068122d609623701cba
80c422c431b60cae1b0a61bdfcc213c0eb7f037c
describe
'128992' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABI' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
a2a8b6bb454732917ea1b402a72b765c
32c3362dcf0c5edda71dca2dc547c67ce697923a
describe
'40346' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABJ' 'sip-files00161.pro'
4425408266339e1e6a147d70249413b0
0c21472d288776421fa92576dbd017f38277978e
describe
'40956' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABK' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
2fae3d8aeacf084fab6101f980ac8432
5053920c2132478b7dc5f4f217c8bac4162adea1
describe
'2668484' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABL' 'sip-files00161.tif'
00385502468a7216f3b15f55c50632c7
6c3564547d914290c13583f81784d490fb843982
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABM' 'sip-files00161.txt'
7dbbd250de72efd406f979fc8bffd50d
11fd3f7878a1907f3d406d489753bc0f536342d8
describe
'10299' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABN' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
eea8cbf97cee0a40c958f6f149da9f8f
d70827e3832c7798ea8f643c246cefa8924850d3
'2011-11-18T10:53:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABO' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
101e05c95162fd1f5fe0276b430eb127
b7082270a3b8c1dc9b8a8f7cb72727e84ce94fb1
'2011-11-18T10:49:17-05:00'
describe
'126529' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABP' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
e0381453086401ec514b707330cbc2eb
03d1daa7071c250d7d953ebcd7384594b8cd70a7
describe
'41132' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABQ' 'sip-files00162.pro'
c2dba8075f5606d421375360cb53df6d
366835a8cc0d1845e3538df3a4f36099847b072b
describe
'41239' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABR' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
4884058250535fe865e6896e8c238936
0751f8c1345f6f57463c4e704b1986fcf14fad27
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABS' 'sip-files00162.tif'
29986dcf1fb0740f8759172b299b952f
8d096760845822fdae2d430a1475707092d040e4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABT' 'sip-files00162.txt'
1817fffc6e8214896bc3a4975adfddf9
1f4f478aa49d826a33ff2f5dd125c56499c3064a
describe
'10221' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABU' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
f3d8ffb6edceb743afcfe30fe6f2f711
08359f65f4da7fd539faf0ee3fb5d040e0c28e7f
describe
'321434' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABV' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
dd3b685facd6f6b1b0c2e6331cb0bb09
debfffd247fad40b21736f355c45cad77b1c256e
describe
'125719' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABW' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
43256a3d27009bbc33c52897a585aa7b
3d76458e1f1c03b1a3c144460057995fd630724c
'2011-11-18T10:46:58-05:00'
describe
'40101' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABX' 'sip-files00163.pro'
5cc3067543c17db32596c9b1ab8e5977
b8c521b8a19ef14a7671bf02f26a721f9dbeddb7
describe
'39865' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABY' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
1421fe16314955216640f9f21816ede3
5e29f25bfa654e16bb40d13852b655b87a2b87d0
describe
'2588120' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABABZ' 'sip-files00163.tif'
439ce622575fae512db75da8779d3af8
9511d430d587a01a1c4c9af1c0d99b3a578d78b7
describe
'1615' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACA' 'sip-files00163.txt'
542a8f1415cb185c57328640cbedf321
4552862c440c1c25347e6577f5d9c478ba7238b2
describe
'9967' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACB' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
dee48a8f10ae59aaca6e12084f0980d1
1aeeeea37ceaca52d86510f9d489377cebabbae6
describe
'331374' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACC' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
241e9bd8c0b03fc4cb5c653c3589d9bc
7425d10d4dae078f88fcedceee0e0f8e3a7bfaf6
describe
'129662' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACD' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
2373076bb536b4039d843f73463ebffb
8fe0d459d2c5f0649a529163aaa99a79f01c4936
describe
'41211' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACE' 'sip-files00164.pro'
570b576690b0ce9e4681af9fea296864
c16aabecc4e80890cfd83e8f9c4cfd9c63ba8ec9
describe
'40986' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACF' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
fc2442b243599ef2d41931b96ce52bb4
7e3a9d3c0910a73ff754cc97352c62cf985dffa6
describe
'2667856' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACG' 'sip-files00164.tif'
6093f4d3924ff03108783e9bca096b0c
985d3eeca3bd86e4ce2450f2eb2ad2d8f80fdb80
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACH' 'sip-files00164.txt'
2ad784d373df3f58d02efc80e30d620f
2ace7e9362e585a6c0bf31a6aea755d8f3ac3fe0
describe
'9660' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACI' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
644fb5885102b991b13c9b031e10da40
301160dfd6e4a72bf7461033691fe380765a10a3
describe
'323557' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACJ' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
f73903662a5be3b83064a108f59b73d7
31fed99dc231f09a12b4e540b9e2349778630425
describe
'62105' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACK' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
c402aef4f216938a9e104d9ea6026a53
ada2f0d915b574b7b1467bff1262cfbc7475f1ca
'2011-11-18T10:50:05-05:00'
describe
'19598' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACL' 'sip-files00165.pro'
ba96e62db5112985bfc1b66735fd1be9
4673cd8702062b1db2faab8009b0595dadee9c28
'2011-11-18T10:47:52-05:00'
describe
'19155' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACM' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
404fb723b8a28d6e5cf0159d0480ffa5
6990be88e4e14d064ecdc2d4d62a66cd7e0b61e1
describe
'2604988' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACN' 'sip-files00165.tif'
a3300074cf79d1535b93855086d19c8a
b29c4e0cb1294b6015472b9221dc1b789250b0ed
describe
'920' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACO' 'sip-files00165.txt'
1619cae0c35040565a50a603bfa62eab
b5d7114529ebaf1b7b60f0d222a3c6a9f8afe41e
describe
'5045' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACP' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
54acfa498a97c02cbb779ed95083d6e7
114cec072f56f259c82d8564eba896a198d0bde2
describe
'329437' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACQ' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
be26d639f6df52aebab578d4ff40943e
c5c1037181f19268ae23e63bc305d5433c76b41c
describe
'105908' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACR' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
641a03118b2bce810ccdb5033361892f
881b15a0df7310c015657d6468d20f20eb8e16de
describe
'31154' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACS' 'sip-files00166.pro'
c047968b1616c0975c3171ba1ad85846
b91d63a3bc240a3c4acb050506dc642c4dd5aa5a
describe
'33562' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACT' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
8007bedfa0e71cfc014011c2e28e8e83
dcec49b47dbb24f00f9940174eecc6fe0607c36b
describe
'2652084' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACU' 'sip-files00166.tif'
d6b55569631137996f9688eda2c96012
70b2f7ddd59794e7309c19ccba396e8c090b5a09
'2011-11-18T10:52:16-05:00'
describe
'1328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACV' 'sip-files00166.txt'
b500ebf56ddc698c524ebc5a6f8abfed
4750ed84e0ca7eb4feb67860da97e9868ed7bd76
describe
'8405' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACW' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
e03f2288fda2ee0a570b74d6a20a73a7
64a48e204462fb4f6d5608f1b5a891a4b8e9946c
describe
'327266' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACX' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
e0fd53c11072460f25ebbd18bf848541
876a1b902277e991116e03fedb82b04910b69a88
describe
'127766' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACY' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
495c9684bb0ee42975ea24c544ec8e75
50daff0d607a6a6df4966b7f01ae5b87496e4754
describe
'40615' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABACZ' 'sip-files00167.pro'
a8c3a68ad1a6530f2bcfd2d9f8449629
b7a0b86b5c8885beddedac06d52bd8858c7d174f
describe
'40886' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADA' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
09db17d00ce68a825601e14650655e93
34f68e2e1978dd0ceff8b4fbd8f2ab91cf0897a2
describe
'2634568' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADB' 'sip-files00167.tif'
26dd175558a3cba804819cbcdabf86c3
f8f880bb6678daeb07cd10b41f8c5fe818ff95ae
'2011-11-18T10:51:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADC' 'sip-files00167.txt'
ddd35f2f39a66c73286068cb30f40148
b5181a393e72aae14e223984d7d26975a6bd2ad8
'2011-11-18T10:52:33-05:00'
describe
'10726' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADD' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
bd04294e654a9c06b5c3ec157a9cdfbe
9e81df4ba0c681d2a44156f45a7755d1d93c671a
describe
'319337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADE' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
8eea18bf090ecfd75641a360031a2368
20c91d913481878c78c025fe04ba454befdd7333
describe
'126152' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADF' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
d5736b722c0b6fabb86a0e0441d0ba08
0c7e3130e779d375c889d17ba4ebc507f4c95245
'2011-11-18T10:51:46-05:00'
describe
'40688' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADG' 'sip-files00168.pro'
dabd47165835ef5bf24f52c869ca162b
805a77c92d7bcd299ce28fee84c79f7fb5e8301a
describe
'40870' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADH' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
00be6aeca1a3611fd589e99199bda338
f09cfbbcf1139496c8ac9eed38f83211a66d8ad7
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADI' 'sip-files00168.tif'
0a3684ea6c1ed9c1575ecce22df8a2d4
ce1c849e393b4b10b9ca14919f20ea0b89155a7e
describe
'1598' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADJ' 'sip-files00168.txt'
cee5bae0fe7536f93ead7eaa02803ee8
76ceb1f827780d1e0659120c9a1885a42d420162
'2011-11-18T10:48:42-05:00'
describe
'10891' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADK' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
432834bbe4d7040be46c0391518f1f9b
db815e8b46a8cdbb540d8807c254c1083f3650fc
describe
'316746' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADL' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
aee79f29007b2bc752597b593bfa4df3
19e68275b51ecf706820edc9e8707187496a6143
describe
'129800' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADM' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
5f1f0d32dad9cecb8c3c2c3ead92082f
fc8eecdab589cb359385627ecc42fc412bd4c20a
describe
'40901' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADN' 'sip-files00169.pro'
16c1c18b29f61e98e10b7532e179d542
b16c35eff0041cb9612cd1bc91ad2f16492ee0ee
describe
'40721' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADO' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
6ac6e1ac6a73f696dccf38037482327b
5b005ba0cfa43fec0631780f4e95b103f1cc7ba4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADP' 'sip-files00169.tif'
76eb48155e3c6331275d650e0b55669c
918f15ae4933abe15a483cd65469ac4ce9c2f3ab
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADQ' 'sip-files00169.txt'
7558251aa79c164278f06f222a732a3d
812fec281c7005cf7898571d2ed4b16e427520a1
describe
'11341' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADR' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
afecb2b79c3bbdfb44438e76736f0dea
075b8ac55a90fa6106c075db20fb1548d996a9e4
describe
'326914' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADS' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
bc9cd383e9498c945468aeabeb990de5
f0bfb6b5ddbf149dce4e4eee738b8b9c1ab7fb67
describe
'121395' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADT' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
f2ef16d441970e6159d90e402f3c514d
d186c6fd4a254eadf82e01d4b62170241128a630
describe
'39449' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADU' 'sip-files00170.pro'
994c0f1ec9d47021e693d96b5d5da8a6
9a0ab561299b15921dc5745d29996ee0e1171232
describe
'39197' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADV' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
fc0fa2991e08c68c1b4480c2c1a8235d
ef0aaf2b3d9079710f8c6ef9918137178e6a86f0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADW' 'sip-files00170.tif'
8110e1adf352cff06c6ab747c09c8c44
bec1889a941dca823bf6e7e4fb3fb4d3de4c43a5
describe
'1556' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADX' 'sip-files00170.txt'
18f849cb45133c6c08afb81b344ea692
5a1cf28db6b078a7cf265e37dd6657d72859fb87
'2011-11-18T10:49:26-05:00'
describe
'10593' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADY' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
e2cb473b35c8ccd652ee77546ac2ef08
01f34684de7d6b86dbeaae40b23914e5099a754f
describe
'330887' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABADZ' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
e2ed208b4ed989eeceee2fae4bef3719
3f583d7aa7adf8d1a9980100dc10c27ace8de9fd
describe
'125802' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEA' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
8db3cd71ff4d76f13e6370032e410963
cc8c5194129ad52558f5c8e6e4a9def62a37b000
'2011-11-18T10:53:00-05:00'
describe
'40692' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEB' 'sip-files00171.pro'
844a6a9deec6494d15277f0b2ce0f611
f12551d025e30948bbbb9ff953d50dd3ec16e061
describe
'39233' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEC' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
65a72c9b82b59c88460baa7350601360
1cdc38fbcdb74782ca06fe657fd29e194b6d67a2
describe
'2663596' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAED' 'sip-files00171.tif'
b0a4550be6625ff1ae4384727fd5331f
e6a7fa35ef64336e8c52f08cafa1ff5fe68b8161
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEE' 'sip-files00171.txt'
3c7a5f172f67b95f6ddb79f87ee2c077
35ac854b6415391d750e31f2223fff330f70e685
describe
'10938' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEF' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
ce6a3c380f05ecda98540fa54c68b927
937bb34a2ba1bc3e515816b8f60e023217051a2e
describe
'316308' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEG' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
b52db42b37e573fa3ec27feb4bcb375c
56aab0b4910b6ebc485634a51a969c52aab90719
describe
'131151' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEH' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
54ce24fcd03c3a387c442617e5fe1520
255c8017a9c925169f86e86a7608bd8bad28ff65
describe
'41724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEI' 'sip-files00172.pro'
9ce2e6369a8a3bc4d2699e5d183d8b5d
ed4cdc5b801b9c0f993bd8a81b013cffbdc03300
'2011-11-18T10:54:11-05:00'
describe
'41974' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEJ' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
2970e8fca423ad3f83540041e4753603
b267f7970b68657617f4d0033a43847bf12128dd
describe
'2547708' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEK' 'sip-files00172.tif'
9e3347d094e80c1dc021bf0ccb022806
e35947ef1643fa1912cb9e8b12aa8373f986ad4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEL' 'sip-files00172.txt'
f6d5398152a4976099d41e1dcb0e48be
950f2d4afc3b74bfa093f0bd1db6785772926f63
describe
'11713' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEM' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
83fe6b52a144220d67a688b6cccc81e0
85bb652f30c351ba31fc238bbd95654aee50b17b
describe
'319238' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEN' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
ee59a1ee7a7d4783d958aca00aa07ebd
b5ed779e20a2784f4b37b34782df4b46f741b8e0
describe
'53574' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEO' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
1c4c38a6c58e9604b842338a13f498d8
1d3ee923ec4aff2d6b973e5abd066ce12f62e226
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEP' 'sip-files00173.pro'
c59f08d4d7692a033e74a35f9fa5d538
cc5080ecfbb246f4a5aeab469244dc15e03ee778
describe
'12239' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEQ' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
a17f4cee044595ee0f25ee03f9aca0bf
4a620959b99703de979fcd68d993f0eea6677e6b
describe
'2571304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAER' 'sip-files00173.tif'
6d6fbc62667f609ac3aee787d77bc7d2
d3a62c518e1badc65f0148d69cbb8c1d39037182
describe
'102' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAES' 'sip-files00173.txt'
ddd0ce81dd061280b4130b4545398d55
08f7f58afb4d20899e940fcdc93e6984a5cfec5b
'2011-11-18T10:53:48-05:00'
describe
'3195' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAET' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
4ede7ca763745cdeea8d106ac1e64080
73d04f616077f51c1b5ba52fc5944ce835ddfb52
describe
'326440' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEU' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
49f9df72ca4d7c700547b2eb9ea6b5cd
9490b4bf8ab27fef9ff674935b566278d5c9151a
describe
'128518' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEV' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
7175cc2b0aa23e5bce57ab02c247a7be
1b976b4b62296ac8741f3655f732090bf47808d9
describe
'42478' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEW' 'sip-files00175.pro'
1ff5d5892ff357b6df0509c4c1a55b42
c4999fc33e0d2806b438889c53e7201900aa4a82
describe
'41007' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEX' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
3a1fe948d3c0a471b3141ccb1f45ecd5
8b8e92c32fdbe8ec1edf289793658b4d0b205913
describe
'2627864' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEY' 'sip-files00175.tif'
a1014f0e229cdffd10b97b1bc12b8deb
18c30f0af8f4046e74a5a8990fc39d833dcbd59e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAEZ' 'sip-files00175.txt'
801e6a741fee9b83b5623dd3033ce4fe
d99d5913f7c64b27a0284758815f713b010c62d5
describe
'10290' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFA' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
42c38bf91e0e8cc7b2e2df4e6a4c9102
a95f824f8857ff35c21bbb84e4b15d2a096271c5
describe
'326550' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFB' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
931e95539a71ea713d959cd3cb3d87c0
5f0e9379ddfc74480b62928be104e53df4037a01
describe
'136033' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFC' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
6c6c59e624d827fa580d793bc6a5c67c
10371a6f8f310f76657a987f0e70268dd30ca80c
describe
'43316' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFD' 'sip-files00176.pro'
4e1fc7a6c24b3f057100c4ee96920e15
71ea71245c87fcdb6a910670ca609058cd20b245
describe
'42386' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFE' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
1793b5bc84fe63502a833de88cf6b141
b1b29453bfd4b8963e3d4d5441468315e42761b1
describe
'2629224' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFF' 'sip-files00176.tif'
aa6cc786df05887b88596141533dc508
d02aeab11f0c3c26c9bcab2aa3dd884a0f095397
describe
'1724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFG' 'sip-files00176.txt'
438799a1449c9ccc5807735cda8b85d2
453d8d467ae3d99ba565b62c16996331f9da3007
describe
'10122' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFH' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
af7363d6c4399d04a0483cee113dc484
82d6bae0785c9ad93eeb69dd251f4dfcf3dea993
describe
'337205' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFI' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
36ba3f085fb9887d4e0ad7183321116b
004070d687fd7176494de0fb3e178e0a6f43a956
describe
'126284' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFJ' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
85505d4218ba2ed7de24452cf742626f
cf842bf81cc61c90fa1838101618e5561ebe3885
describe
'40258' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFK' 'sip-files00177.pro'
25f4c23c0fd327724dde33d5eb4c4502
3ac73986b52d8710b93532e99fc714d427e19d07
'2011-11-18T10:52:50-05:00'
describe
'40543' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFL' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
11fc7cc5e638d9253b1c62496cf6d89b
1a9e892eb07e7464afd7d2b61e7dbd7bc978dad5
describe
'2714044' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFM' 'sip-files00177.tif'
f1c6d37fdd5bf9ca8cd028aede66fa94
1952f0e63e4cae94f5b7027835318236168f7be7
describe
'1596' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFN' 'sip-files00177.txt'
6c42e4609fa244c147f141274424bad9
8f0828d646d2bfa87852dae219fe7cedb85a74ab
'2011-11-18T10:45:46-05:00'
describe
'10132' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFO' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
de694142d610fc05ed6acd296a38d62d
0d8c47830fc0a4df04d48fd954c405eed85e4e1b
describe
'319756' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFP' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
ef6b8409ef0f7f4fbc5131a5b4ac5e8e
13a4f1436506253d81551285d5fff352b5fa0a12
describe
'94474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFQ' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
b74b812dd29c202bf26a59d98aa4db5f
b30006bd0ccb5bbde92a186055caecfe0e92fef1
describe
'27628' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFR' 'sip-files00178.pro'
8a38c8e033bf595a1801071b95d77265
e35d01c73367108950f2b78c505ee4daf63140bd
'2011-11-18T10:48:05-05:00'
describe
'28911' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFS' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
c84643e1c08e3a645856c483924fedf0
00f979417671135e89e2aa8ac7fca1b3f33466f3
describe
'2574408' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFT' 'sip-files00178.tif'
4ba4d633a3110f7e84f15ea3947576a0
9359fddbf5af5934fb63f1630dfed1ae7de2f134
describe
'1089' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFU' 'sip-files00178.txt'
9784d02289b67c55fac7e239f1e4a028
27063b4a0e53d497d066373071a95449cdd9d560
describe
'7189' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFV' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
f455796307f5fd018db000cf0e6d1f31
9056172e30c98d52d953dbb61d99611b56e06cf0
describe
'338999' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFW' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
39bc710c3a0bb96c2b4c8a0c2cdb154e
a5aac1f25c32e7542b784606a0313a740dd109ae
describe
'101816' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFX' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
38ba34119dfff21d375ee8f9dcc402f7
e7940928aa47f3e21ac304dd433539a5765b09e8
describe
'31330' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFY' 'sip-files00179.pro'
a330c0b004dcda84055d57f19427de8a
89c1c94ac44b6c4d7dd14a3d1f0c3e0ecaabf7a9
describe
'32118' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAFZ' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
631074b9e5822dea7511be504f26a57c
31dc3867c5ea6d748e3fcd81b36ad349969bd59e
describe
'2728760' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGA' 'sip-files00179.tif'
50909624883f5e93e601154b15e5a893
7f56b2a2fdb9b6c443a1e8956d45c778699a8340
'2011-11-18T10:46:45-05:00'
describe
'1300' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGB' 'sip-files00179.txt'
ca0f20d3934c91f008de24912f873489
5c28a1a9528c298aa65f93f0803b814968fb19cb
describe
'7681' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGC' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
d8eaf81b4ef83048d7efd446f610ae3d
7ede2856c07808d42bd699475027f01542be36f8
describe
'330492' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGD' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
43237fd0cfad61696a7c3abb262c6573
2257b9b965fe91663ae820fa2b5141b98b07b42e
describe
'133063' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGE' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
35ce5c29ea11db8c068ab76ebf4bd594
6d611cddf49885142056f6f12c2a1ab8266c8c45
describe
'41591' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGF' 'sip-files00180.pro'
a12f2ef5f02a2a37add612dc5d5cdc78
ed6e992deca598295b048c0450f1c13e3242a2a0
describe
'42432' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGG' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
0332f2cd3907292e0f96534733b24a1b
eeefa5c091ea3110950bfb5dfbef744a50206e51
describe
'2660676' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGH' 'sip-files00180.tif'
e295524265a1da51de15d6c753c04eea
06d8c57008b89d6f8ebc3301a6d2cf4780591bb1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGI' 'sip-files00180.txt'
1a9fe319e620b7bda62202912592485d
ca06681519389a51aca2c15a9adbc02ad2304d9d
describe
'9740' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGJ' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
9ac46af8f46791f62f4ecc44452639d5
f3e0575cd0ab6bf52376978d5c09b67e45567275
describe
'336214' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGK' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
1e9141e40e65131605ea1d7bb9bb7ec7
db31603645b8d9b6b329f26611467b0751672f96
describe
'130703' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGL' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
405c9a4f8d4663adc886d108ddd907f4
de7160d623e68cdf1a3b05a11c20703c36821cb6
describe
'39397' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGM' 'sip-files00181.pro'
cb9f74930b093032d8cd4f63f60ad2d6
35105bc8746c77130a1291c40ddec33e8cd702a2
describe
'40662' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGN' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
0357bec517e3168e919b8013e83fc340
f42be3368bb326d1a340101f91df7a4d44db8bfd
describe
'2706112' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGO' 'sip-files00181.tif'
a2b2f0b862cb722f2e7c3273a22fa6ee
f386888f593c8dcbe8a99b1e4f39a9f41636469c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGP' 'sip-files00181.txt'
e47078c63678fcff30c24b9f44e52b30
130ec8c986f2d5f2b345bcfce272df9578e4344a
describe
'9685' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGQ' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
29defb72240ec308ac8a39ae2fd4c46c
4d5390d932bf427e150ef9b5010e3b5cc6655114
'2011-11-18T10:50:52-05:00'
describe
'339838' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGR' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
92240af28055806ed5056b7279a437ad
709d583ca67aab03d4c2d5dfc3e3306348fbb296
describe
'128803' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGS' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
7958f44c232e593ee8701416b6b7aed0
1cad9310d66ec44d8db842bc6a586cf212200951
describe
'41077' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGT' 'sip-files00182.pro'
b9c9b9fdee666590af4e24c0c2e884a4
add0f0ff841f4025b83cc8670b66775fddd23baf
describe
'41185' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGU' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
c8ff9b3ab2d2c1d143f701945a055c15
7db2acf7cefe9bf91e2f131b98f6e5c22afdec6c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGV' 'sip-files00182.tif'
983801352ad141db18bc8002b00b303e
55ec466b55ee3badfa21722f9897f0491f616e63
describe
'1610' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGW' 'sip-files00182.txt'
81f4fc703111634077c8835cdf93f56d
e8412d64d00d868105d23ee7bcd1c2174a2e9d92
describe
'9948' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGX' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
a121041250cddb3cc2171f4e36700350
b3f07efdee41ccf76b6436ec1e4592a9e8e8d268
describe
'345362' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGY' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
299b9fd1a772441b15a13a072f22d4cf
006335b500e3605673b8e798251bb926a1b0ac0b
describe
'127867' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAGZ' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
b71ae1470f57e00a0091bb372e8cb8ee
53e8f8e9c975b1458d6a13529bed8b14fc2e79d7
describe
'40882' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHA' 'sip-files00183.pro'
f634fbf14b3de13ba8beb54bd21df956
9fb54c798c674b17a1434d4d668d65577189b174
describe
'40633' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHB' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
53ea79c6487091dc4ac92620739483e8
af23b853b78327f5481ab329a83674d03e182e9e
describe
'2779208' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHC' 'sip-files00183.tif'
e114d3a49f01d2a6baf87bf5af1fde45
b065de6da47c652af8f5879aabaaaa42a2139967
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHD' 'sip-files00183.txt'
d9cb5066e73eb572746e440fb04198aa
9b7b5743bad610ebd03cb3730bf31823d4ac1ee9
describe
'9778' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHE' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
94dbbad80173c167b0ae218594dd050e
3f835cd32d00c8c9f4c5101e0ac79a547e9e845d
describe
'328037' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHF' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
04db4e989caf496bfcdf33c97275daf1
751c7ca5038f1f01c72a4224f671b098eec62a27
describe
'128269' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHG' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
e4af9bc03ad2ab750ee6e14682ac46fa
52c3bc22519e9eabdea379d536da185cdf178e65
describe
'40498' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHH' 'sip-files00184.pro'
05304001e063f5b34e6ce50b2598963b
d930169bb1c835572a45fbbbfd1b70bf1bb7d91a
describe
'40766' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHI' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
60bf08d778b8e73256ac89d88722eb39
cf1346f80e3e48dd397735a90aa0fd4d35f72afd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHJ' 'sip-files00184.tif'
549636a4dcb8a404a6937dc0d5d4888d
da71722c070c92fa9932f9bd7ab64fdfa0099cf2
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHK' 'sip-files00184.txt'
ea50749834ec1f6b62306f4fecd367ef
e25054f75739e726334606787ad2d7a9c0fdb553
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHL' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
0b09d43de880f43b9d65d9eb789bb2b4
c79a43ed720c1e54ee0769774b74765cef19db15
describe
'334833' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHM' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
3581b8912473ff3174fe767c0f2809c8
f162efab2b25fe2d086eddef84b34301fc3276a7
describe
'120612' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHN' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
c48789113b3ea84a509036e4ef207867
2e993b2b701debe42c586dd3b0b2708b423bc38a
describe
'38950' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHO' 'sip-files00185.pro'
f25ec31a42f96e35048326cde95c2889
2056c30eb7b73d1316203b9bb765ba4cd592890e
describe
'39334' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHP' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
b99b70172eb0a284b485eebc88e2f463
e1402e8118e204dfbf0a3bf4ae19e0dc69574979
describe
'2695128' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHQ' 'sip-files00185.tif'
28cb30a497cba07fe10de6b5f4da12a6
05aa0aeece966a87ef74ea3d86de301245a006a5
describe
'1542' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHR' 'sip-files00185.txt'
fabbd729e5285db43b95ae88d1d64ea2
a996764c7255d292e4e734795e8c9b305a2b0ed2
describe
'9483' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHS' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
d57ce5715178a4d9177789514f3a51ea
9f735da6e545d732c31c11c0cba51f69809184fd
describe
'317214' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHT' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
2ef417e48359dc38e25d3da877442503
e98541e264da5527efb9c211bfdf1e115a431856
describe
'133851' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHU' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
fe4d8d32a57e3e29a393db8db8a34db7
101c50960960f636a8250802cefb3cf2742df11c
describe
'42156' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHV' 'sip-files00186.pro'
3f5c310281c2d833f68441074d72563c
151696b91f37e03a1ef688710a950c178a75c4c4
describe
'42673' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHW' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
68a433947a90656aa594ef3e75a9d322
92d57c6a468cefa43c5976ca246fdb955d7372cb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHX' 'sip-files00186.tif'
2a6d4179809c72da4e7cecaeb00d1edb
7813b5c23219cf837c477c16e0215abf54572801
describe
'1659' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHY' 'sip-files00186.txt'
a106e7c37029321836a35761338a4449
ee8cb3160dd6e92e4eb28aaf90dd6db694bf92b7
describe
'11612' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAHZ' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
977d6ce9ef0e9f952fdfb1e66e646e58
0598020e06e7ea8aca25eeeded11a68fab960c20
describe
'342383' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIA' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
279ca97f26f9a310072255aeb7cdec25
6679d5395299693095039acfd2a00592779a8a03
describe
'91405' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIB' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
943d94b807c52931d3c5f63caf521a35
26ccd7a02583927506f62fdfe76a05f6843d8cf6
describe
'27738' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIC' 'sip-files00187.pro'
87c58f3a932cee3abb941ba193c3bcd3
f05a542f0c71a1ea5bccfe417e0c8916efbb5e71
describe
'28412' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAID' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
b8b4cf5c138e1449394e9db085328cb2
49ba095e1c08d61aee34a8f686c9f8d867bd600f
describe
'2756084' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIE' 'sip-files00187.tif'
3f52096e443b9adb406e072d89dbfd67
c3687cceb4e87e5fe864d16f01aa4d01c291773b
describe
'1094' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIF' 'sip-files00187.txt'
83a8348c78720a658d39ae0ab24b123d
c002046bc52415cc009a952917976873e7f645c9
describe
'7081' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIG' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
489ba2387adb5a316b09cae64f1c3f48
f36e1884b376976bc75b8e4fdb056348168d4e7e
describe
'337973' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIH' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
0921b037ca7e58e7ad0ec3050aced039
fb6625fbeffda23450df9d4f89a424355d4383d8
describe
'98416' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAII' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
c4cbaffa5be05f30e6da37545d9b0557
482a573efe34f330f724e292897d0ff9dc695430
'2011-11-18T10:50:43-05:00'
describe
'29813' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIJ' 'sip-files00188.pro'
43e567500254bee88f4c0c635c375986
562ea3609bf131d44dabba9c1f596a9155b2d405
describe
'31137' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIK' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
4e4cfd2a4ad48b52712878118eef6071
206fb901d57095f0dd6131311f984fb70eb186d3
describe
'2720352' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIL' 'sip-files00188.tif'
ecb350c5a2cff5a231a46818973a27da
b0219d3579285e6389e05d656e26360158b8f5bb
describe
'1273' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIM' 'sip-files00188.txt'
aa173beb1c7cd3a822161ffe9944cca3
0ccda9d8f0f4f6d6b4d6c25507c1dd3984f8d646
describe
'8178' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIN' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
134464b33072b9012c4019e580594937
10405427190bf8bcb6d46eabe5288293f7e914ea
describe
'332456' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIO' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
efe275425517054aa5ec5aa2b169a322
5d86b363aebea6e093c03152aac0113db02a426f
describe
'134208' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIP' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
d1f09cfd8b7c9b5085d84704ff519b64
de14ccb999a5e672be2ba67c931900024c0e203c
'2011-11-18T10:48:10-05:00'
describe
'42284' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIQ' 'sip-files00189.pro'
0b2af3cbf6d13faecffa4623e1588088
99b8764d3fe685c95163c6f88f825dfc3784ccd0
describe
'42348' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIR' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
52331fda94beebf7b0ee3e0b4bd40158
9d21a686d422ec09b8be964c648b1040906964a7
describe
'2676048' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIS' 'sip-files00189.tif'
43c44acf4284fc913565da94a61103d4
437d7b638fc18813d5eb9b68e97d12930750f2b9
'2011-11-18T10:50:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIT' 'sip-files00189.txt'
a108bff348d54669413b84980ca464be
1e86aecb18c6b8950b8f30cae43f84e39472ac1e
describe
'9937' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIU' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
0ef079cdd73e4904a58989e9cc166d96
3ab7673801f9c80bc4ef28e0b3de9f28bc90a4f3
describe
'336392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIV' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
44d633a3777e3593356c383464c78343
565a2be0b121a9458f4dec60080a299958a62a0a
describe
'130645' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIW' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
de6547f0a3c9f6c8b5df47fb1364b993
253e393c9add8846506a2563b18d5690d868686a
describe
'42667' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIX' 'sip-files00190.pro'
f5a4e3e3fcfcf7dbded6bd8a606d8b08
dbd166ba1610e95f9ea11212428a4e2cfb45f05c
describe
'41706' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIY' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
8b0bd3617ed7d91cebaad42dc4d1f2f9
6e431c6e2500396ed6d282b55e3e9e7b5090829c
describe
'2707740' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAIZ' 'sip-files00190.tif'
6005a7313ef4a13daeca6def98f01e8e
35f61f0941186d98d44d0fb6aa348d16eb896d12
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJA' 'sip-files00190.txt'
32c4c2a81ae950f2921aaa1f5f06b46a
2753dd9299cb1f4bfd4f3c5c3c43603515f6c1e4
describe
'10162' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJB' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
471d2207023f775067d8a87c295808e7
9d994d7a5a130025dac4f21fb788bef5d861cb18
describe
'339039' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJC' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
c8c92efc36081430a5bdd36a1beb9901
804d8b06ef77e369b5be24a8a9555cfdfeb6bfbe
describe
'123801' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJD' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
acf302cf454b16f5b92d36b6c2ef5463
b8bc41c0ed626ac8a46d5ed5fe2c82e622b07487
describe
'39729' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJE' 'sip-files00191.pro'
3f23ae1f8b81601989610e0e3c38db01
e7e5107f35a3b6ff5a79cfedec221623be6ab9d4
describe
'38496' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJF' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
d6372f929158e4e4128c8b0cb24e4e6e
2e6a69b8f35980a7d7685da143a5bbc06fd5285c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJG' 'sip-files00191.tif'
00319701df9d7649c46aba85a4fe1b5c
aa859bd7ed82614a628f7db75d21df61a97dd157
describe
'1576' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJH' 'sip-files00191.txt'
ec6bc9102776e7884b49ec7214302e40
a50a770972f2c6d086126dad3d6df98fdf307095
describe
'10064' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJI' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
f2fe0eadeb070ae7ba547e20e872d344
b1ed5783af8afc5645a6f9caa5be6864aa34d4ea
describe
'330296' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJJ' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
33ac80d07a2171f2fad75c2960af9d58
7dbd0b005c81a7ade8c14c2a996990a64b016ada
'2011-11-18T10:50:55-05:00'
describe
'132761' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJK' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
1aacba942241c353f6c77ccc98982608
1f718adbd4a27122cd2de747e6420100f298da43
describe
'42085' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJL' 'sip-files00192.pro'
2a0ecffcd803c0df586d1008d31722ad
6e9c56ff82b5cd57980489259fd27ee9046981c3
describe
'42309' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJM' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
f08585761cd47adf44b917e0b929e31a
ef9229f69e6400b55419c569f092e831a97c4c5b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJN' 'sip-files00192.tif'
d123011190c8e1db914b37f8dac2ef71
a968a9dd2c9cf36b2055cd4cc8cf674542556f02
describe
'1654' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJO' 'sip-files00192.txt'
51ab495e807e943b69aefe1c96c83a13
af270ec1c6c9f4b1995319b36eec37ab36fbbb41
describe
'11392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJP' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
f887aed005624317eac352b9d350329e
c56b613f2330ad4976fb744073c1b51dc57d6bfb
describe
'330961' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJQ' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
a35fce8257dd860d5fc24072587e09cf
898bda61c3e0f6b720a10e41f8c6185d70e92531
describe
'130112' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJR' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
94153bd29e8aaafc55c5124fa6beca94
8b4d9fc9699ad2388f071c3edc70b7be12d6b7a7
describe
'42427' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJS' 'sip-files00193.pro'
42a27e8e50cefbe2a01ceeefe107a0c9
0c5f11ba73c56923e0d8de2ccabae7d94325370e
describe
'41467' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJT' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
c8a5aca4ea2c4edf1a4bc244a2d9d1ca
28bb042f1c18f604bb85ad8834ec5816e71d84a4
describe
'2664552' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJU' 'sip-files00193.tif'
6b608430ebc8bd85b4e1ca05626d3f53
9a63648a85fe0e2c71dc4c2bc55b1f45f45d05e1
'2011-11-18T10:52:43-05:00'
describe
'1673' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJV' 'sip-files00193.txt'
20f7abfa3044ffb7de1b27b2babb57ff
180769fb890d7ba29a199802a2f506bb23a9a051
describe
'10679' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJW' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
f131cbef2bb24568a629dad00931d1a6
de2394e1a56cefe47e642a9bb164fb0e66c3f81a
describe
'330225' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJX' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
a956baf9a45af63433651e850b254c6b
4ca323aeaa0ffe1c2ffe088f2448a1cf5e796952
'2011-11-18T10:48:49-05:00'
describe
'133334' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJY' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
7655e840462e4ab727308863cd31ddd0
62d17d28302cd358498a8b4bec1bbabd51c587c7
describe
'41625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAJZ' 'sip-files00194.pro'
cc1365dd5483dbe3c535f5cf362eb64a
8bbcbe126c6c0e619f0fcb343df2d49f948c04fb
describe
'42009' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKA' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
d4f73a3d5c5d57b2ddddfede456bfe62
1188685358b61947432e88aeb9a7ac12435b609a
'2011-11-18T10:52:08-05:00'
describe
'2658980' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKB' 'sip-files00194.tif'
db55a51cd643ae77bfdca5c59aa8a5be
aaed5c06682ea179c87ec1ce62976c169e6b249f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKC' 'sip-files00194.txt'
7b4417824f5b7f27d497bbcd04bf2307
a9067f72432f8624e15e2dab3b93d748f1a6ff11
describe
'10304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKD' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
2f7ab3efff0e579d86fd1a3d09160815
4eaab5f123b042718dd7212ba0c5335cdca41d8f
'2011-11-18T10:52:24-05:00'
describe
'335532' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKE' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
63c9beb76d183d0a1b555350e72de447
67f1b6e0b0b20a1c68fe07da503e4b597df82860
describe
'129921' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKF' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
852662f9026ed6525870c0f70007a764
b1fcb993184bdf9566777348c6910b10e677a59c
'2011-11-18T10:55:03-05:00'
describe
'42104' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKG' 'sip-files00195.pro'
17de52ea63d84d433b76512bf75cd418
00e3b14236fcae79eb84be210c7ecfaf40f7c7f0
describe
'41350' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKH' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
813bc92e5905ea7efe7b08c732bea521
7d225a716fdf1f46bf1619e445eed6d88ae7ce45
describe
'2700936' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKI' 'sip-files00195.tif'
12c6af2bc21f2db30cab108740a331be
9929567781067e52a558303bd87090228646fdcd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKJ' 'sip-files00195.txt'
e44335c83efe87f68d1c0677b1737c8c
4a36fa85904c70b1bdefe3866ee3bb1a898abf51
describe
'10239' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKK' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
1aff2402509c27ebf3b9283877447da9
3a428a2a6a5bf20bc018bf36b70f4bbdf8e0a809
describe
'339760' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKL' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
5d6c7226e6b316139e1715be2fef704d
3d12099acd0b1e6c1f3a0d2d1f93c8a86f759afe
describe
'127435' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKM' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
882d0fabab3fbe53e017ac0b0feca40d
d6ab8400bea18d822f971f1ee54a090e4a15f889
describe
'39931' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKN' 'sip-files00196.pro'
dd55c72f84a451b72fbc9682162f28af
f618743aebf619998a09ece82ee4641334c7204f
describe
'40229' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKO' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
07a055f965d6dcde5dc4fa450f84d8e6
51972546826f14bbf35a1ca77c42dbdad5660284
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKP' 'sip-files00196.tif'
4b9435a655d5c5d3b50ec2751c78af77
af4b066816feae55758dcd8529e10cdfc1f7ac0b
describe
'1575' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKQ' 'sip-files00196.txt'
c622f84318a6e2f8f9b6b9186644b802
a5fa0e1083c81a6b667092151db7bb9d6fda4b58
describe
'9928' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKR' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
c6a962a7b7ea77cd6f185959c906bfd5
97821083528baa082bc97b11ebe96e88b72c87f3
describe
'335097' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKS' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
0a2d74a6839f362041643ebecae97de8
8563f042137cc42d4832f0659f598bc5a84873b3
describe
'134694' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKT' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
9c4784224594dfa11141ad38eec83fd5
68ad4fd68aed2e5f57a09c85591ffbbfdabbc21d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKU' 'sip-files00197.pro'
6f2e8afca5ccd93ec272b337153a35be
d3c27c3da99f0e883e5fb8b2e173048a1fd40915
describe
'42821' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKV' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
4f58ed2e0de76c53f156c23c9d31798b
14ff0d304532c9843335a2e8fbbedd858b888ae4
describe
'2697828' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKW' 'sip-files00197.tif'
f5e87849fc3f19b81df3de1ee0dfbb38
00ed4d62c438059dab038420fa53ee835932295d
describe
'1644' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKX' 'sip-files00197.txt'
ddb307855372b84ed55ef4a4d3063a93
6ab5507811122a6a362192b7ce7166744d3faa50
describe
'10130' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKY' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
576daac7e1cb237f3bfb9d5706a84fb1
dd4f0346c36e25752be35342c3ecfa9120299b14
describe
'325287' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAKZ' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
1fe23d8c48f32b3747c908ecda26f1f6
8027659d1e3af42260a4f36647816f394e9390be
describe
'132920' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALA' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
34ee2133280d4ce650e59df1e79430d1
1fbeaa1a6b6f295890aaa1dcced1d90b99922635
describe
'41675' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALB' 'sip-files00198.pro'
7aa03cffa4e8e2c5936e9b94b1bd01ec
136fd4a83228f5f2bb938ca0811faef2017bcb75
describe
'42397' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALC' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
af53e852d325415de2de1788d739032f
1ee42a7bea4909260c71ef0cc27ad7af1156e086
describe
'2619168' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALD' 'sip-files00198.tif'
dc057d7f576af91db2225310ed4be88d
4fe2f841f017934f7a895d07cda6936929febf72
'2011-11-18T10:53:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALE' 'sip-files00198.txt'
112b80233183f1be3f185d723dacc4d5
edde5ff9a1f3c209c4e502a302ad9ab71b0aee46
describe
'10717' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALF' 'sip-files00198thm.jpg'
f5fca2d6c3bbe3e14cb7ee99b6186a54
9025d62ecd4fab01afa5963ba9bbb2d9844c0117
describe
'342432' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALG' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
60d412aea47a9fc2add9701a50f33513
406364d90edbf9259f9bf27ff0b07c7688d21e35
describe
'127724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALH' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
c37364cd7e1ee134b6576c5579aefd0e
7f7db5063ca0a640145f6d93f6fab945b822761e
describe
'40312' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALI' 'sip-files00199.pro'
c6603dcf11d0e93cf70b1b4f9e23273f
3fb30def6f07ea9584d7929194c6a9b06b1fe270
describe
'40038' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALJ' 'sip-files00199.QC.jpg'
8308717917aeaaa5c5e6310678f3248c
a5b4d524cd1f190e76d5a3e7cd123c151674d29a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALK' 'sip-files00199.tif'
289678de8c03761033bc68e6527fb715
a09f70732a57162121550112039b677b42b9cac8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALL' 'sip-files00199.txt'
be01b41b2feb2985cea665d8add59e3b
8b8efb8489c7b3d7bd061d6cd58cc5fc35192111
describe
'9385' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALM' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
9bae815998b68d40622e9822d798b4b8
70b8d2372856c97e7aab84963e9791a4677c7a19
describe
'333814' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALN' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
1a89461332a7522c85b221d4ad74777e
682a32bd4dd6614d585f73a083d002da80fa197b
describe
'110256' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALO' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
6b0e6a31cfc4acd31ef0278a0d46b972
c63d2f18bd0909aee6620cec7dd71208f09e8632
describe
'32015' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALP' 'sip-files00200.pro'
d93a25f234b6c5a9fb990fcf341c73aa
ffd5b3ae42665f8df401770b219a0ffa7f6fd61a
describe
'35345' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALQ' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
820c8ecf298806b3dd4c082aeaac06b8
db31d44449341e065f1a3e6deaf03145a0aa7e4c
describe
'2687224' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALR' 'sip-files00200.tif'
db04d45d5c692e1ba438e1d1151c2db7
e8412ee04b6da2cc4504b39368dcc1f99fcccf98
'2011-11-18T10:47:48-05:00'
describe
'1343' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALS' 'sip-files00200.txt'
444f07f9c50f9af464ce03348ee960f6
4ccce24d8576c65937b22ee89a0b62b2e11f8dec
describe
'8175' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALT' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
e9e5075616799f4599d427ce78d2885d
621ebab03d1cfe87a36b346810aa6133c99c2179
describe
'339111' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALU' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
d8852b23b2f2efc53826e0265567831a
8d785ceb7e6f0ed25ea26a96a0e4498c336a2cd7
describe
'132417' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALV' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
165727eaadfbbfd2bdcc4e971d863934
347932a4c98fa914162962546c4680840cc45889
describe
'42167' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALW' 'sip-files00201.pro'
42a0b52132245e212ebcb2d0a2aebf8d
409b3f48f9d2ad8ae2b415f135cf9e8d65a99695
describe
'42102' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALX' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
9308c9cd96f68b89769f432d26283ed2
abd51c4a60705909a48c2713520caec1621120fe
describe
'2730024' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALY' 'sip-files00201.tif'
1c1815d1b9a6830470a8eb93f4ccde25
0ccdc2060d1ca218429fec8625684c53e2a13af6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABALZ' 'sip-files00201.txt'
088257a11ba29df1ce05727776b5556f
cc79ddf4dec8775bda56a4ce1e467d9a57c2dcd6
describe
'9776' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMA' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
624e2d3d04e234f9eda7524c4b1464ec
85875c6ef5a3d4be1d3d93fa6f5b35a3e1fab36e
describe
'322499' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMB' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
6bb6ba85caa92408ec6523a906d858e7
ad7ce45f94850d02238f25738996ec7713262605
describe
'135165' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMC' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
63f50f1f1f27236c1b03fc43bab1a17c
0c5888165156daa54c0279fd2b86ca6a17641616
describe
'43010' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMD' 'sip-files00202.pro'
2d7793bd6350080837abbaee60340b92
7c39c61d9cf98185bfce7e84f64e246c7c3fff5e
describe
'42773' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAME' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
7f7531e9655b5a320bca9f095925ecb3
32d240f1f383dba56d89a371498fe80fa5c0bd1b
describe
'2596820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMF' 'sip-files00202.tif'
ab539abb0ddcf89fa327f533f2f16146
40731f9abc91efcfc5b69e86dcc7884018d7bc2a
describe
'1708' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMG' 'sip-files00202.txt'
67d8f99bd58df10b483cf83c12d28abe
6d3fb95ab694a67a7bf7bcb97c113595db992508
describe
'10284' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMH' 'sip-files00202thm.jpg'
4cdb7861d82ad4e0ebfd5673242883c6
6adddc31e009ce67747fde15179ada98c6793d77
describe
'341155' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMI' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
8996a8f18fbd520f7b18add1c978e9b3
d36ffe80310c8fe5ad62e9d2b5d15645f2ae9373
describe
'131532' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMJ' 'sip-files00203.jpg'
a6db2c5013b756202ab028732b647279
c803a4ec7e91b5214febac8eb2032fdeec50bffa
describe
'41097' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMK' 'sip-files00203.pro'
e6c5fff38b1b5ae3824585aa70123d64
6f3f9ce3631a0b794e9802ea01d35570cc8408e1
describe
'41941' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAML' 'sip-files00203.QC.jpg'
6862253b1c78410e4a6ad59d620f686f
0442b469a02d91deb7d9843b47ccc246def3cc45
describe
'2745576' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMM' 'sip-files00203.tif'
38ea3390e4b39ebe6fdde7777f74ba1a
0906d812011856c2f5bc4cf9923d7e79db4fb68c
describe
'1680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMN' 'sip-files00203.txt'
c76f1c8b15d609175e86e86936d241d2
3adbd39e62bc9bf0c44f97c6c45f02d7f6c559c5
describe
'10201' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMO' 'sip-files00203thm.jpg'
1235eb5dd8f5fe118f1b2481e23c493c
f355ac3e4e3f9aab642b14359bc9f7bb87568f61
describe
'328702' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMP' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
7fe838ca2981a3d43110416794e457ed
2da71308c737e7512d9e08032f90cbe32eb6c82e
describe
'134273' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMQ' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
5472e4d730f052b96f2f466ace5d4391
2228ee0f76c31c3c3957d03ee4d6e53091b992fa
describe
'42253' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMR' 'sip-files00204.pro'
9e0578e8ef5a2caf2895921948204af1
e8a38b95ac295331b017e3919f65758291123daa
describe
'42464' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMS' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
6db75f550d455c149c3b4d6da31cddc7
4205f6d78376736477cfe48e177f682adc3128e6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMT' 'sip-files00204.tif'
4b368d74e27113ef02fa290c3ec36a89
584bcfcbf47bbf5513ad58a648653134adfd1452
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMU' 'sip-files00204.txt'
a5174730637382bda271b960358efb3f
b5c0c6fcb591e882ae790d6ebd4117b01cc6d550
describe
'10812' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMV' 'sip-files00204thm.jpg'
3b3e04e4f9b3b69a9c8350b87458a8f2
c39013d57b4456bf696411440d3efc0cf2b6070a
describe
'317876' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMW' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
a22f76f8a35ef85d3bd05d5639940bc8
813163c7282b5061290c990aab9e69025e4cd3f7
describe
'68549' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMX' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
247c359255cb8631893e0702ea139154
d226f1502a419ca36f1d73a55b7bfd6f4e845ec0
describe
'1185' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMY' 'sip-files00205.pro'
613a077defd272d7f4ceb435773522eb
3051dc165f92e7b811793d836111ecdb83a4188c
describe
'16263' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAMZ' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
1bb560c417333cecb5277279f2a63199
66f2e29c5a95e8df7dd366cb85abc90ee69cfcfe
describe
'2559632' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANA' 'sip-files00205.tif'
86347094d66d5eb7c8fc23cd14b1f441
476f5e534d2113791da1c5c14f9723e7c8b387e6
describe
'127' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANB' 'sip-files00205.txt'
544d9f36d0329b8c3be2e1ac23eaea5e
c8482a186f2302af5d3df8c2c87cc29e2faad76d
'2011-11-18T10:49:27-05:00'
describe
'4166' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANC' 'sip-files00205thm.jpg'
3833962264a3edb46159176308b2adeb
e0ac65cf5ce6d727faf005f6fd4720e1e204b1b1
describe
'343246' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAND' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
2b5fa4474486b70f7c33cc262ea44654
aed976fd8d8f608fab01c5ee364904f0bb2df512
describe
'132116' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANE' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
507ccbb9855a5ccf1386fee22dfa5359
64f361b35dd0c29f923ba9ba0578e988abbd588d
describe
'42389' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANF' 'sip-files00207.pro'
2294f1745169632be9defd34625103a2
a40a6638f24cfc4d41add87b25f69a54fafb0214
describe
'41564' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANG' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
b8735e4cc779ce9e65546857e264f5d2
782fb142ca297ccd3a63604e924af65e036ff3fe
describe
'2762392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANH' 'sip-files00207.tif'
2db9cce5f5d8617a95b838f227c0b442
f10d46121f4b676e81acbe45e5efa5e4b94db741
describe
'1672' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANI' 'sip-files00207.txt'
34c7ff68410bedd56bd4fb8302d2ccb2
95df9652d0eec0a14b494ce71fa6b24cf4276f38
describe
'9693' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANJ' 'sip-files00207thm.jpg'
6ba55b6e62fe6ecc41f027e1d6cc28c1
3e8cc7de077c420b8322c82d7c1490901228aff0
describe
'344564' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANK' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
991363bbf8acf1b2816e834b12d36a80
334620777edf5262c82f802d75b281008a5a76ee
describe
'131997' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANL' 'sip-files00208.jpg'
de230551a1c42b38fb3724393c3d0c95
827689d170f37460a23d29872d6cc2229225c016
describe
'42980' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANM' 'sip-files00208.pro'
bfa63d516cc9adcadad513785be57ed3
ca1572a2e9db224104284ab61b2a9a3b2ff39f21
describe
'41145' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANN' 'sip-files00208.QC.jpg'
22198dcefca354bbdc22535f851a9bd1
27feeb2db0bd0e49b3126dd967427b548d53ae3d
describe
'2772900' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANO' 'sip-files00208.tif'
06ebfe274d0c908953d2df997a576420
6b3f8982064b5236d5392632d80a2efac7f0c508
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANP' 'sip-files00208.txt'
b1a3af4cf9b963cb5f339ffa2064a41a
364b7ac3a30012fe03c737e3c8f8b0528185f011
describe
'9808' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANQ' 'sip-files00208thm.jpg'
7820acef3d4f1b8981174d2dcf6b8374
a54a1da6ac7079dd84413c036b33c55b30a5544c
describe
'342196' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANR' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
4c2607601fb7a1b09aef0dc8e34c75b1
8427055fc12b77a8f835ba82b7889730d3beda66
describe
'133003' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANS' 'sip-files00209.jpg'
7973369f4882ed61b640688e7560cce8
9000bbdcf1627a28c1c89bac06933e947e279c3d
describe
'42975' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANT' 'sip-files00209.pro'
879065ed3789e23d5c4e70450925e793
cc160f9f2efcf29bfd0e7b468bee6e2ebc14126e
describe
'41059' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANU' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
a2d1c81689dd88111ee8f639516b226b
529145ff188498505bf2bdb88a2642a68e136054
describe
'2753984' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANV' 'sip-files00209.tif'
b2d8000a0e46b1a9dc694c9a9e998e02
3dc990bc908795c2df7c29becf2f460cdd40f04c
describe
'1701' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANW' 'sip-files00209.txt'
cb49bf37134dec9e54008f9ef5ac8977
00cac0b195f9ee4d4cc7d86e5a539f62eda1b5a3
'2011-11-18T10:54:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANX' 'sip-files00209thm.jpg'
441c1947cb4646a7b148207f9404f4c1
f6085bacf73c941dd44a75ed122b993f4ec6419a
describe
'330809' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANY' 'sip-files00210.jp2'
0dd5fb022f20e81175a26e04e9731beb
eb23ed2d0a79a8a0c06a47845d10d3ffd0966269
describe
'106928' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABANZ' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
2849d87cd20820af5577e5148a43b6f7
d99a56d6ef7abf38821b8b77be058419ccba8e6b
describe
'30943' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOA' 'sip-files00210.pro'
068d9427f3d9f0f93e54d87c054aed8b
4efe8b4d66e9cef16d90472c391675a7fa9be0c0
describe
'33489' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOB' 'sip-files00210.QC.jpg'
695015bc8d13db896c5ecf2db54221ba
92c4bcda6c7b62e9c455a2a6d605233ea5aa742e
describe
'2663724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOC' 'sip-files00210.tif'
e04ffc58c2622e8104a77f9d4a051baa
3a877959ae0f158eaae304bdac5bdf6c4a717422
describe
'1301' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOD' 'sip-files00210.txt'
49e0e9cc83e75354410b96ad3cb07290
7c68e8297e5beb12813841284c98a7fa364b7235
describe
'8463' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOE' 'sip-files00210thm.jpg'
587113004af57dec5593a3ffc74184fd
111dd34bcb5a2f7c9b921e5ab6e556651ed17348
describe
'336928' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOF' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
ed19378bab52659fea9176121e0828d5
2b7b5203895bfa796ad77a61e871ba65866d89c5
describe
'127169' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOG' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
e3d7b1ab1b26d917f2012bb0f0273ce3
21be683dd3456431bb10014a1a61d9ab96ed29da
describe
'41277' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOH' 'sip-files00211.pro'
b45ceb55bd9f7c8db7100772b538cd27
4faa00edce7c512d6e28c83e374c3dff9b9063e6
describe
'40279' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOI' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
00d4958af4f24e92367d46e6fd44ecc9
baeb1dab6b4cd6fdf11cc224cf924d7e5d891f48
describe
'2711944' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOJ' 'sip-files00211.tif'
0b5559788e220662418ab4e3e8c77963
5f6767f53cbfb7e2e0fa172012609da13ac070f0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOK' 'sip-files00211.txt'
d0e073c69ebb4e28aa7bab585bd608a4
7beec8af761961d78c658335916a8ddece9b5588
describe
'9890' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOL' 'sip-files00211thm.jpg'
0438e814cd6cdbe0e8332b0a93919c20
1c1866939ad17449172c94f4609ee1a5d7373552
describe
'328506' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOM' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
ec70a34ce2d1ede6fcdd75cf85d4355e
d84373d1bc06801c0031fb9580cc1d4a65676e27
describe
'125997' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAON' 'sip-files00212.jpg'
172d1abc9648e9092ac0ea8eadf52876
ba6a6d1054435d95ed4255bea2f843fe3e899303
describe
'40707' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOO' 'sip-files00212.pro'
c67a56b4ccef43b39e2bcf49d5057a2c
477581426782932ceecb1fdeb9e91d020aaa71ac
describe
'40387' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOP' 'sip-files00212.QC.jpg'
0c7b377a3527794e183672867e60f6cd
2520f33535747c38165c6d96f1ff64fbbe6d6fcd
describe
'2644476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOQ' 'sip-files00212.tif'
258dd2bc72a90684c456188cf0b1a0dc
a8a330a98d18b485f41f2e3c12bce90f6561c2f9
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOR' 'sip-files00212.txt'
69c25bf03ea42d7b1fd258a18f70a42c
627bea51bfcd662d903d94734350f9b47f0f5f01
describe
'9689' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOS' 'sip-files00212thm.jpg'
56b8e92c1cdb9a7c88c8a82f745884a0
68078c5a33b5c810c25a57d0f23313ee6ce83c16
describe
'334521' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOT' 'sip-files00213.jp2'
7f087961625710279c708207fdf0837d
e50d7a2d93ee78a060bef3522b93ec771bd5a276
describe
'130563' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOU' 'sip-files00213.jpg'
755e41f3354f61bbe211255c0ae19118
81e13e7eb4391032f4f705720f37371a654c4c7c
describe
'40043' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOV' 'sip-files00213.pro'
c5613cdd21a9cece3772a7d062913716
69bc4e3da364ce4d3d6d9021942b2171727a577e
describe
'41300' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOW' 'sip-files00213.QC.jpg'
16e5601b6be99728a3b5c0be37e956e1
22799738d86bad34f63d4bf3e83c6a48c3ca0982
describe
'2692640' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOX' 'sip-files00213.tif'
c91ab806d09bc26e4f400cda3cec6030
cdc68388310a5b73d0b444a75c8d898325f86d7d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOY' 'sip-files00213.txt'
696bc4882d5c016d5abd20dbbd369c8f
f90e553826182efa9fe80881ff9bafb27f40137d
describe
'9747' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAOZ' 'sip-files00213thm.jpg'
bc66496794a676fcb01b8f432f080eab
aac0b714f44db16b5c89f2ab00086e2a1305e460
'2011-11-18T10:50:51-05:00'
describe
'323781' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPA' 'sip-files00214.jp2'
7c5a3252e9859a8a76b276c8e175e089
78c8c2202db69cd08b929245e335d39b88ad7911
describe
'127743' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPB' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
3c13543942040334edc8dfd320ee4b73
99ee0dea96afde013fe6488b49bb3735dc814966
describe
'40845' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPC' 'sip-files00214.pro'
a97c65035bc7e247caa0b3b9f9f8841f
a962e5f4352fa9de09da5ab50aee7591abe7ee09
describe
'40917' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPD' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
59076c8f107b89b3fea94d7889358256
37cf3cb1a70ddce6a88f4dc690b45f66f573f9c8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPE' 'sip-files00214.tif'
2b9ed8de1ff9acb8f7854f2a5dcf8854
ba6afb3a8979f432b99600738551bbbd22b32f7f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPF' 'sip-files00214.txt'
b49f3aaf2f4faf7b721d9f9de631da16
6125127952e5548f6e874f69c179ec6d9c7ef2ca
describe
'9641' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPG' 'sip-files00214thm.jpg'
fc37b2baf171a73a642263adecaec2e2
5ecefd5aa73c6a08dbb117645bb7e1ae57adf5ba
describe
'335696' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPH' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
53a78f065bb6bc6bba4ce07d7e0b15ed
dc3b2a82d380991fa63ecef7af1c367a8e8260a7
describe
'77507' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPI' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
46b18f67bdb1e35c486b3d2cb643a58f
3ca46c3ba98b415fcf1ca60912ae80fc5c4b57fd
describe
'22953' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPJ' 'sip-files00215.pro'
6f26e362aabb61f572153bd99ea95e07
1a6c8763e9a1b365195315119c36693710f8e78f
describe
'24435' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPK' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
67ad05a1280a910eafa1a2a897301e6d
15f5534f9c6c4f6a105fcc5357b0c0d77cd718e2
describe
'2703536' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPL' 'sip-files00215.tif'
2e04dbccaa206e706d7e298b4cb26425
c754288e74b2e7ab49b480ce044aa721a6e33892
describe
'964' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPM' 'sip-files00215.txt'
ade4b474eeb0568ad938d25b5f191203
f9b7e3bf118ee0246f67c8a2553f2ee536a26ce7
describe
'6086' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPN' 'sip-files00215thm.jpg'
452bb99634d017fe3519951a627bcc05
e2a3f0e641569dfa6cf858752daaf2abc022b621
describe
'325332' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPO' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
049abf7cae010b8d96ffc2992c532fb0
04c612a80e7ff761fa1d22df60cd2a30d82a4bad
describe
'108060' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPP' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
4f0ea0415030aa5d27c4bf1806621e84
889ee6c68fb5c30c4811b2a92a2471ec51da3159
describe
'31844' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPQ' 'sip-files00216.pro'
703e3fa83d3cab38c4a0b87639319bc8
28633c165a398a468e4c0e46412c28c809c7228a
describe
'34601' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPR' 'sip-files00216.QC.jpg'
470215d31aeb8e4b65e2ae4d0b2f2456
cf51557209920f8d33365e21070b54c8b849c609
describe
'2618960' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPS' 'sip-files00216.tif'
c4d7f6af5926a8fe9b3f7e1041612d7a
279129ebcbc903258bded2ac16d6d2fe385110cd
describe
'1295' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPT' 'sip-files00216.txt'
aca75adf53399eb29a224ae6c639df56
beec09bbd0218b4384350910e795a80f1d61b6d4
describe
'8464' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPU' 'sip-files00216thm.jpg'
73cfbe1147ecb9eb8db8e0c8f8936d53
90fe6fe6227e02e7789777b9ffe01dd0ed649449
describe
'339023' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPV' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
eebeec6854b48d9ef7c93bad46d1113c
4fcb108c00ec9ab5bc512acc6252b88641376a96
describe
'128753' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPW' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
b41e0ed90ea01c7711f70f7e9d00fdf2
a3088493f48556ca51c67fc3aa617afdb98a1a39
describe
'41817' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPX' 'sip-files00217.pro'
ae447deb202c545c110c657d62580eb1
c69c67a3ed8621896192a9d0c856efb81da000e6
describe
'41295' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPY' 'sip-files00217.QC.jpg'
5c8a0690829ec74ea161798791e3cc35
a86c7c507852810210858d2bcf89fedf217345fe
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAPZ' 'sip-files00217.tif'
6dc4e99bf670f704cbb9b70e7568fd18
3e0872f5a2d89cf772fbd718b1c8002bf2646c69
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQA' 'sip-files00217.txt'
83bafdb2296bcd6129404dae5a836d8a
5c0aa5fecd0939c495a8fb8d36eb8e2e979beed7
describe
'9801' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQB' 'sip-files00217thm.jpg'
d8077d41ce714323fd5e420a52f0db7c
ef36e949e6e2a2abbb0e56e93d37e1c9210e2122
describe
'333513' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQC' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
196eb40429708494c1d6a8447a1bb0fc
e356a30de80589eb00a22e3c8dad6ed5058ee70b
describe
'130615' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQD' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
816d2b287da6384349bff3a6f972d1a2
81c87c53ba12711fab708ec2bb6efa411a34407a
describe
'42103' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQE' 'sip-files00218.pro'
95bac1e16efc40d70c50f5bcc5f787dd
edb0055d61150a680524b32f68d39c51db31c78f
describe
'41275' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQF' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
674eacb3c15f43abe994b769a2765c29
eac96aebc22a508890c10401e1a3bb3481079018
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQG' 'sip-files00218.tif'
f8f292d25f6a2fb1d4b538974fb22860
e09af0cc85cb041b78f145af6fd24a1f1ca9cb12
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQH' 'sip-files00218.txt'
322e0dbe275f269aa19603fdc3c360c0
8408e1b5f0b469b593064414c6501747e6d8d487
describe
'9940' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQI' 'sip-files00218thm.jpg'
3782ff53ed106de88084c0dde5968fd2
386db7515621dc2bdc9f9fa37f5ab2ec28b4c9e7
describe
'332720' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQJ' 'sip-files00219.jp2'
7ccb8bf76880efee8352ed1be68c7bda
3a26fc092682fc604a754085695e40429d8d6a98
describe
'122332' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQK' 'sip-files00219.jpg'
f13d7c5c9c1c1136f18191d1b5658d1e
84bef6b26f3ecdf976b45cdb01facfef2de6e94b
describe
'40472' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQL' 'sip-files00219.pro'
b4c80a81c52f7ade9c4cdfd8944be302
900a5e392faa0ba39073ee2ade7536400e231876
describe
'39091' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQM' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
7bfd29ce67ca6e7549969b556d8b9a14
1fc065fc46af41012d12a6756c1635476a8bc455
describe
'2678312' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQN' 'sip-files00219.tif'
cc6006b4dae09727e08b71d3bdfb8d7c
966f7470da4656c71738256edda741809abb7201
describe
'1602' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQO' 'sip-files00219.txt'
8b86cd324f41a4971874e91d391fb3ff
ddab67f132d386291086bec9917be4f4681cb2d9
describe
'9706' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQP' 'sip-files00219thm.jpg'
783a0f5c74f337bbd86e8c21913a8d71
1c40ca8ec06bdd86d4753129f45eaa78798a3b5f
describe
'332461' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQQ' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
a86e2ac12c85671f8f090d627254f08f
dd233696e87e3bb85d0c92e59e0ea246d1f0c84a
describe
'87628' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQR' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
4a78251a99e8b18030e0e0a647bd677e
a5da5f986fd688ccbae1f761232599a50e05fcc0
describe
'26521' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQS' 'sip-files00220.pro'
f0aecad3c93e2cbc6bc5da58e6654364
8f3ae7698da57672dfa4928e00db844f2f232845
describe
'28013' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQT' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
11ea6ff1c4fc0ba4da2cd3efb638513b
1fb14bf08ecb5d50c340b41972ff0740ef640b70
describe
'2676120' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQU' 'sip-files00220.tif'
ee3d24a29cb703d491e6592a0bc76b84
9b7185fca263dd5d55b2cc4c6ca48f01304c7739
describe
'1042' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQV' 'sip-files00220.txt'
dc867917895b537624413edb694e2e9b
8e55b8f9792e6a4e4b7295ad6293bbab660b69b8
describe
'6671' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQW' 'sip-files00220thm.jpg'
951bcacdc0540f0977eaeb43b563ee9c
fcb0d0a18b0aab21e22a7780de3977c39437933d
describe
'337924' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQX' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
8b6f8e337ca736274e625cfeee5d9f18
061730298a342390b27d896541a2213e2e02ca4f
describe
'108320' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQY' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
fc921e3f392b296d71c405903fe02aca
7c10becbc43f1dfe2816667af0d3b5d8ed8707fd
describe
'33802' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAQZ' 'sip-files00221.pro'
909d5ca564fae34a20cded3e26cc9538
bfe3917960646801ba0799742b61006cf55bd305
describe
'34009' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARA' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
d1134c1313571c240a7105064fc5406f
0ade32e8771fa14cbaf0d2763a786bad161ac5e8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARB' 'sip-files00221.tif'
1bc906bdc6a0c71061cb2c7f67f8745f
de372508888211189acddcb56e9c95fdcc2260ad
describe
'1382' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARC' 'sip-files00221.txt'
a1058f8fd589c911e88b6e7da5d483d2
e27502324b23aebd00a00beb50f714e6cc58dd99
'2011-11-18T10:50:40-05:00'
describe
'8166' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARD' 'sip-files00221thm.jpg'
c9b3b769697e66b0a58200b914e632f7
580e15f9732cdca21e53242f51b63719bbb2c9bd
describe
'333471' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARE' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
d6376375f81193c7594ab80dca286e5a
5d6cf1c5bc311c867e34ed85f7083a73cbfb88b2
describe
'126323' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARF' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
aedd730b8f5a56136233967b00b75ea9
8c1f38f24836b2065af8c83b7898b220076d29ff
describe
'41756' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARG' 'sip-files00222.pro'
36bfcb99b2e404107acad7b56115be4c
8dbb68a3704ab02c9882e48cc97ad031dfe427c9
describe
'40408' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARH' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
413cd912c26fc7a28f1a0d7c69571aa4
750eca885c570d745b366983a08a5ed96fd729ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARI' 'sip-files00222.tif'
77f6222a0d898b0da88c29b915de963f
126a13d8562b7f7be867ee2c6a0ce1f9702825ea
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARJ' 'sip-files00222.txt'
808c66bc5abaf5e1bd67ff6afbaef0d1
2b02e89e02a55ecb609876389eca45efc8c8c154
describe
'10065' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARK' 'sip-files00222thm.jpg'
c3768c28922b13e515467cb00c6d5b08
82b42e58d91121476a34620ecd9c150678b210d4
describe
'335904' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARL' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
ef0cdd16de932373cead218260074cb1
c118887e20e54d21ad67488a043f88ddc94b3cab
describe
'123550' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARM' 'sip-files00223.jpg'
59db1868546b928e63f7c52aca37d4f3
11aa456ab134cffab399d3165559f8f0f251895d
describe
'38816' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARN' 'sip-files00223.pro'
3f913bde69c7290b0b5fe3ee9be1ec37
c025fc886670b6a3c6c394c8bd73cb48cf8b70a0
describe
'39080' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARO' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
cb687650234010c20a3eb03da6c88e73
21cb0913a14c5b36c87f7958d4d8c5b7658dc130
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARP' 'sip-files00223.tif'
a9a73d04623bcd68dedb5e6b52ae199e
c428009c133ac5297b5b146377bfded4a60be669
'2011-11-18T10:49:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARQ' 'sip-files00223.txt'
5c0de81062b8a14905925f17cf32d030
be0848eb73a763e799ba72899ac0cb7a928226b7
describe
'9974' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARR' 'sip-files00223thm.jpg'
9cb9d0b473c1b2ebf1aa7d2f186bcd16
2efef4582d127b0edaf2d70669699da265e95086
describe
'325925' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARS' 'sip-files00224.jp2'
ed3dc596532771b445cbc8c40ed568a9
85d63c844c73adbd0328095b640cce3d49da4a91
'2011-11-18T10:47:15-05:00'
describe
'134148' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABART' 'sip-files00224.jpg'
e65800bc9d87fb06b01909807360bb6d
91849e14dec992323039ecabc830e57a4f21ed8d
describe
'41909' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARU' 'sip-files00224.pro'
5854aef76f011f7623c175a69c4b1cf9
f125a3add50af777094ae3986d3186e4ccc45379
describe
'43234' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARV' 'sip-files00224.QC.jpg'
2f88ff8a42d6a5cada08356f9c0e0ce7
6842ec79a0d333d8fde995a19e7bec4354487920
describe
'2623704' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARW' 'sip-files00224.tif'
d4c2a42c1b87eda1fb9fcdaf421c485e
84e64154b7eff799eafae5b1cf4e36e9ddc417d3
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARX' 'sip-files00224.txt'
198b133c776758fa918e630910f42180
c8f05401cb8496dc168423cb7cade7182817bb66
describe
'9949' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARY' 'sip-files00224thm.jpg'
571b31de299587ab01c06daba3a2b9e7
b676ea4469696eaa2518a00d1ced167e2379b98c
describe
'341131' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABARZ' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
b455f32fe09f393acf34c32459995545
57aa02e1688468d7a181dce372345f75a82c74b2
'2011-11-18T10:50:27-05:00'
describe
'126881' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASA' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
0ce4c9a0500bee1c888b452f93a6f9d6
f5c72602f385f0db0e7c428912b606800165a8a9
describe
'41307' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASB' 'sip-files00225.pro'
39acb1eccb65a6551ef9821481eb6e30
5885498a20caab5845897392e3396c0605b5250a
describe
'39746' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASC' 'sip-files00225.QC.jpg'
998eb9fdf768efd55734a8733123e5d2
c61571405b4da6080d6717d9846acd43d4dd5ce6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASD' 'sip-files00225.tif'
d8ebf0a128a6316ce120d67678652979
5011228525a36d6cc11b8222413fc590cf7c0d3d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASE' 'sip-files00225.txt'
b0b6889fb95ad259983d29a0ebda9dcf
499ade9f4489c4ad42a9f6d29bc81a909b228bca
describe
'9577' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASF' 'sip-files00225thm.jpg'
d994ca55e219f10789e340d94ddc547a
55bda5a1ff9f04b19bd44aaff46590bc2645919b
describe
'333416' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASG' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
9ebf3e9576e03f1ba9f5dfc1bcae1c65
127f76129e3d2b5b885413a26bd305da9f986e47
describe
'127171' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASH' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
6448bdb52f50e89a4e8e500233ee9f1f
57b37f654eeec786e886404e15941a3e188ed94d
describe
'40464' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASI' 'sip-files00226.pro'
3be260237b19fed6fc61ca5293c3e154
67e1b10fe4964d247aab2110b6c5507c3dc8d54b
describe
'40195' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASJ' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
2806794b214587193e616a3c6d89af4b
f4e653886cc3ddee80f3bacb5709acc2547f2fcd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASK' 'sip-files00226.tif'
43f16b8872ace6c97dee9a5b2109afbf
772f0a6ffee83d4bb4d42639ff0cf4e8e1ca4f55
describe
'1595' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASL' 'sip-files00226.txt'
9a1b1eb05bbf25f0ec032162ca4c6cd5
23176cf9d57c443010343705ae01e9daa5d9ad1d
describe
'10134' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASM' 'sip-files00226thm.jpg'
6c5de5c690043d372ec572fcf2a13cb8
490d08eb18db52acd51009d55d24de604037044f
describe
'340080' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASN' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
e16f8081bade922f7a5e6bad8d456a39
199620a91740acc264c774f7e94bcce536855c52
describe
'128833' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASO' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
3aaf485e97255f4c235518eab6cdd184
92c52d6c6904a3b785dde2647cb1bd7ea5c4d140
describe
'41235' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASP' 'sip-files00227.pro'
e96c2f547c60b5030ee4912c535523eb
71c8e815fd750aad925949293c029d460ee3eace
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASQ' 'sip-files00227.QC.jpg'
db7a4a96e097727552df27dabed9b607
e75cc6e60daf649b78593db4ac2833b19620cbca
describe
'2737168' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASR' 'sip-files00227.tif'
d67a572147297957527194a6d92e49fe
286ceba5df2aab5e4e55ac59f9dec9a51d1744eb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASS' 'sip-files00227.txt'
ccb51a33e3270a54a9fc7b49e9b088e0
43795b030321d19c0a649a35bc53e0e664d5180b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAST' 'sip-files00227thm.jpg'
0fffb5a77f8fb5affd3204d2046c6b67
3a2404df340d449827157681bb8d84d7cdee1ff9
describe
'327209' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASU' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
0460e03bf28de697704b74115045ff9e
214563a8023a2cf2af85de27902d1002854de366
describe
'127076' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASV' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
440e7ded1e83947faba3ec875ef67959
8bb2ff3f31ddd226b7995e8d8e5b5b85a61b364c
describe
'40976' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASW' 'sip-files00228.pro'
dfdb432e4feaf6df55ec348c36406c62
76ebf2966c33e28c5bc3b8990595d22e0b878d83
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASX' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
bfd6470a157f537cd7926e87eeea9d87
576372e47ab04ba7a4d9dc274a86c627af9e7ae6
describe
'2634168' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASY' 'sip-files00228.tif'
fe92549be64c671a15795e7dfa12b356
b671f2e309511d173621460740739ca7683e1631
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABASZ' 'sip-files00228.txt'
77140db462ef37e330e294bc8b069662
aa70c118a0e73dec4ac313e871d973f8a8fa5918
describe
'10322' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATA' 'sip-files00228thm.jpg'
5d20ac87d1a26eef2b9499d03b183d3f
89b6a52b5cce224c5dc50ea959a13646a18cff8c
describe
'326239' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATB' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
41749d67f7c9f6e4b987aa1861b63c76
25382bf96fc0ed3d68453e371cf870bcaf4f8566
describe
'51766' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATC' 'sip-files00229.jpg'
6e0f34dd693ac74eb5b311df8ff82d8c
8dd1c2ccb6a168fbee9518891cfe2e68aeffaba9
describe
'967' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATD' 'sip-files00229.pro'
5685ca9f7eaa280fd9442e7b1c209a99
133bf327cada84f412ac91105adbf6a763954d19
describe
'10843' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATE' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
0ebdc9ddb1799674c621810bf5d519ff
ff5a9c9abf31a6638c51eb611a85da9303bf792d
describe
'2629160' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATF' 'sip-files00229.tif'
6d2b8952954c89b8288974b4ed0b83c3
c7609d9571c8b53c604cdb751303bde3a46b2473
describe
'119' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATG' 'sip-files00229.txt'
34ced6a9921691990a16db77cce2d167
9ceb8129928b101489c484623e56798555833873
describe
'2772' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATH' 'sip-files00229thm.jpg'
ed4558a2e7d91dd925e80acf41435ff5
56557a8fb4387ce75a8590754a394873479d6866
describe
'331691' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATI' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
183385940b159076483d8a08901ec2ef
551ba39fac1904ba25a46695c5efe85772ee343b
describe
'104352' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATJ' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
f4b48e45c886ff8a9de791ee692b758c
3e2728be5a1ae8ffc00e81c04744d56ed7c9b415
describe
'32578' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATK' 'sip-files00231.pro'
046e14380cdc0c293fc6cd828092e2ba
0a2b7720a533df8222e56b5e171435535d7b464c
describe
'32475' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATL' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
698b7150d651e05476421d917f207d9c
e8612031b6a6604d2769bbd33d223246545768db
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATM' 'sip-files00231.tif'
89dfed7abbab52adfeb5069675e5d1a7
76434e9e141b714b1229776d9564a9582d78c1bc
describe
'1364' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATN' 'sip-files00231.txt'
df4e0c49b54a4ebebc646b8836b660cb
dad5e994f8596813d18599f82fdd339c8c788f76
describe
'8584' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATO' 'sip-files00231thm.jpg'
fc3199d29315b828128a547f82852e4c
480f2f8401d287ae59b288c7ac2052b80d3141cd
describe
'328340' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATP' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
7cf199adf8f34aba3e65e802d6bd7b53
2c0db9c92ff3dc28193dbf607fe2caed14a5435e
describe
'131770' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATQ' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
2551690a25e2851406fe7568c33aa233
76b55fad3aaf72adc4c44d929690c8f9e3b55e98
describe
'41746' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATR' 'sip-files00232.pro'
c6a13d7a6f4024bcabb75733bcf24770
b3513c8ecbf7ba2ee414c0413bb13e5924b0364d
describe
'42390' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATS' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
a6a19ab9b5fd41275151f49a4fc5a5d1
854444b3e93f4caf41551609c538a45ddf2ac18d
describe
'2643680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATT' 'sip-files00232.tif'
59bbd205d110d35d8036fb1bad0f6edd
09bb1b4eac48aa072aba31b32843e83c7e7bfbab
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATU' 'sip-files00232.txt'
0d534fe7f04d6953e9d74f22953fab0e
39a7d13f252a5b26eadb212fbfe77f43c7a49b47
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATV' 'sip-files00232thm.jpg'
b65e41a6cbd300f44a8b51c064b2a0b6
929d75625696a37821c7ee974a9a4f0efd390ea0
describe
'339003' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATW' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
cfbe79674d06fe09016e1c02b8780f11
543d606427221bc080ac7e86cae18381db3a6e18
describe
'129097' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATX' 'sip-files00233.jpg'
1583e5206ca7248825b94061b9697fa6
d2a4aa8f36c6790c61d423b6f445c80c78c2c0e0
describe
'40197' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATY' 'sip-files00233.pro'
2623fe92671185111211cc2fc22ecbd5
547b47e5338947ba650040f2635e68bf2cfa9511
describe
'41535' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABATZ' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
9f062cc5a4280ebe4b9194527f77bc60
812fb0b7d932f58076db751c3921a0262b7355e5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUA' 'sip-files00233.tif'
b6a94ebe8d3bf5d6b79b8daadeaa1655
a78a185a6358f58cad5a3b1c90625203bc1a9b6f
describe
'1641' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUB' 'sip-files00233.txt'
9f5367e15629a8e1a7a8fbefc51a1f98
1baee81bcf354a2d9e4e7923c73a8477ba7f74dc
describe
'10361' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUC' 'sip-files00233thm.jpg'
59c80adb8972d3e03b876d83b6fc910c
70e206ec78ee2dcbb36fc0cddf9e1ac31248e883
describe
'323213' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUD' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
92c38530f54881e7b08647047d12dbf9
410bd5fdb5ba8d595afc30d947c1f4e62f70d160
describe
'131073' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUE' 'sip-files00234.jpg'
6353665afbacf303b6687533d7322a87
c0ee503e72739da77909fff94a561815605275ac
describe
'42161' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUF' 'sip-files00234.pro'
78f32007d19efb9c5a1a49d1ca4d47d9
ef8c45a37c4808370d4910bdffdd7de6c957ef6b
describe
'41215' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUG' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
32d7e0ea7c163a2fb0e57ad78b02fe27
c2821c3800c2bf0b40bce42a5d0cc10d13e10848
describe
'2602212' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUH' 'sip-files00234.tif'
f3245669b831db64b626f2eca044f888
c2e8462f08140f8b6d960c271ecc45dac36e368a
'2011-11-18T10:51:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUI' 'sip-files00234.txt'
97a89f21b059964533f1e38eda41a785
4ff7dd96f0cd041bc7451bc688fbb8810323dda8
describe
'11447' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUJ' 'sip-files00234thm.jpg'
0d4d5411d1606f097480ad24b34c9234
f75f6b024ee1b77efe3e1587432e337da95f05a4
describe
'336924' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUK' 'sip-files00235.jp2'
1d7303cefceb7d33609690be400fbff5
d255c276afa8bb8bbed80496af480895b2fb0516
describe
'125282' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUL' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
3dfb5e17d3053a0f59de4692b7c052a4
e4eaf3d03292f56722d678ca418d32e433399ae7
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUM' 'sip-files00235.pro'
51522b9be361802ffce21699e9ce90da
572e47385cdefc0e03571256d023bb927c51ecd9
describe
'40668' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUN' 'sip-files00235.QC.jpg'
a6e7f854811837e4d3c9252198340c1e
1a578a3394c005af0fbb9860a5c78fc764c4e005
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUO' 'sip-files00235.tif'
5da243a17f864c77641d156ae1626efb
f435a5a821110e84147651e17d9b527c4cd63b0c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUP' 'sip-files00235.txt'
50a2c3b44fbff3edb5a7a26f35f6805d
23f2f62061d4f9f9648d7a9192b7bc3b500d3262
describe
'10036' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUQ' 'sip-files00235thm.jpg'
69b3b1f39929c00c6fa009e48a9f1484
76cc59a623921b847de0bbbf615b90120a421116
describe
'333623' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUR' 'sip-files00236.jp2'
b456ea2ad887b6fcafc6c1ff3958528f
a1935ea5c8b2a61cc2e4124345a005e565e65fb4
describe
'130194' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUS' 'sip-files00236.jpg'
d763bf0b22c8d9d2895aa8d74c80eb44
c2f4aa86984c298670d2c93513f20130b63c4c04
describe
'40457' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUT' 'sip-files00236.pro'
a1b5e0cac811a9095eb8075e0f791fe5
159da40757583a98fed52ee29bed6c92695d2695
describe
'41919' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUU' 'sip-files00236.QC.jpg'
79d541d5a1c5978efc952cfccbd1ff5b
1c0ded590ef4752ae72dea4f31b775cf91465786
describe
'2685324' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUV' 'sip-files00236.tif'
4e1516bb1735ab44bf08e7c0b52b9398
2fa5d24f782a7324068f09e66465bd403ca69553
describe
'1591' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUW' 'sip-files00236.txt'
f0f01299c73c4642351c835cafc6df16
3b6ccd0e643c8a15c832531f45bbce72e12bc2e0
describe
'10050' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUX' 'sip-files00236thm.jpg'
4fff97db329fb62889fb1b7d40e84bec
b98e3d437582baed5e6bd5e3980bb86c868f47b1
describe
'333713' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUY' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
a734df8a15159c81e9294e1a84ebc26a
7c39f949771f2df18bdcfc6dc161eb14abe21ac6
describe
'126370' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAUZ' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
7cdac76aa7bbf58f1d6cfa432a4df913
ac6bf76bf0beb2986f9df3aa5f78d08bafbef20b
describe
'40441' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVA' 'sip-files00237.pro'
b4ccf84cd728febcd6f098b837412221
36cb6ab3e42a4ace608b766b1e89edcd9fdf9be0
describe
'40694' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVB' 'sip-files00237.QC.jpg'
61a16c3c7480dcbd39b658da8fdcd23c
23ac68fba6b09198ec0ad384d52e27218bf42189
describe
'2686304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVC' 'sip-files00237.tif'
89dc4019287a5da36bad4a2cd07ea03b
a7524c44a9a9ab2f646f011c880aff6352684cff
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVD' 'sip-files00237.txt'
33bffb0b9d5506fbdb068dbe2935ce35
66cc024ba26873118c78699275c85d14fd88441a
describe
'9980' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVE' 'sip-files00237thm.jpg'
30353c9b50a5d592a6d0e0fa667b8e3b
7008e0c96c6d6d7607ad1f515bfd2060678797cf
describe
'329655' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVF' 'sip-files00238.jp2'
cf0dbac4afa560e3d9931e2c5584f2e3
80d062e694c98b99c3ecf21035d140990abce2d3
describe
'125797' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVG' 'sip-files00238.jpg'
eae938c6b292732815b2362101faffd6
321497cb1a508e2086d9ea88f3defd9a4896ce81
describe
'39558' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVH' 'sip-files00238.pro'
9fe1b96ad725f60426c76da80e8620d7
f8c1c6e616732de968d4f35f5947e30b588fdb6e
describe
'39922' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVI' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
0bb08a20d4fac91bf877cc84ad68f790
53229f009cecf4d74f6127429d465676df8be9ce
describe
'2654160' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVJ' 'sip-files00238.tif'
ade38888879c26c2c52766ce6d03aab5
ddf74657bd716a55086cb665d92f9a5996563615
describe
'1555' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVK' 'sip-files00238.txt'
77b9981915290e18ac38ab579ba75fe0
53d7f6c7080cb67d231e33ccc7f7fcf8cacab820
describe
'9517' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVL' 'sip-files00238thm.jpg'
3688a7b81420a4c1d3e669325dc8a2ae
92c9b53f77134277f791b168b5bc916485aea67e
describe
'335895' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVM' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
6dd6186c1f996c8563b82c56e8ffcfba
152254040e1a2cfc54f18175523e438deb9e2e3c
describe
'100247' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVN' 'sip-files00239.jpg'
5b0e1dbca45db114b875e5fa2cf6cd43
98b7aec485c889b30e71ea73707f36e201b2eed4
describe
'30704' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVO' 'sip-files00239.pro'
57a80a2569024c03f4aba912ae3f46f8
7b57c855c7ab684e6816d2d3724e724306fc34cb
describe
'31131' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVP' 'sip-files00239.QC.jpg'
2f5ec261a40a590e4683ad78f7507422
a88d6a208b6471ebaa8f5ef554d6bddebcef4037
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVQ' 'sip-files00239.tif'
314da86454729547b75f43cc7bd492b5
22ec3aa5323107539607b443b9c734bacd250b91
describe
'1309' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVR' 'sip-files00239.txt'
19a2e760498c11a005a3e354cb3f5cbc
222595cabd910ca6ed0d82432d1214ecf6f9a204
describe
'8188' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVS' 'sip-files00239thm.jpg'
041e55cb5df5a12537122e1b9fa6b2f6
4c04526769df9a1d5aa0b08c98ca9ddcadb8a766
describe
'324097' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVT' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
57ffe45cf76f042108d4d90eae860c6a
aca52d03653d6fae61a5d69ad18766aba0f24988
describe
'129915' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVU' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
d64ff4c0bf93688528565ad2f1dbc6f0
bc813c37617202b3db0bb5a6ef5960ab0431e573
describe
'41392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVV' 'sip-files00240.pro'
5712b2edcabd3ea2eded29643ea8b520
f772f433981d22e2b24af09d4f90b1000a2a9e50
describe
'40754' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVW' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
11ebe606133688d2eb6bf9e4c2a5cac6
0022f7cc326571c10aff3d7d789dd5e9f4cb4fc0
describe
'2609328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVX' 'sip-files00240.tif'
198e428eeb79ba40b31c1d099e31ef8c
4532b255d0db38221b56c6310bc8f82e8b7805bc
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVY' 'sip-files00240.txt'
adedb8fbd1f7e62934c5a71a68dc5dac
1103d96fcefaadd073aaecc1e4933d801abfcbeb
describe
'10096' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAVZ' 'sip-files00240thm.jpg'
1fd655ea2c85c04c8b9a1032b4562dd1
2d990e0c8609306540c4e5350f8fd3de6aee599f
describe
'332604' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWA' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
ed9589d44cec0162e0cf9d057edfa8fa
9fd55c32b321624ce282b196c574815f3c2682c7
describe
'131907' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWB' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
d92ecafc68b4066e2a1e41df29fbedc4
e35036b5d8ade50d48461a96074ba5884166d342
'2011-11-18T10:48:36-05:00'
describe
'41418' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWC' 'sip-files00241.pro'
ddf81f04341137a0d3cf8a3cb3fe2230
dad779a63ead34ef82b02a83e896292c7a84752f
describe
'40998' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWD' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
7ff9dd89f93d6a35fd628a25d617bd64
59dcd48ef606e8d776dd965e61c4cc044dbb0f9c
describe
'2677160' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWE' 'sip-files00241.tif'
ed2e07eb5e395b6765932288ba4cd73d
d724ea0c42f04b568b30a5ee6ba2d215e7b8102e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWF' 'sip-files00241.txt'
1c76652d64122cad5f6c0e37c6ee9b07
628fc083b4b482126fe47f7fb44e3ed4480eae84
describe
'9923' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWG' 'sip-files00241thm.jpg'
9d6e3d40f5798f47e7703e2ae6231704
f41fbf06de0eceb1e292c70792e00b6e393d017d
describe
'338267' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWH' 'sip-files00242.jp2'
8e008cc9cfdd2e81e7aac1069e66d766
e5a52986ce0ebae802b907542fb5b7c8dfa6b8ec
describe
'128969' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWI' 'sip-files00242.jpg'
75614801e46b1ce3009c62b6efc8ebb3
b4eae0cba47704ba52f3b404090891c7443161b8
describe
'41286' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWJ' 'sip-files00242.pro'
866755191ee8fdec5a843bbaa7369f18
be398d466b7f46f9fd284961fe8dce3210e4d187
describe
'40048' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWK' 'sip-files00242.QC.jpg'
f8bb0029cf1ef79ef20cb0fdd662e370
ed54b4fcbb9690217e5c37f5b8181b3f6828171c
describe
'2722448' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWL' 'sip-files00242.tif'
d34b06e54ede68972ff2fcd824a2c1d3
922fd179070e88f3c8c438c2969a8fe454622bc0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWM' 'sip-files00242.txt'
369e25d9def9992fc618c6a652e1cbe0
a4ff343a5ef8f3847a5a06fff2b44df127dffbc3
describe
'9875' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWN' 'sip-files00242thm.jpg'
359fc84ea8f7247f0650c32835960e03
25507e99df7ca0c79ce15b67c2449459c10f74a7
describe
'333238' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWO' 'sip-files00243.jp2'
c925d37a9cc422004838b6783a2740e4
849e34ffcf4fa1d14f2fa15ff1a206f9878bb201
describe
'134348' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWP' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
db4dcd0389ecab639de3266420d9f4dd
ca3ff038aa6e9beda84796704acc00715217be68
describe
'42436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWQ' 'sip-files00243.pro'
380c54a0aa5803f4e152b4a5cb7fc159
3a61f6588d9f7c2a97ca661dd83a57eb9cbceff2
describe
'42027' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWR' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
52998aef81187dbe52243f507872cde7
3ec2e89d172ab269383d6c1108a2e02831635572
describe
'2682320' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWS' 'sip-files00243.tif'
50dfbc7d7cc89229d967ece95e5df9bc
36cdef957e6bc7fca674e666f6f0910104f19786
describe
'1676' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWT' 'sip-files00243.txt'
aaea58f188aae90003674ef0e920a14b
e602b8d1520f75b730976ec693eae1f5d8e89004
'2011-11-18T10:46:12-05:00'
describe
'9761' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWU' 'sip-files00243thm.jpg'
6f3ef79da11202cab10b17c2c562777b
9063a3ccdfad32438ff72e00a101ba08859cd1a6
describe
'324343' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWV' 'sip-files00244.jp2'
4993631cd232cd75043a9d8a4deda09a
8735823576ab8261f0ff38af02498e1ea0d8712f
describe
'134436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWW' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
6706a2e9953ea1865d03455f51d559c4
302cbaa7f90e132867ad0f0de9e8e6590523d52a
describe
'41857' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWX' 'sip-files00244.pro'
0633880d3f55ee8d5fbbf18d344c7b4d
916e45932460512f179ea525a82ebee457623bd6
describe
'42832' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWY' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
ebae6d8a5629c1884da51eefbcf9f7fa
333606e715f10b77c475ea1c428eacbf6f77de35
describe
'2611380' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAWZ' 'sip-files00244.tif'
99dbdbde5f29b311b295af322e250180
83ee38363c42a5ee8a09b4e85d8ad33dc7080e6f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXA' 'sip-files00244.txt'
b2b88c6ce94192e4085676195fd59bea
ee454f05c019b7274c4fa5e97fec4cef5372aa1d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXB' 'sip-files00244thm.jpg'
6d53036264e736b0f35b516079175e0d
74b386a67987f69bf7f5d20d3664cbd574c699cb
describe
'331985' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXC' 'sip-files00245.jp2'
f304ee41b7c3f8f887c8c8ad5437f192
840d6bf36c2d270998c26e79a5dc83dc331e783a
describe
'127456' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXD' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
bb0b791625d5658258e3815754c24917
a1840daedd9747166f8e6b6ec1dea735de97f0fc
describe
'41311' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXE' 'sip-files00245.pro'
52137dc5fc6a62454a4b5caa9710919e
0826dbd74e716b568926b0eab515bc9bfcd08eb6
describe
'40275' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXF' 'sip-files00245.QC.jpg'
7415672c4eb08bfff309bfc64562b9e4
b4a89dcdf2007301d6551bbae8f0ea0f7a401197
describe
'2672864' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXG' 'sip-files00245.tif'
96655c23459d434bfc899aaf83e719a9
2d1aae2858b2c8d15f64be5a43623afc9e49bf0d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXH' 'sip-files00245.txt'
fccbe30c6d1a0b715585243afd7d56d5
a8eba88b639a41a15bc14685c6113976a1afbe90
describe
'9766' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXI' 'sip-files00245thm.jpg'
78013f5617458e854efc77a268297853
9dce8284cf298cd36496f67b7c0384b4774a4246
describe
'338178' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXJ' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
a80d82f1d99f6cac5968c7eb0f6a29bd
9b08b5b4208f5ee35aa96b769c5da9f4e747afbb
describe
'127141' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXK' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
6e22778dc09daa7bbb646a6b6673b3c9
000ae7ceb389e7c2097a8e126747fddcccbfd3e0
describe
'40775' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXL' 'sip-files00246.pro'
c23ae8c6bfd7d09b4325973a12a7354b
49bedcf8e79848f8d1c21f933cd88afa34924bea
describe
'39387' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXM' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
b34e0835b446b157efb0c042c02b84b0
36a7a3422a2cf41526f815e4e611c22b30fa707e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXN' 'sip-files00246.tif'
cbb85744883d35d98178df955d79ee2d
6a36b5c663dc5bd5be844dd9a6a74492cc473207
'2011-11-18T10:45:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXO' 'sip-files00246.txt'
01cad1654bcf39ea2f4b18d0c8eddf89
bc617bdd49d0c0f5153208d39e46ea3ca68c193c
describe
'9534' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXP' 'sip-files00246thm.jpg'
c7a9e41db3db038990b6a758d3c28b1f
b54b4dd53bcec516c5aef803dedb694cc5946fa1
describe
'338966' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXQ' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
8df06d647d8c4d59364a9d0416d1ed0f
9650ef7d14eec429d4969caec65d7700d7b3d398
describe
'128862' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXR' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
944316aeaace5a445ccba223e38819af
be8008d7e220b206ea4a4518c73cfbfa2004471b
describe
'41979' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXS' 'sip-files00247.pro'
20f5be76787560c92fc5db080d9a6f1b
8fbc0215a2d979844beb253b41fe1a076fb8ce12
describe
'40997' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXT' 'sip-files00247.QC.jpg'
82259230c1fced84514b897b967d266b
130c48833904be96b7f287d12a17e7c6fcd66961
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXU' 'sip-files00247.tif'
9e6a4ba720fd65bea556590acf66ff50
a20f967d4bafa46e65096684680c53895bf3d8bf
describe
'1697' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXV' 'sip-files00247.txt'
6a4e781e58644410a8f434800ed5252b
923a846c76ed9baf9352d0be8e0d2eaea86752ce
describe
'9857' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXW' 'sip-files00247thm.jpg'
0acfff7fcc46c902be626f00bb5014e6
32b8f7aadf2111a7d3d9efb390bd6c6481c2f208
describe
'333486' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXX' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
1a0211e5ba89781a60e4a446b3ec6ff7
666f547c9d4ed874c3ac2070eb31a69a5bc4ba35
describe
'80459' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXY' 'sip-files00248.jpg'
ef9c4afbfda4c16e411d2cd1181817ad
d96587c9539afbfb90b2046fb3648d4474848b8e
describe
'23755' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAXZ' 'sip-files00248.pro'
1fa3c2cbb084f6575bc13c397fed4c35
fef7525d64539bba832dfb2787f2f86f5736c3a4
describe
'25304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYA' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
a6ffb0185b0f1b5085962f7e99035d6f
cba053d003fe0f8890669ad6e90d4798622cd704
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYB' 'sip-files00248.tif'
497c263dff7b9a96e549360f213d39ee
6a832b6fbf29bc23b0def2953500f839a3786b37
describe
'971' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYC' 'sip-files00248.txt'
722432000cb24fac366ec810ac94c8a9
8cc18ed788217e743c1c539d351c3c53a4fdfe2e
'2011-11-18T10:54:25-05:00'
describe
'6436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYD' 'sip-files00248thm.jpg'
6e16b0156903ba6cf9f9b9f6abaca38d
003570f0d187be6bd0cf4ef8cdd43eb6b98324e0
describe
'337951' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYE' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
97b7822d0ea2a7f32a5da08c1ca1e9cf
ba4824eda74a83e9e118adafcdfe672310c973cf
describe
'104333' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYF' 'sip-files00249.jpg'
164b0e307af572d3885fd77b9babe13e
af4e50449e1445fc3198fb6359b491fa93f853e4
describe
'30336' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYG' 'sip-files00249.pro'
258250316dd8a8c69b09a30bdc1a33c1
cae0bdff97d8955c69002f43fd9839fb61e1e007
describe
'33284' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYH' 'sip-files00249.QC.jpg'
36f4a29ac2369091020847235700e63f
fefe27fa8c08eba28604a6b6573a1deb63564789
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYI' 'sip-files00249.tif'
fad33e992a135d0affb7df4beebd7801
7cc1e0833f44afcfe99ef04f6668981efb08f8a2
describe
'1313' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYJ' 'sip-files00249.txt'
f118f1f164955d0b94157483a33e45f0
fd45c32605509f45e591069dbe9014328a379eff
describe
'8610' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYK' 'sip-files00249thm.jpg'
12450035ad761d4e3fa333957e78d509
19af471170590433640604b912b216237459e377
describe
'335115' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYL' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
c7378d48b7731080d203b6b913e600f9
cad5e12d68ac8bdda961daca9f83d775d52b1e30
describe
'129523' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYM' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
7c189d3116843ab8cb9b24442b3d58f3
e71f029c8db0f3eabe0f317724537700d9b65fa7
describe
'40606' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYN' 'sip-files00250.pro'
c20448cc1808d077827026b1ed46c434
94eadee1a8784ef337c7467c39a98ae6489a143b
'2011-11-18T10:54:17-05:00'
describe
'40199' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYO' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
574f8cabf0cd775f2c5474a42595fb96
f51319aedd8a60c704e3591a098b100b0e60a4e6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYP' 'sip-files00250.tif'
4a6cbf16cb4e485789d4bed2df427ef6
1e80012cd23fe7018aa53770c01c0015648259ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYQ' 'sip-files00250.txt'
95140bf36504649ab974d83b2b0930c4
76c574b8784e7154fae7317bcc400ce9229ec1d8
describe
'9929' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYR' 'sip-files00250thm.jpg'
955a6995d665d85371e3746ead91a436
7e752fbb859fb33cc18ae5369c95dbdedef40666
describe
'347381' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYS' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
886246b898d6fdef9db316c80e51898e
21e90a73c3bca2f4b4c31e02fac48629ab4e7458
'2011-11-18T10:52:26-05:00'
describe
'134058' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYT' 'sip-files00251.jpg'
04708d2f39d1d81f922dd1b2e303de55
14cd2332e19451f0148d0cfc6790ede3e43d27ff
describe
'41329' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYU' 'sip-files00251.pro'
a2e82a210a3dcaab38428d6d39f85fba
c4e99ede21803ef1e6f2ee3ab966bb8298933200
describe
'42088' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYV' 'sip-files00251.QC.jpg'
6aa69bfd2c3025bbbdaef81c6ac312b4
0cffd24b563875de97ac737497294380b5f8f072
describe
'2796024' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYW' 'sip-files00251.tif'
d6c6583d26822ac9a27a70ed61aaff45
fe8539e55e46db3fbfccb5bc08c5f0cd7797df49
describe
'1723' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYX' 'sip-files00251.txt'
64821a11add04737df28c5087946d474
9b0225e9cda44895112e7101a0e7205479b8a901
describe
'9590' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYY' 'sip-files00251thm.jpg'
d04ba1d0973a8835d64473eac332c163
2456d6fc319d748a97adef999c65a54fa4869ae9
describe
'324935' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAYZ' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
06629aba99c29913e25f06324273d8da
b6a197043d76b8e257967c64a0de4f0450875496
'2011-11-18T10:55:07-05:00'
describe
'137246' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZA' 'sip-files00252.jpg'
6f043d6196ab5a214a3e93f8ad16244d
c19535e4a36b4513cd72d6b184f10a8dee463889
describe
'42089' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZB' 'sip-files00252.pro'
d69a88274d6267b5de806628848fdfcb
f10d8f1e5b1deb69412de0a2d965b471fcddd789
describe
'43912' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZC' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
36c3730c0d8fd7f5bfa65691777ae2c0
4504739295aca63da57907fee803dc954f9c03ce
describe
'2616092' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZD' 'sip-files00252.tif'
bf9d8aa2d172fb17ccaac24524fcddbd
eb240f962fe709f86a5f0f70191f41be8c9b4fdb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZE' 'sip-files00252.txt'
fb4f1213798f4fd67146aba25fd07c97
77a855bef899517cb9a571b32fd8e7bb5a29fc4d
describe
'10274' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZF' 'sip-files00252thm.jpg'
c6ebe5cb300ad9926b44347a4bf50270
4b6a3ff1ee47fe120fd6a9454e097826498b7841
describe
'333140' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZG' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
e18126ebb946204621faddde6ba0dcd3
5cd4e5a71183a2ff15b32fc7b568b4a9823e2eba
describe
'129689' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZH' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
fa4cabb06eee4fba87b68e7e0aee4a4b
9869558877843e738a9b6dbd2ac9049200b76fd0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZI' 'sip-files00253.pro'
702aa6caaa6b3a6c529c34b2a8c7ba71
6883ebca65bec8cbd87b3b561357ce3be95dd872
describe
'42145' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZJ' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
172a5d90ed164907fb262499012fbaa5
3fc029e555e23377b0125a0f53c9bf7d1e4f74d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZK' 'sip-files00253.tif'
04e22c36e1397e89da1c9c6fdfc29026
a01a639bf1bfda826540bcad9bf1c6acdf91ae5c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZL' 'sip-files00253.txt'
9583972d74eeed1046f17080a260ea68
bc4513bb5085bf92c08ccf5d51fcc485a46f0b48
describe
'10218' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZM' 'sip-files00253thm.jpg'
441ce9c53a2e87050ca07109bd3f930e
e4704d06268125a20b54cb61cc76229e4e9e56fe
describe
'330337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZN' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
069c31c2b4aa38c77581c9d9e215f49a
0cb6d9142bafc538baf241e7f7ba28d66425158b
describe
'132044' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZO' 'sip-files00254.jpg'
e694ae5457d159d15f76575d63da4dd2
5a25d4ed9a44cd9c640d0a74411e78cddfbfc509
describe
'42062' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZP' 'sip-files00254.pro'
36ab642c4524fc47077fa6e7ecb5b0ac
47f6aa5b4d2ba5734b5d5dfe0c1ddee4867f110f
describe
'41945' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZQ' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
6bc70432ee8951c419911a48411b793a
427dabb63c9b0852b3cffc7c2871ada6e8cd0215
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZR' 'sip-files00254.tif'
7b36f89e5c46dfe578ef7099dd0d5d9c
7fc60f5daec2ebe2d527d67c78a93f171662d1d0
describe
'1682' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZS' 'sip-files00254.txt'
699c90b0ee7f7aa7c4b0be50432ee655
d3cd949d64a3c6b446b9a7c77016aa5eebcf65d1
describe
'11288' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZT' 'sip-files00254thm.jpg'
c501a70b12ba5b513ad7b98505babe2f
9dec363c34d17deef9ed4ebed060c36f9efe75cb
describe
'333523' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZU' 'sip-files00255.jp2'
b796b74c975613999703c6f954b46abc
1bc731bb4bcdd263e67c2757f14f106b605f8eb8
describe
'133652' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZV' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
089efa41db481bcdd1ad76dce367eebc
2c4d310ce95d3546902987fe223d4dc66ae5c695
describe
'41262' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZW' 'sip-files00255.pro'
61c192ee1cb1d4cf2c52ae0ace9c09f0
13e61d4097d1e369cd0ad17adff8db2099b18f9c
describe
'41963' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZX' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
5cdf98a697f445ac23ec6a68dfdaba21
2296b001e42e4747877f2b1e0b6f6db6af9c726f
describe
'2685408' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZY' 'sip-files00255.tif'
9778365149eb4b4b97452f09a3dd690c
b354fa70c74be492ad5f73e17e299ca3bce9add6
describe
'1625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABAZZ' 'sip-files00255.txt'
25f6afcca08cc5ec0617309995416419
dad1f9fdeebbb4aaee8af7c45af23bbd52e617bb
describe
'10002' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAA' 'sip-files00255thm.jpg'
a55a3ec071dc65d7ca54268b4ed1c000
ee6735a92606ec55cddb41dc65e81fd5fc5ded66
describe
'327225' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAB' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
b9296ed8fb2668b9cbe8212f5074c300
909d7ceb1f9f703e5adb307418b82617ac4ba72b
describe
'129068' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAC' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
67137d8ce59556b331d2619b970bbd16
e28a86fa27fbc1b23933327c0b3d595c519a21e4
describe
'39393' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAD' 'sip-files00256.pro'
a666e33b4ce752f1b80c8cbdde039d2e
e82b5c59adfa9c5b2fd1c09b95254cbf1ab35074
describe
'40846' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAE' 'sip-files00256.QC.jpg'
6c16a62686d07d11e2aef6bd189963b5
d6adc2df2282e8acf07321cba256e1e8b86baa48
describe
'2634116' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAF' 'sip-files00256.tif'
9495351d62e4500a9db9cee9a51506b5
6302108e946ba23cae336f2d0917f6446b2d2414
describe
'1553' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAG' 'sip-files00256.txt'
b5eacbf96c9b26c437a862c3895657d6
3408af4de745f555556392ea91e89d579c30497e
describe
'10011' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAH' 'sip-files00256thm.jpg'
f7a4e1db7daa4719ed3cf783f1bad6f6
6c9717b711147358cd5d61b06ab54af14ed5cd27
describe
'332711' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAI' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
2f0d950c85f1772842938bdab72ff23a
316b1334b8c3cba2f1919ec1672b11878aa3212f
describe
'128337' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAJ' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
cd800b20e4c953593939dcadb6afc457
c3b2edab3b93585846673a19e35edfab782d1d8f
describe
'39507' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAK' 'sip-files00257.pro'
a8ea7ba72c8703609142213fc867d894
22c02d8312ffc9b247909b08a7dd51a39cd0ca77
describe
'40892' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAL' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
8150c681d74e4558b00d5d597400e042
b11aece155aabca4127ee7a1ab4c4630d9660642
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAM' 'sip-files00257.tif'
94af1cb857f32caf3bba9cfb33444751
fec60cd8ccb08c7a4f976fe39fec516662cfab6f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAN' 'sip-files00257.txt'
d2944bd50d1acd945bbe02eccd99205b
5fa45166228b963359b3f4c49eef4942c259bfa1
describe
'9842' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAO' 'sip-files00257thm.jpg'
fc075fb55bac917439d5e83255673eeb
d83cb23e065e13a7a827eb731f7627483dbc8408
describe
'335082' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAP' 'sip-files00258.jp2'
ee5f45b064c520a7174bc1a6f4c6b4d4
8d74cc566b892bb0a923d91151d848ed1fd8d5da
describe
'131265' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAQ' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
51ff93e8cde65164c967c2b238c18220
3ba9bc685cecabd3297c0d9de6327b0b113d226a
describe
'42220' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAR' 'sip-files00258.pro'
ec606fd74d087ff13708cffccd041016
0c2a8767f954f90061471e29533c67f61ade5cde
describe
'41629' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAS' 'sip-files00258.QC.jpg'
9ffc1ba4325b0fb33c29573d79c419a3
4cd4f02ec672ac85ab98d5d7408a8688ef50f3e3
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAT' 'sip-files00258.tif'
59fb930662b5b7263e84314e06dfe973
d4db7242015f0c6ca429b570b2d640e4741a069e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAU' 'sip-files00258.txt'
69c1f6c993131852dff7d1a3669f004b
e54c597544096428425a216873dd18455f92e429
describe
'10197' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAV' 'sip-files00258thm.jpg'
72f2859bd81f1de18b8ad7866dc7cbe6
69876991730623043eae6edc8c367d2f758eaf47
describe
'335523' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAW' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
a2ef2b10aad2677b07888ed8320af093
49b0ad0de5980c7c7393db471c9408e613110d7b
describe
'134343' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAX' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
6f0e971b7d17bfc6fa18292683bef939
67918257d0dad3b1d0588aabd54fe2a459d95ee7
describe
'42416' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAY' 'sip-files00259.pro'
1c1db17a8da6dce5396b60cf778f373d
57b4e2c7bee8254df1999066266cfc830f65d755
describe
'43137' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBAZ' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
b04256a869fe9631b325a20369a248c8
9a62350f5a5990f1fc14903700cfafa6bf3f1efd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBA' 'sip-files00259.tif'
af82561bf13752266593d4c2d4c1b24a
77dbe032d6c2629e041ada758fdfe1dd06003abb
describe
'1684' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBB' 'sip-files00259.txt'
1386e6fcad4ca24949477dbb7cdc9645
99a4e4d5efa109211952e8968ff153b092c16735
describe
'10106' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBC' 'sip-files00259thm.jpg'
fa00670a8c8cbb5c096d0206ee4c02f8
d87dfb39905f6ac151ed16e45b331b6737bb5c36
describe
'329308' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBD' 'sip-files00260.jp2'
e25d079aa255b9e76c842a6c3076d1af
bc689fa4de546a8ade0cd76a6955ca16b61ca0bf
describe
'136627' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBE' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
caacca935424c87e08e52a836e27b3e6
840c8cae4b75fe104ad1b6dfb8b398b6140c9e6c
describe
'41340' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBF' 'sip-files00260.pro'
19a9b4ab7ee29fa1b1d51a6dc1a3dacb
5905ca6f775639457a0a9b9926c520a007171c50
describe
'42823' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBG' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
f8a6fb88087ac731664fd959be2ce7ec
aaa0e4e70f22be4d86401af95c20ca5dc5c118c0
describe
'2651328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBH' 'sip-files00260.tif'
bf020f6d119c434316cb91960163e34d
b5a019997881086f3459c6250ac813a5d7896d91
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBI' 'sip-files00260.txt'
050b3eb4395368d4bdbd3102a0c09cfa
545d98f76152b00c4b40ac9420418a05c6b53d40
describe
'9934' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBJ' 'sip-files00260thm.jpg'
d1c8b532e1efaaa755a17d5bfd468693
5012f8f16ab14f8bfcadc4a5548f924586d63ad7
describe
'328503' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBK' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
2b78e2a2974e2af97258563db71f1110
967bca60ba065347bc18e5ccf09071343761aa89
describe
'128232' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBL' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
ad8d68b674ca05cb98c1c330e1c2a9f5
ea3a25ea25ec8df8b006ca718afba12d50ae9a4f
describe
'41750' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBM' 'sip-files00261.pro'
a201a4b4330ccf3f36def987327c57dd
d02c6d4883d1b6d34d496256cba0503d6f0df8c0
describe
'41455' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBN' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
279ac1f1c61486a56c3aafca63462ac1
2b2af9b79b93bb5f7489d0a40b13b93b2b361a56
describe
'2644680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBO' 'sip-files00261.tif'
043451fd75879e169b9d5c98425fe54e
7218b8f42d18657e814182a01583ae54ef962751
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBP' 'sip-files00261.txt'
a5d6f286f4fcc395a0990624827cc07c
b0bf83afa0985347e7dc9729e4c18d4c9b3d3b31
describe
'10681' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBQ' 'sip-files00261thm.jpg'
2dc584be676f4a600981d0e8e4addfa7
627a360cffed6caedd9f8c7aa4d814e97a07a4ee
describe
'322803' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBR' 'sip-files00262.jp2'
4204450c4e8e6510653513927246ce69
20d3e66489251d68104ae6ede6ffa1cd7ae48ec7
describe
'129484' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBS' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
c580909438fef4f5431e6f76da3a157f
2c511854734440b73cfab98dcd26eb7867cb15e5
describe
'40439' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBT' 'sip-files00262.pro'
15b90ec807157d171e6d0b17930424c1
cc316b78a677295ef2d401247d3b73b75fca944a
describe
'41471' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBU' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
dcf9809583ceef6bd9eb649e3fc84277
023e145a573515ab26051f9e2fa5bfe2aa2b8b4a
describe
'2599056' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBV' 'sip-files00262.tif'
5b571b2522cceceac3d97b61f7b19d6f
c66ca47a1f9229f09d6ce441a857a1946e28d010
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBW' 'sip-files00262.txt'
2640f88cdd9c23ddf36886c7cef8aaa7
a96a5112d3d920ed96079fef17b2e21f78fba340
describe
'10261' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBX' 'sip-files00262thm.jpg'
979d33e9f1a09bc0912bc8a052b700a1
d4e952213258ef9cd0d7d0908a1a79ddf6592a5c
describe
'334700' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBY' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
044fd56491c7cec6b07f155fba91d23a
9108d6f308a9d0c0466a562dc30845922c4b4f11
describe
'106198' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBBZ' 'sip-files00263.jpg'
dc613f9d6b6f50ddd2ac4a41355a5264
a6e51b53fc21222b1c831154d69f3268581478cb
describe
'32642' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCA' 'sip-files00263.pro'
26fbf9759de463501617d3d98089cb04
07afd247e9096b4e4de54dc1b8f329ca266dc9de
describe
'33680' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCB' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
7c657566f0e29451d9a94c4612b85e42
4f5991d75939244f1d6d93d3c1365c420c7b4ca4
describe
'2694632' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCC' 'sip-files00263.tif'
24a7f37bdc15eabbc3059b9fac5e5c92
4c6c8f7401d108d69da6d36f28b2d45320727efd
describe
'1349' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCD' 'sip-files00263.txt'
3597d0a2ba5f509b7e1502466a4cde09
e1d94c52bfdbd8d7f4ab5b5582018247c9fe98d3
describe
'8596' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCE' 'sip-files00263thm.jpg'
0b8e4c3563c0cb2ee432f0958973ba79
1e79fc2a16886c0b11457caab8441302bf81a87b
describe
'328678' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCF' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
e6a8b0bbd39deefefb3a6c253be61d14
cd0a503d0c4ea8632a6b767112370f9054ae2d63
describe
'136063' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCG' 'sip-files00264.jpg'
3542b8ca9dafd0f5fd48182f863f253a
28d13f21d1ab348af1c127b19b031aeb68e6f88a
describe
'43041' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCH' 'sip-files00264.pro'
5a11df7978e9ec6c2da7d3a7c2a3b7e2
070b852556c67b13f0eefd56b0914840e9cb75d7
describe
'43038' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCI' 'sip-files00264.QC.jpg'
a62707e6af60ac9661f10c0fe09b4f5c
361f13049e0392dbab819bc5b1252adc7db64d9f
describe
'2646544' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCJ' 'sip-files00264.tif'
e1eb4fe7363c728b1f1b970e507266b6
46f9a89ce676291b5f1696b507d7d302da19862a
'2011-11-18T10:46:32-05:00'
describe
'1688' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCK' 'sip-files00264.txt'
91ca3394df53b94c2cb7a52fafdca51c
34999ae46bd699e840feef846a3969e8e11fd81c
describe
'10313' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCL' 'sip-files00264thm.jpg'
057016a1c9a2794ebe23e0496af7da56
e51f1e8077748d4423a073aa9b0d2d8327f40caa
describe
'341107' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCM' 'sip-files00265.jp2'
f5dad3ad23fe02952d432e95df5e83e3
a3c6b140584ed8db8161c652ba210a9624cdd3f2
describe
'123608' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCN' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
a39e843c1d60af8f81bbe62bb4565d21
774be84c19b262056762663539e8b39d14669856
describe
'39518' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCO' 'sip-files00265.pro'
7c72e5eed43256128fe52b2ac4617798
1b7dbcf5d9e573c7d7f22eb7943d1e7ddf0c526d
describe
'39093' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCP' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
53b1a735c9544f7049624471e526339d
58a787c061f5521b0c4d8647fbd3397cee3d5bc7
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCQ' 'sip-files00265.tif'
40665f9db1546c92aff737f53251741f
4e19b7d0609b5b13d38180ca34c81493e6f3f2ba
describe
'1563' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCR' 'sip-files00265.txt'
68d327e9e2afe537f84beaad157a4434
0c9c51928cda2cb33136e6cf9aeeb7ae86213b33
describe
'9582' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCS' 'sip-files00265thm.jpg'
eddea733df791fb4a91591ac58e18a26
5df8ad1555d691e9babe1fa97dd173e2f074d07b
describe
'325648' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCT' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
c4acc975b9863268e611f67465ee8f71
af77d08fce272167031fa1189a4c986a0ab0433b
describe
'129824' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCU' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
5ac893888bdca8361a5694748117377f
cda4237d6cf23404cefa93cbdafd4ab32d59e930
describe
'41121' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCV' 'sip-files00266.pro'
0cd28c88b3b2372e1be981eb0c689f47
c49d68ed87230260e6f7ed397be439d34d8f11ae
describe
'40903' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCW' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
fe6f2375d3b911604338854e5140c894
84ef3be39444cacc71c135b76a318124aac426a0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCX' 'sip-files00266.tif'
f51fae37b319bf365bfcd4efc01be39c
131b3f7ad2b757aea9de51dd6eaa864daed10b08
describe
'1617' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCY' 'sip-files00266.txt'
f7f4f55f96a87c576e20927696daea38
dd89a69cbaf2cca5bac4ecedecda197ba1ee40d9
describe
'9860' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBCZ' 'sip-files00266thm.jpg'
2010a884526d531d7a54c72c85ac4453
4a9e78a769833aae4081a271abb0158a58b86835
'2011-11-18T10:48:03-05:00'
describe
'331742' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDA' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
81775adb6a7505cca327fa79ba5c72c5
19b0c070e9e171a2b41add32e2e26c72d3470a2d
describe
'131242' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDB' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
75b99df13eff99a47dc775cc952164b9
be28917ff94ef3f41e0ee9310d511b998371e39b
describe
'42477' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDC' 'sip-files00267.pro'
5dfd6bc1242af5e3fdbfa23fefad09e2
9518f993f1fa9e7a33b35cd5f1c811899d9e25ce
describe
'40577' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDD' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
acfcb19e120a198a582ebceb33aad1fb
c50e488f02c7d2a45e4a24ad0960162ed0f4d9d4
describe
'2670276' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDE' 'sip-files00267.tif'
f8b21fb7ab8821e4d9f52080fe380869
c5ff0c6bce4f433b8cc574b53434dd03275b3394
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDF' 'sip-files00267.txt'
1b35c0f6c65c9ddf7e025e4e953ce445
c8ff0673d4db5267fa68e39a17d26a2f4eec9128
describe
'10292' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDG' 'sip-files00267thm.jpg'
a1c0202a2773777b1f81432d6bc7d269
1a4212301cfd355df576d6d6ccd49c5be42a839f
describe
'335116' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDH' 'sip-files00268.jp2'
ac1f93a2886dbc9fa7a6ce51d211926c
b76fd05e6a214691b6724e0d52d9d20005928b61
describe
'131430' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDI' 'sip-files00268.jpg'
26a3016a56e6e6c8fe5c2cf84815b3b7
990af302f65197485b2106bc398aa2b3097179b6
describe
'41957' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDJ' 'sip-files00268.pro'
b6761cc425bfea2bc1c2492081c7f16f
982af423f057d3a00efa411a3eeaf235a8492128
describe
'41715' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDK' 'sip-files00268.QC.jpg'
002df818dee2d5e3198b654f236e8c8d
6a4dea93293c58d957f7306dd8f1c90219c61735
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDL' 'sip-files00268.tif'
e79e9da7a560c517ebf2dc68328a71ae
b667124088189686f9d3f646e9763497c571c10f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDM' 'sip-files00268.txt'
1e1ff68ae3dee2bb0e30927fb3568b8c
933bba0ef52a7ca5234f527b5ad6f4236b752655
describe
'10478' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDN' 'sip-files00268thm.jpg'
88e4c826bf4243c2c13ac86c4ff361c0
76144575a32ef40d69f68abe4582a580a62c590c
describe
'326665' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDO' 'sip-files00269.jp2'
a6ebf091f9c166bc659d1f484b610887
df71e86f7bc5fee1d1b77da0ed0e2bda9888689a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDP' 'sip-files00269.jpg'
ae2a7154e560e8ed4dde3f9990ee9759
eecfc805003770391b756fa9a5e7494b144c2c3e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDQ' 'sip-files00269.pro'
fdd719b1bc553359febbe8a670a093e1
dc4b64504fbc2e39816cba28d56bed5fb2cd47bf
describe
'42957' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDR' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
ca963a8f382c8b9d77d43588cb7fc301
fc024ae87a0a53009081f86f81836d32ddb82926
describe
'2630488' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDS' 'sip-files00269.tif'
93da46e758f19458cc8251bcdde61640
c091d5c81c59fcf4775a9b6c027877ec028ff494
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDT' 'sip-files00269.txt'
85cd6f040c6260353f2662698f150c19
df7c7f2778abf0e7147684b38e72bd5ff967bbe3
describe
'10039' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDU' 'sip-files00269thm.jpg'
d129d692ec0ed86bd1a32f1c269ea27a
3359bdeee257f9bd9e3ffa3573182f62358a9aff
describe
'336625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDV' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
4f81685f45c55cefc199554165047c07
592ec492c8334db64bcc70eae9e358a2ab01c342
describe
'126997' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDW' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
62325c824134f8359b5cf8e66d1480df
457858a98f322099e66fa70ccb48499a3c9cd834
describe
'39997' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDX' 'sip-files00270.pro'
a4d3f0c2953f3c1c7ea762eea1a5338e
26e2695a093fb1140195211d07da9c6a43dabc03
describe
'40204' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDY' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
ef5fcbe96d811cc8fd152b8d41d3ae25
117c5b8582a9ced6a4010c7e577b8be24790d560
describe
'2709840' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBDZ' 'sip-files00270.tif'
f5074c8c00c632317534786445b1eb52
093dd5f8896095c4f3b90858bfeefca1bac5d4c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEA' 'sip-files00270.txt'
8672241bad1409c5f6de39bdeccc7ac1
a450177fc3ef085919a7da93ecc165f20c27348b
describe
'9874' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEB' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
f9702a0d3f3d9928d9a686219d284075
8644925faa3f06e2d2eaa93d054fc1cafe999f3a
describe
'341385' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEC' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
3691a739f66055145ca5d0177374833d
eddb2eb78e65cfc7bb418a0ae93d644eee5e9776
describe
'121116' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBED' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
9bd2ed635045b0195969f32c43c635ec
95e1b8b235b674da173e8f5d56b3ee8d0beafe97
describe
'39101' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEE' 'sip-files00271.pro'
665563e21c70bfa2ee874338192a5646
da942b7eb96a2f23646dba0d01b3f1ce99eb57b6
describe
'38380' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEF' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
27262e7d99d909b65ae1660df2ff2770
40de0140aabd4e31b89b9a7e50935fc425adc73f
describe
'2747676' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEG' 'sip-files00271.tif'
0345747506edc7b56f12505dd603b649
f5c48e7a818a8a91fe11a0c9df238bcaa4c1954b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEH' 'sip-files00271.txt'
69c403c21123f4e854870df374a073e4
ee44ed5b726c743d529a481ddf2ed971b3335f06
describe
'9333' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEI' 'sip-files00271thm.jpg'
0ab8bf76676a7cf08bde64e0bcbe664e
e7057bae86ec0bd2888f748214f7b8bfcc6799b7
describe
'325636' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEJ' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
cab6f2cba3b0ad8595cc526b833f3dd4
fdb4a503520a1493c1d7470b4a22373ee009d508
describe
'130603' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEK' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
6a7780cc0356e4bdfd8b3d7cf70364a0
aa2843a1ef09f0a55abaa1425602cb87afc7499a
describe
'41607' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEL' 'sip-files00272.pro'
327d29cc94ed47b856c2c8d5c30e4bbd
ec8ec12685e99a3d1ccc1583bd1c23faeee7b1f6
describe
'41347' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEM' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
a45328e042158b963b10cc4122851476
5c60384e4eb812cc3e4e5981605bce9503b03836
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEN' 'sip-files00272.tif'
534a00b49327dd850a6a8115ebf03c9d
88e888a2cbc7f8cd5a8cc395f7008f29bcf8f929
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEO' 'sip-files00272.txt'
488dd512d64315f690e67ede68862a5d
73b9ca4e7392c3e1b8298a702d2c0cd367af3c57
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEP' 'sip-files00272thm.jpg'
585392e8f1cd65745b10e1f912af1ac9
9b603bd4bd117845f5819da136e09c413331caa2
describe
'314794' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEQ' 'sip-files00273.jp2'
1a32421b59b4b534ef70a5035d7772f4
da79f00b6a554118a98fd4ed0cff5b6fdd74f440
describe
'48657' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBER' 'sip-files00273.jpg'
f8e57b49928f710189d76a392ab8b25e
ae3dcd739f076fa2931548d9f4230337c4dd22c3
describe
'1345' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBES' 'sip-files00273.pro'
beced665f00604c9b67ec08c7c10e004
8297c724dc476eaac80b5f83658daf3c6cc1b02b
describe
'10743' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBET' 'sip-files00273.QC.jpg'
7d76dcba78714b0b0cb6a087e6a884ec
6f6ce3ef99c31fd195721e7c660eca9ca22bea58
describe
'2537816' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEU' 'sip-files00273.tif'
2ffd10d1bc63dca707b274e80da64cf6
21b29fed9f789cf1a534b5e839443734f8f802c3
describe
'129' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEV' 'sip-files00273.txt'
c09f4f9be906d9bb8f45c9b18454e816
6b2cee7cf38465dc4f95f02e1afca45f0b1873a5
describe
'2726' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEW' 'sip-files00273thm.jpg'
427bc0db5b28e0ad0f0366bac4c7fd04
eafef69202db2fa32845032b02e922e920dcff8c
describe
'333800' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEX' 'sip-files00275.jp2'
ccd605918ee3bbd56d7435a542e0bb8b
0ab31e66b54f77677de465bcb45167e995b3b871
describe
'123814' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEY' 'sip-files00275.jpg'
1f1db3c09b40971b1817488778521e87
5b12a5e1f3002fe56a718375f1cfbcbb3e6b75e9
describe
'39817' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBEZ' 'sip-files00275.pro'
bfdc62ee276d7004f0a1c3f991ffcc72
097be4e71576fd115f07832e35f481cbd6e8627f
describe
'39916' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFA' 'sip-files00275.QC.jpg'
95f6ec4fd4406221630e11dbdd25f873
fb84b022d088fae7d3f00b2ac81fe654c3efedba
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFB' 'sip-files00275.tif'
9996bf6ac40d9e24da4bc61049e461df
eb29c8f5bb343d1a0f1c31a000bac8d3ff4348d4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFC' 'sip-files00275.txt'
afbc12b827d3a283f107ea9df28f7a81
5da1a7f56ee8f7207c06f3554bffbaf88afb3eb3
describe
'9765' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFD' 'sip-files00275thm.jpg'
1470543142d082939eff206a28fe48d5
47ec2adb3871d2e956f257727f78ca49514a6a25
describe
'325630' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFE' 'sip-files00276.jp2'
9c43cfa2c22a21d7c41602f542f2cced
447bdffd6e2d6546ead84e7a59927feb9d745c36
describe
'138299' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFF' 'sip-files00276.jpg'
fa7ddf01b3883e3975dfb6cdd423c7d6
e9a0f651fc58affa027eb108c6ade0c62f028577
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFG' 'sip-files00276.pro'
a53c3435f7c00ffa2cfdf26230187172
c496bb3112f8c8cceecac99994d3c505c95a75ee
describe
'44067' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFH' 'sip-files00276.QC.jpg'
a00183e35438859483adb83014567f94
e9482257efa2489a186edba2982afd453eb209c1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFI' 'sip-files00276.tif'
68aac204d8ec5110c19d472a227c5dbe
2dc2516570ca1c0342e985ecfe5a4aadd9aada17
describe
'1668' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFJ' 'sip-files00276.txt'
01b72e08ae2beeb22de81aa2b4b5b1db
14f9f55ed9cd56d825f44dd752508c4ec22c0713
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFK' 'sip-files00276thm.jpg'
61f2e256ed3a8934b959768310e417ae
3f9fb855df9063d8bcc6a40126581f6ce71fb8ba
describe
'323136' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFL' 'sip-files00277.jp2'
0aa18ac8b824b89363ad03c561edb9c4
8202a43acd33474bd388e7773297b9a30e4f3311
describe
'127185' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFM' 'sip-files00277.jpg'
61724884544094daf18bacb79b9398fb
7b76d8ed7cb284bc073cf445018f1d4feddbbc26
describe
'40751' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFN' 'sip-files00277.pro'
8a216bf96d517e5df7c35886bf275c32
45bb26c4434e5d6a6d3c8553c9f8c295439dd7c7
describe
'41080' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFO' 'sip-files00277.QC.jpg'
7e4585326af76dcb58353ae41e245927
b41fa973407da0435e351bd87e02f8de0273c9d3
describe
'2601744' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFP' 'sip-files00277.tif'
9e7d88dc351c58621ccd99312d8a27e0
b8eae3b95e2e3d48bcb777a532383f8be7013eba
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFQ' 'sip-files00277.txt'
d16a4295b79cbce4b99fa2c77901ee1f
2419a43d0f9eebe737b042a6edae37258c91e974
describe
'10250' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFR' 'sip-files00277thm.jpg'
3db12c1e37da9eb63433d0d9a0d83384
6a8cf613ee75aec9e3896d23fd621d092636b01d
describe
'335731' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFS' 'sip-files00278.jp2'
19c7172deb2d42f54d9ab58be2c4a96b
88a6bfae9a6b330e9607245190b8d20fddc7dddd
describe
'50119' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFT' 'sip-files00278.jpg'
11060334e3592727adb18f77ca0ddbf5
1da619e2db4c9e64be94a8e20e88267cf8376d08
describe
'12283' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFU' 'sip-files00278.pro'
8c3b74c6e220816504633730efe0e203
a08b13656031071274d0863d1c6dffa5140ab595
describe
'15427' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFV' 'sip-files00278.QC.jpg'
212a25c6a238e11510db563b3bb17e6d
bdb92c4a3408c36be8802cbb2108778cf5d96e16
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFW' 'sip-files00278.tif'
47167a02d760d8d75aa8de726051218c
1c761643f9ee5bb628496a874258387b114107d8
describe
'513' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFX' 'sip-files00278.txt'
9fcc23b59437a4659c469a174d5f5585
838da2bf63f2dc4da8e3b222430515397301ae53
describe
'4015' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFY' 'sip-files00278thm.jpg'
951ef6e82b2b8575938222aa72fdce52
8b5609b3c8d348cdaf00be848b7caf81c95ee201
describe
'326549' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBFZ' 'sip-files00279.jp2'
0490613033e46c3ce1d49fbbdb5d5a12
b4fc9a4ee4eba7aa23d55ee6f188c3e573cd87a5
describe
'108196' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGA' 'sip-files00279.jpg'
75d7453cc6981cb8dae9fa719fa7e440
2ae38d7b7b285a5168f732cf0d4d61d4f564d7ab
describe
'31252' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGB' 'sip-files00279.pro'
8c80d2c5dcfc6e25864c52d5c87367bb
db12eb9409122e40a7b524e6d4b4ff16e45197c6
describe
'34182' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGC' 'sip-files00279.QC.jpg'
e7548ef0bd1805ee4691d034160c3470
90961706c23549d62a7fd7ccbb43503f6c70b7f8
describe
'2628936' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGD' 'sip-files00279.tif'
82fff16d1757c3d6ae5f1b2b04e1971d
29eac569fdc424d72f5230cd812d13e94b2ab9e5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGE' 'sip-files00279.txt'
bf5e7149e96d6db3023d0c22d0dac203
1231d9bef5b1ffaf8137606babc1b68b711cc4f1
describe
'9155' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGF' 'sip-files00279thm.jpg'
d8e1d83cc77bc9658d9e7489f8d8775b
8b52c1e59c94246ab9b8c5f718d2608f4479b8a5
describe
'325250' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGG' 'sip-files00280.jp2'
55c9eb375cc28b02eef473201bfbebf2
9fb2f3778337926a60ff93508e5b0bb9ca63a02f
describe
'134215' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGH' 'sip-files00280.jpg'
8837871d3271f6ab75a216eee03f34db
5346eaef7212cff397b07a300a57777636eaee37
describe
'41598' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGI' 'sip-files00280.pro'
f29e043eae6090e84526fa22db4498ba
f7660a29b61df6ab0c9b271a82f9e9bed4997c76
describe
'43075' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGJ' 'sip-files00280.QC.jpg'
416751c4141edc43f0d0dbc8de288528
0037bb558353af715ec2759ed947bc4fd8d24fee
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGK' 'sip-files00280.tif'
7fc38398635ab5ef65162a18ce5c1656
4307fa55a4e93ae5946a5ff33f8ba896309bf38c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGL' 'sip-files00280.txt'
5a4fc19cc53d984c7414097a54698ae4
d543b0f49d0999da9a488e12a4a1743ae109ff65
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGM' 'sip-files00280thm.jpg'
4f9cde529071d9ae21fdc766fab3adb4
33408c057f94482fc01a6e9ffd625935696a4163
describe
'337433' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGN' 'sip-files00281.jp2'
5a36d6214750483538ea7cb83b102802
cb62330bd8b959f26bf4a259367b693a03323e29
describe
'132873' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGO' 'sip-files00281.jpg'
66859a2f37f52db8c4622d2c3e1061fd
523393e9da2466b70e780bc6c3adae3e93bda6e6
describe
'42006' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGP' 'sip-files00281.pro'
71f12cf087924c7790d5e9041e710e01
c3fb1149a01ead79108706d3b1199ea5749937a4
describe
'42005' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGQ' 'sip-files00281.QC.jpg'
fa3a2e003231a24ce6f1588e69039646
4da422b234bea8695ca7a997377d73100950a1d0
describe
'2716500' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGR' 'sip-files00281.tif'
ff75fb50e695a5183ff43fa985c7d9b7
2b5086be1e3292d428e64c044529b2880f573d4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGS' 'sip-files00281.txt'
e377c551ce00606ad0306102ac8bf6b3
643af8a84bff757192f05c5fa4dad42c5123c1ae
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGT' 'sip-files00281thm.jpg'
5fdbab5f72c9788d1024db00934d3429
c8c1f5b5eb9dec14fd8c0fc13cc05f5afb481c36
describe
'320305' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGU' 'sip-files00282.jp2'
97be644bde0deaf5cfc3653e943250fd
b540f44b5acee30ec4dd96a5867116eb1cb4bffb
describe
'132881' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGV' 'sip-files00282.jpg'
bcb48ddf1ceba7c46e1837a3b328d7e2
92c1383335fecdd20f526fdd20b84e95114a3070
describe
'41733' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGW' 'sip-files00282.pro'
235056855bc336a2a2a95179cb219b31
6f3339b43a1ad06a968760fd54af7e081ec4b1f6
describe
'41844' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGX' 'sip-files00282.QC.jpg'
711e9e99ed807a0b3d665e5539d553e7
2be6a4357fb80985a2ac92dc6b255eec32259f1b
describe
'2579352' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGY' 'sip-files00282.tif'
8364d9f51b02fcd26e6bfafb962c696b
cd98aa78380417fc6d94fe0fd2a056ad3d5b7274
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBGZ' 'sip-files00282.txt'
a6701a88e4a2ec87d92078a9bec38e7c
5da0850bcb2f03a2e5d84e1d62846fd08022e789
describe
'10585' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHA' 'sip-files00282thm.jpg'
d746d774146503a957bac74a71b6ed4d
d244a77d0f3d347c39736bc393224f3dcb87de7d
describe
'324627' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHB' 'sip-files00283.jp2'
dcc46ef5211c5f08074ed8aaad8e288d
6b10fe03bd62bae50590777b4eddaec02423ae6e
describe
'124444' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHC' 'sip-files00283.jpg'
65e329cde4e61c0d1a9cc31cf3c890a9
cd226d30637e80cd2571d066140360f8b1ff02c8
describe
'38276' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHD' 'sip-files00283.pro'
dea5dfc39eb4cf5a9ac69d737cefe50e
00116c7c1f9a4537ecfc6c7fe71c738ec4aa2f62
describe
'40341' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHE' 'sip-files00283.QC.jpg'
6469b94da18b28ab92d631ebcea772dd
21fef0051e5a073322a84b23e5930f64fa2f6099
describe
'2613432' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHF' 'sip-files00283.tif'
198d88e79b3b403eed55f842887fe9a8
6de8a7d10848ca4bf413b2c1ca9b03701af48f3f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHG' 'sip-files00283.txt'
76e22adb6d71370dad67440c81194ca6
d1987a1d03f0644d5ff2ed47bbb1bb14d85d6d56
describe
'11441' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHH' 'sip-files00283thm.jpg'
0447e772579c53df770485d407345d8f
2ff4d5157bf7a1982722e85ebe8a65a4908e3de5
describe
'325570' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHI' 'sip-files00284.jp2'
b0c1262e779525e8f4e142922b4f1d03
da7af7e28fa96eaadf55a363ad6524f35ec43ffa
describe
'130255' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHJ' 'sip-files00284.jpg'
a1f885e1470d1a22c58ed5ae8f479ab9
43922565068d598ed414873db17469c765c54c4e
describe
'41273' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHK' 'sip-files00284.pro'
4eb03487910aca784cd449dfdcf7716b
46c8906d7cc032e6357f82d97ac5209d174d3b15
describe
'41158' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHL' 'sip-files00284.QC.jpg'
298c445be233ade31c63e2d23f27aebb
520ff52763c8a8ca107ef418861f9f14162b5424
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHM' 'sip-files00284.tif'
21acc71416630a7d2e11e38b87486235
57547b96b7bd0947c3e2f6084110b3fd140310fb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHN' 'sip-files00284.txt'
d1239617c5215efc86ea1f710762396e
a2b7417fb39219f590971f0a6d46c897b8d69234
describe
'10714' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHO' 'sip-files00284thm.jpg'
fc8e4f49ebe29c27a33c9cd0a6c128eb
238dcac5180338ba7aa7a03428b928f0b57e1e13
describe
'329290' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHP' 'sip-files00285.jp2'
35e7a2e5da3861a4b50501961ba61a4c
03d7b6223acdcc17481056ccfcfdb31475127108
describe
'133311' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHQ' 'sip-files00285.jpg'
81c278019e85bc1bd5ee726e8476e074
ac018609ade8e83676ae114a084b0e024126f68b
describe
'40690' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHR' 'sip-files00285.pro'
d8ca13fbc4e8a48efee728a41b281d62
b1aa6fb45cebdd5b4ef6e30c02535805699d41f7
describe
'42380' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHS' 'sip-files00285.QC.jpg'
4ada96e759b83de50258b40987014dd9
b2895911bf3066ed55f824dffe6eec1712538a79
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHT' 'sip-files00285.tif'
e455b39f6f1e6b465c6ee25941987c63
3c218c87e1a8d4dfe456f730630fdaec9e801299
describe
'1704' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHU' 'sip-files00285.txt'
0b1d12bbd13c368353c460e69e41f2f1
ed17f891c96308d2d827229c9b6b57ddd1306fe9
describe
'9993' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHV' 'sip-files00285thm.jpg'
09d6c2ad093fa2cdb0da21a8d04fae65
4acd06c7b1b663d5c92264e763371397cabb58d1
describe
'324377' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHW' 'sip-files00286.jp2'
eff4f5a82e3a8a31bc1cfb63062b0bf2
176185732d8cd01aa6d1aaf6a6d8e04bcfb85f05
describe
'134344' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHX' 'sip-files00286.jpg'
5ccc32315a9b417af4ff58120878d2a3
aa951f7779fb3388ecd64b86eaa7a3d2a7753510
describe
'41577' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHY' 'sip-files00286.pro'
d0d517c33845c45cca9e5e63f84121b5
44d88ed084d68b32ffd57fc1def5f80e49052eb2
describe
'42181' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBHZ' 'sip-files00286.QC.jpg'
d849b14f033674e84bec57bea0b23c16
56fa81dfefeb83350dd29af4992e142c91fdc0db
describe
'2611760' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIA' 'sip-files00286.tif'
cfb94de584b5fd7219bed67d32e34261
c9ab43f0fb162b27d427e496cc21f8e3cb634d12
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIB' 'sip-files00286.txt'
ac8dffb16b6d058a2869daf2e9f108c5
9a51237569fde78ff17e979c49ce614fb628713f
describe
'10388' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIC' 'sip-files00286thm.jpg'
3d7647fa4f2575dd3465d3cf00d70dfd
5ef5bf2de0755595131812aec767acd7d36c477a
describe
'319762' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBID' 'sip-files00287.jp2'
fb763ba2a905e17d769feee60bc7d800
ea90039db8d076b0476d8e5812733117512c696e
describe
'129304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIE' 'sip-files00287.jpg'
a188902ee2682b969f6eed4fab0101c8
37ec8ee3e099f6a009239519e154ec8383d9762b
describe
'40305' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIF' 'sip-files00287.pro'
b7c68975a849cb8822061295b028ed00
f674dc00243d899f67fce2cceecd33381efafb38
describe
'40776' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIG' 'sip-files00287.QC.jpg'
3e9fac09567c1cd12f90be2aaee2fd91
f795c86bc53e9ac024b2f22d29317705b2f88c8f
describe
'2575196' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIH' 'sip-files00287.tif'
beff532d6cb512960bf4e916bfc428a5
7161c47c185071c30fbcf9fab7be1c692845e7db
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBII' 'sip-files00287.txt'
1e97280f09015dc1c33a30996947aa22
767dc976dd25bbabffad7d57f094a7aba340dff3
describe
'10551' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIJ' 'sip-files00287thm.jpg'
e99508f783902c6225d9cf07a198397f
92985c33e55befc097362b075f85192331de2ddd
describe
'330372' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIK' 'sip-files00288.jp2'
c9790f26a29e502e8f44b1a3d9bbe65a
762cc0bedc49d9b2020ebf906688a6fb0f085955
describe
'127930' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIL' 'sip-files00288.jpg'
6e1fc10d984f36be4e9f35f808ab1ab8
60280bf861e51179d21e68fc3b38786918a7aa19
describe
'41991' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIM' 'sip-files00288.pro'
ca667819bf65a3ca9a78eda9861dae90
82589f2044ac1d24ce0c556775e5204aabb3cc03
describe
'41046' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIN' 'sip-files00288.QC.jpg'
fa1610f60f2563e5279716bbbdac5bbe
7840dc515bc8c9a2b8c074a1cd9749d914a4a454
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIO' 'sip-files00288.tif'
0660783e3039ad86d33d366c5d51a0fe
6be3d940d5cf80c3695fe4fb59bbf1cd396d9bce
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIP' 'sip-files00288.txt'
4c8a617dcc37a2b4a52bdde5dfea1989
8d44c26be7d2abebc5e36e5adc52627d0043c10a
describe
'11132' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIQ' 'sip-files00288thm.jpg'
b72ac1a4799272a7b1ebf6711566f061
b50c0f4ac29ee54e5246ef7d9b0c5b6a52b82fb6
describe
'327797' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIR' 'sip-files00289.jp2'
306dfeacf188683545e84cecd3e014e2
31b1f2811fdd0554de9c518e55ba03f9a82be51f
'2011-11-18T10:54:54-05:00'
describe
'131943' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIS' 'sip-files00289.jpg'
e731c94df89d45525970c585568ea048
972fce08b262cdb01ce5ea721f5b58d2e72952dd
describe
'39820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIT' 'sip-files00289.pro'
9343f94ec2981de93c1ded676ebbe134
fd2df17d5d7843b6baaea36addb3643f6f13ee88
describe
'41886' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIU' 'sip-files00289.QC.jpg'
f26845b5e9ac5b95a0cc9ac04ec0bb36
d1670d7515b171371ba0d3e675ad443b1923a09c
describe
'2639128' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIV' 'sip-files00289.tif'
f44ddd25dc68fa0beb78afcecbe4775f
1180c9dba8a3b67bd3b58f1ba067ca2c12a302aa
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIW' 'sip-files00289.txt'
819ef6bf2db10fbe2533d2150c3d9ec7
a13aa540b16251d8cdc79319a11aba5f818fe3a5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIX' 'sip-files00289thm.jpg'
e767543c28bd48d54b85b10a4dec9ade
45c5a2bf4c5c82f3c7c28510fdd4230854b67e45
describe
'333234' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIY' 'sip-files00290.jp2'
d6e0c0cf3572b10fe6a18b8a3e6957fb
f4e88efc064b08b7908c0a7f4a3021dbf0c62b5e
describe
'90579' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBIZ' 'sip-files00290.jpg'
4009b66949085d0eac6d0fa053fbd03a
88509e789913e6a2d8641a7cd7344378f13c9a47
describe
'25385' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJA' 'sip-files00290.pro'
d9c66cbea85b7a56642ccd64efa9e3fb
e1b9307c3f0c908a945c1551dcf14c74d415c2f4
describe
'28482' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJB' 'sip-files00290.QC.jpg'
bab76fbeba53405186af7d50ffa4d7cc
be34f2efaa74bd5a7822682d19614c6fe0fc979c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJC' 'sip-files00290.tif'
b2c7db858b3c7e34540d3ec4f9b7aac2
f97c76fc25c7e4631a495f7a61b56377c553cae4
describe
'1035' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJD' 'sip-files00290.txt'
f1403f22c2acaab1563309503cc5bae7
e386f63acf0327270600c0bc8a3c8114f78d21c9
describe
'7225' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJE' 'sip-files00290thm.jpg'
35c765263ba72d17307f47932a946331
174e83d610315fe8abd22124033aa491c30290a2
describe
'337187' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJF' 'sip-files00291.jp2'
6c72fc0e51a83e35ce9de8227cd92914
2c907480e7f62e4171a449d1f3752a35f4bae970
describe
'105184' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJG' 'sip-files00291.jpg'
27157afef06ba1e182a42295b9db2c86
f1e9cdae01f1a8260ce491796ebce3970813615f
describe
'30179' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJH' 'sip-files00291.pro'
2940cce237cd6a09b9a122d635ec76c4
8a24c5ee120f71f53ec5b36485a82401e9812da4
describe
'32771' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJI' 'sip-files00291.QC.jpg'
b228cba705aa22b6923d2bc347cc4186
ca2630ae7e6de9874012c55f8988e438e5cbfce6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJJ' 'sip-files00291.tif'
f1efdd63e3aa9679417c830b73bae6b6
549be61c20a708bb62a93b0e59edf744825b93fc
describe
'1267' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJK' 'sip-files00291.txt'
db62ded6681ee08d2dee730748af2268
6874f1fa7a9c00941a27befe184637da7d9d49de
describe
'8437' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJL' 'sip-files00291thm.jpg'
1cd7b832583e0ff932879441c69f59f5
b78b21531243e87a2d68eacb4472f4a7794e8624
describe
'327165' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJM' 'sip-files00292.jp2'
8a5b09e514a64c2754a21576e27bbb2f
26e955581f556fd4802441c709b4f3eed6580a04
describe
'131064' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJN' 'sip-files00292.jpg'
11b77987ebf909b20b821bdc14cebf62
78e9cb07731b37f9dd5fc152b27650aea47d9f9c
describe
'40435' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJO' 'sip-files00292.pro'
a4687c522cb3e7e75284df8002fdc5d4
832479226194c3c2fdb2972adb84a26c04b7b1fa
describe
'40988' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJP' 'sip-files00292.QC.jpg'
7a38f63c32fe59d38354a24197ec4405
c9eb0d4f8a44764cf43dce04986d189813185451
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJQ' 'sip-files00292.tif'
37bffaebdd29426e07ef482ba8635aed
c8eddb0fb8fc8d8f7acff8d556278b4091dd6a6d
describe
'1592' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJR' 'sip-files00292.txt'
d882b0fd77424117b8a6facac9e1b1c5
d5066ef70ea4ee233bf3411abca4323e0730f8d1
describe
'10035' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJS' 'sip-files00292thm.jpg'
b5ed347616af225107379af6cde861de
1360a63b9ac1573eb6ae406bd6f4f3dfade0d8bb
describe
'326928' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJT' 'sip-files00293.jp2'
53925bd85d20334015c54edf0fe95a61
1fe0c4f01ce2eacb44f7cb823e7bb4bf2d1308da
describe
'131248' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJU' 'sip-files00293.jpg'
2cad2754d0acba1fb1ce341dc6f7a56a
e72b0f012b73f2c694aaa9d18746f1aefd670dba
describe
'41334' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJV' 'sip-files00293.pro'
8d1b666bf6a4beff76b45ec28cd973a5
beda2b1d0ad5334767f02f6eeb3ba90a3ca8df18
describe
'41016' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJW' 'sip-files00293.QC.jpg'
f24e5c42a4d41597cdabe0b90d1227c3
c12b2f60d9ede016bbf103919d267190c0669798
describe
'2631768' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJX' 'sip-files00293.tif'
12033d79da8d2619d20e48c463c9c123
7a046c3f5ae953cfb7b6cb9860086932119e6a46
describe
'1741' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJY' 'sip-files00293.txt'
f4cd124f8d0c3aa70e1cd36c33f68ff3
9ff3d30f159e1e3b375ea041bbbeb9fae166ea26
describe
'11027' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBJZ' 'sip-files00293thm.jpg'
1b02da25a0a6c4c30f5d6f3192ed1e67
f4b9f2a4188699b3c2e3e9a404d9dd6698a9a9e5
describe
'321183' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKA' 'sip-files00294.jp2'
82330d26b80aa53cd52c05d76a3c6ea2
b944af433dc55be56d309e6a114e19567566021b
describe
'135891' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKB' 'sip-files00294.jpg'
f0706f4411c9fee84512dbd32c8f73e4
fbc4b9a7608e4a5cff4487ec58678c5aa1c250b5
describe
'39635' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKC' 'sip-files00294.pro'
800a8efe79d313827d6901572eff45df
1a46e6ccd468ea8f298bb60c44d35f3623e3618a
describe
'42949' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKD' 'sip-files00294.QC.jpg'
4b10b6c62a446353615ce7ebc6234a88
2293cb8b69688116772ba3e7ecd28e6ede0338e8
describe
'2586732' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKE' 'sip-files00294.tif'
fde0ab765bfdbdfe0c03b375690633da
8741beba8da3b5416eef1afc8ff187ff72814e93
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKF' 'sip-files00294.txt'
9f14cfb83d5886870b430218d93afc2a
8f7e4b63bf70f9dde5a7c76e18c87424b510dc76
describe
'10461' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKG' 'sip-files00294thm.jpg'
6b682d6d9f46c8bcde23fcd0d568cae7
60383c2f338a5dd51484df5c6b5d301c666eec71
describe
'329730' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKH' 'sip-files00295.jp2'
2a3a03022b3cea8ecfc40b6d3b9033dc
fcdefd11dd12149004a4e55f0ba16791d7af9e92
describe
'130266' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKI' 'sip-files00295.jpg'
19989a7eb4317bf6487797e5f310a8e9
6802fd2e2b02a99946ffd852a0770ff22a63affd
describe
'40332' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKJ' 'sip-files00295.pro'
0e19d18be227a1ca2c3f8d95b0cd3c9d
d9170764f334d06be4e9d11567401f7d08065e4d
describe
'41036' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKK' 'sip-files00295.QC.jpg'
a708d35d4d11f62f399801453f640eca
f75d826fec0c7182be4c72affb3e6b5caf0b9c45
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKL' 'sip-files00295.tif'
001a7a9389b28fd354906895d1c38760
8fab6df9941ccc3b44e56cd138c3b7c41d956341
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKM' 'sip-files00295.txt'
668bcefda3a4e94504078eb96322c9b4
065d2907214399a5f85f3550edb4c48a0a6696e3
describe
'10081' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKN' 'sip-files00295thm.jpg'
058244a167a6c9ddd828e8b8125553ec
633775243715df1eb7fb8107987a4c2869c47c7e
describe
'325627' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKO' 'sip-files00296.jp2'
3db2fe844cd37516539a74d196267cea
0af90e2c99bc9590b1fb05619f2c2c2224018b5f
describe
'126055' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKP' 'sip-files00296.jpg'
e405b0ecd04041b5abe40f1d3f2e37ee
b4d2d8f8c21aa0966b6f3368ce7590d7c3ca0370
describe
'39780' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKQ' 'sip-files00296.pro'
f5d8707b96076f388786c47fabcf193d
be8433a89377e885d41f59a6013df4049bc9207e
describe
'40359' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKR' 'sip-files00296.QC.jpg'
bcf9ddb94bef0be8b34f8d52148dd7ed
239300ec9dd1a92986a2e5284391575bfe212831
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKS' 'sip-files00296.tif'
3ee68840f7a65206db106ddd366f5c64
e81faf4e23272f2fc0daf5f9ac46afbab5ccb899
describe
'1565' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKT' 'sip-files00296.txt'
5849bc82629ede444b964b5243aa74c5
6db6bc0c38033abf8ae4e171f75fceb25bbd2672
describe
'10797' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKU' 'sip-files00296thm.jpg'
628ff7bdefb6c63abccbc1fd75d3851c
337c8f4f26898a55d85fef303526d7e495ff0c6b
describe
'323506' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKV' 'sip-files00297.jp2'
7c6a35f223305e95b1426fcef6e7ba49
e1f2cd40fafeda188ecef26429692013259ecded
'2011-11-18T10:46:42-05:00'
describe
'130566' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKW' 'sip-files00297.jpg'
fc6dddb0e0ab4f84dbb613f6b7f183a0
65589d27e201b4b037e3ddcad61d0562574b53e3
describe
'41248' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKX' 'sip-files00297.pro'
bfc90bb87aaf3ee85d28ee1cf215560e
933cccd8bb3b017267ef39e1c7f732657801655b
describe
'42173' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKY' 'sip-files00297.QC.jpg'
507a32a3e078e4d87e7ab2774a3ab5d5
102b69f5582d14bbada7a7821c35c7e1f3f4b0d8
describe
'2605104' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBKZ' 'sip-files00297.tif'
3480b450d0d33284542f46b0c91d88da
4dcfd76b1f44e3b01e83a908a356115d637c2f5a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLA' 'sip-files00297.txt'
c62502cc7724412decb8a23d0df10914
d33020e1ee4e700073cf8d0572b997690e710e8f
describe
'10420' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLB' 'sip-files00297thm.jpg'
a876d1188e6f20e1e8b60ef06c945e3f
e4f7bee42fbce38792db4f6a2213e241a666e360
describe
'320623' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLC' 'sip-files00298.jp2'
076ecd2fe628f43c16740724b7b8f289
7a885d0a1166c1c3d2a10ff73263fe3e2243249b
describe
'126752' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLD' 'sip-files00298.jpg'
e140eb8fbc2d47ce86431cf34c253097
d489c28ceccb28a6c9a0e915cf1e726a643fb647
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLE' 'sip-files00298.pro'
ab72cdb81b0740991143ea3617e3492d
c47406777a0fe074297655c3b45de5a515c1aab5
describe
'41008' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLF' 'sip-files00298.QC.jpg'
28008ecf4781f8eccb56c778e9085546
bcea8fc1bba58d57921b6c08092781e2da489851
describe
'2581880' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLG' 'sip-files00298.tif'
17de2fa03fc57b94edb52efd1e39ddd2
0819a4a1cb9017e15ca1e9c1f77be2d49f311f65
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLH' 'sip-files00298.txt'
14658c3fb310f338ab216a2da323bf0c
d95e27a8f060953048c865e6d536caf6ae75622c
describe
'10508' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLI' 'sip-files00298thm.jpg'
0138948ce222e861faee73e16626585d
3dc9e41d45550faa26af57c303feaf76fbc7d8d5
describe
'317366' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLJ' 'sip-files00299.jp2'
1ff864c5cbb9b5252ceeabe0173f3ea6
7fc2c1939f2c489e7eb26b10f3081bed7ef24f8a
describe
'128561' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLK' 'sip-files00299.jpg'
f4abe3d38f87bcb1dd7bc58356816a5e
a6ba5174c9bc63e85bafd5fab059b4dc579500bb
describe
'42910' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLL' 'sip-files00299.pro'
ebe90ba7f216a1e7f697a50acbe98edc
4d96cab0faf5de7a2c151e99cb76f7f8e574223d
describe
'41778' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLM' 'sip-files00299.QC.jpg'
f9d264cdf34afaea77511688a42cb855
82cea183b5c1f7109c29b9c46c89caaf440ad99d
describe
'2555500' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLN' 'sip-files00299.tif'
bbf0ce0e647694218baa96c9cf6b6f72
5744f5651e4574cf4d8555350f6609fe1054f14b
describe
'1768' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLO' 'sip-files00299.txt'
0bb5ae8f46e0d30bd24bc0962f89fd92
0d733cd9002334e9e1a9ed58908da6a514288476
describe
'10522' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLP' 'sip-files00299thm.jpg'
8b29d304abc2c4cb306c39744cfc7734
cb972c09afcd1f418fcbeb843f732adaa6fbd1f9
describe
'315425' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLQ' 'sip-files00300.jp2'
432a01c4cfd601e6037de735c724a946
e0c71cc80d0acc24ba24022d37da02255bc765c2
describe
'130741' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLR' 'sip-files00300.jpg'
4221f6adbba2c8a4208e33730605c9c2
5300c8f74b17830a0d10418a65f913752c42adf0
describe
'40934' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLS' 'sip-files00300.pro'
65c6efe2f0056f9be10905526b5f8336
c8b7c724c7a09fa3096b1fb0403c82634c5eb7e5
describe
'41131' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLT' 'sip-files00300.QC.jpg'
490cc9fbb86d9dc97e771d65f3cef549
a1e6a212d0192cd7a63b6cbe071f11b023a8730c
describe
'2539872' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLU' 'sip-files00300.tif'
05f72ba5294e325b8dd71c51beb9aa78
29c6bb4b21e049522d5ebdf0aa8110d79321432c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLV' 'sip-files00300.txt'
a4d2768cc0f3eee371084954f5c16f77
4e0daa8bc8a9c6e0bffc4344ea5662874e88acbb
describe
'11108' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLW' 'sip-files00300thm.jpg'
b857c8ca7e56312c147d533e0ae25be7
f3f5b384e18df44be1b1c1661e9027c5487098f7
describe
'331685' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLX' 'sip-files00301.jp2'
becb67e2d98e70e8ede3a8bdeaa60eb0
f9d29b53d77327f769474d1247168a6b84664801
describe
'127200' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLY' 'sip-files00301.jpg'
be5543009687da0b8e03ae6ad8ffa613
ee3fba75d45caa07fcbd13b9a5fc187862d65086
describe
'39547' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBLZ' 'sip-files00301.pro'
84d746b5874a73e5704994f1e18888c4
280f79d556c0fa12c835e24e1974ad83d68fa1e3
describe
'39859' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMA' 'sip-files00301.QC.jpg'
023bb0ee5f8c417434638024b42cbe36
a57dd63563867b222d59642455df1532a26f1a17
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMB' 'sip-files00301.tif'
10f9f8767d9db4f9dc3408139fd0c6af
ca1c3e9bd22dabb11ef64dfc9fbbe013bec6115d
'2011-11-18T10:48:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMC' 'sip-files00301.txt'
3575ef146d23f80ae75955410d97d5cd
0fa2bef68ace48b95675ac88b68dd20629f76f74
describe
'9811' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMD' 'sip-files00301thm.jpg'
56b4c4522ea0071abb6ef2b44d8884d8
5b443712ea18c0bd11c61f067a26f34bf6572db7
describe
'323718' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBME' 'sip-files00302.jp2'
371039db222ea018ccdc8f61105b428c
79ea4fdffa537de73defcbc747ea0e0a5dfac906
'2011-11-18T10:53:46-05:00'
describe
'128220' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMF' 'sip-files00302.jpg'
99949607568286b823ccdae53cb955ff
7233eb8c3e09c5273452c903cc0ac35f1243c2e7
describe
'40426' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMG' 'sip-files00302.pro'
ab099b6bc20375bd96769097d049a785
034f7e98b14f0d00572026839e270611440f1c9f
describe
'41837' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMH' 'sip-files00302.QC.jpg'
b10df8fb8cdf2a4a118157877b70bc87
969aa66458804f563b8052f66296d875b4da176b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMI' 'sip-files00302.tif'
bccbf8a657bfd731033ef0df0d42b505
ad2b74bbf1e79245c9bae1365dac781336ccc4b6
describe
'1589' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMJ' 'sip-files00302.txt'
1a8a61959553496c9d5a5e34d72dd7d5
a561b84fffbd347a794fe3d7629ec9ff489065af
describe
'10236' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMK' 'sip-files00302thm.jpg'
bfbb64cf8908e4abbecf2e3b0bc54ca0
91e7c69b80e2307a28f14d6483af1283ace8d218
describe
'330885' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBML' 'sip-files00303.jp2'
2e2f7bd91adb461e215c42d31e880abd
b620b7bccdff8fd1419406f53bc82d1cd60aa9fd
describe
'125925' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMM' 'sip-files00303.jpg'
f2b76c38903baca0c80876d0a23156f3
bff9765dc9cd1188b72896801b319508706a9592
describe
'39399' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMN' 'sip-files00303.pro'
f99f8de89b39733effccb78be65f9003
5db082b0dc4f4565218735b0b460a73081135ffd
describe
'39224' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMO' 'sip-files00303.QC.jpg'
f2dbd9eb06186ce52aa442743978a2a6
5df48ed9c8f731d296137186a336a870af87dcdd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMP' 'sip-files00303.tif'
6bc364f6b37e6a7c4e2d7feea7c8368d
b755646b575f61410dc9203f41fb4f913a9311c5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMQ' 'sip-files00303.txt'
042d7857f71d6db77c49f629665c0dff
7fa6f8b5091c49b3dd7ec02b823d0307cda0b03f
describe
'10641' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMR' 'sip-files00303thm.jpg'
de452f9efe02befd441a0ad9a9a15588
21ab82487f244ee9b53b7e657fe589bb39d9645f
describe
'326943' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMS' 'sip-files00304.jp2'
654dc134207e1dbe9d062e211608102d
8487c649d608705274d86d8829aa24a2fd0f148b
describe
'123842' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMT' 'sip-files00304.jpg'
b63e2622dca2ac2dac77ad8861d75a14
ef426e06720361b2d47f5969a67af7313d525041
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMU' 'sip-files00304.pro'
2faece3cae46df9490d4230659ce4f91
6045308dc73c769356efce1f7f63a2b30f62feff
describe
'39586' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMV' 'sip-files00304.QC.jpg'
0ea6dcc764d34071dc63c4c242e2a60d
a06edaf22909ef911f4b411986ac738e2f73676d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMW' 'sip-files00304.tif'
337785db4e6dd5d034f5b63dec2875bb
1e4fd548eeb0412506210e3853790cd6859690ba
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMX' 'sip-files00304.txt'
fcdcb12d41008420f7416e520f5f716d
9e4e09b83447a5940cb9611fc871dda6116d5d89
describe
'10516' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMY' 'sip-files00304thm.jpg'
cb7ae8c7480d2492af12b3574d6a79d1
cf712efe12e6f47be304a1c71d1a60bc66a7134a
describe
'318013' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBMZ' 'sip-files00305.jp2'
266d665dac4dd3c35f06348d75f1698c
bbaae696046564f3d76641c45d1d6bcc7804ed5f
describe
'131474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNA' 'sip-files00305.jpg'
3b5d94cdf86ce3292ac5f7a5b3df61e2
80cf1fa17bf60e0c79796cda780018d1474ac74a
describe
'39978' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNB' 'sip-files00305.pro'
1f219c8fdfb5c8e5873b8f13464bd9f6
642a9609197a1fdef85b10b5f6e26768107fe2d5
describe
'41959' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNC' 'sip-files00305.QC.jpg'
0d12c2c16329e33a5044074fd6fecc5e
20847b4738b381e4610d77c09b44cf0fd077d8a7
describe
'2560424' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBND' 'sip-files00305.tif'
a2d31440dcd5087bd2090740ac4e90fd
fd84858fdfdd590d7b6a47a9cefe15eedb43274b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNE' 'sip-files00305.txt'
67fd01f0a9f8391b2f37d3f042e52b0a
5414b24cade0f220421b0056270d5edfbc3cef63
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNF' 'sip-files00305thm.jpg'
cce8f3b1117d5a0ba422a7efef7a7113
b54e14e3b1059175fd730d30764f35c36d446544
describe
'319745' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNG' 'sip-files00306.jp2'
be87f2d93e1855df4bf15e8f3b2ff626
e6f453c55d94a5ee68579014c2c617019dedfd78
describe
'134306' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNH' 'sip-files00306.jpg'
1c4dd672bde08cf6d621257cea69fbd4
02eb57e64f39bb9017c2c714923c71fb8528b3ee
describe
'42053' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNI' 'sip-files00306.pro'
cc44c05d730651044feacbdf8bf6e918
4eb501b4cc35d855021fa073563361d29021dae8
describe
'43205' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNJ' 'sip-files00306.QC.jpg'
7636900b70ae6b649670685134f32fa5
29193ab8d394c195d1b1ba3ff020fe444db60744
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNK' 'sip-files00306.tif'
8101bfa236b4ea550b3a1eea8cabb842
4a13bafb2c6d86d2ede581d827a0e919315e17ae
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNL' 'sip-files00306.txt'
37899bb494345f167c70ada7def03ade
3dfe0dd7b0e1398f13b1341f91b9f6d833ff6a3f
describe
'10703' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNM' 'sip-files00306thm.jpg'
89deb3f694b0fdafa5743c4ef44a764e
601c92ea4a1e8e6895643d1df0f2885d3a62fe4a
describe
'327682' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNN' 'sip-files00307.jp2'
9ca59d6ed3c4d34ab458ca3c29ede67a
05dd980fcc298d9224d0b92e36e5a1e3e9dcdcd6
describe
'99052' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNO' 'sip-files00307.jpg'
5546171c9c249204e954464969e63736
abe4873dfaaec01e317c70efacafd197253bad7c
describe
'30200' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNP' 'sip-files00307.pro'
2e1cb57a385338a4fbefe4f927084af3
258f530d40152165208c11d7cce88e04a923cded
describe
'30717' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNQ' 'sip-files00307.QC.jpg'
a38809789856f059f827df1edf445abe
72c32884d05c94f880b7540dda9572e8c3822fa6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNR' 'sip-files00307.tif'
6c1bfd9e6ffa13814ee21a0fbb01766c
1250e5035167adf2a4b93fca579ef2743d43c2fa
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNS' 'sip-files00307.txt'
67db67bfcde0a77aaa35d954d1daa7e0
9ba0300f74838df067af57596de607f6c1ce6e81
describe
'8252' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNT' 'sip-files00307thm.jpg'
7b284bef4dd43ff7f2038488e763c649
eeecca2e7322fa1f09b151f906513c27b1dba113
describe
'323809' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNU' 'sip-files00308.jp2'
ff05b7e1050183b208edf579c197543f
9b1876a63b24e3e206118d250122931e74cab82e
describe
'110157' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNV' 'sip-files00308.jpg'
cc859e64fdfb0e34bdffdb42507132ba
50e31c55ed141b76d0aef3e25693ca10c0a56e83
describe
'34229' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNW' 'sip-files00308.pro'
adcc48f95ece07a7aa078cb606f7bcc1
fb38f688da06ac87b8d1141f79af6b88c1b31d57
describe
'34358' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNX' 'sip-files00308.QC.jpg'
6ccdbff19162b44f053dc61129326db0
9677d4f2158595ab7f01b51ed90c1f36b3fea960
describe
'2606844' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNY' 'sip-files00308.tif'
c8829e2704400c8d03f784a163d78135
dff939ba97edda84f843c808e081ea25cb1c1c08
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBNZ' 'sip-files00308.txt'
8ee72d53892239856f40aeb61a0ef358
7776ea532c687a9cd7f34e210eecc8bcf29e417d
describe
'8936' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOA' 'sip-files00308thm.jpg'
25d7a8313e4f705b35cf18cb2b59a39b
a9d07707c35b9ccb78259285b888dbf7a0d14e6a
describe
'323364' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOB' 'sip-files00309.jp2'
8ee1389b6cf2d5dbec8b85f9d233c5df
f7be85be1d4ef22c8ebcfb4f32710130b09cd206
describe
'129954' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOC' 'sip-files00309.jpg'
1e0afd18f6febe0fbc4daaa66b286320
384589369e838100879b0a29a8a09a6a588a9f91
describe
'42564' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOD' 'sip-files00309.pro'
a47540ceb416e36b94cc291c5adee96e
07134ff8b745ed7f269dc92a00d0f28a7a12f860
describe
'41486' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOE' 'sip-files00309.QC.jpg'
0ccf3cf5262e45a6df356f7fda90c117
cc7041d872eb8a04d1323bdb890c873e171fc7d2
describe
'2603876' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOF' 'sip-files00309.tif'
7f11819ce65eaa1c5ee3f22051f74a5c
469d23f0ae9c800a8ea3e6d21f49470d1cd47d8b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOG' 'sip-files00309.txt'
e56e29f176ff7fadbde8104ccae6c0b6
c373e2e21f091ed4fe89d142287e300f035bcc91
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOH' 'sip-files00309thm.jpg'
5e6ea79a7c9885ec065d7761fa865bb7
12f1bfb261e78ad436928e8c8453a17f1ef5cb7d
describe
'323774' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOI' 'sip-files00310.jp2'
cca22d51e409931dd698e72fad2e6ff4
6d24b8c0b5f06d26813b368a2437a1cf91728e65
describe
'125601' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOJ' 'sip-files00310.jpg'
2c62e818ed290c8ca27f6997ce0ab875
7b4d8bddc4fc6390eb977aabcd3c56e55c23ecb1
describe
'40876' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOK' 'sip-files00310.pro'
68538aaf20c54fe2c470f5314ac6a04b
cb37b120e2b5f29eaaf467ea856b128bde28e8ba
describe
'40492' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOL' 'sip-files00310.QC.jpg'
e3676babcf8eaaed25fcb6740ee833b6
0b5f0372f08142e90ab5dc24935585c94c8f9b01
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOM' 'sip-files00310.tif'
43ff8c5ace6da071a0b68a721002e045
39ceb3e24b2df34f09942d028bb8dfb811dd0fbd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBON' 'sip-files00310.txt'
1a482cdce152fea538c5ea9c7c61355d
ea402dfffaf413d5abbd7f2f41be80c198758d70
describe
'10823' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOO' 'sip-files00310thm.jpg'
2a33aa61da68eb8edcab79b3abaf89ea
271f9854a2dd474e4300687393ad9ba306553259
describe
'335869' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOP' 'sip-files00311.jp2'
e100a804619b83d3d8eea73493dc9ff1
4f75cc4951eb5c213bcee546399ad39a5abd4759
describe
'124649' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOQ' 'sip-files00311.jpg'
dbd713464acf32c7c8fc35ffc7d9012e
13ff1a18fabd4d91605a9f1c5440e905504f8d42
describe
'39554' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOR' 'sip-files00311.pro'
421257df3fe4db7a0db9ef95dbac240e
202e4e95f9bd69bb2fbb696c2b6887d87fbecc29
describe
'39829' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOS' 'sip-files00311.QC.jpg'
a5de3bb2b939fbd4faf59ea0545b0c2d
883b2113eada8df681ef52d29bcaca9677c0a55a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOT' 'sip-files00311.tif'
38eda556789c1faeb1e85eb2433d929a
ce642daee3f552b22395e48fd57da1884af18db1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOU' 'sip-files00311.txt'
1262a5d4ad44d361225c94f47a9eb62b
d4849569f7069540996bede82156c8afc051e6bd
describe
'10038' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOV' 'sip-files00311thm.jpg'
4059ea115e794e87152afedee653f8f7
8e84e1d5a11383fce28d8b5da6d1b70bc449a0d9
describe
'327128' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOW' 'sip-files00312.jp2'
0d254a4853d063117aba1d81864f9fa9
8db79cf4e0a60f405c9dcfb2e5e91e33e3631fc6
describe
'132363' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOX' 'sip-files00312.jpg'
e1774f3b020c80b08670c8a42770683a
b34927c9199cd5b8c0190099211689563ca8a56a
describe
'41788' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOY' 'sip-files00312.pro'
d7af75ec85431f01ab8237d9957fd275
359734d06e02287fdf44466153bf082ecf85d78a
describe
'41287' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBOZ' 'sip-files00312.QC.jpg'
fd67b3d9d66caa16e93c21ad5771b6dc
04fd84570a00bfb1456555663e1d5b8005ebd56d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPA' 'sip-files00312.tif'
1ca8f8c26fd1f1d22da15c13e9f1ce0a
625758924787a488d3c6233ec932201b80863c38
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPB' 'sip-files00312.txt'
23650586248226a6ae2909ef1a4676f9
c3d2a4fabdeea9ae376c3eca9daa3a6a2650e62b
describe
'10526' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPC' 'sip-files00312thm.jpg'
39394de773092a66fb8eb8c66cec0664
f1ddf184d25eb6c7f5622c9cd09fd6cc5e561ef4
describe
'329837' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPD' 'sip-files00313.jp2'
6c7c8f9ad09710b76b0d8251451fd18a
d30979fdd9720b1cca6c94b4188dd79cd0ad47dd
describe
'128396' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPE' 'sip-files00313.jpg'
db2a98a194dda2e7f8fbd06e709da3b5
c4950688c8225c523222664b4bd87d02b16528fb
describe
'41114' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPF' 'sip-files00313.pro'
47be01b97984f2b79fb795ad9a42ff82
1417927ceebd0a17daba937c6fc4e58d9262b711
describe
'40511' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPG' 'sip-files00313.QC.jpg'
5dd1bd1e10b555a69b33cabf584e5c69
2c2554a1098e93c4c92da5d63f04aec8f5a3da59
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPH' 'sip-files00313.tif'
f3d928ce5bfbcc41a9aeda09c73c6bde
89d2e50a14d3d042c4b83da94dd83ffdc0602783
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPI' 'sip-files00313.txt'
a9b813942e654c32d5ba771d505413c1
380b0322a9a644eacac7b668857ab7f0bbc45ee3
describe
'10196' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPJ' 'sip-files00313thm.jpg'
cca7ce469a7bf72a5d24c8b5b18a97ec
01642e8d692810e2f786abea91861dccd2a6b04a
describe
'327199' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPK' 'sip-files00314.jp2'
d88fb7340274fe8592ce29412425e25a
20c7daf8a4c43bceaf201e4766226443f58ff722
describe
'133654' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPL' 'sip-files00314.jpg'
5d36e0009b1827ab0b318ca9aa9c104f
b039053ea609b356a00ef30fe09350579967923a
describe
'42078' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPM' 'sip-files00314.pro'
4f50e9b135484f3efec3c301ff5d566a
156bb3104386e9b2cf762abd73f82760ee083e14
describe
'42902' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPN' 'sip-files00314.QC.jpg'
c4c8665041dbc1fd65f145ce2fcac175
6c00bfc9799fdfed626bc57de2fa576e30ed3a1b
describe
'2634112' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPO' 'sip-files00314.tif'
2321309e576f60f530556640c275c251
948e8a3a91c77ac353aa0b3aab797d7cf45673a7
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPP' 'sip-files00314.txt'
2a2b3c2ee3133db898ed4c20b005728c
673621595d7f9fdae71491afa76bd515e30712aa
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPQ' 'sip-files00314thm.jpg'
26bc81933a824c7b3b65f6983351c81a
4475ade6a344df20f7bc4207336306ba6059bdae
describe
'339156' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPR' 'sip-files00315.jp2'
07badf495c950c6a62b02b8e15fc6736
bcd338e28b576d565d0c8b02161b4b7d0b75219b
describe
'97108' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPS' 'sip-files00315.jpg'
6f7432087d23086e7fb087b7bcc1233e
f5de8c0905ba8aa5eab4fc581cc7eff6e2e5d1a6
describe
'29687' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPT' 'sip-files00315.pro'
ca9c963bd064dd99319eec138a849978
935e664e7cf3a2cdb36f86a7a1661ecaedaa01a8
describe
'30315' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPU' 'sip-files00315.QC.jpg'
5d801936c1b348094c5cbffdfbb5e0a3
685233b7d22c3d3315b38c2561f60e5d485ec051
describe
'2730860' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPV' 'sip-files00315.tif'
1b247281e2f8d24f173bdba720991bab
1e0177c720714b53f65a17819210e37af423b83c
describe
'1177' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPW' 'sip-files00315.txt'
0644033406a604cd12bb759fb1ed77fb
efe2b8a8d57722f94e207651f2815872948447f3
describe
'7677' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPX' 'sip-files00315thm.jpg'
0b69ff3cee11382d4a770baf81f4324f
e6a943ef95ac32e746923bc7ac84eecb71400b10
describe
'328752' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPY' 'sip-files00316.jp2'
d6d58a4d99ca86a35df74e190c36a7d7
ad9c484e2bd736f15e24306ce7f46c9501cbcc36
describe
'109258' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBPZ' 'sip-files00316.jpg'
c084c05557485a933fb6b5d5b3ad25a7
4c5bd172cda1fa5f6c85e30d01f9a0bb80b31662
describe
'33162' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQA' 'sip-files00316.pro'
acbed3f54f383d91a43bdbababe191f3
f0f165db11edc2f21726ee6944b691565d39106b
describe
'34902' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQB' 'sip-files00316.QC.jpg'
dca4ab284adbe1966c25ad96cce96c3b
578e34e6a83542d21df3928141bee6de1eb21197
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQC' 'sip-files00316.tif'
88e369a548fae9ee06d45c0ec19ea4e8
1df7b7ae98276a8ecfdc3d6bea1d17e0013974bc
describe
'1357' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQD' 'sip-files00316.txt'
bafe9bfcd334aee7d61989f902e6b7c1
811ea2ca1229c44fcbfac38a6439f26c4f5ad07d
describe
'8917' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQE' 'sip-files00316thm.jpg'
57253f20fbd0ca59eeb3238f6aa91b09
3f9752fed8183fbd3e235b4863a78eec7390955c
describe
'335866' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQF' 'sip-files00317.jp2'
26159238801f6dc8356b2300d9fb7ddb
32290673c44dd06d1c6771beb189f831f597b03b
describe
'126234' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQG' 'sip-files00317.jpg'
0f4b3b91181326337fdd57eeb8be7680
af070bfa9b548ab6aaba0cbeebdd2976097c648b
describe
'41436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQH' 'sip-files00317.pro'
d50ba7ce17ecfe6e21febc6f4b6b12f2
394de5fdcb5b910a5831b58807ea116cc37c6098
describe
'40283' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQI' 'sip-files00317.QC.jpg'
971006a8067dbfa4f56bdf9f04683458
9d72584ca9dd6bfb4376e55ba2ef52c0a2c410ea
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQJ' 'sip-files00317.tif'
a9a0a575a965a2b40fb25f524a8ffe15
4210cce68a874139d13aa743f4405046548c1197
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQK' 'sip-files00317.txt'
3fa66cd2a090bd152321746faf77af51
93220fe020c95e82e3caa99ab8f7b546820db79b
describe
'9884' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQL' 'sip-files00317thm.jpg'
7718292ba30250c59cda232ce4470101
8d4720976cd053f80041dc1a9ae75adb5de4eaff
describe
'326930' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQM' 'sip-files00318.jp2'
21e035bbc22c67075a1038149246405d
a6778982845baedd5fac26d1b241e80911ed9770
describe
'124302' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQN' 'sip-files00318.jpg'
1b9bdda1509e55d8962dd54dcf94c4c7
934fb26128eb621410c37e6672e0f988dc671173
describe
'39952' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQO' 'sip-files00318.pro'
cc2563f1329f495f7f31b02d2bf46abd
634306423f2013ff90657e3bf58dbab195c0fe69
describe
'40644' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQP' 'sip-files00318.QC.jpg'
6d715c1eff98f93490ecd9ffe2eed39f
d68636c01a91a6029b28ff82657b0e632d57385b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQQ' 'sip-files00318.tif'
90171baeac7c9df68efe04dcb75b2900
57bee33df2c23ce094d13bc2380a95c97065c412
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQR' 'sip-files00318.txt'
6096b80188865df979a986ff92a628af
6091cf9f0be2606942382db133a6cbd014a633bc
describe
'10673' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQS' 'sip-files00318thm.jpg'
c1a577417ce4ae020025417f32e76cda
0a19bd14ae75592d9d1f1dd554651224a9824bb7
describe
'330867' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQT' 'sip-files00319.jp2'
93bd5cce6aedf8cfa72caf9ba2e1ded9
f7ff5ae2c9c202c35b7df23b651fda01389aeee0
describe
'122315' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQU' 'sip-files00319.jpg'
90bf339e4dfa6c03c74cf6cbab01e357
e631252a5e6da002c7bad1f923f876b13c2a35df
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQV' 'sip-files00319.pro'
52b58cb91c732406202895623f538053
a017d5e882543f5619d7aff507c1da50c3431058
describe
'39457' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQW' 'sip-files00319.QC.jpg'
2317e61494cbafba516b9c62e63224cd
c645286507810440b29fa80bc7123dc88688e34e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQX' 'sip-files00319.tif'
5692309dabf37f5c97f0ad43c13ba08f
654966da146b218b680020ce4148c323076b7ca8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQY' 'sip-files00319.txt'
e1fa4e16980db474c8bf17b55239a47b
d8b7bf70fa20fec3f1f94feb2b256e42f720ce84
describe
'10813' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBQZ' 'sip-files00319thm.jpg'
357e8ac2ce344ed636ea3b12de771578
06c5d2a287a228ad867f2eacf5295d231bb3642b
describe
'330122' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRA' 'sip-files00320.jp2'
6e7cd7d4c895c778e2015a1d10c109d2
1a6a33bc620ed5eec49ed25c01804f1757d56284
describe
'125292' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRB' 'sip-files00320.jpg'
7e24bb28eb96f866c9ad8f06c3f19c30
50ee0432cbf0d6eb471101530ca7ba09b515a908
describe
'39819' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRC' 'sip-files00320.pro'
e2f19c0fce869a2ad4b17b7c54c6906d
401ac7579f7c49ad70f82b25334956bc8097e2ad
describe
'39923' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRD' 'sip-files00320.QC.jpg'
84e53f99f25c87dc168361cb1850f149
3285bb7a0f67800b012746d1fb29f2d11f74ea6e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRE' 'sip-files00320.tif'
b2805f4b0166043e688c6616f2c3f294
84a45168264cf6ed09c55aa46cc4d094f6a05a7e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRF' 'sip-files00320.txt'
4109013c0cb03ca493124574c8b500c7
08aeb266306f812fbf69f369a453f463eb319060
describe
'9987' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRG' 'sip-files00320thm.jpg'
2ec447de464911f9d11ffd5f2d8b5124
4a61eb057e15e3db7b5808d78aed6ef18604a14e
describe
'331879' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRH' 'sip-files00321.jp2'
b81f621d846669618dac0083b1670b22
c19443c65acac841439535a1b547399e7e7e1904
describe
'62396' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRI' 'sip-files00321.jpg'
dc8eadec1c95ccc01d201422fb1fa1a8
56354e13cb1a019213b88ce451bd807584fc4ef5
describe
'1158' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRJ' 'sip-files00321.pro'
b9b291b5c8366a3000bf3d4b601c826a
8dbbca14fa3791220649f3e581bcf8cfe20f7736
describe
'15174' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRK' 'sip-files00321.QC.jpg'
2d56525219a713499d3b3044ab0d7abe
bbcd635b83603f24d22d31686379c3a43d1b7836
describe
'2672412' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRL' 'sip-files00321.tif'
3f0d1d56e61e8ae40edf4bd7425ce1db
e0a76e7d91682d57f8aea02c98a1bf78be6482a2
describe
'126' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRM' 'sip-files00321.txt'
f87754f4d63b310f0bd9f7e7879ca891
06d17d1fedd6709aca39615b15a0d8c487356a76
describe
'4089' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRN' 'sip-files00321thm.jpg'
0260555dc8ef3c24bd3fa942272b2f5e
ef440023768e069681da9ab7b10b56c97a8ee985
describe
'328738' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRO' 'sip-files00323.jp2'
889d4d083158d9102f7eed433482c94a
cee42922c8cbe14ffc39aaa70489a11b9a57b03d
describe
'131102' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRP' 'sip-files00323.jpg'
29a32331089dbd2155584aac514a93ce
7755636b487171c695e97199d028984b5d18be7b
describe
'41719' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRQ' 'sip-files00323.pro'
681ca7d57c73206cb726fa1deea35fb8
99e60307fdddfa35d5df9d58fcf1def5829e78f9
describe
'41143' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRR' 'sip-files00323.QC.jpg'
b455ee204798e5c9f16f3808a0bdc850
320618cb6606997b3cf21a32cfef4e8b09e0b066
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRS' 'sip-files00323.tif'
2ebb3e804e8b55eaecb7a8298ae06db8
06077e1a0ad626a1727b153ee6f96fa0d39138dc
describe
'1649' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRT' 'sip-files00323.txt'
6aca613bc2a1a11a3689dac2f4215368
9189161dea163c0f110e1f1203c62baa66945f75
describe
'10294' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRU' 'sip-files00323thm.jpg'
3c4cd2cc41f5b0222f3510074799ae60
15b654fcec8b1ea79d15f5e0ebed5fa5e89bc5c8
describe
'327195' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRV' 'sip-files00324.jp2'
919f4a163d3bc5cd565f9f0bc64fbf6d
0410ddf6b84c01a2bf4193366422ce8e3bb1e0db
describe
'133318' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRW' 'sip-files00324.jpg'
6750a178a411f5b1a98b08e0b7e5d0d5
49d2f6853e51f39f623b0f84b3ab6f0d31050ca1
'2011-11-18T10:50:53-05:00'
describe
'42271' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRX' 'sip-files00324.pro'
44748474f4d794a6e16914629a51dac5
fc06ce54d73e9ec46bf706175079529eca491c14
describe
'43288' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRY' 'sip-files00324.QC.jpg'
69e4439c97cc1aa9cd02ddfec66d6b2d
27b473df9657dcbedca39dd1ff5c5183bb6b5a96
describe
'2633976' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBRZ' 'sip-files00324.tif'
f13da2ea74acb26be091ae836a6048e5
a1e413f6c21b99cc72c572d5b1de7e8896dc9c93
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSA' 'sip-files00324.txt'
a9191468b09b8ded70475c30885433cf
ec8034a85a597dcfb845213e04e7fa168d105679
describe
'10150' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSB' 'sip-files00324thm.jpg'
d471192fafb6df90d6001d2995ba4988
143f6453f8d6f79355066c63cb1629c81374548c
describe
'331944' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSC' 'sip-files00325.jp2'
8de53a6021a6efe018c57e7401d43e67
e978e40545b86c7f1e628ee06b1a550a294e823c
describe
'127697' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSD' 'sip-files00325.jpg'
ba7d63eb30684c42e6dee69296a08441
e971b2a3b55bff40f35f02c21a3dfc63a3ed377c
describe
'39927' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSE' 'sip-files00325.pro'
a056d20b074c470517415a5ecf6d1b26
fd82278d6740526149ccec433a3eb5d9f334e259
describe
'40247' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSF' 'sip-files00325.QC.jpg'
d1f4bf58ecd21330ad73b29715802da2
27dc85d93435ab6f862bb3ce8f5fd472464b8adf
describe
'2672004' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSG' 'sip-files00325.tif'
63a5910c63c47b7ee5533e93d671290e
a04238554f927c7ccc5b1ed67a63e71d6a229d7d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSH' 'sip-files00325.txt'
29511b7b32fd7a758448aab848f9b5d1
c8bcd8d6bbb16ee1928996f7908076aa35df8240
describe
'9737' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSI' 'sip-files00325thm.jpg'
02448003704658d694965c4c0fc434f7
a9cb98ec03c49397ff8d6255357ea7f5ac5de988
describe
'334798' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSJ' 'sip-files00326.jp2'
b097417a970266f4e02e0d9f59665854
2cdbaf81b7950d950eb77d5852e4ab529531dbd3
describe
'94674' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSK' 'sip-files00326.jpg'
1784d6dfad89e8358595c6417ba13ea3
76369a24bcf575129ed1fe869e0004fdb584581d
describe
'28804' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSL' 'sip-files00326.pro'
a498ab484823348f08dab8db384d1a6e
bf767e5be45f1a3c9ee3b7adab45b346d608d955
describe
'30148' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSM' 'sip-files00326.QC.jpg'
b148e7ef5779e8d91da326864afad7b3
71cab020fe0c384050815603063e82744f8c8513
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSN' 'sip-files00326.tif'
072bc77575e4f2bde550de804db6198c
8b21289277ad47d820075a2baac007e44cee9b4a
describe
'1153' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSO' 'sip-files00326.txt'
6b8cf97bb33cdeb689e81b957dc940dd
3a409d534502dffab40203d7d8aaff0630126135
describe
'7731' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSP' 'sip-files00326thm.jpg'
7dcae1a4f080a5b741a3ca40610afef2
4248986e89922b723f6115cc1ec1bade72fedb2d
describe
'329839' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSQ' 'sip-files00327.jp2'
e2975c347df128418426e455d97db3c9
53d79e563218d777ef74a00d0cf5716bfc20e233
describe
'99027' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSR' 'sip-files00327.jpg'
8bc3ac0ffe4d1be14d4825d15adc48be
87279344b5bc7e4f1b79778f72fd6581cb525912
describe
'30525' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSS' 'sip-files00327.pro'
256ec0c0cb389df8c0c4c41d7abc98f5
17ef6591e053d7f6a222bbae54f383d4852b6551
describe
'32031' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBST' 'sip-files00327.QC.jpg'
f179d0fb27379cf5145d741436469dcb
52a048ddf82b9e742ddae1d79508364a88b9f9de
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSU' 'sip-files00327.tif'
f358242b76defc976a03abd86210b273
b0a985dc3b1f1b9d7f303a01d722f58ee70696ed
describe
'1288' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSV' 'sip-files00327.txt'
1cdbf1c47e87856e1652c715f0508ba0
e380e155004b7cccd33337cdbcde2808c95a69df
describe
'8212' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSW' 'sip-files00327thm.jpg'
ccca5a7e9b75db5c73894efb6181a7fd
94ba6a696de72850cf3412fb3638ca0522b3c52f
describe
'333487' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSX' 'sip-files00328.jp2'
e601f32354c28faafcd0df9d6fc34071
e2f102773be828cbacf3a4c145782e0a12e539b0
describe
'130579' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSY' 'sip-files00328.jpg'
7172e6d064a102c7ad7cb6a4c2b3b40b
a4417c842ea267577f95f231f003032069b5d5eb
describe
'41851' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBSZ' 'sip-files00328.pro'
b818618f04e77421f89d0578ca90110f
b3232033d5ac256f889df8a57352e136ab710e64
describe
'41713' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTA' 'sip-files00328.QC.jpg'
9347dc090c5974e0be048bd5b3ee4363
765803c30ad259c335adfa71bc93377c5114e207
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTB' 'sip-files00328.tif'
148e560aaaf34d81376d85300f781ff7
1162361aa231f4d49384d06a12ba9a8497c96f23
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTC' 'sip-files00328.txt'
ce408ceb20672d2094e8d7f1857f8550
d0498281b45e812e84dd8c45b482ba6b533fd1cd
describe
'10310' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTD' 'sip-files00328thm.jpg'
865ecb83840bc85929cb0415ce5cc3d0
8951c2919f95a4e694cb1144dba7e7b2e2398f3c
describe
'337189' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTE' 'sip-files00329.jp2'
32bb2a315fe5ab2060b5802a34a888a2
c62aec190fe251f9ed3c35a02f38ba6d18121e07
describe
'123008' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTF' 'sip-files00329.jpg'
5864b5b190ded7bb17ce6721965b2297
b79cab4cfe81000c5a32a1a771b95c03a6dfc446
describe
'39963' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTG' 'sip-files00329.pro'
c8553dfdd4882f40072d98049e0dffb9
3a29f236246f27abaaaf395f38d6b8e9505b417a
describe
'39002' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTH' 'sip-files00329.QC.jpg'
a69a7bef79407846f09090c64aa924af
c11fbb9cdacbe3f86f0f3955c170f6924ddb249a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTI' 'sip-files00329.tif'
f031be91c2c20ef8e989473a589ed04c
4dc84b0a48fd275d269d621dc2d08ff509b315c0
describe
'1583' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTJ' 'sip-files00329.txt'
1311ccdc93ca8761ec9ac632831599dc
d1c9c3f759044675b4cf041390a120fba4e16eb8
describe
'9855' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTK' 'sip-files00329thm.jpg'
7a3e73eadf8d70e8cd78a49ee9b4776c
5d934fbf3b75a058a7549d2d22cb10da44d3360d
describe
'331511' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTL' 'sip-files00330.jp2'
c959a45d2f9c50d70721e9db7733b77d
10e8f30c4d7a97365d0b349bf3244b8737b8f133
describe
'131706' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTM' 'sip-files00330.jpg'
28e83cce5cdb5bcec5f357a2c1749408
0188dc96b7f742d1be5494111facdf1318f2701c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTN' 'sip-files00330.pro'
f87ba2d5c73f836cf28e3c8675b173d9
7bc2e6f03d2a584e95ae43034c32f26376e46097
describe
'42298' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTO' 'sip-files00330.QC.jpg'
0f7692ee8fb428c954c0ac77603ef59f
f0dc530b5b5e9b5664d4ae2a9275362762eb7178
describe
'2668400' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTP' 'sip-files00330.tif'
55e9b8368acfe54e45d557d915cae6ad
3186465a5d8e4a7fadcf68b463c2e5e82df77fff
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTQ' 'sip-files00330.txt'
1d361033bd3ebe3bd04378ef5eb9bbb9
508bb11b27538b2f514144bcb785df94bb15855a
describe
'10161' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTR' 'sip-files00330thm.jpg'
3dd1b20c06f174470a7cc8d51232e2b9
9b62663ca27218d3451ac68862e2f1eb12eb328f
describe
'331964' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTS' 'sip-files00331.jp2'
bafc7a1f01a6709a6dd5977e8bfdd0dd
45a841ac7830f2f0b4ba79ef94dac6b1e0723561
describe
'126980' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTT' 'sip-files00331.jpg'
3f2c27c5d45c64e084152b5d26549ea0
5e90354d336075d86fa6ec6e572ae6ddfe752dc1
describe
'39623' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTU' 'sip-files00331.pro'
73f08cc7ddf05d47147e93cebb6facf5
53c6abc7a00821dc0cb13d131812c1269afb8bec
'2011-11-18T10:50:44-05:00'
describe
'39707' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTV' 'sip-files00331.QC.jpg'
679d74c1289ef0d3cdd45e8acd80b167
0e2c2fa3a77cd567c6d359d7d485da4121cd0b42
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTW' 'sip-files00331.tif'
31442a1649ebc305906c10dada000cb2
329234dd9428b85883d7567ef86b5e30a0856147
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTX' 'sip-files00331.txt'
9c9e3b3a4f0cc5f0fa25b086db7e03f5
9ab4b4fbfce07cc78e2fe33e2d1723a6861824dc
describe
'10231' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTY' 'sip-files00331thm.jpg'
c0ece561a5485e042dc40dd4b0a2c8f1
f0266995388b1a12678d106ff3b9f6bf9689e582
describe
'324720' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBTZ' 'sip-files00332.jp2'
13dbd0ab4ec54ef1f7fc57b2bce33a28
59cd730f1ffc91cb595d5d804f71b3803588fd60
describe
'133294' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUA' 'sip-files00332.jpg'
17e5e573658f88d3b1a599b83dfce2e5
fb9fc025ef9a166aa303241e11a93f430fdff6c8
'2011-11-18T10:51:16-05:00'
describe
'42149' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUB' 'sip-files00332.pro'
58f47a1333808108b9e9b3ba2ae2c9e2
688ad52dbeb79391c9bbe0e8c10ddcd359f86b82
describe
'42833' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUC' 'sip-files00332.QC.jpg'
a70d9e4395b845462370c800d0f27a49
7d6abdfe3569a972fbd32a0bc21acc8aa544433c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUD' 'sip-files00332.tif'
dfc1931a28abd13c6e815be47361d8c3
9a4a1217c6a914bc07bcd34cb0e031f0143df323
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUE' 'sip-files00332.txt'
9028810a31524e6c751c7f683d117a7a
cbb0ea6055aeb8b02fbf4016f82a71151657b238
describe
'10505' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUF' 'sip-files00332thm.jpg'
337776ec8266e57705988e1f028643dc
b9b59f577d041e6d8f3d368c8fcab0fad9869136
describe
'334041' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUG' 'sip-files00333.jp2'
19b41fa0681b09cd36cd4e92ac2dcd35
33443a359eb58f1959a70f52aa0b70d849dfc757
describe
'126437' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUH' 'sip-files00333.jpg'
c51fc5901a155f60517489e998f45625
4a264e9992cdb67d426c940f8d7f75b8fb7fba34
describe
'41223' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUI' 'sip-files00333.pro'
b4b88ebd191ef5ae3f6ecefabf6f5aeb
4288b86891ddadadb8616403fecaf533c525b149
describe
'39903' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUJ' 'sip-files00333.QC.jpg'
8decdd7f924915866fba613b6baeb756
2ebba2cc7ace99711d645dd9ebfaeb8d9623f717
describe
'2688820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUK' 'sip-files00333.tif'
d8829bd6988b904d4e08621e410f5bcb
323d878a3688ed98b6426ce24ed705c37d1b958d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUL' 'sip-files00333.txt'
655a0ba3756a24a4f65d6313e7234404
610465b31f26cf00158f3e5a6ece85efdbe821fb
describe
'9653' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUM' 'sip-files00333thm.jpg'
78db0fc0657aea53316e43c222bd20a1
5862961cc6e8735524beb1c6a1cd1c1fe0c808b9
describe
'326478' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUN' 'sip-files00334.jp2'
f879a52f3401164164bbe1191d2e1e7e
1003cbba1d0b1a727a34308c4b7d04a9d485a21d
describe
'132388' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUO' 'sip-files00334.jpg'
298fa08b11a10e300a4e173a15532b03
9aa1a47119f44923a4512883d1ac18d0d0dab2dc
describe
'40720' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUP' 'sip-files00334.pro'
9967be230de2ce4ebfa5d14dd7e59c63
7f196a06b922483b853ddf56a550e3661bf798cb
describe
'42384' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUQ' 'sip-files00334.QC.jpg'
f5255c088d844565e274580d58dbe87b
89dd84b1cc62bc293c96a6c823bab9194b6f9ff3
describe
'2628380' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUR' 'sip-files00334.tif'
d0bc2ad5277e7143e397cf938477d896
eddf9f8a3e3c946e7d5663a876d061dc27f44de8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUS' 'sip-files00334.txt'
4d6167214afdfd5ae018ed82ae9aac6b
51f1a25712a88c9857aecdde9e004b1fc4e3e061
describe
'10418' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUT' 'sip-files00334thm.jpg'
8fa5947dba49f06c4b9cff5fedf6a205
2f203058e47dfad1a4cbe0788150ba1a4aa4a594
describe
'329788' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUU' 'sip-files00335.jp2'
3127c78b2ad402216dd6504f287cc228
38efefd7b1586e422533103b2efe6ece1696c377
describe
'118527' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUV' 'sip-files00335.jpg'
5bb394667d50437c0ba0c76c5cf7223a
62e3de5ccb1828017c6a1a976a560547167b7ece
describe
'38106' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUW' 'sip-files00335.pro'
d6fff100f9fb065e9443e8f4658d6dc9
376041218a6ec25847eb63a0d99d103009638b9c
describe
'37889' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUX' 'sip-files00335.QC.jpg'
848ec5606c9ff469ebfdccac7c9b0c3e
8e280137dba6a25e3087a8d28d602c46cfe51c0d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUY' 'sip-files00335.tif'
d6ffa27d91f56d74f274b8d4045f2696
c7017cadcecd6a0d698a9106763e23178770ebfa
describe
'1528' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBUZ' 'sip-files00335.txt'
e2ed52a1007168d0e848ee6c32ac80fb
2746a502473156e3e3c3906596527ce1882a6a96
describe
'10086' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVA' 'sip-files00335thm.jpg'
b303b9cfbd5199d3ad2c0d62fc2d301a
efc799636f707a94185f4f8ae0ec1349a1ca7a91
describe
'335041' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVB' 'sip-files00336.jp2'
388dfc2488fd5e0908489766ace381e8
4280166178956e07e95327a502da69269a5d93bb
describe
'116018' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVC' 'sip-files00336.jpg'
1478ac6df81c354f32cf62fe028f9561
687cb39f305a0677c8e62dcbb2c5b6b7ccb054a2
describe
'37415' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVD' 'sip-files00336.pro'
ba039e00c31d3ad5f263d404891f8024
9eefe2f95e524a451f60b42df7ee0f85bd6f19aa
describe
'36358' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVE' 'sip-files00336.QC.jpg'
dd05869aeaa603457c130e7c2705e153
528a3d12c69b56e32b52718628a5b41884cbb264
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVF' 'sip-files00336.tif'
3348eb2d0b5072a7b72d4cd1127cd5fa
7404f4ba29399b9c22bf2b1e1697a2ba06e0a5ac
describe
'1474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVG' 'sip-files00336.txt'
e546149531b5c03bd5f92f3d3e32997a
9fd3c86fb262780923068061e01b93bd97a61aa8
describe
'9006' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVH' 'sip-files00336thm.jpg'
3a8bf9425cf60fe71876a6d21bf6a7d1
b5ee2f1207914bd1621caf8ad22ea6ac320c3883
describe
'332962' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVI' 'sip-files00337.jp2'
43abc1a6050817c9eebdf05963737163
047745784660dc73e07e30c68d54fc25d56da6c8
describe
'107445' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVJ' 'sip-files00337.jpg'
b91e69cbfad90a67298d13e6844f71b6
a2fcd1f46bac5ae7d8d546cd5617bbf2e523b5d5
describe
'32460' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVK' 'sip-files00337.pro'
3b6e2369d8d3e23a544c08bb4f9da163
236f17ef5f7b2c9be8b146ed4b4d651904cb9d9f
describe
'34080' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVL' 'sip-files00337.QC.jpg'
f76261cbe6d7294a4c0b1c5a63f3433f
2e0a5e122d064a7c0f34fffca14f14bdff7d7b97
describe
'2680056' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVM' 'sip-files00337.tif'
f559f7080c9bcdb1196fc68d46b03619
10ea57d4399c909c1920be011a8b048a0a582110
describe
'1383' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVN' 'sip-files00337.txt'
b6351c4cea931d90baf4caeefd8cb628
a297815b78ba8465a35f04a0ff9226349b02ce5b
describe
'8162' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVO' 'sip-files00337thm.jpg'
40c33fc7b9b964d36f39a7a1bd7b2fe0
fdaaeddb5a5f263e7f7af468a8219a134f1430b2
describe
'337990' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVP' 'sip-files00338.jp2'
ed39afa434b343bbf9f83224b15f4f39
0da35b1bc8bd7632f12937dfb0126127e8a22810
describe
'126870' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVQ' 'sip-files00338.jpg'
0b9a2e4686689666c16edc9fdd96df27
89a45060e695d068339412223cf0e16a5a3a71c6
describe
'41170' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVR' 'sip-files00338.pro'
f0b6d0b6984640e3c395a5879f3e4905
387f493dd6bc3b0f7eaf5e8036132e567bceb5dc
describe
'41516' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVS' 'sip-files00338.QC.jpg'
61a5692fe28f4f7cfbccef5d68559d66
d0712a35a605fc3e230c88b789c2998c7e671b1b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVT' 'sip-files00338.tif'
2887ef19a6bf3950418e2364549a0c2c
7bd0bb399d6423cbb14bb386e2ba7ce4bb953d54
describe
'1614' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVU' 'sip-files00338.txt'
9a81026580d114c619383591d442a03b
6d63ecf1060f0f1761ac785fd95e9a001dacc479
describe
'9950' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVV' 'sip-files00338thm.jpg'
b5e5810abd5a07ab7806897ca3ca15a3
b96f094f13361e6f019029d9b4924eebb330bbc9
describe
'335096' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVW' 'sip-files00339.jp2'
2106100c7243a1cb0fd6d1f531cd7598
829c8523ae792555fac1333849cc2044cd78ca47
describe
'126430' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVX' 'sip-files00339.jpg'
5d74fae3e052b601b727fc664eef99ef
58326e2d6fd26917865a3b3e18e3407329b705b3
describe
'43015' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVY' 'sip-files00339.pro'
87af9f433f1638c7fdf03a2e86bff30a
4f30d806fc04f3d0972ab793c6e6c3d08fa88e56
describe
'39559' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBVZ' 'sip-files00339.QC.jpg'
5f37e194c2b658b07a4d7e34f1ec5db8
519d3cf9d3cd77e313f6a6e744f573a81a4a6bfb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWA' 'sip-files00339.tif'
c71c04acf00614fc2f21f1e0b2f35bca
d0c0ca919cbcf43e094badc5d141874826db5fde
describe
'1750' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWB' 'sip-files00339.txt'
0216f430e3aebcb36fa9d1a763e61ba1
f52ecdd120c47e39256e695edcaabfe02f1cb214
describe
'9804' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWC' 'sip-files00339thm.jpg'
88888c0c3aef5a5a49aec7ddfd4cc543
1d0bbb1dcc180d00137fd843b274b130aef0140b
describe
'335089' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWD' 'sip-files00340.jp2'
613a6447b86b39554af02a39cbebec81
cecb93ef9866749f950c73b49617568429fe2370
describe
'130461' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWE' 'sip-files00340.jpg'
90e8d927d46b5631065a7ccc63977bca
0b1d54896dae5a80c1cb35d180a4c23bc91a0ecd
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWF' 'sip-files00340.pro'
fafa938bce73d65908db081454b84f18
df1bab3268df10eb1ad1b25db0e793c17111f18a
describe
'40664' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWG' 'sip-files00340.QC.jpg'
4c45e47c6f99c5dbcfae8a73bebf8884
cc79e846ef389fef1e1a421d34659dfaf66db0c6
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWH' 'sip-files00340.tif'
6b062ca96104f414c7a80b24d42275bb
cfa64528085c394686650e49a158dbea414efd81
describe
'1722' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWI' 'sip-files00340.txt'
07397f5b9d7188a85cb01c34045cb805
628ed44e5ede00ea3bb1673a20f21b6a006fea73
describe
'9709' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWJ' 'sip-files00340thm.jpg'
66df96c9ff3aed324e0cb3cceb45dc83
a7ed14e5241130953be1a33fa229979434b9e3bc
describe
'337509' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWK' 'sip-files00341.jp2'
802dcb23b132145d2a1f2b298152c760
99af3542e50cc5d1990049bacb49ae72a7134052
describe
'130871' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWL' 'sip-files00341.jpg'
e594741e1bbc58a7265701a3306189e0
73839cf40511d8f1912e3d45e93d8ece9a5af02c
describe
'40637' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWM' 'sip-files00341.pro'
11e02afcf692cd2ba1c08bb6eab9f06f
cb63d7b6c22c3e37a833f3117cc1bd3bcbcf5622
describe
'42074' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWN' 'sip-files00341.QC.jpg'
a3db22c86ec3de5daa44e8adbc974aeb
8e5fc24d6aaccd58149092bb873c6a1a42e1d851
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWO' 'sip-files00341.tif'
596fefe80185d0171625e4b14052495c
d3fd3a75643d9549155f95478197e20977f73393
describe
'1660' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWP' 'sip-files00341.txt'
d50f3d53bf45ee24058d19121e11a241
a085b9461d5d22f27f85f080e77408278d7b114d
describe
'9902' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWQ' 'sip-files00341thm.jpg'
8dda1c542240604980277c5679561177
8888a0774d5ff2a538c8570a617cededea161fe7
describe
'326837' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWR' 'sip-files00342.jp2'
bb7581a7fc86fb7ad1092dcdbf198bd8
8cfae46aeaac1ff089f95ee5ea4644374966b187
describe
'135133' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWS' 'sip-files00342.jpg'
bfc0c6b8daaf2e6dad6b1fd22d5d7f7d
b1dfd89f24cc62548cc39a1ccf12539b40f9f7e7
describe
'41948' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWT' 'sip-files00342.pro'
168b9ff7935b6192860b42a5ad66e361
e9faf2de72213dd45534e0d5d12a0d5eeee68a4b
describe
'43505' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWU' 'sip-files00342.QC.jpg'
28011736837eb03d51649eebff7378ca
d7a5038f7aae847e3cf5ce0210a0fb4824de19eb
describe
'2631320' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWV' 'sip-files00342.tif'
f0d32370fd6414fc8e2038563d2145a3
6f9ce5719ff90f5d3d3184a71cbdc0adbf149e82
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWW' 'sip-files00342.txt'
73a0dda6f302068b184749b25922e70c
553c20cbe1a4826c760c76d37a4479d1a348f90a
describe
'10257' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWX' 'sip-files00342thm.jpg'
48a8d4a87cfe8dfcf55c848a2e3e4831
65a6de79db0c1cdf1e9599abaced77d9d3a33578
describe
'334801' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWY' 'sip-files00343.jp2'
bd159e1d956c51120b8a8dbd372f7aa0
4efaccad54bb23f0aa8128f0838e70512f85de5c
describe
'131406' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBWZ' 'sip-files00343.jpg'
8b57a98519dd9e5d08a5d9cf11fd4e13
344be8bfb4a059b249c3b408239a38d0e60d515c
describe
'43308' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXA' 'sip-files00343.pro'
f4e9adbd3fc7cb304232737cca7e29d0
44480bf507bdab0ab333424708d623922679fb85
describe
'40117' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXB' 'sip-files00343.QC.jpg'
ba48a1130970c08d61bc934acd84365a
e997fa238fa34b1bc83bfecdef21e36da56916fb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXC' 'sip-files00343.tif'
d79863cf512a8cbaed5cf15c0a2a2976
de9bddaeaa2395b0e6ca0cf8bbf6ea3df835ad92
describe
'1718' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXD' 'sip-files00343.txt'
c528f0a6c748cecf0214222e56333f76
d8044bacbceff93c8fcea358fd009137cae774e0
describe
'10228' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXE' 'sip-files00343thm.jpg'
409e6c61d6107cefcde119b9726de1b7
997349e5bb2039cdbfcb20cf34157af08db1e6a2
describe
'331683' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXF' 'sip-files00344.jp2'
f621759adde781ea8004b5d315f6abb9
8defda1395bbc9a7e3b338ab36177c182a3d72e2
describe
'130087' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXG' 'sip-files00344.jpg'
014bc2e656f6948f304f3b0ba5897dfe
57b063bf2398f065426cd3a8d6b8728e80175495
describe
'40184' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXH' 'sip-files00344.pro'
3bc7659ae02e1bea4e537a9981f1bb9c
d0171517a723a75703337d6ab793f428a502f05b
describe
'40042' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXI' 'sip-files00344.QC.jpg'
dceeb3bb42cf72ca50fe3a196f94cbc7
2c6f7cd740fe9d16f1d22f74ffb32b4af3f26115
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXJ' 'sip-files00344.tif'
e97a4aa3d64ae6b0459abbe279346437
295cc9cd4526becfde7b11dbcddd81de28253dfb
describe
'1629' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXK' 'sip-files00344.txt'
d1a68c79f9a8d651ebf2845df334793c
2d78b9b96a6b3c0e974258b68cc283e951379534
describe
'10345' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXL' 'sip-files00344thm.jpg'
a743099b5f7ae2e7755e16defff97c4a
e6a4155b426e2373e61a7ca5c0e1a6d7ed687da7
describe
'326983' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXM' 'sip-files00345.jp2'
df6c42fd6c67755cb473dfcad35ad264
b742052f5213ffca2ea5b7f8340ca85d1f16535b
describe
'58727' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXN' 'sip-files00345.jpg'
8373460fc93ed91e09ef17c12c3dea1d
bcb28bb172dfa0e31a9543a0e368684fbf16432f
describe
'1102' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXO' 'sip-files00345.pro'
ccff718ab59f7b7f7c100a932d8e9baa
f0f9e4d4f849a0893aee2d1d02374919e6b9256a
describe
'13565' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXP' 'sip-files00345.QC.jpg'
d713f9b56bd5d5779479a3d5a2787470
c434c0e0d8d60f7f645e58867a14871ed28199d2
describe
'2632896' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXQ' 'sip-files00345.tif'
b43db919ebb6378b59eeec3b7beb06bc
42deca46657159643066b37117e81f18ba203574
describe
'122' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXR' 'sip-files00345.txt'
7fd1bdd3f84797b2f7013dc3a5935729
0ae7ab1fcf06dc02814217af3ce6a6e09051cbfc
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXS' 'sip-files00345thm.jpg'
6c810ee064952aad52fdc8fe303ab99b
ede19aebe7f0f26916fe60a81d890cb85bac5e80
describe
'335699' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXT' 'sip-files00347.jp2'
ffc0bfbb817bb6759becdaca8089464c
b3ab43e4b46202497f424ba337c2a7501168da36
describe
'96062' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXU' 'sip-files00347.jpg'
cf8d8fead2597be7cc811fea19b30ff0
28b0105d73752a88c2ae369468b5dc5cc0e66c66
describe
'31291' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXV' 'sip-files00347.pro'
c7d92c5dc48d4f384df7b68616d15335
ca68cb493d97bdec6d4140df1f0d0e94fcfc4353
describe
'31067' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXW' 'sip-files00347.QC.jpg'
a6a04c6629d42b24e9692cffcfa5421e
ddfbc4cf5814a2f601dd88656ebdf165052b8f2e
'2011-11-18T10:50:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXX' 'sip-files00347.tif'
fa651430a797c8b6abc3e0c6b67d53b3
65a534518adcfa1194a31dd29356addb0b3be1ec
describe
'1235' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXY' 'sip-files00347.txt'
cec504ea27fb2192ced81fd257f7b72c
0cce55ea9ca62c24312f20c36a7f92e7bd6aea68
describe
'7579' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBXZ' 'sip-files00347thm.jpg'
6e4fd5fc29ad5d95ac01340e2984fa91
de1e1a37db736d9a42738874edd03ce0c95672f1
describe
'338248' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYA' 'sip-files00348.jp2'
ff1716d69865e43935320f2d8fca387e
5b7699f4d0c1a2e11d3669d0a7f0c8687fd8b6ce
describe
'105280' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYB' 'sip-files00348.jpg'
8ac23535efdc5c3103d5390c4ed960b1
d3ed2dbedea3a6f7a95a7761f0dfa3a77fa467c8
describe
'32106' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYC' 'sip-files00348.pro'
ac3d3eb8664ee0638ab5eeeab7b2794c
d45975439db78504a16963a5c159911a54f197de
describe
'33407' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYD' 'sip-files00348.QC.jpg'
d7b80a81e1019bbfac3b4d0912dbabdd
b2848cc421fa6a5fa3dd02afe38e21a3f8e03ded
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYE' 'sip-files00348.tif'
03e1eb304cdd67fb58c21653f275af7d
6feedcc15e7fb48310288f998e36529d98bef529
describe
'1294' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYF' 'sip-files00348.txt'
791c51b08778ef2a9fcb1bfa00574496
2988f8e37a707ab815adca842b89edeb4c1fbf45
describe
'8276' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYG' 'sip-files00348thm.jpg'
4fdc06fd97589063162ac6ca9d3e8fa0
394b3b29c07e90ed6d26efcfee1f3364be36f51b
describe
'332676' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYH' 'sip-files00349.jp2'
9d9117480e5662c0210b3e1f6f702163
40abe48760fdbd516a435ea4d70971b52c3cf1b7
describe
'122155' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYI' 'sip-files00349.jpg'
15e64070383945ae16cb174cc9894039
ff34bf3193c316bae13e16754dc3c2e011378e1a
describe
'41207' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYJ' 'sip-files00349.pro'
da2fc6d3c2bc8c6fedef073c9a548eb3
a5ff155efa35ea43abffa651a9c17661234f7314
describe
'38624' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYK' 'sip-files00349.QC.jpg'
93c87235b270973113857a73ce899b8c
f09bf80540de2d3a967c2c09576f84d982bb3ba1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYL' 'sip-files00349.tif'
fb9063904dc556099e140be8073f40a0
13615603c8cec3bd35727676be806cdbab827cfc
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYM' 'sip-files00349.txt'
b17aef5948a4c9c23b3313f1e785a6b6
ca25c19baff5bf86c145e3402ff78fbb7f366031
describe
'9964' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYN' 'sip-files00349thm.jpg'
815338d5b21d59d95fc40ef01bb4efab
1edf72396abadf0617af1e825da6595db3eae646
describe
'339533' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYO' 'sip-files00350.jp2'
a4f49f3062fe9336fe9142da86268b25
adc1519b8708e89d04549d0a11513cd16072dcea
describe
'118754' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYP' 'sip-files00350.jpg'
f19a982e0c6a71c51c086ae626f0b5e2
db03e4632be0c0f76eac5e847d44d28e62fca037
describe
'38206' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYQ' 'sip-files00350.pro'
b9a1304b72f5c76670bf09e01e7a66f7
d1318123828acb781137a80f2562af79bdda91ed
describe
'37455' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYR' 'sip-files00350.QC.jpg'
7750315f59a182de012c5348fd7640aa
51ff6c5bc942fd87da9f511375df0908c0368b7a
describe
'2732964' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYS' 'sip-files00350.tif'
8cb2ca96d0f4d9af12850b9092c97dbf
d0c929fc2ecf0162e157714ec51d631fc7adc4fb
describe
'1546' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYT' 'sip-files00350.txt'
4459633efbf861de012ccab3c0acb3eb
cc9393c922d97bc0d9d5276b2b334202266b97ea
describe
'9605' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYU' 'sip-files00350thm.jpg'
845fd84e831a842caf07df27ab4d9a3c
3e439ca150f7097d2e22afba9a84c234d7e373a4
describe
'325625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYV' 'sip-files00351.jp2'
136098c5dcf6ba38bb6f3da418724179
a3e25fc26fa4a04fbed0f843b09c3831d54a9cb7
describe
'121206' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYW' 'sip-files00351.jpg'
1717aef874f7740d0f8798a0965836e2
6282a05e4cf945bf7e891d90fb48e6a7f95653ae
describe
'38087' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYX' 'sip-files00351.pro'
c10e11d51d4ff98ffc2a02fc54952bf9
877315e4e812f23cd256b6cba29df15446e3d9b8
describe
'38875' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYY' 'sip-files00351.QC.jpg'
f1874727893258e9884faa8e118ac201
ee917f388a57cd47954ee2ed699661325fc5e55e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBYZ' 'sip-files00351.tif'
b272138c99d7ab5c26f34542987e1620
06efd63c32131afd1da6dfb37b3cafd268dc471b
describe
'1607' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZA' 'sip-files00351.txt'
606e0700140d4da45ba75c783e13224d
28c70cdae323090e386801d735e1afbe7d111c8a
describe
'10353' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZB' 'sip-files00351thm.jpg'
1bb651f36b37cf5b1a1be40c815589fb
4ceb6e6aa15c4f324dd494a2959058ea0281b59b
describe
'342713' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZC' 'sip-files00352.jp2'
9e17184ac70b44961307b079755cc57a
8ab0bf6a9c6d5e21d9dc4c6066532ac3b6966b07
describe
'123543' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZD' 'sip-files00352.jpg'
eee48eea4c2d696064bce489ab112ef3
a25e31e5ca8f19f33e9b37e027dfad01ad23c0b0
describe
'38834' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZE' 'sip-files00352.pro'
834d62db5a3840a01e602a2c7be25617
980860f6f3b8d36f54f8f759aa859341a3c77adb
describe
'38475' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZF' 'sip-files00352.QC.jpg'
9b815dc9b133e32c724866b8b0839d0a
d8fa4248d5e26c2a9fd55487a734223a2751c0ff
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZG' 'sip-files00352.tif'
e3cfb27049d2e03b9a872c0caaf74f9f
315cc1b7404fd9acda6b2b9c61588aa35b2b1e23
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZH' 'sip-files00352.txt'
31339acf3dcb4ef781a72ecac0ef7af0
4bc3bd6e63c634ff0078e57b2138832aa56f20fc
describe
'9568' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZI' 'sip-files00352thm.jpg'
b4eafd04ff1ff96fadf6667a7ed0607b
186350441fd07778c6b0dde0b96cbe8904bf0179
describe
'333712' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZJ' 'sip-files00353.jp2'
9436dfbe996d23896b18de6dffa08367
67cd82a19ff6a7aae108d2c07321bb4553479bd1
describe
'117820' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZK' 'sip-files00353.jpg'
3865edee8d5224504922633b83c15171
5413c9fc2cf7e9581abd2e3bc6ca032903d0a0b6
describe
'39712' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZL' 'sip-files00353.pro'
66b4ba46d1e9643d982a5cf70ad22ed6
060606015dbc0fa154eca19d645c2e6f843732c7
describe
'36871' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZM' 'sip-files00353.QC.jpg'
b568ee42c6438ffe5acf8cfd319ed96e
22c11010e9f8a37a992aef212af19bc8b178bce9
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZN' 'sip-files00353.tif'
cbb0cb747f6a4aa7e97df4da78251b24
11994d682429df97f3b274352688f8baaa631d0e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZO' 'sip-files00353.txt'
1a8f09dcd410249508243eb50f9dbdd1
bc2bf5ed6f48a7c83feb166c9050495727020c82
describe
'9432' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZP' 'sip-files00353thm.jpg'
d7b192dcb49f7cce414f33ed4ed51dc0
d94a94d8713e3d476e7d05a0974f6ab9ce8ec965
describe
'341150' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZQ' 'sip-files00354.jp2'
8c1c41ea474b4960aaa19742687353c6
2da578e6cd541346b1528b6e5ca97e5f89323398
describe
'127566' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZR' 'sip-files00354.jpg'
8f4432ab787cb2e50e756389f0f520dc
f3561cadd2d6914be5929c40c9f0b8f8f7b19db7
describe
'41232' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZS' 'sip-files00354.pro'
0e5c1b0f9d628ef53813f7fa134f42f8
ce1ce52da4ddc45ccd81bc7ed5a3aff517f7002d
describe
'40475' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZT' 'sip-files00354.QC.jpg'
2554e346c73313b7fdc771a635e90871
d912c29da73e597a88bcf328e14ec8e470068e4b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZU' 'sip-files00354.tif'
5f0477e9a10d963f1b24bf447c6a3f2f
17c3b54cdec36303c413f148ee39c0aa844da7e6
describe
'1621' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZV' 'sip-files00354.txt'
84d3f48f955cf7bbec3aae1e93765b0a
b52a79e1366231053f51ad3d9c7c61ba48ff9ffb
describe
'9697' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZW' 'sip-files00354thm.jpg'
c12ef55377951ba4a1a657cf41deabf6
56ddd66b15f69b5494f35931d569cad629a8b43b
describe
'330863' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZX' 'sip-files00355.jp2'
d37f5bcfc4c8781b7296dbb5e4001796
30d978652c5de02eef7a0545a75b598dd9473850
describe
'125507' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZY' 'sip-files00355.jpg'
8cc8a0d61656648d2d81e7fc5c91a9fd
1c6f84907ebd5014f2c0c4c4a728703cb59be18c
describe
'41792' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABBZZ' 'sip-files00355.pro'
0f000069bd99b47e1d9a8bce0c3206b3
1558c368fe8b55118d4e7ead133d9fe72317d1d9
describe
'39955' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAA' 'sip-files00355.QC.jpg'
32a7446a873eddc2cd5eb9adcb942350
290414a4a1e793f6d4e6a26f30a141b1569f1737
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAB' 'sip-files00355.tif'
a31f493b11b63881ba2d20917102b4c5
653a4a3f473e116dd43fe5a460a8c736f9c6e3e7
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAC' 'sip-files00355.txt'
73a6ce05e9c3f68486411cbe21791f7e
7a89f2a461d2b2245cf43e99386c238d4f65b657
describe
'11158' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAD' 'sip-files00355thm.jpg'
7707bad4a854595eb9cc244f784a80e3
f242b2d977f7c809b30a505393ac6c9aa8404fe7
describe
'330125' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAE' 'sip-files00356.jp2'
79e9b6bdc47d86027c24403a3779afa3
b1ebbe327c8ded2886658fda1511efe8b1c41afd
describe
'122724' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAF' 'sip-files00356.jpg'
e8b48c20320be002150f4c5d5b0d69ef
fd17c383b063ab516417b1d2bce721c9cb175f7a
describe
'39679' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAG' 'sip-files00356.pro'
040a6aeccc2c8ad18889a4ce8b8be695
3b92a3c113069093a7842aa3ad188807968a9adb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAH' 'sip-files00356.QC.jpg'
d0bbdeaf50c12956eadfe19c39748e44
ea99cd67eb757c91cc92331aa79558c87a90281c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAI' 'sip-files00356.tif'
56b83384c666959a6d508c4c30583cde
c34777e5e66ab3ad76c03d4ec17468965cfc3a9d
'2011-11-18T10:53:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAJ' 'sip-files00356.txt'
ee8699510a6d9f3d789a309b4c5b4200
16f1f0baab9d526e4aed71e2b9797d73659e9f03
describe
'9998' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAK' 'sip-files00356thm.jpg'
2a3b2abd65723aa681fa8188342be6a5
441e4259d0ee7d7f10653cbe6bb01b6be5e4c9c2
describe
'323584' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAL' 'sip-files00357.jp2'
c4493936466599b45f707a459b81c8d9
85ae0c3543cc4221cf1a38fdb8f3e1097897934d
describe
'99257' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAM' 'sip-files00357.jpg'
b12ac57cbb182e64932b0c1e743a7e99
286bfd8efaf934133b53013960471ba1d7d7d96e
describe
'30195' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAN' 'sip-files00357.pro'
7039228e112ef5d4d3debcc146752adb
e5fa62fe5627a7b2c5b7030b6e675b2694fdb07b
describe
'31384' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAO' 'sip-files00357.QC.jpg'
dffbd6321c0309bc1ac7e82b4623af55
3273dcfd4119aa289d86e42ef7cf86e4c62458b8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAP' 'sip-files00357.tif'
672288959b51c280019f2872d9ff6e48
2d58a34696a9abff20de424e84a53ec68fa4c5e6
describe
'1240' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAQ' 'sip-files00357.txt'
c2eb25cedc7bd4fbc04beaaa3a50f9ed
786fa0fb19bbc4ccdce19a3a5f85d0081fb43559
describe
'7854' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAR' 'sip-files00357thm.jpg'
c385dfed0d068fe9bb83acca12804cc2
91845250a8ecadad3a806602a2a9218183575527
describe
'334821' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAS' 'sip-files00358.jp2'
c4822fea4a196310b9c3e547e20d835b
7e296f0a049fdf07da12d3e433bf9c2a04e16baa
describe
'109392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAT' 'sip-files00358.jpg'
c7d5a08ff618dc92eabef870273517b9
6b986c93260f0b173e91868335704fb9361dd607
describe
'33435' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAU' 'sip-files00358.pro'
6acccd283e5a01b9061e711fe85c124c
2022b7dd335fd1c3b4d89ed8876e1b3ba5bb869b
describe
'35420' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAV' 'sip-files00358.QC.jpg'
4070f542becdac97163b19be9a3173aa
2807d715e2781ccce1aa716d85bcb0de657d7a38
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAW' 'sip-files00358.tif'
820ea8bf790a9640ef885674339fefbe
3106534c7db4241bc345101da775681cac1e68bc
describe
'1386' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAX' 'sip-files00358.txt'
13a47d2620b1b9d7368fe77c5debc7a1
00494e1f5f174e6eb0a643532e2e633df40f5571
describe
'8611' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAY' 'sip-files00358thm.jpg'
af138e3fc7b6762ba64b183c5229d2f5
ab80100c4fc4cda14af5bf501b5dff474b4a88af
describe
'326203' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCAZ' 'sip-files00359.jp2'
4df7dd285f1bf130333115152d4c3cd3
2d5d7f6bba984c1582197d1c8aae2c0658347eed
describe
'130241' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBA' 'sip-files00359.jpg'
be6801ca3fa71651ebee44f300c580c6
b57f90d9d1a092eeea57affefe21cb46d0831c2a
describe
'40185' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBB' 'sip-files00359.pro'
49f827e569425cdb55d4ead9e72cf71c
3d128c2e8f30dde36138e656203326af1d4cd400
describe
'41922' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBC' 'sip-files00359.QC.jpg'
838240101938d26d5def0856a9bdc421
48e9299b4e454c6cc8dc3be7ff0fa2e6f6e1c9d9
describe
'2626856' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBD' 'sip-files00359.tif'
53a01bfc168f348dcb5b4010874798e8
2a1b6bfcb6ce1e3187a4e4662b4a02f16af0f2e7
describe
'1674' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBE' 'sip-files00359.txt'
0cfd7919dd646e0eee36d6861fd53231
3969c6dd16902737bf86877c380a8bac5d59d246
describe
'10582' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBF' 'sip-files00359thm.jpg'
529554c75d0b950718e04a8b29bda1b9
a5899e560b8ba9ae2ad4085ac38297755f20f9ca
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBG' 'sip-files00360.jp2'
b13efe0ee12bf6c0c77246bebcd26a03
efa6a61a5b5ccb480c7f6f5d1b242b202af9a24f
describe
'127704' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBH' 'sip-files00360.jpg'
ece5b69d6b46c1fa16fcc05e8d425d02
67628bc489b9bb9d90feda646489cb83cb87565c
describe
'40982' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBI' 'sip-files00360.pro'
043dd0997fe1698048dcb9905dd11e26
93ba4e2a38f4ba1d011fcc01ac47e2323baff296
describe
'39822' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBJ' 'sip-files00360.QC.jpg'
19794bf8b8036275af94c70689c58737
22c9340dce6acc244b13cf7c7875dd2a9ed30048
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBK' 'sip-files00360.tif'
32ca26317e2b280ba91a183987e5d665
9855587ad632eb1dc424ee950a2d78b9b32aa242
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBL' 'sip-files00360.txt'
44c7c99f5ad5622fb18ebf9bb3dc6bc2
9649f38265dc765c641275863bbf682c7e762a3f
describe
'9557' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBM' 'sip-files00360thm.jpg'
da4cf9dbbaf19dbdd1e93819ec87583b
2f97f5a71d9f03b38ee536079b2fa893288ee78d
describe
'333777' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBN' 'sip-files00361.jp2'
5d43adb18f782c49d30fd9d9686ca9a5
d2921835b710df9a244867cf2e16afd3face6dc4
describe
'119125' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBO' 'sip-files00361.jpg'
7e2ec8c8c6eb02827e3836e8838db981
be522e373bf7aed1598dbd367fe8dc81c1fb6165
describe
'39569' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBP' 'sip-files00361.pro'
eeb95064e78881310f228f795e94b4be
06db656cb3eb79ec93803da5dee3e8e68c4ab1b5
describe
'38501' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBQ' 'sip-files00361.QC.jpg'
7c8c6684f76608e1dbe371ab788c9627
026e5680913cddc9b64158c9d69f3a6abe1bc9a5
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBR' 'sip-files00361.tif'
cdf6e976744e14a107292bc8bbbd9092
a650e127b57679c8be6d6fdd8b214a2aa2bb48f9
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBS' 'sip-files00361.txt'
ea74829f05bcfa64f1e335450b953966
d905ce75885e8bcf2761cbbc0655df542cfa0890
describe
'10071' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBT' 'sip-files00361thm.jpg'
250c5483542f16bc1e96fa899cc614cd
78c7379d475b53b2ef8461a753d06443ceb64393
describe
'342735' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBU' 'sip-files00362.jp2'
200480cedb255af0bf17639e96e9110a
9eb4e728da0c230ae4c7349ae2ca425edba22732
describe
'123540' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBV' 'sip-files00362.jpg'
cb09b735a6fe8219edf3ac04b2b1f923
402fb97a989594980b92a68dfa7c74c91bc421c1
describe
'39682' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBW' 'sip-files00362.pro'
f99fe76d1b09ae6836fa79681396dab6
7e79773d7b2571210b6a731cd9058a3fbf1c54ae
describe
'39421' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBX' 'sip-files00362.QC.jpg'
e98fdf215422a3edcf90daa8a61d6790
49ba55dd0148e7afa095f7eaf10a92fea67f70c0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBY' 'sip-files00362.tif'
99321e7c958adde27034aca53c2b1832
4bf36dea9e30f85e4e9009c8205ed626e665caf1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCBZ' 'sip-files00362.txt'
3f1ba181f601e2dbefda2a5c543dc1cc
e5b900bb66fbb2de00bd0a9a759547eac28a2e5c
describe
'9575' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCA' 'sip-files00362thm.jpg'
e8999d697b374458b8057f1e922c10c9
201dd4a3200a2a70d7d58d6d7e4f37e94f60875c
describe
'342193' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCB' 'sip-files00363.jp2'
e4f3085005f4d96ab06dcee75ad0161b
6edf1322cbdcca67141a3858fdc883b1f9b6abf9
describe
'123446' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCC' 'sip-files00363.jpg'
98e014b1c9588deed772436645c03c95
0da6ca986fea8113b40e77b47d8a450811947b3c
describe
'39596' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCD' 'sip-files00363.pro'
8ef7d62e25c9162c1a21e4e3e278dd85
3fd3d60168aceda13f45e2331d596497c79d81d7
describe
'38876' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCE' 'sip-files00363.QC.jpg'
f7e15e9368a2a47bb115e4e1488b345d
3204c07a3c98fef4fbd6ac366efdda28b8eaa218
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCF' 'sip-files00363.tif'
53264cabb905f955a18d4835cdab9c2a
472e5b1de3799b10135ed9cc19861a020fe9be01
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCG' 'sip-files00363.txt'
55481f86b208d29a38591d10c7f32e88
0b206b9b1ff7f456958f2e7548980ea79dc0f062
describe
'9637' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCH' 'sip-files00363thm.jpg'
2806425931f59acddb1e5f25249a2f37
e9869617782b3f5c47852cfa0469f455a625f9bb
describe
'339553' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCI' 'sip-files00364.jp2'
b46ff033a382f4e824c7c543c1ab0910
6c4782667536d048739c8d48faa454ac84d9c92e
describe
'127975' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCJ' 'sip-files00364.jpg'
cc41fc9cbb5f4031a1f7380e62141d09
d0ed4f801d5b96e475a79d6a7e75037779a131fc
describe
'41832' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCK' 'sip-files00364.pro'
4964b8f4519a893d2fb14ae51265fb39
635a9be1c8b50d87cf587d642a8a442629c52183
describe
'40705' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCL' 'sip-files00364.QC.jpg'
d6fa620403f06af961044c6decb2054c
8ec5c2d58df2a43e1903a8de3ec2807aa6dfc769
describe
'2732956' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCM' 'sip-files00364.tif'
5809fd591a16bcbaac0544a09a8b62dd
251f9bd2f5bfecd03a8bf470fb50477cb7c47a64
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCN' 'sip-files00364.txt'
b301ef7286564c1ffd79934bd9b18c51
1c782622a33a2ec83b0d857992f3c9612780f072
describe
'9679' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCO' 'sip-files00364thm.jpg'
61177b8cc5417b07f7e977a724c1c790
992c2b0100d4969b28b8625fd5d9f3230f324a2a
describe
'345355' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCP' 'sip-files00365.jp2'
b38e021b701edd3c60436d662e6c99e7
d745f96abe11d2e41be7bd92e1b5a1e860a6b793
describe
'123592' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCQ' 'sip-files00365.jpg'
46e2373ce4259956aff5417aed562247
99e1efe774c24034a8000e6a508352093bb2fc71
describe
'37809' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCR' 'sip-files00365.pro'
9e79a78ab200ae84ee78d6b3693aa6ef
568472099a423b59829318e80bf9fdf47f8a7ba8
describe
'39152' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCS' 'sip-files00365.QC.jpg'
13f72b415978b3b5101d6b8b46bdf1e3
5439bfc89b9477a77c94a0fec8754ad3371fac3d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCT' 'sip-files00365.tif'
4e2d9419f179d9100c6e444f5f82a54b
a16605cb540ad2d571f0ea07bafb796b02e7f199
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCU' 'sip-files00365.txt'
a6fe8d5c535c32de02fe81767f0f0ea0
ac411c71f17572c3a6032db554ac7aa2be9d02b1
describe
'9447' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCV' 'sip-files00365thm.jpg'
bd7f4412c70f0feb25fe942602f5c584
48dba0f2106e0b1cd427693c1f93cbb1626b867a
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCW' 'sip-files00366.jp2'
2eba5949c0c57342d5d3e704cb2fe6ed
fc65fb674f487154bee42fea42b09b5b217e69ef
describe
'131362' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCX' 'sip-files00366.jpg'
4b83b01aae3da24ee0c09200f8ffb2ec
1088c64636668e01b9f58817c045cfc30fa35499
describe
'42420' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCY' 'sip-files00366.pro'
7230d3828a758bd16bb99fac11662c5a
1e39a7b393d8cd38316b99faaceff69510216526
describe
'41737' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCCZ' 'sip-files00366.QC.jpg'
7e9a2c14016142a493ad9b8bb65d6465
987c76d9a9163eb3a5a77269c6c0f6d06f00cc3e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDA' 'sip-files00366.tif'
1895a2a22c43891ac14d61a913ab0fa2
b2f6081f19f45c0fe1edf291e2fdbb9324350351
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDB' 'sip-files00366.txt'
83d573ffb01440efc2f12b6cb98c1cac
c6684b68dd3dc02b5aef9b3274cb16fd66ef43bb
describe
'9832' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDC' 'sip-files00366thm.jpg'
494b4e02ad87834b6aa862838e1e3e0f
aacfbc8dd4bcb8afa8ad551afbb5121690297df1
describe
'336914' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDD' 'sip-files00367.jp2'
8833b8e83e9e35fbb3c0411fd773ba19
6b3c11069706f3bd172ef06a68afe0f47d16c9de
describe
'126890' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDE' 'sip-files00367.jpg'
d8bc4ddc27162e2468f21b9c9706eaec
ae9d654db5fdc99b88297192f3b5d18b1110ac77
describe
'39836' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDF' 'sip-files00367.pro'
be887cdb66f675fa97262449663eb603
8b8de94adaac0229ca5b0401dccced0cc266c401
describe
'40927' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDG' 'sip-files00367.QC.jpg'
4fb2a89abc505e317fc0c7e382207d5e
d395f9d33fa9a6188578b912b24261fcd7e014ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDH' 'sip-files00367.tif'
a61c7580e71628d5066656bf5be7c6c5
9e70d2fba06df3aad549fe45e898c65cbe63977c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDI' 'sip-files00367.txt'
862a1c74b5c31572146db0a71105a29b
4412f3232c67af0282becb8ebda3a17536c5d521
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDJ' 'sip-files00367thm.jpg'
7c0f10dc8b21f6785a500bbd5271dcef
e742ec87cd086921d5155b61a5a8068ec57a559d
describe
'337991' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDK' 'sip-files00368.jp2'
d671df4a577eac65e7a22e0c140b8a0d
7f59124da684dd7c52d27f11963be33862a36a69
describe
'118018' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDL' 'sip-files00368.jpg'
eb29bd768ff7d12bf24a582e337f34e0
1f06be68ba9a1697964fc79ba7bea5aeb0e0481d
describe
'37245' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDM' 'sip-files00368.pro'
37e986a5194a8453afaa557b1b16ff99
c9725b9442e65f43bbda8649c905a11b068ea8de
describe
'37647' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDN' 'sip-files00368.QC.jpg'
853fc0fb0ad2e526dfa85a6b430f287b
99eb5ee49c6db5927c9593f142127dca56ca8d27
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDO' 'sip-files00368.tif'
7b72d682c4c9e9f43c7309c18dbb0a16
3f12eec67df74c36837ec19614595df2cceb4fbe
describe
'1471' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDP' 'sip-files00368.txt'
ad67df5d328d39e4b56a9f466a27942d
c793b2a9a349ed240f45e7144664279e31f7a35f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDQ' 'sip-files00368thm.jpg'
1df4061921a2e6dab44a76919c105a26
597b06cd1139aabf22fed1d3bda6af3be15f2184
describe
'317404' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDR' 'sip-files00369.jp2'
405dc767d13366018c33ff17995f181d
b102118a40289d1ad7efcfde73e87d5b36dc3d60
describe
'56444' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDS' 'sip-files00369.jpg'
54cb286e496e1e9c286f63a85bb7882c
9c0a35ecdcf063095a92fc8d3572b1cc20becd38
describe
'1401' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDT' 'sip-files00369.pro'
d3f0307392c8c1a8955b9c5dc885c39f
b5890882cfccf5b3a7cff3e0ca7c35cf81440166
describe
'12581' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDU' 'sip-files00369.QC.jpg'
e0f2d130e001d714c5fee1a4bd089940
5966a0de8902d67c7debeec299368331ef8cbc0f
describe
'2555996' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDV' 'sip-files00369.tif'
17975dedef8a68e83f9ff23d029b8eb5
a7e5b01bd62aad17ad8ef4f616ae181d63a982ab
describe
'131' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDW' 'sip-files00369.txt'
ceca60ab899a99ffab4abd67157e5d10
7cc319e68fdc7c71a4679c63c0434adb4b79aeba
describe
'3038' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDX' 'sip-files00369thm.jpg'
f8306b5a0e778793f8b976477d918bfb
f9d22e33d9e1c5fa79960c3d040a58ea971fe2ae
describe
'327757' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDY' 'sip-files00371.jp2'
1eecdb3a23acf2eeed50cd94068f5df5
eab628fd5de9e248fc14a41988a87447a636688a
describe
'102689' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCDZ' 'sip-files00371.jpg'
5c63b848305090a566bac681a7f919d2
042b29af236e5206d93fc30343cd13544c703102
describe
'30965' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEA' 'sip-files00371.pro'
929e29fe83bf9f34d5ba092025afc6c9
f56bc6533b615b2c1ff0f3fe1b85f98bfb0af728
describe
'33110' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEB' 'sip-files00371.QC.jpg'
669929adba1110f83b02ef5bf18e8d1b
aac37d5124ed2f2271f701465547c8231540ffd9
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEC' 'sip-files00371.tif'
070be37a8fe16293bce5cc45c0a4ad71
82180a413bb07126a953f488812c7b87f974f6d4
describe
'1311' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCED' 'sip-files00371.txt'
8b3469614374de4ea34213359163e0e2
6f74ee7af715cc03d0039b0cc84c4ec07885d108
describe
'8379' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEE' 'sip-files00371thm.jpg'
eca50df912adcc37477c5366b919bd07
58e13762c453beb4276366461a2e4a570cf66a5b
describe
'342973' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEF' 'sip-files00372.jp2'
4c06316df34a32a6a5b6037eb99029b9
b084fd6db72f248dd537a282e007ce4b9f22031c
describe
'129071' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEG' 'sip-files00372.jpg'
0b7512e5ec552362a5be5d5ac7bd6320
190b6a3dff7734f6493a8642d42b98b05a648e33
describe
'40789' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEH' 'sip-files00372.pro'
191148ee92857e91133c44f0aa585abc
465615a040d1575d1344fa7fbc218fec107eb023
describe
'40816' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEI' 'sip-files00372.QC.jpg'
4707148de8c7efcd691d28aa419f32aa
cd2c9a0d2bf94a41a738235a360df5180f9ba06f
describe
'2760288' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEJ' 'sip-files00372.tif'
035ce9bdb6d11d6c3557e161df51c5b3
aa95d8ba028fc7112b85c4b7dab8a18d060b168c
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEK' 'sip-files00372.txt'
8c7ea8a8a2547b2312d8dd09164e2618
fd8777546f6038b43d4a6c0c4a93ff01f5c05a31
describe
'9986' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEL' 'sip-files00372thm.jpg'
886a2ed619d42f0a4a9f6613842d648c
00e90c0101cb3e228be72d4fb5dc925a0e8019fa
describe
'333771' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEM' 'sip-files00373.jp2'
b62d180b1d1e3d4875645ddb1746fa8a
d1a195a6ec5a41debb513874123b75268b1f841e
describe
'125762' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEN' 'sip-files00373.jpg'
0516f833bd249c5b53939c8c60407eb4
b7cc381829c648c8c278f3b8a2e1dc2989a04796
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEO' 'sip-files00373.pro'
45d7110e615ab5522d67f1746f5c799f
53de92378a82239a7155a0c7d4723731e3767833
describe
'39990' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEP' 'sip-files00373.QC.jpg'
24c225093ed91c59a8d51a0835642eb0
4f88da576395d5274eed8f3c759b0be482ebf24b
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEQ' 'sip-files00373.tif'
749eed5b056e63c5f49fb991190d3929
a473bcbd31bfd0204511a3d834ac86139a8294b1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCER' 'sip-files00373.txt'
ace54ec2df0934cb9872b84108ffca4a
49b4a75ade92e165a659bd9cd16998bbfea76259
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCES' 'sip-files00373thm.jpg'
ef906b0eaad4d5d5567c58bbdbecbb26
5dfca43d4588da521c2287de136569f42a92489f
describe
'336521' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCET' 'sip-files00374.jp2'
02a706e442d9f73d010797a406ac4d82
17a09ab48f060fb406507511d7e3956558278e83
describe
'131752' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEU' 'sip-files00374.jpg'
7bc2e98a00c487c0ae7e50fb4176dbf2
a88dd67114c05b334282f6cc13fcc13bbd687859
describe
'41312' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEV' 'sip-files00374.pro'
60b84675a96f2bfd99109e69e7f87aae
3e18ec8408d2a6bbc5db6f817785353a37678153
describe
'42290' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEW' 'sip-files00374.QC.jpg'
44280b8b29a58f052f256054a2e96edf
012ef6a9353153a53740b1f4ab9f4bab07c4620f
describe
'2708708' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEX' 'sip-files00374.tif'
66fe2924e6622410f7f8ad0e8e5cc556
e10b6c23d1595426803a921f6aedc100180b48ee
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEY' 'sip-files00374.txt'
28d0f09e74a0064295a4abaa105a40bb
3b24d18543da7f224fad86033b99c743614282ec
describe
'9906' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCEZ' 'sip-files00374thm.jpg'
3f76255897cb1f381719d770fda61624
fa9777ee8a51607296045165be1d305baf1711c8
describe
'331765' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFA' 'sip-files00375.jp2'
ee661fab23ff88597221faa9e5d7d520
03a44199921c724a090b9657e76be27d792fd4f0
describe
'123371' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFB' 'sip-files00375.jpg'
e1ee03ff426bcf2162c1df748ab235bd
0e376d2e0e885f15ee68d3ded7162d818ee3703b
describe
'39496' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFC' 'sip-files00375.pro'
730450a4e683ea784a7cf1aa27650956
b0343b1f489a308103e821c1f5cc156af5df0874
describe
'38553' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFD' 'sip-files00375.QC.jpg'
486de9f995cca56cd12c7681edfd7305
2eecda151a6522d0443ffd4218b606609f544a2f
describe
'2670920' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFE' 'sip-files00375.tif'
5d01102921d526c1c2381853d8302d64
60aa7a27072e3c728bf5e983efc2142c41209765
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFF' 'sip-files00375.txt'
93f182ef69af006ea2c460ef54284cd5
db915d359aeb6ae2f46ac2b19b0b05c37a16818e
describe
'9576' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFG' 'sip-files00375thm.jpg'
27e7197aeb2c9913edfad8cfb2b16c83
c2ddcd271d1fae6da6d3fb934c4f6212a4633653
describe
'334191' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFH' 'sip-files00376.jp2'
76ee8e7ae81513891c5478c9d4c6f270
b9d5c85fb1198a0fd681090bd32b7bae24665880
describe
'118836' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFI' 'sip-files00376.jpg'
5c6a072324f2f6ba3daf30fac14d4595
caed09d2f9bea291eb22c90a84def2a854591a14
describe
'37200' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFJ' 'sip-files00376.pro'
f749bc02e17e7f71efcaabb9bb57f775
e22d27603c261b049480891ad494c8c2ff15add1
describe
'38011' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFK' 'sip-files00376.QC.jpg'
f08cc1c8fe9f83a12efdc55e8f913d22
b05cd21f38fd8933f6cfb3522a8b2eeedc014aa3
describe
'2690280' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFL' 'sip-files00376.tif'
002546ebb15d5f46856dccc663c9524f
dea7f77f5ffad668a22dc7d2606b7b8028eaaec2
describe
'1469' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFM' 'sip-files00376.txt'
664132b4bb0828da675c994f08fbd0f0
aca969ee980d45e9a6fcb8f4af388c696be37800
describe
'9565' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFN' 'sip-files00376thm.jpg'
be69d7c205cbe923ddac032b196f2c5b
5f30807e668632bd104f069633278417c31a4910
describe
'327880' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFO' 'sip-files00377.jp2'
7082a98e857da4e572dc948ab63bbe40
3c3c7823329772391a198201f0043e491edfe563
describe
'104735' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFP' 'sip-files00377.jpg'
432af9e412e10905c380fa311d23f7c3
18ce7ad1d82675c97a9178c015359cbdd13c497b
describe
'31106' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFQ' 'sip-files00377.pro'
58c8657f8565da6e5be574c68ac29a61
725c6484031fc71ad2d96b0fe5d15fce293f3d65
describe
'33808' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFR' 'sip-files00377.QC.jpg'
32be86b7b3f8d3c2467344a0ab784fac
26dc577717704ec7a27fa59fa5c408b947f0be1e
describe
'2639616' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFS' 'sip-files00377.tif'
d4499c0c4c50967757e191e93e7315dd
8f88cacca50be2e37a8b125881df97624fd4d0a0
describe
'1354' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFT' 'sip-files00377.txt'
afbe1ffc758ce86387aa217124c2d668
04ad62c8ff5cec4cfde9e874347d3096dd0051ab
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFU' 'sip-files00377thm.jpg'
cf66170327785eabb79f548655c04a4a
38241b91abfdd4e29fbe23c2903d4018ad279067
describe
'324341' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFV' 'sip-files00378.jp2'
7f2fdc79934be02b820061437ca4b98c
a8cab81384da02cca73d65570d085d6a5bac8e61
describe
'142754' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFW' 'sip-files00378.jpg'
80bc15f5f03f66977c61e7199217c0f9
89360a93f3ea57a48e05b4e430bb35291a9ed0d3
describe
'41152' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFX' 'sip-files00378.pro'
faefb0c0f4e091e829c0b66c23116873
a7da58acb52e17e3c14ca0f7780d960995790be9
describe
'45111' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFY' 'sip-files00378.QC.jpg'
8d28c61075b22da1826776d0dc06e83a
a8b0af5454796b6664f6edde256b416328dce4b8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCFZ' 'sip-files00378.tif'
c1beb2c0b2c97741c82f12ff90143ff0
da984d644f388482bce8d5032bdecadcfbdfe462
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGA' 'sip-files00378.txt'
703bba548260c7b4e51d343c569736f4
d35326a4ff0111b8f3a08f13f38ab96497ace19f
describe
'10693' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGB' 'sip-files00378thm.jpg'
bcb01a6064567a52298070430c056ce1
7ef615eb50bc20a6bf3341d3d63da29c17cd1f09
describe
'327474' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGC' 'sip-files00379.jp2'
0ccc179f6516ca4303de52f9a22f11b8
e5eaada5caca7c8324721b065585948dedc0a806
describe
'136194' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGD' 'sip-files00379.jpg'
4507ded799153ac5e08458b1eae1832a
a2dbc54376ff8a0539cd3df90b78ab0b88e50d2a
describe
'41970' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGE' 'sip-files00379.pro'
ce66bde0ba7b032a7f4c70a434abcfe1
bdc1b757e8bde0f7e5dd006d4134ac177595a5be
describe
'42268' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGF' 'sip-files00379.QC.jpg'
f1993f5e8eb15a245d03c18093662abb
0168fa50254814f686acb560ec6b63039e24dab3
describe
'2636272' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGG' 'sip-files00379.tif'
0dcce048fa141cb3dba09e328499bb78
eda2ec959e920ee150e2f8fb5f3d7effbbb287ed
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGH' 'sip-files00379.txt'
c6f9b6deb83998afecd69291203b5b30
c5548efe1542ddb4e7c7a58721203e6c99ca29b3
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGI' 'sip-files00379thm.jpg'
2bb2b5117777944bc731cc2af6d43935
4d660805345ff3be8a894e6e75108304fc85b3d7
describe
'331595' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGJ' 'sip-files00380.jp2'
4a8a90aa153dc845a0e662cab5102d5c
89a28073de067c0508e69afb009676e5ec704103
describe
'132299' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGK' 'sip-files00380.jpg'
91133d852f9f80567148c90f006cafb8
6d3cb797ade4422e562187bd0635748109ec6a41
describe
'41569' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGL' 'sip-files00380.pro'
238824a113338a3d280b1c667e465bbb
68f7d8055c26cda175d6c5fdb166c05e0a8f2b05
describe
'41901' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGM' 'sip-files00380.QC.jpg'
09526f679b4fa69bf81c00e438a2e31d
e11cc378f2adffe01d589b75a8f612ffce1a62ef
describe
'2669340' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGN' 'sip-files00380.tif'
c491438a7dd9f6323a14e1f18d3d31d8
24f3500065538b542f695b38d317c888e1a8805d
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGO' 'sip-files00380.txt'
58e9fb999ac0e856fca345d99e8dbb76
1c8e342273de942c7f1ae4f2294be2adf113edf0
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGP' 'sip-files00380thm.jpg'
c1356fec97969473ae30805ae23b17d9
5ddb1e499bc7220e7e0cf3b26826d1b268f7e848
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGQ' 'sip-files00381.jp2'
d981674482e8591152cbdb58e5fe811d
151d0882515034e73aba708ee87a1895b9a31a21
describe
'122352' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGR' 'sip-files00381.jpg'
8d1f63e5abaa42b0a6c52407cb4ccff4
d160896d725c966db06e5281efcbe813b78aef4e
describe
'39375' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGS' 'sip-files00381.pro'
50ee6e9a9f13076d3934337dc64022e8
500428548645e295ff23a1d634e530f27878645c
describe
'39033' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGT' 'sip-files00381.QC.jpg'
1ffe7c35abd157b44d8da2a3724343ff
65e6ff196622a2d09ba8b398416964cd7f63ee78
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGU' 'sip-files00381.tif'
7fa7bac7d400205bfafdfa69369a66e5
6c124ff04d45a2ca0d6eb700987b26bae82c49eb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGV' 'sip-files00381.txt'
1539b5c8e30d373d1123202b34bd0865
0fad426fa9af2ce1b11546756c6bd9367c6e7c1c
describe
'9493' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGW' 'sip-files00381thm.jpg'
641188b2b8d2d0725fd91fe104767c9d
b68543bdf0b98e2c64244cb39b64ac701e0839b4
describe
'342668' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGX' 'sip-files00382.jp2'
ce4543bc25db1680957da97bb5f7a5ee
f7b2748d2223e4424cafc3be035fa6467b6b4342
describe
'132702' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGY' 'sip-files00382.jpg'
732d7826141f9cf0bfcb238d7c07f368
1396cf605283e46cda0c86025cd420b3b92b66fb
describe
'43039' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCGZ' 'sip-files00382.pro'
df78a0b114507f2f2b87296e8549f808
b9785a5dce9efb58a8a5a3a742b8ec0f4a90c5b6
describe
'41726' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHA' 'sip-files00382.QC.jpg'
82702aaa3da3c46733ecf55f7650e978
762732f45e9f485d7209b6db9aa44a5398f1ed81
describe
'2758436' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHB' 'sip-files00382.tif'
e3ab4337b8e45de9b1137fae76f70c3b
7814f713d0090e6bf7c3d0cc02f7b39b0ce01899
describe
'1686' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHC' 'sip-files00382.txt'
5eba7d7b5fcc2ab952d68878cafc8c19
ee621c433367a8159eb4ca0ad6d4d301c1641c31
describe
'9477' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHD' 'sip-files00382thm.jpg'
43abefd46288c634af5ed1ab408d8b16
f365705b5420152a110d068787c095012a109368
describe
'330119' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHE' 'sip-files00383.jp2'
210d440a58e1597d055741361d0e1402
379ab0481660b61c7eb11f7b40370b6b4bdacaf7
describe
'127346' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHF' 'sip-files00383.jpg'
2e7df7c5d06c7dc040e74ebfb542ebbc
8ac04770488ab91e04b2a67ef9653b2cc708126a
describe
'40660' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHG' 'sip-files00383.pro'
36749ee415026fd7b18e415378bb6612
9d5e292268fb37ef4c3667eaced287afa0228cb5
describe
'40304' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHH' 'sip-files00383.QC.jpg'
dd30ee50e55d69090b8b5b75f41685e9
357e64068337e5a5a3fca8f6d963dd821f63d4f2
describe
'2657528' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHI' 'sip-files00383.tif'
3cbbc0333814eeca7124174cfded2ea2
fb8e2390bd122a12cced514f47bec77a4508dc7f
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHJ' 'sip-files00383.txt'
e6a5a3005208b0dca4fba8c48351cbbe
cec08847f437eb80eb4ddf6df06accb2b8ddd9bb
describe
'9872' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHK' 'sip-files00383thm.jpg'
13d5e141ca78681a60a483b49c58824d
71315fc90ab431aaad05ba20c794d41400c3766e
describe
'344543' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHL' 'sip-files00386.jp2'
d7179c031797b33da4e812ef0beabfde
c99256dc35da875d101c035887f393669e7ecf29
describe
'136925' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHM' 'sip-files00386.jpg'
5cbd6fadb954eca4cbfded732712c1f5
802204b715b7d1f986cfd077f10b9a5200360ed1
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHN' 'sip-files00386.pro'
f99ce6790a39535121b28195456de788
421be373b82ff23c2ac315499441de396e9352f4
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHO' 'sip-files00386.QC.jpg'
fa3dd3ba9a70c49ebca48b5862bc5cc7
96d6b4bcc8abed60741a3639c00f5575438bfe73
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHP' 'sip-files00386.tif'
4bb36aa9c45f9e0f002bdb406584b77d
11442c5f3f23d5b90d6881be92b4ed56f4929887
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHQ' 'sip-files00386.txt'
f1cb78abe40bf741a97bf023c3253b70
5cfc85d0d680286bb70dc333fc05d8669d874d79
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHR' 'sip-files00386thm.jpg'
dc7ea38517148c50b253c1e4e2ef769d
fba69b89b3bd01cceffc5d1449c1028aea53f792
describe
'335621' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHS' 'sip-files00387.jp2'
9faebfb04b05b3c91b75fe0385e8b56b
469b0cacdfcb1c7927f9a8ad67cc05453601bdd0
describe
'51323' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHT' 'sip-files00387.jpg'
28382491af98cb65c0503b8e2d0bc0a8
e761ee051b37703dd53144d653bba3918ce72732
describe
'834' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHU' 'sip-files00387.pro'
a52a109a7c0108ab71eedaafc13991b8
48c5dbbdd4cad7766647450ae191995980d4e483
describe
'11476' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHV' 'sip-files00387.QC.jpg'
477b02670a0d1eaaab923d03664d174d
db1e45831daa1f097b220c1046e631336183aaaa
describe
'2701904' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHW' 'sip-files00387.tif'
1acb3c508d8d8a77481be318b0de6225
a03c85477bc1f55ef6876d34c9eebdf185ecd6ce
describe
'112' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHX' 'sip-files00387.txt'
f98cda63593f36d89309b4a72f746679
4bc16840b2139672973c8dea6500c3751988719f
describe
'2884' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHY' 'sip-files00387thm.jpg'
f899754deaeb2972bc85f31a20ed9f25
4b5b0be0531e1b56941b605416c78eaec564a48f
describe
'333803' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCHZ' 'sip-files00389.jp2'
377cd0814104fc38c999674c817e22cf
ce10945b79fc3a07deab1e6896ffcb279d9b390c
describe
'113455' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIA' 'sip-files00389.jpg'
4907d154122783187dd4a61dff877932
319fd837c59e0d3f3e2e58d920b4d0c348aaaea9
describe
'35028' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIB' 'sip-files00389.pro'
d42c9ec00c0962d1e4b9ff96acd5ccdd
b383fefe9ec1e76e840e4ee896bb37e8525b2290
describe
'36302' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIC' 'sip-files00389.QC.jpg'
e55434d6b21ab84cf620fde31ba0680c
f5b4f9f5379aaea95e6b3c8f263fbc46e41c52ad
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCID' 'sip-files00389.tif'
0fb2031c2cfbda93a40c495a4f10fe15
8e2cfaf12899d7d1cdb25c6b97de9b9fbee9f053
describe
'1392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIE' 'sip-files00389.txt'
4da1d4c7da33f43039e74bb44a933edf
3136df7f20eb9a15a59872f0f92c0bdb19a6367d
describe
'8715' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIF' 'sip-files00389thm.jpg'
128155d411aeec649a005c7da282cb9a
f3150af5976bbd54e01bb203d31f264ceeb3e97d
describe
'338643' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIG' 'sip-files00390.jp2'
e2ff369599fb18d594bd192522505745
4bf78e9c90f2729914ab63e5e6e06569d96b54f2
describe
'107317' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIH' 'sip-files00390.jpg'
ba978a51a8264687c304a435637e54d3
32e28013b26c8077f66c43a0fca42dc186a3c971
describe
'29980' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCII' 'sip-files00390.pro'
6968aa7a5d3f6de11462248d31d3fa0c
a96dabc9dc4903b2d114fe2dc84cb8b4ff679e9c
describe
'33446' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIJ' 'sip-files00390.QC.jpg'
f778aefe3fb3fe10810196567a70e63c
b4c16e63050a2f0f91586b74821a3af90e2b531d
describe
'2725704' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIK' 'sip-files00390.tif'
ab6636a890196762a1799d60930d45af
711bcdc01649ce107a75fd1fa2dd95e711120276
describe
'1256' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIL' 'sip-files00390.txt'
43763b182c1bc6221a018b38792110a7
918e2a14ec39634b7356286c60f39425729ec6c1
describe
'8211' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIM' 'sip-files00390thm.jpg'
8910146b37735766de7687a40a3daf49
e86d3433121229c1f847b002639331b676d52b8c
describe
'336955' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIN' 'sip-files00391.jp2'
87e7e5c0c0f2ced775f8224274e3b982
9b7089930c830c478131d5e81c9ca59d605b28e7
describe
'131334' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIO' 'sip-files00391.jpg'
896de0f3b17857e8ca0f44e03b5ed145
c800fee5d6e9689fe1797d0fb1f62083ad91bb84
describe
'43193' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIP' 'sip-files00391.pro'
8d7d3efc971f76fdae9b3f72aa695b92
6584f4fd53ec52c6ace357284c14755c9810db65
describe
'40328' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIQ' 'sip-files00391.QC.jpg'
022653d7759660a6557e395de9785b2d
b914f55acda5f6f6f4a61ab8dae332202b58a307
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIR' 'sip-files00391.tif'
49a59108891113c1efbc198f55202d78
1350c657f83b8cc429349675b05f0bedf7df24e3
describe
'1716' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIS' 'sip-files00391.txt'
dcd746b6c483741fc2a78686812e5836
55c6a72b42ac889c703fb89f8b1c03d85676bb94
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIT' 'sip-files00391thm.jpg'
0012c1b5ab78648441b98d6aa071196c
86425d2e99c82696cbf66f998272859c85f86b92
describe
'347683' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIU' 'sip-files00392.jp2'
77eae64476fb674ac42017e8381cf14a
19d97a0dae0aab92ef4e12fd25ac96259de2a185
describe
'128197' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIV' 'sip-files00392.jpg'
667340be53e6f58030f16596168e69c2
a58805efd748553c221d4fab25d8021aa4041e41
describe
'40131' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIW' 'sip-files00392.pro'
effb9e24d4db225d43e13027e7b58102
a64badf64161b8ad872045006f8edc5a6bbe5aac
describe
'39117' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIX' 'sip-files00392.QC.jpg'
26860b1c2e4948643e09ae616db627b7
8e5a23b12a29c74b36ba52dcee09e75caf8c1e4a
describe
'2798124' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIY' 'sip-files00392.tif'
422fb53414b783cde2bb5e95dd9d8735
ebf540c17f1b32229ae3c8d353c62c3cb2ee92b8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCIZ' 'sip-files00392.txt'
9804a7f810e3b0493fb58c765a22806d
43f203fe24e58eb4abce8ae009bea5ff744c617d
describe
'9460' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJA' 'sip-files00392thm.jpg'
6466b6ae20b3ad89f03ed089caaa4153
f9ad0c0d5851df6d82eeaddd2d66401d09d5d1ee
describe
'340068' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJB' 'sip-files00393.jp2'
3d5c532b418b6c1fc486418603e8c225
406f0f4056dfc0ba94400fd802c3ec8e9bc94119
describe
'128606' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJC' 'sip-files00393.jpg'
4455dc8be6eaa2f55f03af38d2e91cd0
0c3c7e4acf1228d500e8c1512e08e5c8e78adef1
describe
'40887' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJD' 'sip-files00393.pro'
d9b1236fad6dc81c77175b79febfab4d
40a2a0b3bc7c1523fa63960f1baf4514c55b44fe
describe
'40489' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJE' 'sip-files00393.QC.jpg'
847f02b8ba3bd200da0e9973b887d0fd
8185708552ac6395812b22818c2dc83353cfd864
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJF' 'sip-files00393.tif'
079bffabeddcd9160f9a733441c4ab19
56e83a10044b92c8af759d86bb221d4c281fef5e
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJG' 'sip-files00393.txt'
218d40ff4114cd4a2d5a751f0244eec0
ec1fc656df299145d5ef67bb1ab94bd7126d4beb
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJH' 'sip-files00393thm.jpg'
7b05233c65e46d6471e3c93a62388a4f
05d0db3957e8b93b91f82a52f679f07ac4ed84c1
describe
'344534' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJI' 'sip-files00394.jp2'
f696cfad872814bd2e3bc742472698c6
3c8e132f442f9bbbde8a776de444388039b1f79b
describe
'135733' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJJ' 'sip-files00394.jpg'
90d5a757657774104816dea72a919f92
97e189541f42498a1b947881d8d26b7e22654f1f
describe
'43024' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJK' 'sip-files00394.pro'
29d70f1116be19a6378329a368ae9d0b
6b6133e0b0b9c5f015f19f81b7ac28b61d03892d
describe
'41378' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJL' 'sip-files00394.QC.jpg'
a689388c124ebed2e37f48940e1fa68c
f0b268e0e9069eb6bd71f13df069eafd452e6bd8
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJM' 'sip-files00394.tif'
730be2387cb5db2cd2388aa90be8b5e4
bffb450168870f09aeb59813549e46f897e5d13d
describe
'1687' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJN' 'sip-files00394.txt'
73ecccc772c5efe65b9357dc4afc3733
32681eadae5fa34b1b3e61bce58e3507bc59f3a3
describe
'9873' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJO' 'sip-files00394thm.jpg'
c8aac1cde5204a6a53140a2d0b36a938
1a21a1b30d35286026d7545effcea18112fdab25
describe
'340094' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJP' 'sip-files00395.jp2'
c4a544d2c0d075626dd6db1e5a156802
7a0fe317ac6c10927c98a746df7b7581833ad516
describe
'129615' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJQ' 'sip-files00395.jpg'
0298877114465a291ce09d8d883917d3
70f19351feb5d4a4bb085d249dbde15178467449
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJR' 'sip-files00395.pro'
9c292c7219629208bbd8430b011bf57c
62b27de0e1315b0129f061d0ff2a1acec40d3d47
describe
'41174' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJS' 'sip-files00395.QC.jpg'
66e748512fbbff99b8b7b86ad0f4b70b
0a015714246194abe3cf3d703b8c9755ead4bf45
describe
'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJT' 'sip-files00395.tif'
ab7e625e9310b9cdce98cc71be344155
91193c8436d92ade60ccab2288269477ec40937e
describe
'1711' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJU' 'sip-files00395.txt'
ade44dd33fc13c2652fc56b033b647de
ec726029a8952fa8d7f1f4a0ee1147c41da3a37b
describe
'9625' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJV' 'sip-files00395thm.jpg'
8053680d228e32ae90659408424fba52
6242ed1762e2388ed75b2cb63632b387a043bd17
describe
'349227' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJW' 'sip-files00396.jp2'
1b0952456ad9e9fb7a2c3b3842899aec
9fee3b60e3d3447852b5d512c916516556eb2ea6
describe
'110196' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJX' 'sip-files00396.jpg'
dd4299c46be3c83cac5c1ad65aeadcfc
2634633ab47ccc22ce078543307456724e3f146a
describe
'33482' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJY' 'sip-files00396.pro'
e3b3ec5733334f6d9cff28d966cc6ee7
2aab5cb5b2e924d0db4a095c4894606ce84048de
describe
'34214' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCJZ' 'sip-files00396.QC.jpg'
ab6859f499940d6e24e1aa8fb4db46d7
bfd5bf910fd246ceedd6b33e62e4ddd3b3ed1cc2
describe
'2810736' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKA' 'sip-files00396.tif'
9cf08ad52b035dd71baf30a41e2c0e8c
e93a331e8d8e5b3c303255fadf3f10a33ad7240c
describe
'1366' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKB' 'sip-files00396.txt'
f38b83c07065d4ddf691d79c5c1c08ef
690fbc3d5c332a06e534a5f5e260e02221610703
describe
'7594' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKC' 'sip-files00396thm.jpg'
5ed99fc4f50f3caf006358eeb58a8b24
539a7fb65e4430fa471c5b7590cac9b66d7e53fc
describe
'382636' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKD' 'sip-files00401.jp2'
2f8a1626d9a3fbd91129e30bb36d741f
e82bd66d49a649d8ccc66388c53906f7b6f9ef1e
describe
'92606' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKE' 'sip-files00401.jpg'
db1f28462266c782dddafb4b2a998d51
b6eeb2ef34a4ffd5d8fc0804bd84915b33d91bfa
describe
'17931' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKF' 'sip-files00401.QC.jpg'
d482073130ce32b6f9f9cbff26c39ea7
b4dd7cad97dce185e3ae452198efd243cf5accfc
describe
'9199088' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKG' 'sip-files00401.tif'
8950ecb6595a7181bf8580dad689c677
a480a000d0a6d27c1b5a619115f5ead87b33e4bb
describe
'4392' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKH' 'sip-files00401thm.jpg'
4636bae3272a7e40757895f59fb7afa7
2e6735b90596747646225875411f31092bc513fc
describe
'347794' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKI' 'sip-files00402.jp2'
cf7a0f010bd06201704fb32409213501
764210be77d437548ca51a780bba9e4f41c6d100
describe
'122718' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKJ' 'sip-files00402.jpg'
09d0826eaafd9cafd7f83f0ac1d1a5a5
4b8e75b2876b9dddc9fd3fe01a5097f8d841806e
describe
'21628' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKK' 'sip-files00402.QC.jpg'
d986ade27a727b10982cc962acb6c7c4
ef4bb4e71911edf3d434e40411255affd8b4717c
describe
'8363640' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKL' 'sip-files00402.tif'
9f9d7a90bdd6472055d8ce8a43db384d
8b9db30d3ded43f78a91c762d4d2bea97de40494
describe
'4540' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKM' 'sip-files00402thm.jpg'
d1ef7cea016afe855fe7f789c5f2ac90
f84527d161ed3425bab627dd60a2e59d8423b06a
describe
'97849' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKN' 'sip-files00403.jp2'
c12d41454f0b2a4201bc9cb8976f826a
61cdd2285a673962bbc08f9dd35f99bdc27e4dff
describe
'48332' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKO' 'sip-files00403.jpg'
af7941b6f5182126bdacc243e3a2de37
fcab05e3dc2c13c440671d19b121ec256b1d7b6e
describe
'284' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKP' 'sip-files00403.pro'
913b5cb35a6d09a0b4b3ba5707dd735f
acdf89e0f130ad7c0b91109f0fa5e62587500178
describe
'11297' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKQ' 'sip-files00403.QC.jpg'
062bbb75b78ed0a3d71755bed3c62efe
3ee0c1a36347d6ab97d4bdb4e21cc95f7a565277
describe
'2364872' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKR' 'sip-files00403.tif'
7566df0f17a6cef80277199e03593225
aa0a3fa8562978259a08397286df4d5a2e96a995
describe
'32' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKS' 'sip-files00403.txt'
492008a2aeb8e65455c4ba872d4584aa
58accf8a97103866898c7f6d2b2b302d7cb8e49f
describe
'4234' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKT' 'sip-files00403thm.jpg'
7b4cab11d9a0168dc1598d31c76dd5b2
2817a687f7738ce9cfc189c45ce11dde0969dc46
describe
'24' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKU' 'sip-filesprocessing.instr'
32e30d0e514e1bec391879226c2fd598
8b43e4af9aace7d255ba35295c4997e2299a69de
describe
'632983' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKV' 'sip-filesUF00084074_00001.mets'
b8dd2c390b9c140510ea1f835a81169d
9d1a3008fd04ccef237c63749aa40e63a188b159
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2014-01-08T16:39:47-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'821057' 'info:fdaE20080927_AAAAMJfileF20080929_AABCKY' 'sip-filesUF00084074_00001.xml'
1bb91b9092da80af0c6b39601af93216
874392ef19730f038fce4ef87cec7873d5189ba7
describe
'2014-01-08T16:39:39-05:00'
xml resolution






tft Why

THE ACROPOLIS OF ATHENS.

seis |


HISTORICAL TALES

The Romance of Reality

BY

CHARLES MORRIS

AUTHOR OF ‘‘HALF-HOURS WITH THE BEST AMERICAN
AUTHORS,” ‘‘ TALES FROM THE DRAMATISTS,” ‘* KING
ARTHUR AND THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND-TABLE,” ETC.

GREEK

PHILADELPHIA

J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
1896
CopyriGHT, 1896,
BY
J. B. Lippincott Company.

ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED py J.B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, U.S.A.
CONTENTS.

How Troy WAS TAKEN .......2.006.
Tur VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS .....
THESEUS AND ARIADNE. .....-. ee.
Tur SEVEN AGAINST THEBES .......

LYcURGUS AND THE SPARTAN Laws .
ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA.. .

Soon, THE Law-GIvER or ATHENS... .
Tur ForRTUNE OF CRGSUS.........
Tue Surrors ofr AGARISTH ........
Tur TYRANTS OF CORINTH ..... 2 6
Tur RING oF POLYCRATES. .... 2. es
Tur ADVENTURES OF DEMOCEDES .....
DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS .......
Tur ATHENIANS AT MARATHON. .....

XERKES AND HIS ARMY. .......0.-
How tHe SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLA.
THE WoopEN WALLS oF ATHENS .....
Puatrma’s Famous Day. .........
Four Famous Menor ATHENS ......
How ATHENS ROSE FROM ITS ASHES ....

THe PLAGUE AT ATHENS .. 2... 2.0
Tue Envoys oF Lirz— anD DmraTH. ....
Tur DEFENCE OF PLATHA 1... 4.2.2.6.

How tur Lona WALLS WENT DOWN. ...
SocRATES AND ALCIBIADES .......6.
Tue RETREAT OF THE TEN THOUSAND. . .
Tur Rescuzn or THEBES. . 1... eee ee
Tun HUMILIATION OF SPARTA... 2. ee
TIMOLHON, THE Favorire or Fortuny. . .

PAGE

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4 CONTENTS.

THE SACRED WAR As” cis iisles spac else
ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND DARIUS

THE WoRLD’Ss GREATEST ORATOR ...
Tur OLyMPICGAMES.......6.-.
PYRRHUS AND THE ROMANS ......
PHILOPG@MEN AND THE FALt or SPARTA
Tur DEATH-STRUGGLE OF GREECE...
ZENOBIA AND LONGINUS ..... :
Hyvpatia, THE MAIDEN PHILOSOPHER .

PAGE
288
296
805
315
824
8384
845
351
360
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE
THE ACROPOLIS OF ATHENS .... . . Frontispiece.
Partine or Hector AND ANDROMEDA ....... 15
GHD IBUS ANDEAN TIGO NA sven ere nese eed 2
RUINS OF THE PARTHENON. ............ 180
Tue Vicrors ar SALAMIS ............. 160
A Reunion av THE House or Aspasta ...... 190
PIR#Us, THE Port or ATHENS. ....... 2... 218
GatTE oF THE AGorRA oR O1L Market, ATHENS . . 255
Toe DwaTu or ALEXANDER THE GReaT..... . 800
Tur THEATRE OF Baccuus, ATHENS ....... . 822
REMAINS OF THT TEMPLE oF MinrRvA, Corinto. . 845
THKRUINS aOR PAL MYR Acd .sceuls methane Toth ODS

HOW TROY WAS TAKEN.

Tux far-famed Helen, wife of King Menelaus of
Sparta, was the most beautiful woman in the world.
And from her beauty and faithlessness came the
most celebrated of ancient wars, with death and
disaster to numbers of famous heroes and the final
ruin of the ancient city of Troy. The story of
these striking events has been told only in poetry.
We propose to tell it again in sober prose.

But warning must first be given that Helen and
the heroes of the Trojan war dwelt in the mist-land
of legend and tradition, that cloud-realm from which
history only slowly emerged. The facts with which
we are here concerned are those of the poct, not
those of the historian. It is far from sure that Helen
ever lived. It is far from sure that there ever was a
Trojan war. Many people doubt the whole story.
Yet the ancient Greeks accepted it as history, and
as we are telling their story, we may fairly include
it among the historical tales of Greece. The heroes
concerned are certainly fully alive in Homer’s great
poem, the “Iliad,” and we can do no better than
follow the story of this stirring poem, while adding
details from other sources.

Mythology tells us that, once upon a time, the

7
8 HISTORICAL TALES.

three goddesses, Venus, Juno, and Minerva, had a
contest as to which was the most beautiful, and left
the decision to Paris, then a shepherd on Mount
Ida, though really the son of King Priam of Troy.
The princely shepherd decided in favor of Venus,
who had promised him in reward the love of the
most beautiful of living women, the Spartan Helen,
daughter of the great deity Zeus (or Jupiter). Ac-
cordingly the handsome and favored youth set sail
for Sparta, bringing with him rich gifts for its beauti-
ful queen. Menelaus received his Trojan guest with
much hospitality, but, unluckily, was soon obliged to
make a journey to Crete, leaving Helen to entertain
the princely visitor, The result was as Venus had
foreseen. Love arose between the handsome youth
and the beautiful woman, and an elopement followed,
Paris stealing away with both the wife and the
money of his confiding host. He set sail, had a
prosperous voyage, and arrived safely at Troy with
his prize on the third day. This was a fortune very
different from that of Ulysses, who on his return
from Troy took ten years to accomplish a similar
voyage.

As might naturally be imagined, this elopement
excited indignation not only in the hearts of Mene-
laus and his brother Agamemnon, but among the
Greek chieftains generally, who sympathized with
the husband in his grief and shared his anger
against Troy. War was declared against that faith-
less city, and most of the chiefs pledged themselves
to take part in it, and to lend their aid until Helen
was recovered or restored. Had they known all




HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 9

that was before them they might have hesitated,
since it took ten long years to equip the expedition,
for ten years more the war continued, and some of
the leaders spent ten years in their return. But in
those old days time does not seem to have counted
for much, and besides, many of the chieftains had
been suitors for the hand of Helen, and were doubt-
less moved by their old love in pledging themselves
to her recovery.

Some of them, however, were anything but eager
to take part. Achilles and Ulysses, the ¢wo most
important in the subsequent war, endeavored to
escape this necessity. Achilles was the son of the
sea-nymph Thetis, who had dipped him when an in-
fant in the river Styx, the waters of which magic
stream rendered him invulnerable to any weapon
except in one spot,—the heel by which his mother
had held him. But her love for her son made her
anxious to guard him against every danger, and
when the chieftains came to seek his aid in the ex-
pedition, she concealed him, dressed as a girl, among
the maidens of the court. But the crafty Ulysses,
who accompanied them, soon exposed this trick.
Disguised as a pedler, he spread his goods, a shield
and a spear among them, before the maidens. Then
an alarm of danger being sounded, the girls fled in
affright, but the disguised youth, with impulsive
valor, seized the weapons and prepared to defend
himself. His identity was thus revealed.

Ulysses himself, one of the wisest and shrewdest
of men, had also sought to escape the dangerous
expedition. To do so ho feigned madness, and when
10 HISTORICAL TALES.

the messenger chiefs came to seek him they found
him attempting to plough with an ox and a horse
yoked together, while he sowed the field with salt.
One of them, however, took Telemachus, the young
son of Ulysses, and laid him in the furrow before the
plough. Ulysses turned the plough aside, and thus
showed that there was more method than madness
in his mind.

And thus, in time, a great force of men and a
great fleet of ships were gathered, there being in all
eleven hundred and eighty-six ships and more than
one hundred thousand men. The kings and chief-
tains of Greece led their followers from all parts of
the land to Aulis, in Beotia, whence they were to
set sail for the opposite coast of Asia Minor, on
which stood the city of Troy. Agamemnon, who
brought one hundred ships, was chosen leader of
the army, which included all the heroes of the age,
among them the distinguished warriors Ajax and
Diomedes, the wise old Nestor, and many others of
valor and fame.

The fleet at length set sail; but Troy was not
easily reached. The leaders of the army did not
even know where Troy was, and landed in the wrong
locality, where they had a battle with the people.
Embarking again, they were driven by a storm back
to Greece. Adverse winds now kept them at Aulis
until Agamemnon appeased the hostile gods by sac-
rificing to them his daughter Iphigenia,—one of the
ways which those old heathens had of obtaining
fair weather. Then the winds changed, and the
fleet made its way to the island of Tenedos, in the
HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 11

vicinity of Troy. From here Ulysses and Menelaus
were sent to that city as envoys to demand a return
of Helen and the stolen property.

Meanwhile the Trojans, well aware of what was
in store for them, had made abundant preparations,
and gathered an army of allies from various parts
of Thrace and Asia Minor. They received the two
Greek envoys hospitably, paid them every attention,
but sustained the villany of Paris, and refused to
deliver Helen and the treasure. When this word
was brought back to the fleet the chiefs decided on
immediate war, and sail was made for the neighbor-
- ing shores of the Trojan realm.

Of the long-drawn-out war that followed we know
little more than what Homer has told us, though
something may be learned from other ancient poems.
The first Greek to land fell by the hand of Hector,
the Trojan hero,—as the gods had foretold. But in
vain the Trojans sought to prevent the landing;
they were quickly put to rout, and Cycnus, one of
their greatest warriors and son of the god Neptune,
was slain by Achilles. He was invulnerable to iron,
but was choked to death by the hero and changed
intoaswan. The Trojans were driven within their
city walls, and the invulnerable Achilles, with what
seems a safe valor, stormed and sacked numerous
towns in the neighborhood, killed one of King Priam’s
sons, captured and sold as slaves several others,
drove off the oxen of the celebrated warrior Aineas,
and came near to killing that hero himself. He
also captured and kept as his own prize a beautiful
maiden named Briscis, and was even granted, through
12 HISTORICAL TALES.

the favor of the gods, an interview with the divine
Helen herself.

This is about all we know of the doings of the
first nine years of the war. What the Greeks were
at during that long time neither history nor legend
tells, The only other event of importance was the
death of Palamedes, one of the ablest Grecian chiefs.
It was he who had detected the feigned madness of
Ulysses, and tradition relates that he owed his death
to the revengeful anger of that cunning schemer, who
had not forgiven him for being made to take part in
this endless and useless war.

Thus nine years of warfare passed, and Troy re-
mained untaken and seemingly unshaken. How the
two hosts managed to live in the mean time the tellers
of the story do not say. Thucydides, the historian,
thinks it likely that the Greeks had to farm the
neighboring lands for food. How the Trojans and
their allies contrived to survive so long within their
walls we are left to surmise, unless they farmed
their streets. And thus we reach the opening of the
tenth year and of Homer’s “ Iliad.”

Homer's story is too long for us to tell in detail,
and too full of war and bloodshed for modern taste.
We can only give it in epitome.

Agamemnon, the leader of the Greeks, robs Achil-
les of his beautiful captive Briseis, and the invul-
nerable hero, furious at the insult, retires in sullen
rage to his ships, forbids his troops to take part in
the war, and sulks in anger while battle after battle
is fought. Deprived of his mighty aid, the Greeks
HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 13

find the Trojans quite their match, and the fortunes
of the warring hosts vary day by day.

On a watch-tower in Troy sits Helen the beautiful,
gazing out on the field of conflict, and naming for
old Priam, who sits beside her, the Grecian leaders
as they appear at the head of their hosts on the
plain below. On this plain meet in fierce combat
Paris the abductor and Menelaus the indignant hus-
band. Vengeance lends double weight to the spear
of the latter, and Paris is so fiercely assailed that
Venus has to come to his aid to save him from
death. Meanwhile a Trojan archer wounds Mene-
laus with an arrow, and a general battle ensues.

The conflict is a fierce one, and many warriors on
both sides are slain. Diomedes, a bold Grecian chief-
tain, is the hero of the day. Trojans fall by scores
before his mighty spear, he rages in fury from side
to side of the field, and at length meets the great
/Eneas, whose thigh he breaks with a huge stone.
But Aineas is the son of the goddess Venus, who flies
to his aid and bears him from the field. The furious
Greek daringly pursues the flying divinity, and even
succeeds in wounding the goddess of love with his
impious spear. At this sad outcome Venus, to whom
physical pain is a new sensation, flies in dismay to
Olympus, the home of the deities, and hides her
weeping face in the lap of Father Jove, while her
lady enemies taunt her with biting sarcasms. The
whole scene is an amusing example of the childish
folly of mythology.

In the next scene a new hero appears upon the
field, Hector, the warlike son of Priam, and next to

2
14 \ITISTORICAL TALES.

Achilles the greatest warrior of the war. He arms
himself inside the walls, and takes an affectionate
leave of his wife Andromache and his infant son,
the child crying with terror at his glittering helmet
and nodding plume. This mild demeanor of the.
warrior changes to warlike ardor when he appears
upon the field. His coming turns the tide of battle.
The victorious Greeks are driven back before his
shining spear, many of them are slain, and. the
whole host is driven to its ships and almost forced
to take flight by sea from the victorious onset of
Hector and his triumphant followers. While the
Greeks cower in their ships the Trojans spend the
night in bivouac upon the field. Homer gives us a
picturesque description of this night-watch, which
Tennyson has thus charmingly rendered into English:

‘‘ As when in heaven the stars about the moon
Look beautiful, when all the winds are laid,
And every height comes out, and jutting peak
And valley, and the immeasurable heavens
Break open to their highest, and all the stars
Shine, and the shepherd gladdens in his heart;
So, many a fire between the ships and stream
Of Xanthus blazed before the towers of Troy,
A thousand on the plain; and close by each
Sat fifty in the blaze of burning fire;

And, champing golden grain, the horses stood
Hard by their chariots, waiting for the dawn.”

Affairs had grown perilous for the Greeks. Patro-
clus, the bosom friend of Achilles, begged him to come
to their aid. This the sulking hero would not do, but
he lent Patroclus his armor, and permitted him to lead


THE PARTING OF HECTOR AND ANDROMACHE.
HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 15

his troops, the Myrmidons, to the field. Patroclus
was himself a gallant and famous warrior, and his
aid turned the next day’s battle against the Trojans,
who were driven back with great slaughter. But,
unfortunately for this hero of the fight, a greater than
he was in the field. Hector met him in the full tide
of his success, engaged him in battle, killed him, and
captured from his body the armor of Achilles.

The slaughter of his friend at length aroused
the sullen Achilles to action. Rage against the
Trojans succeeded his anger against Agamemnon.
His lost armor was replaced by new armor forged
for him by Vulcan, the celestial smith,—who fash-
ioned him the most wonderful of shields and most
formidable of spears. Thus armed, he mounted his
chariot and drove at the head of his Myrmidons to
the field, where he made such frightful slaughter of
the Trojans that the river Scamander was choked
with their corpses; and, indignant at being thus
treated, sought to drown the hero for his offence.
Finally he met Hector, engaged him in battle, and
killed him with a thrust of his mighty spear. Then,
fastening the corpse of the Trojan hero to his chariot,
he dragged it furiously over the blood-soaked plain
and around the city walls. Homer’s story ends with
the funeral obsequies of the slain Patroclus and the
burial by the Trojans of Hector’s recovered body.

Other writers tell us how the war went on. Hector
was replaced by Penthesileia, the beautiful and war-
like queen of the Amazons, who came to the aid of
the Trojans, and drove the Greeks from the field.
But, alas! she too was slain by the invincible
16 ‘HISTORICAL TALES.

Achilles, Removing her helmet, the victor was
deeply affected to find that it was a beautiful woman
he had slain.

The mighty Memnon, son of godlike parents, now
made his appearance in the Trojan ranks, at the
head of a band of black Ethiopians, with whom
he wrought havoc among the Greeks. At length
Achilles encountered this hero also, and a terrible
battle ensued, whose result was long in doubt. In
the end Achilles triumphed and Memnon fell. But
he died to become immortal, for his goddess mother
prayed for and obtained for him the gift of immortal
life.

Such triumphs were easy for Achilles, whose flesh
no weapon could pierce; but no one was invulnerable
to the poets, and his end came at last. He had
routed the Trojans and driven them within their
gates, when Paris, aided by Apollo, the divine
archer, shot an arrow at the hero which struck him
in his one pregnable spot, the heel. The fear of
Thetis was realized, her son died from the wound,
and a fierce battle took place for the possession of
his body. This Ajax and Ulysses succeeded in
carrying off to the Grecian camp, where it was
burned on a magnificent funeral pile. Achilles,
like his victim Memnon, was made immortal by
the favor of the gods. His armor was offered
as a prize to the most distinguished Grecian hero,
and was adjudged to Ulysses, whereupon Ajax,
his close contestant for the prize, slew himself in
despair.

We cannot follow all the incidents of the cam-
HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 17

paign. It will suffice to say that Paris was himself
slain by an arrow, that Neoptolemus, the son of
Achilles, took his place in the field, and that the
Trojans suffered so severely at his hands that they
took shelter behind their walls, whence they never
again emerged to meet the Greeks in the field.

But Troy was safe from capture while the Pal-
ladium, a statue which Jupiter himself had given to
Dardanus, the ancestor of the Trojans, remained in
the citadel of that city. Ulysses overcame this diffi-
culty. He entered Troy in the disguise of a wounded
and ragged fugitive, and managed to steal the Pal-
ladium from the citadel. Then, as the walls of Troy
still defied their assailants, a further and extraordi-
nary stratagem was employed to gain access to the
city. It seems a ridiculous one to us, but was ac-
cepted as satisfactory by the writers of Greece.
This stratagem was the following:

A great hollow wooden horse, large enough to
contain one hundred armed men, was constructed,
and in its interior the leading Grecian heroes con-
cealed themselves. Then the army set fire to its
tents, took to its ships, and sailed away to the island
of Tenedos, as if it had abandoned the siege. Only
the great horse was left on the long-contested battle-
field.

The Trojans, filled with joy at the sight of their
departing foes, came streaming out into the plain,
women as well as warriors, and gazed with astonish-
ment at the strange monster which their enemies
had left. Many of them wanted to take it into the
city, and dedicate it to the gods as a mark of' grati-

1.—d 2*
18 HISTORICAL TALES.

tude for their deliverance. The more cautious ones
doubted if it was wise to accept an enemy’s gift.
Laocoon, the priest of Neptune, struck the side of
the horse with his spear. A hollow sound came from
its interior, but this did not suffice to warn the in-
discreet Trojans. And a terrible spectacle now filled
them with superstitious dread. Two great serpents
appeared far out at sea and came swimming inward
over the waves. Reaching the shore, they glided
over the land to where stood the unfortunate La-
ocoon, whose body they encircled with their folds.
His son, who came to his rescue, was caught in the
same dreadful coils, and the two perished miserably
before the eyes of their dismayed countrymen.

There was no longer any talk of rejecting the
fatal gift. The gods had given their decision. A
breach was made in the walls of Troy, and the
great horse was dragged with exultation within the
stronghold that for ten long years had defied its foe.

Riotous joy and festivity followed in Troy. It
extended into the night. While this went on Sinon,
a seeming renegade who had been left behind by
the Greeks, and who had helped to deceive the
Trojans by lying tales, lighted a fire-signal for the
fleet, and loosened the bolts of the wooden horse,
from whose hollow depths the hundred weary war-
riors hastened to descend.

And now the triumph of the Trojans was changed
to sudden woe and dire lamentation. Death fol-
lowed close upon their festivity. The hundred war-
riors attacked them at their banquets, the returned
fleet disgorged its thousands, who poured through
HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 19

the open gates, and death held fearful carnival
within the captured city. Priam was slain at the
altar by Neoptolemus. All his sons fell in death.
The city was sacked and destroyed. Its people were
slain or taken captive. Few escaped, but among
these was Aineas, the traditional ancestor of Rome.
As regards Helen, the cause of the war, she was re-
covered by Menelaus, and gladly accompanied him
back to Sparta. There she lived for years after-
wards in dignity and happiness, and finally died to
become happily immortal in the Elysian fields.

But our story is not yet at an end. The Greeks
had still to return to their homes, from which they
had been ten years removed. And though Paris
had crossed the intervening seas in three days, it
took Ulysses ten years to return, while some of his
late companions failed to reach their homes at all.
Many, indeed, were the adventures which these
home-sailing heroes were destined to encounter.

Some of the Greek warriors reached home speedily
and were met with welcome, but others perished by
the way, while Agamemnon, their leader, returned
to find that his wife had been false to him, and per-
ished by her treacherous hand. Menelaus wandered
long through Egypt, Cyprus, and elsewhere before
he reached his native land. Nestor and several
others went to Italy, where they founded cities,
Diomedes also became a founder of cities, and various
others seem to have busied themselves in this same
useful occupation. Neoptolemus made his way to
Epirus, where he became king of the Molossians.
ineas, the Trojan hero, sought Carthage, whose
20 HISTORICAL TALES.

queen Dido died for love of him. Thence he sailed
to Italy, where he fought battles and won victories,
and finally founded the city of Rome. His story
is given by Virgil, in the poem of the “ Aneid.”
Much more might be told of the adventures of the
returning heroes, but the chief of them all is that
related of the much wandering Ulysses, as given by
Homer in his epic poem the “ Odyssey.”

The story of the “Odyssey” might serve us for a
tale in itself, but as it is in no sense historical we
give it here in epitome.

We are told that during the wanderings of Ulysses
his island kingdom of Ithaca had been invaded by
a throng of insolent suitors of his wife Penelope,
who occupied his castle and wasted his substance in
riotous living. His son Telemachus, indignant at
this, set sail in search of his father, whom he knew
to be somewhere upon the seas. Landing at Sparta,
he found Menelaus living with Helen in a macnifi-
cent castle, richly ornamented with gold, silver, and
bronze, and learned from him that his father was
then in the island of Ogygia, where he had been
long detained by the nymph Calypso.

The wanderer had experienced numerous adven-
tures. He had encountered the one-eyed giant Poly-
phemus, who feasted on the fattest of the Greeks,
while the others escaped by boring out his single
eye. He had passed the land of the Lotus-Eaters,
to whose magic some of the Grecks succumbed. In
the island of Circe some of his followers were turned
into swine. But the hero overcame this enchantress,
and while in her land visited the realm of the de-
HOW TROY WAS TAKEN. 21

parted and had interviews with the shades of the
dead. He afterwards passed in safety through the
frightful gulf of Scylla and Charybdis, and visited
the wind-god Afolus, who gave him a fair wind
home, and all the foul winds tied up inabag. But
the curious Greeks untied the bag, and the ship was
blown far from her course. His followers after-
wards killed the sacred oxen of the sun, for which
they were punished by being wrecked. All were
lost except Ulysses, who floated on a mast to the
island of Calypso. With this charming nymph he
dwelt for seven years.

Finally, at the command of the gods, Calypso set
her willing captive adrift on a raft of trees. This
raft was shattered in a storm, but Ulysses swam to
the island of Pheacia, where he was rescued by
Nausicaa, the king’s daughter, and brought to the
palace. Thence, in a Pheacian ship, he finally
reached Ithaca.

Here new adventures awaited him. He sought
his palace disguised as an old beggar, so that of
all there, only his old dog knew him. The fnithful
animal staggered to his feet, feebly expressed his
joy, and fell dead. Telemachus had now returned,
and led his disguised father into the palace, where
the suitors were at their revels. Penelope, instructed
what to do, now brought forth the bow of Ulysses,
and offered her hand to any one of the suitors who
could bend it. It was tried by them all, but tried
in vain. Then the seeming beggar took in his hand
the stout, ashen bow, bent it with ease, and with
wonderful skill sent an arrow hurtling through the
22 HISTORICAL TALES.

rings of twelve axes set up in line. This done, he
turned the terrible bow upon the suitors, sending its
death-dealing arrows whizzing through their midst.
Telemachus and Eumeus, his swine-keeper, aided
him in this work of death, and a frightful scene of
carnage ensued, from which not one of the suitors
escaped with his life.

In the end the hero, freed from his ragged attire,
made himself known to his faithful wife, defeated
the friends of the suitors, and recovered his kingdom
from his foes. And thus ends the final episode of
the famous tale of Troy.
THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGO-
NAUTS.

We: are forced to approach the historical period
of Greece through a cloud-land of legend, in which
stories of the gods are mingled with those of men,
and the most marvellous of incidents are introduced
as if they were every-day occurrences. The Argo-
nautic expedition belongs to this age of myth, the
vague vestibule of history. It embraces, as does the
tale of the wanderings of Ulysses, very ancient ideas
of geography, and many able men have treated it
as the record of an actual voyage, one of the earliest
ventures of the Greeks upon the unknown seas.
However this be, this much is certain, the story is
full of romantic and supernatural elements, and it
was largely through these that it became so cele-
brated in ancient times.

The story of the voyage of the ship Argo is a
tragedy. Pelias, king of Ioleus, had consulted an
oracle concerning the safety of his dominions, and
was warned to beware of the man with one sandal.
Soon afterwards Jason (a descendant of AMolus, the
wind god) appeared before him with one foot un-
sandalled. He had lost his sandal while crossing a
swollen stream. elias, anxious to rid himself of
this visitor, against whom the oracle had warned

; 23
24 HISTORICAL TALES.

him, gave to Jason the desperate task of bringing
back to Ioleus the Golden Fleece (the fleece of a
speaking ram which had borne Phryxus and Helle
through the air from Greece, and had reached Col-
chis in Asia Minor, where it was dedicated to Mars,
the god of war).

Jason, young and daring, accepted without hesita-
tion the perilous task, and induced a number of the
noblest youth of Greece to accompany him in the
enterprise. Among these adventurers were Hercules,
Theseus, Castor, Pollux, and many others of the
heroes of legend. The way to Colchis lay over the
sea, and a ship was built for the adventurers named
the Argo, in whose prow was inserted a piece of
timber cut from the celebrated speaking oak of
Dodono.

The voyage of the Argo was as full of strange
incidents as those which Ulysses encountered in his
journey home from Troy. Land was first reached
on the island of Lemnos. Here no men wore found.
It was an island of women only. All the men had
been put to death by the women in revenge for ill-
treatment, and they held the island as their own.
But these warlike matrons, who had perhaps grown
tired of seeing only each other’s faces, received the
Argonauts with much friendship, and made their
stay so agreeable that they remained there for
several months.

Leaving Lemnos, they sailed along the coast of
Thrace, and up the Hellespont (a strait which had
received its name from Helle, who, while riding on
the golden ram in the air above it, had fallen and
THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 25

been drowned in its waters). Thence they sailed
along the Propontis and the coast of Mysia, not, as
we may be sure, without adventures. In the country
of the Bebrycians the giant king Amycus challenged
any of them to box with him. Pollux accepted the
challenge, and killed the giant with a blow. Next
they reached Bithynia, where dwelt the blind prophet
Phineus, to whom their coming proved a blessing.

Phineus had been blinded by Neptune, as a pun-
ishment for having shown Phryxus the way to
Colchis. He was also tormented by the harpies,
frightful winged monsters, who flew down from the
clouds whenever he attempted to eat, snatched the
food from his lips, and left on it such a vile odor
that no man could come near it. He, being a prophet,
knew that the Argonauts would free him from this
curse. There were with them Zetes and Calias,
winged sons of Boreas, the god of the north winds;
and when the harpies descended again to spoil the
prophet’s meal, these winged warriors not only
drove them away, but pursued them through the
air. They could not overtake them, but the harpies
were forbidden by Jupiter to molest Phineus any
longer.

The blind prophet, grateful for this deliverance,
told the voyagers how they might escape a dreadful
danger which lay in their onward way. This came
from the Symplegades, two rocks between which
their ships must pass, and which continually opened
and closed, with a violent collision, and so swiftly
that even a bird could scarce fly through the open-
ing in safety.. When the Argo reached the danger-

B 38
26 HISTORICAL TALES.

ous spot, at the suggestion of Phineus, a dove was
let loose. It flew with all speed through the open-
ing, but the rocks clashed together so quickly be-
hind it that it lost a few feathers of its tail. Now
was their opportunity. The rowers dashed their «
ready oars into the water, shot forward with rapid
speed, and passed safely through, only losing the
ornaments at the stern of their ship. Their escape,
however, they owed to the goddess Minerva, whose
strong hand held the rocks asunder during the brief
interval of their passage. It had been decreed by
the gods that if any ship escaped these dreadful
rocks they should forever cease to move. The
escape of the Argo fulfilled this decree, and the
Symplegades have ever since remained immovable.

Onward went the daring voyagers, passing in
their journey Mount Caucasus, on whose bare rock
Prometheus, for the crime of giving fire to mankind,
was chained, while an eagle devoured his liver.
The adventurers saw this dread eagle and heard the
groans of the sufferer himself. Helpless to release
him whom the gods had condemned, they rowed
rapidly away.

Finally Colchis was reached, a land then ruled
over by King etes, from whom the heroes de-
manded the golden fleece, stating that they had
been sent thither by the gods themselves. Actes
heard their request with anger, and told them that
if they wanted the fleece they could have it on one
condition only. He possessed two fierce and tame-
less bulls, with brazen feet and fire-breathing nostrils.
These had been the gift of the god Vulcan. Jason
THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 27

was told that if he wished to prove his descent from
the gods and their sanction of his voyage, he must
harness these terrible animals, plough with them a
large field, and sow it with dragons’ teeth.

Perilous as this task seemed, each of the heroes
was eager to undertake it, but Jason, as the leader
of the expedition, took it upon himself. Fortune
favored him in the desperate undertaking. Medea,
the daughter of Metes, who knew all the arts of
magic, had seen the handsome youth and fallen in
love with him at sight. She now came to his aid
with all her magic. Gathering an herb which had
grown where the blood of Prometheus had fallen,
she prepared from it a magical ointment which,
when rubbed on Jason’s body, made him invulner-
able either to fire or weapons of war. Thus pre-
pared, he fearlessly approached the fire-breathing
bulls, yoked them unharmed, and ploughed the field,
in whose furrows he then sowed the dragons’ teeth.
Instantly from the latter sprang up a crop of armed
men, who turned their weapons against the hero.
But Jason, who had been further instructed by Me-
dea, flung a great stone in their midst, upon which
they began to fight each other, and he easily subdued
them all.

Jason had accomplished his task, but Aetes proved
unfaithful to his words. He not only withheld the
prize, but took steps to kill the Argonauts and burn
their vessel. They were invited to a banquet, and
armed men were prepared to murder them during
the night after the feast. Fortunately, sleep over-
came the treacherous king, and the adventurers,
28 HISTORICAL TALES.

warned of their danger, made ready to fly. But
not without the golden fleece. This was guarded
by a dragon, but Medea prepared a potion that
put this perilous sentinel to sleep, seized the fleece,
and accompanied Jason in his flight, taking with
her on the Argo Absyrtus, her youthful brother.

The Argonauts, seizing their oars, rowed with all
haste from the dreaded locality. Metes, on awaken-
ing, learned with fury of the loss of the ficece and
his children, hastily collected an armed force, and
pursued with such energy that the flying vessel was
soon nearly overtaken. The safety of the adven-
turers was again due to Medea, who secured it by a
terrible stratagem. This was, to kill her young
brother, cut his body to pieces, and fling the bleed-
ing fragments into the sea. Metes, on reaching the
scene of this tragedy, recognized these as the remains
of his murdered son, and sorrowfully stopped to col-
lect them for interment. While he was thus engaged
the Argonauts escaped.

But such a wicked deed was not suffered to go un-
punished. Jupiter beheld it with deep indignation,
and in requital condemned the Argonauts to a long
and perilous voyage, full of hardship and adventure.
They were forced to sail over all the watery world
of waters, so far as then known. Up the river
Phasis they rowed until it entered the ocean which
flows round the earth. This vast sea or stream was
then followed to the source of the Nile, down which
great river they made their way into the land of

Egypt.
Here, for some reason unknown, they did not fol-
SSS

aT TT





THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 29

low the Nile to the Mediterranean, but were forced
to take the ship Argo on their shoulders and carry
it by a long overland journey to Lake Tritonis, in
Libya Here they were overcome by want and ex-
haustion, but Triton, the god of the region, proved
hospitable, and supplied them with the much-needed
food and rest. Thus refreshed, they launched their
ship once more on the Mediterranean and proceeded
hopefully on their homeward way.

Stopping at the island of Mea, its queen Circe—
she who had transformed the companions of Ulysses
into swine—purified Medea from the crime of mur-
der; and at Corcyra, which they next reached, the
marriage of Jason and Medea took place. The cav-
ern in that island where the wedding was solemnized
was still pointed out in historical times.

After leaving Corcyra a fierce storm threatened
the navigators with shipwreck, from which they
were miraculously saved by the celestial aid of the
god Apollo. An arrow shot from his golden bow
crossed the billows like a track of light, and where
it pierced the waves an island sprang up, on whose
shores the imperilled mariners found a port of refuge.
On this island, Anaphe by name, the grateful Argo-
nauts built an altar to Apollo and instituted sacrifices
in his honor.

Another adventure awaited them on the coast of
Crete. This island was protected by a brazen sen-
tinel, named Talos, wrought by Vulean, and pre-
sented by him to King Minos to protect his realm.
This living man of brass hurled great rocks at the
vessel, and destruction would have overwhelmed the

8%
30 HISTORICAL TALES.

voyagers but for Medea. Talos, like all the invul-
nerable men of legend, had his one weak point.
This her magic art enabled her to discover, and,
as Paris had wounded Achilles in the heel, Medea
killed this vigilant sentinel by striking him in his
vulnerable spot.

The Argonauts now landed and refreshed them-
selves, In the island of Mgina they had to fight to
procure water. Then they sailed along the coasts
of Eubcea and Locris, and finally entered the gulf
of Pagase and dropped anchor at Tolcus, their start-
ing-point,

As to what became of the ship Argo there are
two stories. One is that Jason consecrated his ves-
sel to Neptune on the isthmus of Corinth. Another
is that Minerva translated it to the stars, where it
became a constellation.

So ends the story of this earliest of recorded voy-
ages, whose possible substratum of fact is overlaid
deeply with fiction, and whose geography is similarly
a strange mixture of fact and fancy, Yet though
the voyage is at an end, our story is not. We have
said that it was a tragedy, and the denouement of
the tragedy remains to be given.

Pelias, who had sent Jason on this long voyage
to escape the fate decreed for him by the oracle,
took courage from his protracted absence, and put
to death his father and mother and his infant brother.
On learning of this murderous act Jason determined
onrevenge. But Pelias was too strong to be attacked
openly, so the hero employed a strange stratagem,
suggested by the cunning magician Medea. He and
THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS. 31

his companions halted at some distance from Iolcus,
while Medea entered the town alone, pretending
that she was a fugitive from the ill-treatment of
Jason,

Here she was entertained by the daughters of
Pelias, over whom she gained great influence by
showing them certain magical wonders, In the end
she selected an old ram from the king’s flocks, cut
him up and boiled him in a caldron with herbs of
magic power. In the end the animal emerged from
the caldron as a young and vigorous lamb. The
enchantress now told her dupes that their old father
could in the same way be made young again. Fully
believing her, the daughters cut the old man to
pieces in the same manner, and threw his limbs into
the caldron, trusting to Medea to restore him to life
as she had the ram.

Leaving them for the assumed purposo of invok-
ing the moon, as a part of the ceremony, Medea
ascended to the roof of the palace. Here she
lighted a fire-signal to the waiting Argonauts, who
instantly burst into and took possession of the
town.

Having thus revenged himself, Jason yielded the
crown of Iolcus to the son of Pelias, and withdrew
with Medea to Corinth, where they resided together
for ten years. And here the final act in the tragedy
was played.

After these ten years of happy married life, dur-
ing which several children were born, Jason ceased
to love his wife, and fixed his affections on Glauce,
the daughter of King Creon of Corinth. The king
32 HISTORICAL TALES,

showed himself willing to give Jason his daughter
in marriage, upon which the faithless hero divorced
Medea, who was ordered to leave Corinth. He
should have known better with whom he had to
deal. The enchantress, indignant at such treatment,
determined on revenge, Pretending to be recon-
ciled to the coming marriage, she prepared a poi-
soned robe, which she sent as a wedding-present to
the hapless Glauce. No sooner had the luckless
bride put on this perilous gift than the robe burst
into flames, and she was consumed; while her father,
whe sought to tear from her the fatal garment, met
with the same fate.

Medea escaped by means of a chariot drawn by
winged serpents, sent her by her grandfather Helios
(the sun). As the story is told by Huripides, she
killed her children before taking to flight, leaving
their dead bodies to blast the sight of their horror-
stricken father, The legend, however, tells a dif.
ferent tale. It says that she left them for safety
before the altar in the temple of Juno; and that the
Corinthians, furious at the death of their king,
dragged the children from the altar and put them
to death. As for the unhappy Jason, the story goes
that he fell asleep under the ship Argo, which had
been hauled ashore according to the custom of the
ancients, and that a fragment of this ship fell upon
and killed him.

The flight of Medea took her to Athens, where
she found a protector and second husband in Agcus,
the ruler of that city, and father of Theseus, tho
great legendary hero of Athens,
THESEUS AND ARIADNE.

Minos, king of Crete in the age of legend, made
war against Athens in revenge for the death of his
son. This son, Androgeos by name, had shown
such strength and skill in the Panathenaic festival
that Aigeus, the Athenian king, sent him to fight
with the flame-spitting bull of Marathon, a mon-
strous creature that was ravaging the plains of
Attica. The bull killed the valiant youth, and
Minos, furious at the death of his gon, laid siege to
Athens.

As he proved unable to capture the city, he prayed
for aid to his father Zeus (for, like all the heroes of
legend, he was a son of the gods). Zeus sent pesti-
lence and famine on Athens, and so bitter grew the
lot of the Athenians that they applied to the oracles
of the gods for advice in their sore strait, and were
bidden to submit to any terms which Minos might
impose. The terms offered by the offended king
of Crete were severe ones. He demanded that the
Athenians should, at fixed periods, send to Crete
seven youths and seven maidens, as victims to the
insatiable appetite of the Minotaur.

This fabulous creature was one of those destructive
monsters of which many ravaged Greece in the age

¢ 83
34 HISTORICAL TALES.

of fable. It had the body of aman and the head
of a bull, and so great was the havoc it wrought
among the Cretans that Minos engaged the great
artist Dedalus to construct a den from which it
could not escape. Dedalus built for this purpose
the Labyrinth, a far-extending edifice, in which were
countless passages, so winding and intertwining that
no person confined in it could ever find his way out
again. It was like the catacombs of Rome, in which
one who is lost is said to wander helplessly till death
ends his sorrowful career. In this intricate puzzle
of a building the Minotaur was confined.

Every ninth year the fourteen unfortunate youths
and maidens had to be sent from Athens to be de-
voured by this insatiate beast. We are not told on
what food it was fed in the interval, or why Minos
did not end the trouble by allowing it to starve in
its inextricable den. As the story goes, the living
tribute was twice sent, and the third period came
duly round. The youths and maidens to be devoured
were selected by lot from the people of Athens, and
left their city amid tears and woe. But on this oc-
casion Theseus, the king’s son and the great hero of
Athens, volunteered to be one of the band, and
vowed either to slay the terrible beast or dic in the
attempt.

There seem to have been few great events in those
early days of Greece in which Theseus did not take
part. Among his feats was the carrying off of Helen,
the famous beauty, while still a girl. He then took
part in a journey to the under-world,—the realm
of ghosts,—during which Castor and Pollux, the
THESEUS AND ARIADNE. 35

brothers of Helen, rescued and brought her home.
He was also one of the heroes of the Argonautic
expedition and of an expedition against the Amazons,
or nation of women warriors; he fought with and
killed a series of famous robbers; and he rid the
world of a number of ravaging beasts,—the Caly-
donian boar, the Crommyonian sow, and the Mara-
thonian bull, the monster which had slain the son of
Minos. He was, in truth, the Hercules of ancient
Athens, and he now proposed to add to his exploits
a battle for life or death with the perilous Minotaur.

The hero knew that he had before him the most
desperate task of his life. Jiven should he slay the
monster, he would still be in the intricate depths of
the Labyrinth, from which escape was deemed impos-
sible, and in whose endless passages he and his com-
panions might wander until they died of weariness
and starvation. He prayed, therefore, to Neptune
for help, and received a message from the oracle at
Delphi to the effect that Aphrodite (or Venus) would
aid and rescue him.

The ship conveying the victims sailed sadly from
Athens, and at length reached Crete at the port of
Knossus, the residence of King Minos. Here the woful
hostages were led through the streets to the prison
in which they were to be confined till the next day,
when they were to be delivered to death. As they
passed along the people looked with sympathy upon
their fair young faces, and deeply lamented their
coming fate. And, as Venus willed, among the spec-
tators were Minos and his fair daughter Ariadne, who
stood at the palace door to see them pass.
36 HISTORICAL TALES.

The eyes of the young princess fell upon the face
of Theseus, the Athenian prince, and her heart
throbbed with a feeling she had never before known.
Never had she gazed upon a man who seemed to her
half so brave and handsome as this princely youth.
All that night thoughts of him drove slumber from
her eyes. In the early morning, moved by a new-
born love, she sought the prison, and, through her
privilege as the king’s daughter, was admitted to see
the prisoners. Venus was doing the work which
the oracle had promised.

Calling Theseus aside, the blushing maiden told
him of her sudden love, and that she ardently longed
to save him. If he would follow her directions he
would escape. She gave him a sword, which she
had taken from her father’s armory and concealed
beneath her cloak, that he might be armed against
the devouring beast. And she provided him besides
with a ball of thread, bidding him to fasten the end
of it to the entrance of the Labyrinth, and unwind
it as he went in, that it might serve him as a clue to
find his way out again.

As may well be believed, Theseus warmly thanked
his lovely visitor, told her that he was a king’s son,
and that he returned her love, and begged her, in
case he escaped, to return with him to Athens and
be his bride. Ariadne willingly consented, and left
the prison before the guards came to conduct the
victims to their fate. It was like the story of Jason
and Medea retold.

With hidden sword and clue Theseus followed the
guards, in the midst of his fellow-prisoners. They
THESEUS AND ARIADNE. 37

were led into the depths of the Labyrinth and there
left to their fate. But the guards had failed to ob-
serve that Theseus had fastened his thread at the en-
trance and was unwinding the ballas he went. And
now, in this dire den, for hours the hapless victims
awaited their destiny. Mid-day came, and with it a
distant roar from the monster reverberated fright-
fully through the long passages. Nearer came the
blood-thirsty brute, his bellowing growing louder as
he scented human beings. The trembling victims
waited with but a single hope, and that was in the
sword of their valiant prince. At length the creat-
ure appeared, in form a man of giant stature, but
with the horned head and huge mouth of a bull.

Battle at once began between the prince and the
brute. Itsoon ended. Springing agilely behind the
ravening monster, Theseus, with a swinging stroke
of his blade, cut off one of its Jegs at the knee. As
the man-brute fell prone, and lay bellowing with
pain, a thrust through the back reached its heart,
and all peril from the Minotaur was at an end.

This victory gained, the task of Theseus was easy.
The thread led back to the entrance. By aid of
this clue the door of escape was quickly gained.
Waiting until night, the hostages left the dreaded
Labyrinth under cover of the darkness. Ariadne
was in waiting, the ship was secretly gained, and the
rescued Athenians with their fair companion sailed
away, unknown to the king,

But Theseus proved false to the maiden to whom
he owed his life. Stopping at the island of Naxos,
which was sacred to Dionysus (or Bacchus), the god

4
38 HISTORICAL TALES.

of wine, he had a dream in which the god bade him
to desert Ariadne and sail away. This the faithless
swain did, leaving the weeping maiden deserted on
the island. Legend goes on to tell us that the de-
spair of the lamenting maiden ended in the sleep of
exhaustion, and that while sleeping Dionysus found
her, and made her his wife. As for the dream of
Theseus, it was one of those convenient excuses
which traitors to love never lack.

Meanwhile, Theseus and his companions sailed on
over the summer sea. Reaching the isle of Delos,
he offered a sacrifice to Apollo in gratitude for his
escape, and there he, and the merry youths and
maidens with him, danced a dance called the Geranus,
whose mazy twists and turns imitated those of the
Labyrinth.

But the faithless swain was not to escape punish-
ment for his base desertion of Ariadne. He had
arranged with his father Aigeus that if he escaped
the Minotaur he would hoist white sails in the ship
on his return. If he failed, the ship would still
wear the black canvas with which she had set out
on her errand of woe.

The aged king awaited the returning ship on a
high rock that overlooked the sea. At length it hove
in sight, the sails appeared, but—they were black.
With broken heart the father cast himself from
the rock into the sea,—which ever since has been
called, from his name, the Aigean Sea. Theseus,
absorbed perhaps in thoughts of the abandoned
Ariadne, perhaps of new adventures, had forgotten
to make the promised change, And thus was the
THESEUS AND ARIADNE. 39

deserted maiden avenged on the treacherous youth
who owed to her his life.

The ship—or what was believed to be the ship—
of Theseus and the hostages was carefully preserved
at Athens, down to the time of the Macedonian con-
quest, being constantly repaired with new timbers,
till little of the original ship remained. Every year
it was sent to Delos with envoys to sacrifice to
Apollo. Before the ship left port the priest of Apollo
decorated her stern with garlands, and during her
absence no public act of impurity was permitted to
take place in the city. Therefore no one could be
put to death, and Socrates, who was condemned at
this period of the year, was permitted to live for
thirty days until the return of the sacred ship.

There is another legend connected with this story
worth telling. Dedalus, the builder of the Laby-
rinth, at length fell under the displeasure of Minos,
and was confined within the windings of his own
edifice. He had no clue like Theseus, but he had
resources in his inventive skill. Making wings for
himself and his son Icarus, the two flew away from
the Labyrinth and their foe. The father safely
reached Sicily ; but the son, who refused to be gov-
erned by his father’s wise advice, flew so high in his
ambitious folly that the sun melted the wax of which
his wings were made, and he fell into the sea near
the island of Samos. This from him was named the
Icarian Sea.

There is a political as well as a legendary history
of Theseus,—perhaps one no more to be depended
upon than the other. It is said that when he be-
40 HISTORICAL TALES.

came king he made Athens supreme over Attica,
putting an end to the separate powers of the tribes
which had before prevailed. He is also said to
have abolished the monarchy, and replaced it by a
government of the people, whom he divided into the
three classes of nobles, husbandmen, and artisans.
He died at length in the island of Scyrus, where he
fell or was thrown from the cliffs. Ages later, after
the Persian war, the Delphic oracle bade the Athe-
nians to bring back the bones of Theseus from Scy-
rus, and bury them splendidly in Attic soil. Cimon,
the son of Miltiades, found—or pretended to find—
the hero’s tomb, and returned with the famous bones.
They were buried in the heart of Athens, and over
them was erected the monument called the Theseium,
which became afterwards a place of sanctuary for
slaves escaping from cruel treatment and for all
persons in peril. Theseus, who had been the cham-
pion of the oppressed during life, thus became their
refuge after death.
THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES.

Amona the legendary tales of Greece, none of
which are strictly, though several are perhaps
partly, historical, none—after that of Troy—was
more popular with the ancients than the story of
the two sieges of Thebes. This tale had probably
in it an historical element, though deeply overlaid
with myth, and it was the greatest enterprise of
Grecian war, after that of Troy, during what is
called the age of the Heroes. And in it is included
one of the most pathetic episodes in the story of
Greece, that of the sisterly affection and tragic fate
of Antigone, whose story gave rise to noble dramas
by the tragedians Aischylus and Sophocles, and is
still a favorite with lovers of pathetic lore.

Asa prelude to our story we must glance at the
mythical history of Gidipus, which, like that of his
noble daughter, has been celebrated in ancient drama.
Anoracle had declared that he should kill his father,
the king of Thebes. He was, in consequence, brought
up in ignorance of his parentage, yet this led to the
accomplishment of the oracle, for as a youth he,
during a roadside squabble, killed his father not
knowing him. For this crime, which had been one
of their own devising, the gods, with their usual

4* 41
42 HISTORICAL TALES.

inconsistency, punished the land of Thebes; afflicting
that hapless country with a terrible monster called
the Sphinx, which had the face of a woman, the
wings of a bird, and the body ofa lion. This
strangely made-up creature proposed a riddle to the
Thebans, whose solution they were forced to try and
give; and on every failure to give the correct answer
she seized and devoured the unhappy aspirant.
Cidipus arrived, in ignorance of the fact that he
was the son of the late king. He quickly solved
the riddle of the Sphinx, whereupon that monster
committed suicide, and he was made king. He
then married the queen,—not knowing that she was
his own mother.

This celebrated riddle of the Sphinx was not a
very difficult one. It was as follows: “A being
with four feet has two feet and three feet; but its
feet vary, and when it has most it is weakest.”

The answer, as given by Cidipus, was “ Man,” who

‘ First as a babe four-footed creeps on his way,

Then, when full age cometh on, and the burden of years

weighs full heavy,

Bending his shoulders and neck, as a third foot uscth his

staff.”?

When the truth became known—as truth was apt
to become known when too late in old stories—the
queen, Jocasta, mad with anguish, hanged herself,
and Cidipus, in wild despair, put out his eyes. The
gods who had led him blindly into crime, now handed
him over to punishment by the Furies,—the ancient
goddesses of vengeance, whose mission it was to
pursue the criminal with stinging whips.


CEDIPUS AND ANTIGONE.


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THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. 43

The tragic events which followed arose from the
curse of the afflicted Gidipus. He had two sons,
Polynikes and Eteocles, who twice offended him
without intention, and whom he, frenzied by his
troubles, twice bitterly cursed, praying to the gods
that they might perish by each other’s hands.
Cidipus afterwards obtained the pardon of the gods
for his involuntary crime, and died in exile, leaving
Creon, the brother of Jocasta, on the throne. But
though he was dead, his curse kept alive, and brought
on new matter of dire moment.

It began its work in a quarrel between the two sons
as to who should succeed their uncle as king of Thebes.
Polynikes was in the wrong, and was forced to leave
Thebes, while Eteocles remained. The exiled prince
sought the court of Adrastus, king of Argos, who
gave him his daughter in marriage, and agreed to

- assist in restoring him to his native country.

Most of the Argive chiefs joined in the proposed
expedition. But the most distinguished of them
all, Amphiaratis, opposed it as unjust and against
the will of the gods. He concealed himself, lest he
should be forced into the enterprise. But the other
chiefs deemed his aid indispensable, and bribed his
wife, with a costly present, to reveal his hiding-
place. Amphiaraiis was thus forced to join the ex-
pedition, but his prophetic power taught him that it
would end in disaster to all and death to himself,
and as a measure of revenge he commanded his
son Alkmaon to kill the faithless woman who had
betrayed him, and after his death to organize a sec-
ond expedition against Thebes.
44 HISTORICAL TALES.

Seven chiefs led the army, one to assail each of
the seven celebrated gates of Thebes. Onward they
marched against that strong city, heedless of the
hostile portents which they met on their way. The
Thebans also sought the oracle of the gods, and
were told that they should be victorious, but only
on the dread condition that Creon’s son, Menceceus,
should sacrifice himself to Mars. The devoted
youth, on learning that the safety of his country
depended on his life, forthwith killed himself before
the city gates,—thus securing by innocent blood the
powerful aid of the god of war.

Long and strenuous was the contest that suc-
ceeded, each of the heroes fiercely attacking the
gate adjudged to him. But the gods were on the
side of the Thebans and every assault proved in vain.
Parthenopeeus, one of the seven, was killed by a stone,
and another, Capaneus, while furiously mounting the
walls from a scaling-ladder, was slain by a thunder-
bolt cast by Jupiter, and fell dead to the earth.

The assailants, terrified by this portent, drew back,
and were pursued by the Thebans, who issued from
their gates. But the battle that was about to take
place on the open plain was stopped by Eteocles, who
proposed to settle it by a single combat with his
brother Polynikes, the victory to be given to the
side whose champion succeeded in this mortal duel.
Polynikes, filled with hatred of his brother, eagerly
accepted this challenge. Adrastus, the leader of the
assailing army, assented, and the unholy combat
began.

Never was a more furious combat than that be-
THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES, 45

tween the hostile brothers. Hach was exasperated
to bitter hatred of the other, and they fought with
a violence and desperation that could end only in the
death of one of the combatants. As it proved, the
curse of Cidipus was in the keeping of the gods, and
both fell dead,—the fate for which their aged father
had prayed. But the duel had decided nothing, and
the two armies renewed the battle.

And now death and bloodshed ran riot; men fell
by hundreds; deeds of heroic valor were achieved
on either side; feats of individual daring were dis-
played like those which Homer sings in the story of
Troy. But the battle ended in the defeat of the
assailants. Of the seven leaders only two survived,
and one of these, Amphiaraiis, was about to suffer
the fate he had foretold, when Jupiter rescued him
from death by a miracle. The earth opened beneath
him, and he, with his chariot and horses, was re-
ceived unhurt into her bosom. Rendered immortal
by the king of the gods, he was afterwards wor-
shipped as a god himself.

Adrastus, the only remaining chief, was forced to
fly, and was preserved by the matchless speed of his
horse. He reached Argos in safety, but brought
with him nothing but “his garment of woe and his
black-maned steed.”

Thus ended, in defeat and disaster to the assailants,
the first of the celebrated sieges of Thebes. It was
followed by a tragic episode which remains to be
told, that of the sisterly fidelity of Antigone and
her sorrowful fate. Her story, which the dramatists
have mado immortal, is thus told in the legend.
46 HISTORICAL TALES.

After the repulse of his foes, King Creon caused
the body of Kteocles to be buried with the highest
honors; but that of Polynikes was cast outside the
gates as the corpse of a traitor, and death was
threatened to any one who should dare to give it
burial. This cruel edict, which no one else ventured
to ignore, was set aside by Antigone, the sister of
Polynikes. This brave maiden, with warm filial
affection, had accompanied her blind father during
his exile to Attica, and was now returned to Thebes
to perform another holy duty. Funeral rites were
held by the Greeks to be essential to the repose of
the dead, and Antigone, despite Creon’s edict, deter-
mined that her brother's body should not be left to the
dogs and vultures. Her sister, though in sympathy
with her purpose, proved too timid to help her. No
other assistance was to be had. But not deterred
by this, she determined to perform the act alone,
and to bury the body with her own hands.

In this act of holy devotion Antigone succeeded ;
Polynikes was buried. But the sentinels whom
Creon had posted detected her in the act, and she
was seized and dragged before the tribunal of the
tyrant. Here she defended her action with an ear-
nestness and dignity that should have gained her
release, but Creon was inflexible in his anger. She
had set at naught his edict, and should suffer the
penalty for her crime. He condemned her to be
buried alive.

Sophocles, the dramatist, puts noble words into
the mouth of Antigone. This is her protest against
the tyranny of the king:
THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. AT

‘¢ No ordinance of man shall override
The settled laws of Nature and of God;
Not written these in pages of a book,
Nor were they framed to-day, nor yesterday ;
‘We know not whence they are; but this we know,
That they from all eternity have been,
And shall to all eternity endure.”’

And when asked by Creon why she had dared dis-
obey the laws, she nobly replied,—

‘ Not through fear
Of any man’s resolve was I prepared
Before the gods to bear the penalty
Of sinning against these. That I should die
I knew (how should I not?) though thy decree
Had never spoken. And before my time
If I shall die, I reckon this a gain ;
For whoso lives, as I, in many woes,
How can it be but he shall gain by death?”

At the king’s command the unhappy maiden was
taken from his presence and thrust into a sepulchre,
where she was condemned to perish in hunger and
loneliness. But Antigone was not without her ad-
vocate. She had a lover,—almost the only one in
Greek literature. Hemon, the son of Creon, to
whom her hand had been promised in marriage, and
who loved her dearly, appeared before his father
and earnestly interceded for her life. Not on the
plea of his love,—such a plea would have had no
weight with a Greek tribunal,—but on those of mercy
and justice. His plea was vain; Creon was obdu-
rate: the unhappy lover left his presence and sought
Antigone’s living tomb, where he slew himself at
48 HISTORICAL TALES.

the feet of his love, already dead. His mother, on
learning of his fatal act, also killed herself by her
own hand, and Creon was left alone to suffer the
consequences of his unnatural act.

The story goes on to relate that Adrastus, with
the disconsolate mothers of the fallen chieftains,
sought the hero Theseus at Athens, and begged his
aid in procuring the privilege of interment for the
slain warriors whose bodies lay on the plain of
Thebes. The Thebans persisting in their refusal
to permit burial, Theseus at length led an army
against them, defeated them in the field, and forced
them to consent that their fallen foes should be
interred, that last privilege of the dead which was
deemed so essential by all pious Greeks. The tomb
of the chieftains was shown near Hleusis within late
historical times.

But the Thebans were to suffer another reverse.
The sons of the slain chieftains raised an army,
which they placed under the leadership of Adrastus,
and demanded to be led against Thebes. Alkmzon,
the son of Amphiaraiis, who had been commanded to
revenge him, played the most prominent part in the
succeeding war. As this new expedition marched,
the gods, which had opposed the former with hostile
signs, now showed their approval with favorable
portents. Adherents joined them on their march.
At the river Glisas they were met by a Theban
army, and a battle was fought, which ended in a
complete victory over the Theban foe. A prophet
now declared to the Thebans that the gods were
against them, and advised them to surrender the
THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. 49

city. This they did, flying themselves, with their
wives and children, to the country of the Illyrians,
and leaving their city empty to the triumphant foe.
The Epigoni, as the youthful victors were called,
marched in at the head of their forces, took posses-
sion, and placed Thersander, the son of Polynikes,
on the throne. And thusends the famous old legend
of the two sieges of Thebes.
LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN
LAWS.

Or the many nations between which the small
peninsula of Greece was divided, much the most in-
teresting were those whose chief cities were Athens
and Sparta. These are the states with whose doings
history is full, and without which the history of
ancient Greece would be little more interesting to
us than the history of ancient China and Japan.
No two cities could have been more opposite in
character and institutions than these, and they were
rivals of each other forthe dominant power through
centuries of Grecian history. In Athens freedom
of thought and freedom of action prevailed. Such
complete political equality of the citizens has scarcely
been known elsewhere upon the earth, and the intel-
lectual activity of these citizens stands unequalled.
In Sparta freedom of thought and action were both
suppressed to a degree rarely known, the most rigid
institutions existed, and the only activity was a war-
like one. All thought and all education had war for
their object, and the state and city became a com-
pact military machine. This condition was the re-
sult of a remarkable code of laws by which Sparta
was governed, the most peculiar and surprising code
which any nation has ever possessed. It is this

60
LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 51

code, and Lycurgus, to whom Sparta owed it, with
which we are now concerned.

First, who was Lycurgus and in what age did he
live? Neither of these questions can be closely an-
swered. Though his laws are historical, his biogra-
phy is legendary. He is believed to have lived
somewhere about 900 or 1000 Bc. that age of
legend and fable in which Homer lived, and what
we know about him is little more to be trusted than
what we know about the great poet. The Greeks
had stories of their celebrated men of this remote
age, but they were stories with which imagination
often had more to do than fact, and though we may
enjoy them, it is never quite safe to believe them.

As for the very uncertain personage named Ly-
curgus, we are told by Herodotus, the Greek his-
torian, that when he was born the Spartans were
the most lawless of the Greeks, Every man was a
law unto himself, and confusion, tumult, and injustice
everywhere prevailed. Lycurgus, a noble Spartan,
sad at heart for the misery of his country, applied
to the oracle at Delphi, and received instructions as
to how he should act to bring about a better state
of affairs.

Plutarch, who tells so many charming stories
about the ancient Greeks and Romans, gives us the
following account. According to him the brother
of Lycurgus was king of Sparta. When he died
Lycurgus was offered the throne, but he declined
the honor and made his infant nephew, Charilaus,
king. Then he left Sparta, and travelled through
Crete, Ionia, Egypt, and several more remote coun-
52 HISTORICAL TALES.

tries, everywhere studying the laws and customs
which he found prevailing. In Ionia he obtained a
copy of the poems of Homer, and is said by some
to have met and conversed with Homer himself.
If, as is supposed, the Greeks of that age had not
the art of writing, he must have carried this copy
in his memory.

On his return home from this long journey Ly-
curgus found his country in a worse state than be-
fore. Sparta, it may be well here to say, had always
two kings; but it found, as might have been ex-
pected, that two kings were worse than one, and
that this odd device in government never worked
well. At any rate, Lycurgus found that law had
nearly vanished, and that disorder had taken its
place. He now consulted the oracle at Delphi, and
was told that the gods would support him in what
he proposed to do.

Coming back to Sparta, he secretly sSenoreHe a
body-guard of thirty armed men from among the
noblest citizens, and then presented himself in the
Agora, or place of public assembly, announcing that
he had come to end the disorders of his native land.
King Charilaus at first heard of this with terror,
but on learning what his uncle intended, he offered
his support. Most of the leading men of Sparta
did the same. Lycurgus was to them a descendant
of the great hero Hercules, he was the most learned
and travelled of their people, and the reforms he
proposed were sadly needed in that unhappy land.

These reforms were of two kinds. He desired
to reform both the government and society. We
LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS, 53

shall deal first with the new government which he
instituted. The two kings were left unchanged. But
under them was formed a senate of twenty-eight mem-
bers, to whom the kings were joined, making thirty
in all. The people also were given their assemblies,
but they could not debate any subject, all the power
they had was to accept or reject what the senate had
decreed. At a later date five men, called ephors,
were selected from the people, into whose hands fell
nearly all the civil power, so that the kings had
little more to do than to command the army and
lead it to war. The kings, however, were at the
head of the religious establishment of the country,
and were respected by the people as descendants of
the gods.

The government of Sparta thus became an aris-
tocracy or oligarchy. The ephors came from the
people, and were appointed in their interest, but they
came to rule the state so completely that neither the
kings, the senate, nor the assembly had much voice
in the government. Such was the outgrowth of the
governmental institutions of Lycurgus.

It is the civil laws made by Lycurgus, however,
which are of most interest, and in which Sparta
differed from all other states. The people of Laconia,
the country of which Sparta was the capital, were
composed of two classes. That country had origi-
nally been conquered by the Spartans, and the
ancient inhabitants, who were known as Helots,
were held as slaves by their Spartan conquerors.
They tilled the ground to raise food for the citizens,
who were all soldiers, and whose whole life and

5*
54 HISTORICAL TALES.

thought were given to keeping the Helots in slavery
and to warlike activity. That they might make the
better soldiers, Lycurgus formed laws to do away
with all luxury and inequality of conditions, and to
train up the young under a rigid system of discipline
to the use of weapons and the arts of war. The
Helots, also, were often employed as light-armed
soldiers, and there was always danger that they
might revolt against their oppressors, a fact which
made constant discipline and vigilance necessary to
the Spartan citizens.

Lycurgus found great inequality in the state. A
few owned all the land, and the remainder were
poor. The rich lived in luxury; the poor were
reduced to misery and want. He divided the whole
territory of Sparta into nine thousand equal lots,
one of which was given to each citizen. The terri-
tory of the remainder of Laconia was divided into’
thirty thousand equal lots, one of which was given
to each Pericecus. (The Periceci were the freemen
of the country outside of the Spartan city and dis-
trict, and did not possess the full rights of citizen-
ship.)

This measure served to equalize wealth. But
further to prevent luxury, Lycurgus banished all
gold and silver from the country, and forced the
people to use iron money,—each piece so heavy that
none would care to carry it. He also forbade the
citizens to have anything to do with commerce or
industry. They were to be soldiers only, and the
Helots were to supply them with food. As for com-
merce, since no other state would accept their iron
LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 55

money, they had to depend on themselves for every-
thing they needed. The industries of Laconia were
kept strictly at home.

To these provisions Lycurgus added another of
remarkable character. No one was allowed to take
his meals at home. Public tables were provided, at
which all must eat, every citizen being forced to be-
long to some special public mess. Each had to sup-
ply his quota of food, such as barley, wine, cheese,
and figs from his land, game obtained by hunting, or
the meat of the animals killed for sacrifices. At
these tables all shared alike. The kings and the
humblest citizens were on an equality. No distinc-
tion was permitted except to those who had rendered
some signal service to the state.

This public mess was not accepted without pro-
test. Those who were used to luxurious living were
not ready to be brought down to such simple fare,
and a number of these attacked Lycurgus in the
market-place, and would have stoned him to death
had he not run briskly for his life. As it was, one
of his pursuers knocked out his eye. But, such was
his content at his success, that he dedicated his last
eye to the gods, building a temple to the goddess
Athene of the Eye. At these public tables black
broth was the most valued dish, the elder men eat-
ing it in preference, and leaving the meat to their
younger messmates.

The houses of the Spartans were as plain as they
could well be made, and as simple in furniture as
possible, while no lights were permitted at bedtime,
it being designed that every one should become ac-
56 HISTORICAL TALES.

customed to walking boldly in the dark. This, how-
ever, was but a minor portion of the Spartan dis-
cipline. Throughout life, from boyhood to old age,
every one was subjected to the most rigorous train-
ing. From seven years of age the drill continued,
and every one was constantly being trained or seeing
others under training. The day was passed in pub-
lic exercises and public meals, the nights in public
barracks. Married Spartans rarely saw their wives
—during the first years of marriage—and had very
little to do with their children; their whole lives
were given to the state, and the slavery of the
Helots to them was not more complete than their
slavery to military discipline.

They were not only drilled in the complicated
military movements which taught a body of Spartan
soldiers to act as one man, but also had incessant
gymnastic training, so as to make them active,
strong, and enduring. They were taught to bear
severe pain unmoved, to endure heat and cold,
hunger and thirst, to walk barefoot on rugged
ground, to wear the same garment summer and
winter, to suppress all display of feeling, and in
public to remain silent and motionless until action
was called for.

Two companies were often matched against each
other, and these contests were carried on with fury,
fists and fect taking the place of arms. — Hunting
in the woods and mountains was encouraged, that
they might learn to bear fatigue. The boys were
kept half fed, that they might be forced to provide
for themselves by hunting or stealing. The latter
LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 57

was designed to make them cunning and skilful,
and if detected in the act they were severely pun-
ished. The story is told that one boy who had
stolen a fox and hidden it under his garment, per-
mitted the animal to tear him open with claws and
teeth, and died rather than reveal his theft,

One might say that he would rather have been
born a girl than a boy in Sparta; but the girls were
trained almost as severely as the boys. They were
forced to contend with each other in running, wrest-
ling, and boxing, and to go through other gymnastic
exercises calculated to make them strong and healthy.
They marched in the religious processions, sung and
danced at festivals, and were present at the exercises
of the youths. Thus boys and girls were continually
mingled, and the praise or reproach of the latter did
much to stimulate their brothers and friends to the
utmost exertion.

As a result of all this the Spartans became strong,
vigorous, and handsome in form and face. The
beauty of their women was everywhere celebrated.
The men became unequalled for soldierly qualities,
able to bear the greatest fatigue and privation, and
to march great distances in a brief time, while on
the field of battle they were taught to conquer or to
die, a display of cowardice or flight from the field
being a lifelong disgrace. |

Such were the main features of the most singular
set of laws any nation ever had, the best fitted to
make a nation of soldiers, and also to prevent in-
tellectual progress in any other direction than the
single one of war-making. Even eloquence in speech
58 HISTORICAL TALES,

was discouraged, and a brief or laconic manner sedu-
lously cultivated. But while all this had its advan-
tages, it had its defects. The number of citizens
decreased instead of increasing. At the time of the
Persian war there were eight thousand of them.
Ata late date there were but seven hundred, of whom
one hundred possessed most of the land. Whether
Lycurgus really divided the land equally or not is
doubtful. At any rate, in time the land fell into a
few hands, the poor increased in number, and the
people steadily died out; while the public mess, so
far as the rich were concerned, became a mere form.

But we need not deal with these late events, and
must go back to the story told of Lycurgus. It is
‘said that when he had completed his code of laws,
he called together an assembly of the people, told
them that he was going on a journey, and asked
them to swear that they would obey his laws till
he returned. This they agreed to do, the kings, the |
senate, and the people all taking the oath.

Then the law-giver went to Delphi, where he
offered a sacrifice to Apollo, and asked the oracle
if the laws he had made were good. The oracle
answered that they were excellent, and would brin g
the people the greatest fame. This answer he had
put into writing and sent to Sparta, for he had re-
solved to make his oath binding for all time by never
returning. So the old man starved himself to death.

The Spartans kept their oath. For five hundred
years their city continued one of the chief cities of
Greece, and their army the most warlike and dreaded
of the armies of the earth. As for Lycurgus, his


LYCURGUS AND THE SPARTAN LAWS. 59

countrymen worshipped him as a god, and imputed
to him all that was noble in their institutions and
excellent in their laws. But time brings its in-
evitable changes, and these famous institutions in
time decayed, while the people perished from over-
strict discipline or other causes till but a small troop
of Spartans remained, too weak in numbers fairly
to control the Helots of their fields.

In truth, the laws of Lycurgus were unnatural,
and in the end could but fail. They were framed to
make one-sided men, and only whole men can long
succeed. Human nature will have its way, and
luxury and corruption crept into Sparta despite
these laws. Nor did the Spartans prove braver or
more successful in war than the Athenians, whose
whole nature was developed, and who were alike
great in literature, art, and war.
ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF
MESSENTA,

We have told by what means the Spartans grew
to be famous warriors. We have now to tell one
of the ancient stories of how they used their war-
like prowess to extend their dominions. Laconia,
their country, was situated in the southeast section
of the Peloponnesus, that southern peninsula which
is attached to the remainder of Greece by the narrow
neck of land known as the Isthmus of Corinth. Their
capital city was anciently called Lacedemon; it was
later known as Sparta. In consequence they are
called in history both Spartans and Lacedemonians.

In the early history of the Spartans they did not
trouble themselves about Northern Greece. They
had enough to occupy them in the Peloponnesus.
As the Romans, in after-time, spent their early
centuries in conquering the small nations immedi-
ately around them, so did the Spartans. And the
first wars of this nation of soldiers seem to have
been with Messenia, a small country west of Laconia,
and extending like it southward into the blue waters
of the Mediterranean Sea.

There were two wars with the Messenians, both
full of stories of daring and disaster, but it is the
second of these with which we are specially con-

60
ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA., 61

cerned, that in which the hero Aristomenes won his
fame. We shall not ask our readers to believe all
that is told about this ancient champion. Much of
it is very doubtful. But the war in which he took
part was historical, and the conquest of Messenia
was the first great event in Spartan history.

Now for the story itself. In the first Messenian
war, which was fought more than seven hundred
years B.c., the leader of the Messenians was named
Aristodemus. A quarrel had arisen between the
two nations during some sacrifices on their border
lands. The Spartans had laid a snare for their
neighbors by dressing some youths as maidens and
arming them with daggers. They attacked the
Messenians, but were defeated, and the Spartan
king was slain.

In the war that ensued the Messenians in time
found themselves in severe straits, and followed the
plan that seems to have been common throughout
Grecian history. They sent to Delphi to ask aid
and advice from the oracle of Apollo. And the
oracle gave them one of its often cruel and always
uncertain answers; saying that if they would be
successful a virgin of the house of Mpytus must
die for her country. To fulfil this cruel behest
Aristodemus, who was of that ancient house, killed
his daughter with his own hand,—much as Aga-
memnon had sacrificed his daughter before sailing
for Troy.

Aristodemus afterwards became king, and had a
stirring and tragic history, which was full of por-
tents and prodigies. Thus an old blind prophet sud-

6
62 ‘ HISTORICAL TALES,

denly recovered his sight,—which the Messenians
looked upon to mean something, though it is not
clear what. its brazen shield; which meant something more,—
probably that the fastenings had given way; but
the ancients looked on it as a portent. Then the
ghost of his murdered daughter appeared to Aris-
todemus, pointed to her wounded side, stripped off
his armor, placed on his head a crown of gold and
on his body a white robe,—a sign of death. So, as
it seemed evident that he had mistaken the oracle,
and killed his daughter without saving his country,
he did the only thing that remained for him: he
went to her grave and killed himself. And with
this tragedy ends all we need to tell about the first
champion of Messenia.

The war ended in the conquest of Messenia by the
Spartans. The conquered people were very harshly
treated by the conquerors, being forced to pay as
tribute half the produce of their fields, and to humble
themselves before their haughty masters. As a re-
sult, about fifty years afterwards, they broke out
into rebellion, and a second Messenian war began.

This war lasted for many years, the Messenians
being led by a valiant hero named Aristomenes, who
performed startling exploits and made marvellous
escapes. Three great battles took place, with vari-
ous results, and three times Aristomenes made a re-
markable sacrifice to the king of the gods. This
was called the Hekatomphonia, and could only be
offered by one who had slain, with his own hands,
one hundred enemies in battle,
ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA. 63

But great battles were not all. There were years
of guerilla warfare. At the head of a band of brave
followers Aristomenes made his way more than once
to the very heart of Laconia, surprised two of its
cities, and on one occasion ventured into Sparta
itself by night. Here he boldly entered the temple
of Athene of the Brazen House and hung up his
shield there as a mark of defiance to his enemies,
placing on it an inscription which said that Aris-
tomenes presented it as an offering from Spartan
spoil.

The Messenian maidens crowned their hero with
garlands, and danced around him, singing a war
strain in honor of his victories over his foes. Yet
he found the Spartans vigorous and persistent ene-
mies, and in spite of all his victories was forced at
length to take refuge in the mountain fastnesses,
where he held out against his foes for eleven years.

We do not know all the adventures of this famous
champion, but are told that he was taken prisoner
three times by his enemies. Twice he made marvel-
lous escapes while they were conveying him to
Sparta. On the third occasion he was less fortu-
nate. His foes bore him in triumph to their capital
city, and here he was condemned to be cast from
Mount Taygetus into the Keadas, a deep rock cavity
into which they flung their criminals.

Fifty Messenian prisoners suffered the same fate
and were all killed; but the gods, so we are told,
came to their leader’s aid. The legend says that an
eagle took Aristomenes on its outspread wings, and
landed him safely in the bottom of the pit. More
64 HISTORICAL TALES.

likely the bodies of the former victims broke his
fall. Seeing no possible way out from the deep
cavity, he wrapped himself in his cloak, and re-
signed himself to die. But, while thus lying, he
saw a fox prowling among the dead bodies, and
questioned himself how it had found its way into
the pit. When it came near him he grasped its tail,
defending himself from its bites by means of his
cloak. Holding fast, he followed the fox to the
aperture by which it had entered, enlarged it so
that he could creep out, and soon appeared alive
again in the field, to the surprise of his friends and
the consternation of his foes.

Being seized again by some Cretan bowmen, he
was rescued by a maiden, who dreamed that wolves
had brought into the city a chained lion, bereft of
its claws, and that she had given it claws and set it
free. When she saw Aristomenes among his captors,
she believed that her dream had come true, and that
the gods desired her to set him free. This she did
by making his captors drunk, and giving him a
dagger with which he cut his bonds. The indiscreet
bowmen were killed by the warrior, while the es-
caped hero rewarded the maiden by making her the
wife of his son.

But Messenia was doomed by the gods, and no
man could avert its fate. The oracle of Delphi de-
clared that if the he-goat (Tragos) should drink the
waters of the Neda, the god could no longer defend
that fatal country. And now a fig-tree sprang up
on the banks of the Neda, and, instead of spreading
its branches aloft, let them droop till they touched
ARISTOMENES, THE HERO OF MESSENIA. 65

the waters of the stream. This a seer announced
as the fulfilment of the oracle, for in the Messenian
language the fig-tree was called Tragos.

Aristomenes now, discouraged by the decree of
the gods, and finding himself surrounded, through
treachery, by his enemies in his mountain strong-
hold, decided to give up the hopeless struggle. He
broke fiercely through the ranks of his assailants
with his sons and followers, and left his country to
the doom which the gods had decreed.

The end of his career, like its earlier events, was,
according to the legend, under the control of the
deities. Damagetes, the king of the island of
Rhodes, had been told by an oracle that he must
marry the bravest of the Hellenes (or Greeks).
Believing that Aristomenes had the best claim to
this proud title, he asked him for the hand of his
daughter in marriage, and offered him a home in
his island realm. Aristomenes consented, and spent
the remainder of his days in Rhodes. From his
daughter descended the illustrious family of the
Diagoride.

This romantic story of the far past resembles
those of King Alfred of England, of Wallace and
Bruce of Scotland, and of other heroes who have
defended their countries single-handed against a
powerful foe. But we are not done with it yet.
There is another singular and interesting episode to
be told,—a legend, no doubt, but one which has
almost passed into history.

The story goes that the Spartans, losing heart at
the success of the Messenians in the early years of

é 6%
66 HISTORICAL TALES.

the war, took the usual method then adopted, and
sent to the oracle at Delphi for advice. The oracle
told them to apply to Athens for a leader. They
did so, sending an embassy to that city; and in
response to the oracle the Athenians sent them a
lame schoolmaster named Tyrteus. They did not
dare to resist the command of the god, but they had
no desire to render any actual aid to the Spartans.

However, Apollo seems to have been wiser than
the Athenians. The lame schoolmaster was an able
poet as well, and on reaching Sparta he composed a
series of war-songs which so inspirited the army
that they marched away to victory. Tyrteus was
probably not only an able poet; very likely he also
gave the Spartans good advice in the conduct of the
war, and though he did not lead their armies, he
animated them by his songs and aided them with
his advice until victory followed their career of
defeat.

For many years afterwards the war-songs of Tyr-
teus remained highly popular at Sparta, and some
of them have come down to our own days. As for
the actual history of this war, most of what we
know seems to have been written by Tyrteus, who
was thus not only the poet but the historian of the
Messenian wars.
SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF
ATHENS.

We have told how Sparta came to have an aris-
tocratic government, under the laws of Lycurgus.
We have now to tell how Athens came to have a
democratic government, under the laws of Solon.
These formed the types of government for later
Greece, some of whose nations became aristocracies,
following the example of Sparta; others became
democracies, and formed their governments on the
model of that of Athens.

As before Lycurgus the Spartan commonwealth
was largely without law, so was Athens before
Solon. In those days the people of Attica—of
which Athens was the capital city—were divided
into three factions,—the rich, the middle class, and
the poor. As for the poor, they were in a condition
of misery, being loaded down with debt, and many
of them in a state of slavery to the rich, who owned
nearly all the land.

At that period what law existed was very severe
against debtors. The debtor became the slave of
his creditor, and was held in this state until he
could pay his debt, either in money or in labor.
And not only he, but his younger sons and his un-
married daughters and sisters, were reduced to
slavery. Through the action of this severe law

67
68 HISTORICAL TALES,

many of the poor of Attica were owned as slaves,
many had been sold as slaves, some had kept their
freedom only by selling their own children, and
some had fied from the country to escape slavery.
And this, too, had arisen in many cases through in-
justice in the courts and corruption of the judges.
In the time of Solon the misery and oppression
from these laws became so great that there was a
general mutiny of the poor against the rich. They
refused to submit to the unjust enactments of their
rulers, and the state fell into such frightful disorder
that the governing class, no longer able to control
the people, were obliged to call Solon to their aid.
Solon did not belong to the rich men of Athens,
‘though he was of noble birth, and, like so many of
the older Greeks, traced his family line back to the
gods. Neptune, the ocean deity, was fabled to be
his far-off ancestor. He was born about 638 B.o.
His father had spent most of his money, largely in
kind deeds to others, and the son found himself
obliged to become a merchant. In this pursuit he
travelled in many parts of Greece and Asia, and
in his journeys paid more heed to the gaining of
knowledge than of money, so that when he came
back his mind was fuller than his purse. Men who
seek wisdom rarely succeed in gaining much money,
but Solon’s story goes to show that wisdom is far
the better of the two, and that a rich mind is of
more value than a rich purse. When he returned
to Attica he gained such fame as a poet and a man
of learning and wisdom that he has ever since been
classed as one of the Seven Wise Men of Greece.
SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS. 69

Of these wise men the following story is told.
Some fishermen of Cos cast their net into the sea,
and brought up in its meshes a golden tripod, which
the renowned Helen had thrown into the sea during
her return from Troy. A dispute arose as to whom
the tripod should belong. Several cities were ready
to go to war about it. To prevent bloodshed the
oracle of Apollo was applied to, and answered that
it should be sent to the wisest man that could be
found.

It was at first sent to Thales of Miletus, a man
famous for wisdom. But he- decided that Bias of
Priene was wiser than he, and sent it to him. And
thus it went the round of the seven wise men,—
Solon among them, so wé are told,—and finally
came back to Thales. He refused to keep it, and
placed it in the temple of Apollo at Thebes.

An evidence alike of Solon’s wisdom, shrewdness,
and political skill arose in the war for the island of
Salamis, which adjoined the two states of Megara
and Attica, and for whose possession they were at
war. After the Athenians had been at great loss of
men and money in this conflict, Megara gained the
island, and the people of Athens became so dis-
gusted with the whole affair that a law was passed
declaring that any man who spoke or wrote again
about the subject should be put to death.

This Solon held to be a stain on the honor of
Athens. He did not care to lose his life by break-
ing the law, but was not content that his country
should rest under the stigma of defeat, and should
yield so valuable a prize, He accordingly had it
70 HISTORICAL TALES.

given out that he had gone mad; and in pretended
insanity he rushed into the public square, mounted
the herald’s stone, and repeated a poem he had com-
posed for the occasion, recalling vividly to the people
the disgrace of their late defeat. His stirring appeal
so wrought upon their feelings that the law was re-
pealed, war was declared, and Solon was placed in
command of the army.

Megara sent out a ship to watch the proceedings,
but this was seized by Solon’s fleet and manned by
part of his force. The remainder of his men were
landed and marched towards the city of Salamis,
on which they made an assault. While this was
going on, Solon sailed up with the ship he had cap-
tured. The Megarians, thinking it to be their own
ship, permitted it to enter the port, and the city
was taken by surprise. Salamis, thus won, con-
tinued to belong to Athens till those late days when
Philip of Macedon conquered Greece.

To Solon, now acknowledged to be the wisest and
most famous of the Athenians, the tyrants who had
long misruled Athens turned, when they found the
people in rebellion against their authority. In the
year 594 B.c. he was chosen archon, or ruler of the
state, and was given full power to take such meas-
ures as were needed to put an end to the disorders.
Probably these autocrats supposed that he would
help them to continue in power; but, if so, they did
not know the man with whom they had to deal.

Solon might easily have made himself a despot,
if he had chosen,—all the states of Greece being
then under the rule of despots or of tyrannical aris-
SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS. 71

tocrats. But he was too honest and too wise for
this. He set himself earnestly to overcome the
difficulties which lay before him. And he did this
with a radical hand. In truth, the people were in
no mood for any but radical measures.

The enslaved debtors were at once set free. All
contracts in which the person or the land of the
debtor had been given as. security were cancelled.
No future contract under which a citizen could be
enslaved or imprisoned for debt was permitted.
All past claims against the land of Attica were can-
celled, and the mortgage pillars removed. (These
pillars were set up at the boundaries of the land,
and had the lender's name and the amount of the
debt cut into the stone).

But as many of the creditors were themselves in
debt to richer men, and as Solon’s laws left them
poor, he adopted a measure for their relief. This
was to lower the value of the money of the state.
The old silver drachmas were replaced by new
drachmas, of which seventy-three equalled one hun-
dred of the old. Debtors were thus able to pay
their debts at a discount of twenty-seven per cent.,
and the great loss fell on the rich; and justly so, for
most of them had gained their wealth through dis-
honesty and oppression. Lastly, Solon made full
citizens of all from whom political rights had been
taken, except those who had been condemned for
murder or treason.

This was a bold measure. And, like such bold
measures generally, it did injustice to many. But
the evil was temporary, the good permanent. It
72 HISTORICAL TALES.

put an end to much injustice, and no such condition
as had prevailed ever again arose in Athens. The
government of the aristocracy came to an end under
Solon’s laws. From that time forward Athens grew
more and more a government of the people.

The old assembly of the people existed then, but
all its power had been taken from it. Solon gave
back to it the right of voting and of passing laws.
But he established a council of four hundred men,
elected annually by the people, whose duty it was
to consider the business-upon which the assembly
was to act. And the assembly could only deal with
business that was brought before it by this council.

The assemblies of the people took place on the
Pnyx, a hill that overlooked the city, and from
which could be seen the distant sea. At its right
stood the Acropolis, that famous hill on which the
noblest of temples were afterwards built. Between
these two hills rose the Arcopagus, on which the
Athenian supreme court held its sessions. The
Athenians loved to do their business in the open air,
and, while discussing questions of law and justice,
delighted in the broad view before them of the
temples, the streets, and the crowded marts of trade
» of the city, and the shining sea, with its white-sailed
craft, afar in the sunny distance.

Solon’s laws went further than we have said. He
divided the people into four ranks or divisions, ac-
cording to their wealth in land. The richer men
were, the more power they were given in the state.
But at the same time they had to pay heavier taxes,
so that their greater authority was not an unmixed
SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS, 73

blessing. The lowest class, composed of the poorest
citizens, had no taxes at all to pay, and no power in
the state, other than the right to vote in the assem-
bly. When called out as soldiers arms were fur-
nished them, while the other classes had to buy their
own arms.

Various other laws were made by Solon. The old
law against crime, established long before by Draco,
had made death the penalty for every crime, from
murder to petty theft. This severe law was re-
pealed, and the punishment made to agree with the
crime. Minor laws were these: The living could
not speak evil of the dead. No person could draw
more than a fixed quantity of water daily from the
public wells. People who raised bees must not have
their hives too near those of their neighbors. It
was fixed how women should dress, and they were
forbidden to scratch or tear themselves at funerals.
They had to carry baskets of a fixed size when they
went abroad. A dog that bit anybody had to be
delivered up with a log four feet and a half long
tied to its neck. Such were some of the laws which
the council swore to maintain, each member vowing
that if he broke any of them he would dedicate a
golden statue as large as himself to Apollo, at Delphi.

Having founded his laws Solon, fearing that he
would be forced to make changes in them, left
Athens, having bound the people by oath to keep
them for ten years, during which time he proposed
to be absent.

From Athens he set sail for Egypt, and in that
ancient realm talked long with two learned priests

D 7
74. HISTORICAL TALES.

about the old history of the land. Among the storics
they told him was a curious one about a great island
named Atlantis, far in the western ocean, against
which Athens had waged war nine thousand years
before, and which had afterwards sunk under the
Atlantic’s waves. It was one of those fanciful
legends of which the past had so great a store.

From Egypt he went to Cyprus, where he dwelt
long and made useful changes. He is also said to
have visited, at Sardis, Croesus, the king of Lydia, a
monarch famous for his wealth and good fortune.
About this visit a pretty moral story is told. It is
probably not true, being a fiction of the ancient story-
tellers, but, fiction or not, it is well worth the telling.

Croesus had been so fortunate in war that he had
made his kingdom great and prosperous, while he
was esteemed the richest monarch of his times. He
lodged Solon in his palace and had his servants
show him all the treasures which he had gained.
He then, conversing with his visitor, praised him
for his wisdom, and asked him whom he deemed to
be the happiest of men.

He expected an answer flattering to his vanity,
but Solon simply replied,—

“Tellus, of Athens.”

“ And why do you deem Tellus the happiest?” de-
manded Croesus.

Solon gave as his reason that Tellus lived in com-
fort and had good and beautiful sons, who also had
good children; and that he died in gallant defence
of his country, and was buried by his countrymen
with the highest honors.
SOLON, THE LAW-GIVER OF ATHENS. 75

«And whom do you give the second place in hap-
piness?” asked Croesus.

“ Cleobis and Bito,” answered Solon. “These were
men of the Argive race, who had fortune enough for
their wants, and were so strong as to gain prizes at
the Games.

“ But their special title to happiness was,” continued
Solon, that in a festival to the goddess Juno, at Ar-
gos, their mother wished to go ina car. As the oxen
did not return in time from the fields, the youths,
fearing to be late, yoked themselves to the car, and
drew their mother to the temple, forty-five furlongs
away. This filial deed gained them the highest
praise from the people, while their mother prayed
the goddess to bestow upon them the highest bless-
ing to which mortals can attain, After her prayer,
the youths offered sacrifices, partook of the holy
banquet, and fell asleep in the temple. They never
woke again! This was the blessing of the goddess.”

“ What,” cried Croesus, angrily, “is my happiness,
then, of so little value to you that you put me on a
level with private men like these ?”

“You are very rich, Croesus,” answered Solon,
“and are lord of many nations. But remember
that you have many days yet to live, and that any
single day in a man’s life may yield events that will
change all his fortune. As to whether you are
supremely happy and fortunate, then, I have no
answer to make. I cannot speak for your happiness
till I know if your life has a happy ending.” *



* The sequel to this episode will be found in the tale en-
titled “The Fortune of Croesus.”
76 HISTORICAL TALES.

Solon, having completed his travels, returned to
Athens to find it in turmoil. Pisistratus, a politi-
cal adventurer and a favorite with the people, had
gained despotic power by a cunning trick. He
wounded himself, and declared that he had been
attacked and wounded by his political enemies. He
asked, therefore, for a body-guard for his protection.
This was granted him by the popular assembly,
which was strongly on his side. With its aid he
seized the Acropolis and made himself master of the
city, while his opponents were forced to fly for their
lives.

This revolutionary movement was strenuously op-
posed by Solon, but in vain. Pisistratus had made
himself so popular with the people that they treated
their old law-giver like a man who had lost his
senses. As a last appeal he put on his armor and
placed himself before the door of his house, as if on
guard as a sentinel over the liberties of his country!
This appeal was also in vain.

“T have done my duty!” he exclaimed; “I have
sustained to the best of my power my country and
the laws.”

He refused to fly, saying, when ales on what he
relied for protection, “On my old age.’

Pisistratus—who proved a very mild decpomeneny
his aged opponent unharmed, and in the next year
Solon died, being then eighty years of age.

His laws lived after him, despite the despotism
which ruled over Athens for the succeeding fifty
years,
THE FORTUNE OF CRGSUS.

Tue land of the Hellenes, or Greeks, was not con-
fined to the small peninsula now known as Greece.
Hellenic colonies spread far to the east and the
west, to Italy and Sicily on the one hand, to Asia
Minor and the shores of the Black Sea on the
other. The story of the Argonauts probably arose
from colonizing expeditions to the Black Sea. That
of Croesus has to do with the colonies in Asia Minor.

These colonies clung to the coast. Inland lay
other nations, to some extent of Hellenic origin.
One of these was the kingdom of Lydia, whose
history is of the highest importance to us, since the
conflicts between Lydia and the coast colonies were
the first steps towards the invasion of Greece by
the Persians, that most important event in early
Grecian history.

These conflicts began in the reign of Crcesus, an
ambitious king of Lydia in the sixth century before
Christ. What gave rise to the war between Lydia
and the Greek settlements of Ionia and Molia we
do not very well know. An ambitious despot does
not need much pretext for war. He wills the war,
and the pretext follows. It will suffice to say that,
on one excuse or another, Croesus made war on

ie 17
78 HISTORICAL TALES.

every Ionian and AXolian state, and conquered them
one after the other.

First the great and prosperous city of Ephesus
fell. Then, one by one, others followed, till, by the
year 550 B.c., Croesus had become lord and master
of every one of those formerly free and wealthy
cities and states. Then, having placed all the col-
onies on the mainland under tribute, he designed
to conquer the islands as well, and proposed to build
ships for that purpose. He was checked in this plan
by the shrewd answer of one of the seven wise men
of Greece, either Bias or Pittacus, who had visited
Sardis, the capital of Lydia.

“What news bring you from Greece?” asked
King Creesus of his wise visitor.

“T am told that the islanders are gathering ten
thousand horse, with the purpose of attacking you
and your capital,” was the answer.

“What!” cried Croesus. “Have the gods given
these shipmen such an idea as to fight the Lydians
with cavalry ?”

“T fancy, O king,” answered the Greek, “that
nothing would please you better than to catch. these
islanders here on horseback. But do you not think
that they would like nothing better than to catch
you at sea on shipboard? Would they not avenge
on you the misfortunes of their conquered brethren ?”

This shrewd suggestion taught Croesus a lesson.
Instead of fighting the islanders, he made a treaty
of peace and friendship with them. But he con-
tinued his conquests on the mainland till in the end
all Asia Minor was under his sway, and Lydia had
THE FORTUNE OF CRSUS., 79

become one of the great kingdoms of the earth.
Such wealth came to Croesus as a result of his con-
quests and unchanging good fortune that he became
accounted the richest monarch upon the earth,
while Sardis grew marvellous for its splendor and
prosperity. At an earlier date there had come
thither another of the seven wise men of Greece,
Solon, the law-giver of Athens. What passed be-
tween this farseeing visitor and the proud monarch
of Lydia we have already told.

The misfortunes which ‘Solon told the king were
liable to come upon any man befell Creesus during
the remainder of his life. Herodotus, the historian,
tells us the romantic story of how the gods sent
misery to him who had boasted overmuch of his
happiness. We give briefly this interesting account.

Croesus had two sons, one of whom was deaf and
dumb, the other, Atys by name, gifted with the
highest qualities which nature has to bestow. The
king loved his bright and handsome son as dearly as
he loved his wealth, and when a dream came to him
that Atys would die by the blow of an iron weapon,
he was deeply disturbed in his mind.

How should he prevent such a misfortune? In
alarm, he forbade his son to take part in military
forays, to which he had before encouraged him; and,
to solace him for this deprivation, bade him to take a
wife. Then, lest any of the warlike weapons which
hung upon the walls of his apartments might fall and
wound him, the king had them all removed, and stored
away in the part of the palace devoted to the women.

But fate had decreed that all such precautions
80 HISTORICAL TALES.

should be in vain. At Mount Olympus, in Mysia,
had appeared a monster boar, that ravaged the
fields of the lowlands and defied pursuit into his
mountain retreat. Hunting parties were sent against
him, but the great boar came off unscathed, while
the hunters always suffered from his frightful tusks.
At length ambassadors were sent to Croesus, beg-
ging him to send his son, with other daring youths
and with hunting hounds, to aid them rid their
country of this destructive brute.

“That cannot be,” answered Croesus, still in terror
from his dream. “My son is just married, and can-
not so soon leave his bride. But I will send youa
picked band of hunters, and bid them use all zeal to
kill this foe of your harvests.”

With this promise the Mysians were quite con-
tent, but Atys, who overheard it, was not.

“Why, my father,” he demanded, “do you now
keep me from the wars and the chase, when you
formerly encouraged me to take part in them, and
win glory for myself and you? Have I ever shown
cowardice or lack of manly spirit? What must the
citizens or my young bride think of me? With
what face can I show myself in the forum? Hither
you must let me go to the chase of this boar, or
give a reason why you keep me at home?”

In reply Croesus told the indignant youth of his
vision, and the alarm with which it had inspired him.

“Ah!” cried Atys, “then I cannot blame you for
keeping this tender watch over me. But, father, do
you not wrongly interpret the dream? It said I
was to die stricken by an iron weapon. A boar
THE FORTUNE OF CRESUS. 81

wields no such weapon. Had the dream said I was
to die pierced by a tusk, then you might well be
alarmed; but it said a weapon. We do not propose
now to fight men, but to hunt a wild beast. I pray
you, therefore, let me go with the party.”

“You have the best of me there,” said Croesus.
“Your interpretation of the dream is better than
mine. You may go, my son.”

At that time there was at the king’s court a
Phrygian named Adrastus, who had unwittingly
slain his own brother and had flown to Sardis,
where he was purified according to the customs of
the country, and courteously received by the king.
Croesus sent for this stranger and asked him to go
with the hunting party, and keep especial watch
over his son, in case of an attack by some daring
band of robbers.

Adrastus consented, though against his will, his
misfortune having taken from him all desire for
scenes of bloodshed. However, he would do his ut-
most to guard the king’s son against harm.

The party set out accordingly, reached Olympus
without adventure, and scattered in pursuit of the
animal, which the dogs soon roused from its lair.
Closing in a circle around the brute, the hunters
drew near and hurled their weapons at it. Not the
least eager among the hunters was Adrastus, who
likewise hurled his spear; but, through a frightful
chance, the hurtling weapon went astray, and
struck and killed Atys, his youthful charge. Thus
was the dream fulfilled: an iron weapon had slain
the king’s favorite son.

gf
82 HISTORICAL TALES.

The news of this misfortune plunged Creesus into
the deepest misery of grief. As for Adrastus, he
begged to be sacrificed at the grave of his unfortu-
nate victim. This Crossus, despite his grief, refused,
saying,—

“Some god is the author of my misfortune, not
you. I was forewarned of it long ago.”

But Adrastus was not to be thus prevented, Deem-
ing himself the most unfortunate of men, he slew
himself on the tomb of the hapless youth. And for
two years Croesus abandoned himself to grief.

And now we must go on to tell how Croesus met
with a greater misfortune still, and brought the
Persians to the gates of Greece. Cyrus, son of
Cambyses, king of Persia, had conquered the neigh-
boring kingdom of Media, and, inspired by ambition,
had set out on a career of wide-spread conquest and
dominion. He had grown steadily more powerful,
and now threatened the great kingdom which Croesus
had gained.

The Lydian king, seeing this danger approaching,
sought advice from the oracles. But wishing first
to know which of them could best be trusted, he
sent to six of them demanding a statement of what
he was doing at a certain moment. The oracle of
Delphi alone gave a correct answer.

Thereupon Croesus offered up a vast sacrifice to
the Delphian deity. Three thousand oxen were
slain, and a great sacrificial pile was built, on which
were placed splendid robes and tunics of purple,
with couches and censers of gold and silver, all to
be committed to the flames. To Delphi he sent
THE FORTUNE OF CRGSUS. 83

presents befitting the wealthiest of kings—ingots,
statues, bowls, jugs, etc., of gold and silver, of great
weight. These Herodotus himself saw with aston-
ishment a century afterwards at Delphi. The en-
voys who bore these gifts asked the oracle whether
Croesus should undertake an expedition against the
Persians, and should solicit allies.

He was bidden, in reply, to seek alliance with the
most powerful nations of Greece. He was also told
that if he fought with the Persians he would over-
turn a “mighty empire.” Crcesus accepted this as
a promise of success, not thinking to ask whose em-
pire was to be overturned. He sent again to the
oracle, which now replied, “ When a mule shall be-
come king of the Medes, then thou must run away,
—be not ashamed.” Here was another enigma of
the oracle. Cyrus—son of a royal Median mother
and a Persian father of different race and lower
position—was the mule indicated, though Croesus
did not know this. In truth, the oracles of Greece
seem usually to have borne a double meaning, so
that whatever happened the priestess could claim
that her word was true, the fault was in the inter-
pretation.

Croesus, accepting the oracles as favorable, made
an alliance with Sparta, and marched his army into
Media, where he inflicted much damage. Cyrus
met him with a larger army, and a battle ensued.
Neither party could claim a victory, but Croesus re-
turned to Sardis, to collect more men and obtain
aid from his allies. He might have been successful
had Cyrus waited till his preparations were com-
84 HISTORICAL TALES,

plete. But the Persian king followed him to his
capital, defeated him in a battle near Sardis, and
besieged him in that city.

Sardis was considered impregnable, and Creesus
could easily have held out till his allies arrived had
it not been for one of those unfortunate incidents
of which war has so many to tell. Sardis was
strongly fortified on every side but one. Here the
rocky height on which it was built was so steep as
to be deemed inaccessible, and walls were thought
unnecessary. Yet a soldier of the garrison made
his way down this precipice to pick up his helmet,
which had fallen. A Persian soldier saw hin, tried
to climb up, and found it possible. Others followed
him, and the garrison, to their consternation, found
the enemy within their walls. The gates were
opened to the army without, and the whole city
was speedily taken by storm.

Croesus would have been killed but for a miracle.
His deaf and dumb son, seeing a Persian about to
strike him down, burst into speech through the
agony of terror, crying out, “Man, do not kill
Cresus!” The story goes that he ever afterwards
retained the power of speech.

Cyrus had given orders that the life of Croesus
should be spared, and the unhappy captive was
brought before him. But the cruel Persian had a
different death in view. He proposed to burn the
captive king, together with fourteen Lydian youths,
on a great pile of wood which he had constructed,
We give what followed as told by Herodotus, though
its truth cannot be vouched for at this late day.
THE FORTUNE OF CRG@SUS. 85

As Croesus lay in fetters on the already kindled
pile and thought of this terrible ending to his
boasted happiness, he groaned bitterly, and cried in
tones of anguish, “Solon! Solon! Solon!”

“What does he mean?” asked Cyrus of the in-
terpreters. They questioned Creesus, and learned
from him what Solon had said. Cyrus heard this
story not without alarm. His own life was yet to
end; might not a like fate come to him? He
ordered that the fire should be extinguished, but
would have been too late had not a timely down-
pour of rain just then come to the aid of the captive
king,—sent by Apollo, in gratitude for the gifts to
his temple, suggests Herodotus. Crcesus was after-
wards made the confidential friend and adviser of
the Persian king, whose dominions, through this
victory, had been extended over the whole Lydian
empire, and now reached to the ocean outposts of
Greece.
THE SUITORS OF AGARISTE.

Srcyon, the smallest country of the Peloponnesus,
lay on the Gulf of Corinth, adjoining the isthmus
which connects the peninsula with the rest of Greece.
In this small country—as in many larger ones—the
nobles held rule, the people were subjects. The rich
and proud rulers dwelt on the hill slopes, the poor
and humble people lived on the sea-shore and along
the river Asopus. But in course of time many of
the people became well off, through success in fish-
eries and commerce, to which their country was well
adapted. Weary of the oppression of the nobles, they
finally rose in rebellion and overthrew the govern-
ment. Orthagoras, once a cook, but now leader of
the rebels, became master of the state, and he and
his descendants ruled it for a hundred years. The
last of this dynasty was Cleisthenes, a just and
moderate ruler, concerning whom we have a story
to tell.

These lords of the state were called tyrants; but
this word did not mean in Greece what it means to
us. The tyrants of Greece were popular leaders who
had overthrown the old governments and laws, and
ruled largely through force and under laws of their
own making. But they were not necessarily tyran-

86
THE SUITORS OF AGARISTS. 87

nical. The tyrants of Athens were mild and just in
their dealings with the people, and so proved to be
those of Sicyon.

Cleisthenes, who became the most eminent of the
tyrants of Sicyon, had a beautiful daughter, named
Agaristé, whom he thought worthy of the noblest
of husbands, and decided that she should be married
to the worthiest youth who could be found in all the
land of Greece. To select such a husband he took
unusual steps.

When the fair Agaristé had reached marriageable
age, her father attended the Olympic games, at which
there were used to gather men of wealth and emi-
nence from all the Grecian states. Here he won
the prize in the chariot race, and then bade the
heralds to make the following proclamation:

“ Whoever among the Greeks deems himself wor-
thy to be the son-in-law of Cleisthenes, let him come,
within sixty days, to Sicyon. Within a year from
that time Cleisthenes will decide, from among those
who present themselves, on the one whom he deems
fitting to possess the hand of his daughter.”

This proclamation, as was natural, roused warm
hopes in many youthful breasts, and within the
sixty days there had gathered at Sicyon thirteen
noble claimants for the charming prize. From the
city of Sybaris in Italy came Smindyrides, and from
Siris came Damasus. Amphimnestes and Males made
their way to Sicyon from the cities of the Ionian Gulf.
The Peloponnesus sent Leocedes from Argos, Ami-
antus from Arcadia, Laphanes from Pseus, and Ono-
mastus from Elis. From Huboa came Lysanias;
88 HISTORICAL TALES.

from Thessaly, Diactorides; from Molossis, Alcon;
and from Attica, Megacles and Hippoclides. Of the
last two, Megacles was the son of the renowned
Alcmzon, while Hippoclides was accounted the
handsomest and wealthiest of the Athenians.

At the end of the sixty days, when all the suitors
had arrived, Cleisthenes asked each of them whence
he came and to what family he belonged. Then,
during the succeeding year, he put them to every
test that could prove their powers. He had had a
foot-course and a wrestling-ground made ready to
test their comparative strength and agility, and took
every available means to discover their courage,
vigor, and skill.

But this was not all that the sensible monarch
demanded in his desired son-in-law. He wished to
ascertain their mental and moral as well as their
physical powers, and for this purpose kept them
under close observation for a year, carefully noting
their manliness, their temper and disposition, their
accomplishments and powers of intellect, Now he
conversed with each separately; now he brought
them together and considered their comparative
powers. At the gymnasium, in the council chamber,
in all the situations of thought and activity, he tested
their abilities. But he particularly considered their
behavior at the banquet-table. From first to last
they were sumptuously entertained, and their de-
meanor over the trencher-board and the ,wine- aD
was closely observed.

In this story, as told us by garrulous old Herodotus,
nothing is said of Agaristé herself. In a modern ro-
THE SUITORS OF AGARISTE. 89

mance of this sort the lady would have had a voice
in the decision and a place in the narrative. There
would have been episodes of love, jealousy, and
malice, and the one whom the lady blessed with her
love would in some way—in the eternal fitness of
things—have become victor in the contest and car-
ried off the prize. But they did things differently in
Greece. The preference of the maiden had little to
do with the matter; the suitor exerted himself to
please the father, not the daughter; maiden hands
were given rather in barter and sale than in trust
and affection; in truth, almost the only lovers we
meet with in Grecian history are Hemon and An-
tigone, of whom we have spoken in the tale of the
“Seven against Thebes.”

And thus it was in the present instance. It was
the father the suitors courted, not the daughter.
They proved their love over the banquet-table, not
at the trysting-place. It was by speed of foot and
skill in council, not by whispered words of devotion,
that they contended for the maidenly prize. Or, if
lovers’ meetings took place and lovers’ vows were
passed, they were matters of the strictest secrecy,
and not for Greek historians to put on paper or
Greek ears to hear.

But the year of probation came in due time to its
end, and among all the suitors the two from Athens
most won the favor of Cleisthenes. And of the two
he preferred Hippoclides. It was not alone for his
handsome face and person and manly bearing that
this favored youth was chosen, but also because he
was descended from a noble family of Corinth which

g*
90 HISTORICAL TALES,

Cleisthenes esteemed. Yet “there is many a slip
between the cup and the lip,” an adage whose truth
Hippoclides was to learn.

When the day came on which the choice of the
father was to be made, and the wedding take place,
Cleisthenes held a great festival in honor of the occa-
sion. First, to gain the favor of the gods, he offered
a hundred oxen in sacrifice. Then, not only the suit-
ors, but all the people of the city were invited to a
grand banquet and festival, at the end of which the
choice of Cleisthenes was to be declared. What tor-
ments of love and fear Agaristé suffered during this
slow-moving feast the historian does not say. Yet it
may be that she was the power behind the throne,
and that the proposed choice of the handsome Hip-
poclides was due as much to her secret influence as
to her father’s judgment.

However this be, the feast went on to its end, and
was followed by a contest between the suitors in
music and oratory, with all the ‘people to decide.
As the drinking which followed went on, Hippo-
clides, who had surpassed all the others as yet,
shouted to the flute-player, bidding him to play a
dancing air, as he proposed to show his powers in
the dance.

The wine was in his weak head, and what he con-
sidered marvellously fine dancing did not appear so
to Cleisthenes, who was closely watching his pro-
posed son-in-law. Hippoclides, however, in a mood
to show all his accomplishments, now bade an at-
tendant to bring in a table. This being brought, ho
leaped upon it, and danced some Laconian steps,
THE SUITORS OF AGARISTE. 91

which he followed by certain Attic ones. Finally,
to show his utmost powers of performance, he stood
on his head on the table, and peg to dance with
his legs in empty air.

This was too much for Cleisthenes. He had
changed his opinion of Hippoclides during his light
and undignified exhibition, but restrained himself
from speaking to avoid any outbreak or ill feeling.
But on seeing him tossing his legs in this shameless
manner in the air, the indignant monarch cried out,—

“Son of Tisander, you have danced your wife
away.”

“What does Hippoclides care?” was the reply of
the tipsy youth.

And for centuries afterwards “ What does Hippo-
clides care?’ was a common saying in Greece, to
indicate reckless folly and lightness of mind.

Cleisthenes now commanded silence, and spoke as
follows to the assembly :

“Suitors of my daughter, well pleased am I with
you all, and right willingly, if it were possible,
would I content you all, and not, by making choice
of one, appear to put a slight upon the rest. But
as it is out of my power, seeing that I have only one
daughter, to grant to all their wishes, I will present
to each of you whom I must needs dismiss a talent
of silver * for the honor that you have done in seek-
ing to ally yourselves with my house, and for your
long absence from your homes. But my daughter
Agaristé I betroth to Megacles, the son of Alemzon,



* Equal to about one thousand dollars,
92 HISTORICAL TALES.

to be his wife, according to the usage and wont of
Athens.”

Megacles gladly accepted the honor thus offered
him, the marriage was solemnized with all possible
state, and the suitors dispersed,—twelve of them
happy with their silver talents, one of them happier
with his charming bride.

We have but further to say that Cleisthenes of
Athens—a great leader and law-giver, whose laws
gave origin to the democratic government of that
city—was the son of Megacles and Agaristé, and that
his grandson was the famous Pericles, the foremost
name in Athenian history.
LHE TYRANTS SOR“CORINTH.

We have already told what the word “tyrant”
meant in Greece,—a despot who set aside the law
and ruled at his own pleasure, but who might be mild
and gentle in his rule. Such were the tyrants of
Sicyon, spoken of in our last tale. The tyrants of
Corinth, the state adjoining Sicyon, were of a harsher
character. Herodotus, the gossipping old historian,
tells some stories about these severe despots which
seem worth telling again.

The government of Corinth, like most of the gov-
ernments of Greece, was in early days an oligarchy,
—that is, it was ruled by a number of powerful aris-
tocrats instead of by a single king. In Corinth these
belonged to a single family, named the Bacchiade
(or legendary descendants of the god Bacchus), who
constantly intermarried, and kept all power to them-
selves.

But one of this family, Amphion by name, had a
daughter, named Labda, whom none of the Bacchiadse
would marry, as she had the misfortune to be lame.
So she married outside the family, her husband being
named Aétion, and a man of noble descent. Having
no children, Aétion applied to the Delphian oracle,
and was told that a son would soon be borne to him,

93
94 HISTORICAL TALES.

and that this son “would, like a rock, fall on the
kingly race and right the city of Corinth.”

The Bacchiade heard of this oracle, and likewise
knew of an earlier one that had the same signifi-
cance. Forwarned is forearmed. They remained
quiet, waiting until Aétion’s child should be born, and
proposing then to take steps for their own safety.

When, therefore, they heard that Labda had borne
a son, they sent ten of their followers to Petra (the
rock), where Aétion dwelt, with instructions to kill
the child. These assassins entered Aétion’s house,
and, with murder in their hearts, asked Labda, with
assumed friendliness, if they might see her child.
She, looking upon them as friends of her husband,
whom kindly feeling had brought thither, gladly
complied, and, bringing the infant, laid it in the arms
of one of the ruffianly band.

It had been agreed between them that whoever
first laid hold of the child should dash it to the ground.
But as the innocent intended victim lay in the mur-
derer’s arms, it smiled in his face so confidingly that
he had not the heart to do the treacherous deed.
He passed the child, therefore, on to another, who
passed it to a third, and so it went the rounds of the
ten, disarming them all by its happy and trusting
smile from performing the vile deed for which they
had come, In the end they handed the babe back
to its mother, and left the house.

Halting just outside the door, a hot dispute arose
between them, each blaming the others, and nine of
them severely accusing the one whose task it had
been to do the cruel deed. He defended himself,
THE TYRANTS OF CORINTH. 95

saying that no man with a heart in his breast could
have done harm to that smiling babe,—certainly not
he, In the end they decided to go into the house
again, and all take part in the murder.

But they had talked somewhat too long and too
loud. Labda had overheard them and divined their
dread intent. Filled with fear, lest they should re-
turn and murder her child, she seized the infant,
and, looking eagerly about for some place in which
she might conceal it, chose a cypsel, or corn-bin, as
the place least likely to be searched.

Her choice proved a wise one. The men returned,
and, as she refused to tell them where the child was,
searched the house in vain,—none of them thinking
of looking for an infant in a corn-bin. At length
they went away, deciding to report that they had
done as they were bidden, and that the child of
Aétion was slain.

The boy, in memory of his escape, was named
Cypselus, after the corn-bin. He grew up without
further molestation, and on coming to man’s estate
did what so many of the ancients seemed to have
considered necessary, went to Delphi to consult the
oracle.

The pythoness, or priestess of Apollo, at his ap-
proach, hailed him as king of Corinth. “He and
his children, but not his children’s children.” And
the oracle, as was often the case, produced its own
accomplishment, for it encouraged Cypselus to head
a rebellion against the oligarchy, by which it was
overthrown and he made king, For thirty years
thereafter he reigned as tyrant of Corinth, with a
96 HISTORICAL TALES,

prosperous but harsh rule. Many of the Corinthians
were put to death by him, others robbed of their tor-
tunes, and others banished the state. Then he died
and left the government to his son Periander.

Periander began his reign in a mild spirit. But
his manner changed after he had sent a herald to
Thrasybulus, the tyrant of Miletus, asking his advice
how he could best rule with honor and fortune.
Thrasybtlus led the messenger outside the city and
through a field of corn, questioning him as they
walked, while, whenever he came to an ear of corn
that overtopped its fellows, he broke it off and threw
itaside. Thus his path through the field was marked
by the downfall of all the tallest stems and ears.
Then, returning to the city, he sent the messenger
back without a word of answer to his petition.

Periander, on his herald’s return, asked him what
counsel he brought. “None,” was the answer;
“not a word. King Thrasybilus acted in the
strangest way, destroying his corn as he led me
through the field, and sending me away without a
word.” He proceeded to tell how the monarch had
acted.

Periander was quick to gather his brother tyrant’s
meaning. If he would rule in safety he must cut off
the loftiest heads,—signified by the tall ears of corn.
He took the advice thus suggested, and from that
time on treated his subjects with the greatest cruelty.
Many of those whom Cypselus had spared he put to
death or banished, and acted the tyrant in the fullest
sense of the word.

He even killed his wife Melissa; just why, we do
THE TYRANTS OF CORINTH, 97

not know. But we are told that she afterwards ap-
peared to him in a dream and said that she was cold,
being destitute of clothes. The garments he had
buried with her were of no use to her spirit, since
they had not been burned. Periander took his own
way to quiet and clothe the restless ghost. He pro-
claimed that all the wives of Corinth should go to
the temple of Juno. This they did, dressed in their
best, deeming it a festival, When they were all
within he closed the doors, and had them stripped
of their rich robes and ornaments, which he threw
into a pit and set on fire, calling on the name of
Melissa as they burned. And in this way the de-
mand of the shivering ghost was satisfied.

Periander had two sons,—the elder a dunce, the
younger, Lycophron (or wolf-heart), a youth of noble
nature and fine intellect. He sent them on a visit to
Proclus, their mother’s father, and from him the boys
learned, what they had not known before, that their
father was their mother’s murderer.

This story did not trouble the dull-brained elder,
but Lycophron was so affected by it that on his
return home he refused to speak to his father, and
acted so surlily that Periander in anger turned him
out of his house. The tyrant, learning from his
elder son the cause of Lycophron’s strange behavior,
grew still more incensed. He sent orders to those
who had given shelter to his son that they should
cease to harbor him. And he continued to drive him
from shelter to shelter, till in the end he proclaimed
that whoever dared to harbor, or even speak to, his
rebellious son, should pay a heavy fine to Apollo.

E g 9
98 HISTORICAL TALES.

Thus, driven from every house, Lycophron took
lodging in the public porticos, where he dwelt
without shelter and almost without food. Seeing
his wretched state, Periander took pity on him and
bade him come home and no longer indulge in such
foolish and unfilial behavior.

Lycophron’s only reply was that his father had
broken his own edict by coming and talking with
him, and therefore himself owed the penalty to
Apollo.

Periander, seeing that the boy was uncontrollable
in his indignation, and troubled at heart by the pite-
ous spectacle, now sent him by ship to the island of
Coreyra, a colony of Corinth. As for Proclus, the
tyrant made war upon him for his indiscreet revela-
tion, robbed him of his kingdom, Epidaurus, and
carried him captive to Corinth.

And the years went on, and Periander grew old
and unable properly to handle his affairs. His elder
son was incapable of taking his place, so he sent to
Corcyra and asked Lycophron to come to Corinth
and take the kingship of that fair land.

Lycophron, whose indignation time had not cooled,
refused even to answer the message. Then Periander
sent his daughter, the sister of Lycophron, hoping
that she might be able to persuade him. She made
a strong appeal, begging him not to let the power
pass away from their family and their father’s wealth
fall into strange hands, and reminding him that
mercy was a higher virtue than justice.

Her appeal was in vain. Lycophron refused to go
back to Corinth as long as his father remained alive.
THE TYRANTS OF CORINTH. 99

Then the desperate old man, at his wits’ end
through Lycophron’s obstinacy, sent a herald, say-
ing that he would himself come to Corcyra, and let
his son take his place in Corinth as king. To these
terms Lycophron agreed. But there were others to
deal with, for, when the terrified Corcyrians heard
that the terrible old tyrant was coming to dwell in
their island, they rose in a tumult and put Lycophron
to death,

And thus ended the dynasty of Cypselus, as the
oracle had foretold. Though Periander revenged
himself on the Corcyrians, he could not bring his
son to life again, and the children’s children of
Cypselus did not come to the throne.
THE RING OF POLYCRATES.

Near the coast of Asia Minor lies the bright and
beautiful island of Samos, one of the choicest gems
of the Aigean archipelago. This island was, some-
where about the year 530 B.c., seized by a political
adventurer named Polycrates. He accomplished
this by the aid of his two brothers, but of these he
afterwards killed one and banished the other,—Sylo-
son by name,—so that he became sole ruler and
despot of the island.

This island kingdom of Polycrates was a small
one, about eighty miles in circumference, but it was
richly fertile, and had the honor of being the birth-
place of many illustrious Greeks, among whom we
may name Pythagoras, the famous philosopher.
The city of Samos became, under Polycrates, “the
first of all cities, Greek or barbarian.’ It was
adorned with magnificent buildings and costly works
of art; was supplied with water by a great aque-
duct, tunnelled for nearly a mile through a moun-
tain; had a great breakwater to protect the harbor,
and a vast and magnificent temple to Juno: all of
which seem to have been partly or wholly con-
structed by Polycrates.

But this despot did not content himself with

100
THE RING OF POLYCRATES. 101

ruling the island and adorning the city which he
had seized. He was ambitious and unscrupulous,
and aspired to become master of all the islands of
the Aigean Sea, and of Ionia in Asia Minor. He
conquered several of these islands and a number
of towns in the mainland, defeated the Lesbian
fleet that came against him during his war with
Miletus, got together a hundred armed ships and
hired a thousand bowmen, and went forward with
his designs with a fortune that never seemed to
desert him. His naval power became the greatest
in the world of Greece, and it seemed as if he
would succeed in all his ambitious designs. But a
dreadful fate awaited the tryant. Like Croesus he
was to learn that good fortune is apt to be followed
by disaster. The remainder of his story is part
history and part legend, and we give it as told by
old Herodotus, who has preserved so many interest-
ing tales of ancient Greece.

At that time Persia, whose king Cyrus had over-
come Creesus, was the greatest empire in the world.
All western Asia lay in its grasp; Asia Minor was
overrun; and Cambyses, the king who had suc-
ceeded Cyrus, was about to invade the ancient land
of Egypt. The king of this country, Amasis by
name, was in alliance with Polycrates, rich gifts
had passed between them, and they seemed the best
of friends. But Amasis had his superstitions, and
the constant good fortune of Polycrates seemed to
him so different from the ordinary lot of kings that
he feared that some misfortune must follow it. He
perhaps had heard the story of Solon and Croesus.

g*
102 HISTORICAL TALES.

Amasis accordingly wrote a warning letter to his
friend.

The great prosperity of his friend and ally, he
said, caused him foreboding instead of joy, for he
knew that the gods were envious, and he desired
for those he loved alternate good and ill fortune.
He had never heard of any one who was successful
in all his enterprises that did not meet with calamity
in the end. He therefore counselled Polycrates to
do what the gods had not yet done, and bring some
misfortune on himself. His advice was that he
should select the treasure he most valued and could
least bear to part with, and throw it away so that it
should never be seen again. By this voluntary sacri-
fice he might avert involuntary loss and suffering.

This advice seemed wise to the despot, and he
began to consider which of his possessions he could
least bear to lose. He settled at length on his signet-
ring, an emerald set in gold, which he highly valued.
This he determined to throw away where it could
never be recovered. So, having one of his fifty-
oared vessels manned, he put to sea, and when he
had gone a long distance from the coast he took the
ring from his finger and, in the presence of all the
sailors, tossed it into the waters.

This was not done without deep grief to Poly-
crates. He valued the ring more highly than ever,
now that it lay on the bottom of the sea, irretriev-
ably lost to him, as he thought; and he grieved for
days thereafter, feeling that he had endured a real
misfortune, which he hoped the gods might accept
as a compensation for his good luck.
THE RING OF POLYCRATES. 103

But destiny is not so easily to be disarmed. Several
days afterwards a Samian fisherman had the fortune
to catch a fish so large and beautiful that he esteemed
it worthy to be offered as a present to the king.
He accordingly went with it to the palace gates
and asked to see Polycrates. The guards, learning
his purpose, admitted him. On coming into the
king’s presence, the fisherman said that, though he
was a poor man who lived by his labor, he could
not let himself offer such a prize in the public market.

_ “J gaid to myself,” he continued, “‘It is worthy:
of Polycrates and his greatness ;’ and so I brought
it here to give it to you.”

The compliment and the gift so pleased the tyrant
that he not only thanked the fisherman warmly,
but invited him to sup with him on the fish.

But a wonder happened in the king’s kitchen.
On the cook’s cutting open the fish to prepare it
for the table, to his surprise he found within it the
signet-ring of the king. With joy he hastened to
Polycrates with his strangely recovered treasure,
the story of whose loss had gone abroad, and told
in what a remarkable way it had been restored.

As for Polycrates, the return of the ring brought
him some joy but more grief. The fates, it appeared,
were not so lightly to be appeased. He wrote to
Amasis, telling what he had done and with what
result. The letter came to the Egyptian king like
a prognostic of evil. That there would be an ill
end to the career of Polycrates he now felt sure;
and, not wishing to be involved in it himself, he
sent a herald to Samos and informed his late friend
104 HISTORICAL TALES.

and ally that the alliance between them was at an
end.

It cannot be said that Amasis profited much by
this act. Soon afterwards his own country was
overrun and conquered by Cambyses, the Persian
king, and his reign came to a disastrous termina-
tion.

Whether there is any historical basis for this story
of the ring may be questioned. But this we do know,
that the friendship between Amasis and Polycrates
was broken, and that Polycrates offered to help
Cambyses in his invasion, and sent forty ships to the
Nile for this purpose. .On these were some Samians
whom the tyrant wished to get rid of, and whom he
secretly asked the Persian king not to let return.

These exiles, however, suspecting what was in
store for them, managed in some way to escape, and
returned to Samos, where they made an attack on
Polyerates. Being driven off by him, they went to
Sparta and asked for assistance, telling so long a
story of their misfortunes and sufferings that the
Spartans, who could not bear long speeches, curtly
answered, “ We have forgotten the first part of your
speech, and the last part we do not understand.”
This answer taught the Samians a lesson. The next
day they met the Spartans with an empty wallet,
saying, “Our wallet has no meal in it.” “Your
wallet is superfluous,” said the Spartans; meaning
that the words would have served without it. The
aid which the Spartans thereupon granted the exiles
proved of no effect, for it was against Polycrates,
the fortunate. They sent an expedition to Samos,
THE RING OF POLYCRATES. 105

and besieged the city forty days, but were forced to
retire without success. Then the exiles, thus made
homeless, became pirates. They attacked the weak
but rich island of Siphnos, which they ravaged, and
forced the inhabitants to buy them off at a cost of one
hundred talents. With this fund they purchased
the island of Hydrea, but in the end went to Crete,
where they captured the city of Cydonia. After
they had held this city for five years the Cretans re-
captured it, and the Samian exiles ended their career
by being sold into slavery.

Meanwhile the good fortune of Polycrates con-
tinued, and Samos flourished under his rule. In
addition to his great buildings and works of engi-
neering he became interested in stock-raising, and
introduced into the island the finest breeds of sheep,
goats, and pigs. By high wages he attracted the
ablest artisans of Greece to the city, and added to
his popularity by lending his rich hangings and
costly plate to those who wanted them for a wedding
feast or a sumptuous banquet. And that none of
his subjects might betray him while he was off upon
an extended expedition, he had the wives and chil-
dren of all whom he suspected shut up in the sheds
built to shelter his ships, with orders that these
should be burned in case of any rebellious outbreak.

Yet the misfortune that the return of the ring
had indicated came at length. The warning which
Solon had given Croesus applied to Polycrates as
well. The prosperous despot had a bitter enemy,
Orcetes by name, the Persian governor of Sardis.
As to why he hated Polycrates two stories are told,
106 HISTORICAL TALES.

but as neither of them is certain we shall not re-
peat them. It is enough to say that he hated Poly-
crates bitterly and desired his destruction, which he
laid a plan to bring about.

Orestes, residing then at Magnesia, on the Meander
River, in the vicinity of Samos, and being aware of
the ambitious designs of Polycrates, sent him a mes-
sage to the effect that he knew that while he desired
to become lord of the isles, he had not the means to
carry out his ambitious project. As for himself, he
was aware that Cambyses was bent on his destruc-
tion. He therefore invited Polycrates to come and
take him, with his wealth, offering for his protection
gold sufficient to make him master of the whole of
Greece, so far as money would serve for this.

This welcome offer filled Polycrates with joy. He
knew nothing of the hatred of Oretes, and at once
sent his secretary to Magnesia to see the Persian and
- report upon the offer. What he principally wished
to know was in regard to the money offered, and
Oreetes prepared to satisfy him in this particular.
He had eight large chests prepared, filled nearly full
of stones, upon which gold was spread. These were
corded, as if ready for instant removal.

This seeming store of gold was shown to the sec-
retary, who hastened back to Polycrates with a
glowing description of the treasure he had seen.
Polycrates, on hearing this story, decided to go at
once and bring Orcetes and his chests of gold to
Samos.

Against this action his friends protested, while the
soothsayers found the portents unfavorable. His
THE RING OF POLYCRATES. 107

daughter, also, had a significant dream. She saw
her father hanging high in the air, washed by Zeus,
the king of the gods, and anointed by the sun. Yet
in spite of all this the infatuated king persisted in
going. His daughter followed him on the ship, still
begging him to return. His only answer was that
if he returned successfully he would keep her an old
maid for years.

“Oh that you may perform your threat!” she
answered. “It is far better for me to be an old maid
than to lose my father.”

Yet the infatuated king went, despite all warnings
and advice, taking with him a considerable suite.
On his arrival at Magnesia grief instead of gold
proved his portion. His enemy seized him, put him
to a miserable death, and hung his dead body on a
cross to the mercy of the sun and the rains. Thus
his daughter’s dream was fulfilled, for, in the old be-
lief, to be washed by the rain was to be washed by
Zeus, while the sun anointed him by causing the fat
to exude from his body.

A year or two after the death of Polycrates, his
banished brother Syloson came to the throne in a
singular way. During his exile he found himself at
Memphis, in Egypt, while Cambyses was there with
his conquering army. Among the guards of the
king was Darius, the future king of Persia, but then
a soldier of little note. Syloson wore a scarlet cloak
to which Darius took a fancy and proposed to buy it.
By asudden impulse Syloson replied, “I cannot for
any price sell it; but I give it you for nothing, if it
must be yours.”
108 HISTORICAL TALES.

Darius thanked him for the cloak, and that ended
the matter there and then,—Syloson afterwards hold-
ing himself as silly for the impulsive good nature of
his gift.

But at length he learned with surprise that the
simple Persian soldier whom he had benefited was
now king of the great Persian empire. He went to
Susa, the capital, and told who he was. Darius had
forgotten his face, but he remembered the incident
of the cloak, and offered to pay a kingly price for
the small favor of his humbler days, tendering gold
and silver in profusion to his visitor. Syloson rejected
these, but asked the aid of Darius to make him king
of Samos. This the grateful monarch granted, and
sent Syloson an army, with whose aid the island
quickly and quietly fell into his hands.

Yet calamity followed this peaceful conquest.
Charilaus, a hot-tempered and half-mad Samian,
who had been given charge of the acropolis, broke
from it at the head of the guards, and murdered
many of the Persian officers who were scattered
unguarded throughout the town. The reprisal was
dreadful. The Persian army fell in fury on the
Samians and slaughtered every man and boy in the
island, handing over to Syloson a kingdom of women
and infants. Some time afterwards, however, the
island was repeopled by men from without, and
Syloson completed his reign in peace, leaving the
sceptre of Samos to his son.
THE ADVENTURES OF DEMO.-
CEDES.

Wuen Pythagoras, the celebrated Greek philoso-
pher, settled in the ancient Italian city of Crotona
(between 550 and 520 B.c.) there was living in that
town a youthful surgeon who was destined to have
a remarkable history. Democedes by name, the son
of a Crotonian named Calliphon, he strongly inclined
while still a mere boy to the study of medicine and
surgery, for which arts that city had then a reputa-
tion higher than any part of Greece.

The boy had two things to contend with, the hard
study in his chosen profession and the high temper
of his father. The latter at length grew unbear-
able, and the youthful surgeon ran away from home,
making his way to the Greek island of gina.
Here he began to practise what he had learned at
home, and, though he was very poorly equipped with
the instruments of his profession, he proved far abler
and more successful than the surgeons whom he
found in that island. So rapid, indeed, was his
progress that his first year’s service brought him an
offer from the citizens of Aigina to remain with them
for one year, at a salary of one talent,—the Aiginetan
talent being nearly equal to two thousand dollars.
The next year he spent at Athens, whose people had

10 109
110 HISTORICAL TALES.

offered him one and two-thirds talents. In the fol-
lowing year Polycrates of Samos bid higher still,
offering him two talents, and the young surgeon
repaired to that charming island.

Thus far the career of Democedes had been one of
steady progress. But, as Solon told Crcesus, a man
cannot count himself sure of happiness while he
lives. The good fortune which had attended the run-
away surgeon was about to be followed by a period of
ill luck and degradation, following those of his new
patron. In the constant wars of Greece a free citi-
zen could never be sure how soon he might be reduced
to slavery, and such was the fate of Democedes.

We have already told how Polycrates was treach-
erously seized and murdered by the Persian satrap
Oretes. Democedes had accompanied him to the
court of the traitor, and was, with the other attend-
ants of Polycrates, seized and left to languish in
neglect and imprisonment. Soon afterwards Orcetes
received the just retribution for his treachery, being
himself slain. And now a third turn came to the
career of Democedes. He was classed among the
slaves of Orcetes, and sent with them in chains to
Susa, the capital of Darius, the great Persian king.

But here the wheel of fortune suddenly took an
upward turn. Darius, the king, leaping one day from
his horse in the chase, sprained his foot so badly
that he had to be carried home in violent pain.
The surgeons of the Persian court were Egyptians,
who were claimed to be the first men in their pro-
fession. But, though they used all their skill in
treating the foot of the king, they did him no good.
THE ADVENTURES OF DEMOCEDES. 111

Indeed, they only made the pain more severe. For
seven days and nights the mighty king was taught
that he was a man as well as a monarch, and could
suffer as severely as the poorest peasant in his king-
dom. The foot gave him such torture that all sleep
fied from his eyelids, and he and those around him
were in despair.

At length it came to the memory of one who had
come from the court of Orestes, at Sardis, that report
had spoken of a Greek surgeon among the slaves of
the slain satrap. He mentioned this, and the king,
to whom any hope of relief was welcome, gave orders
that this man should be sought and brought before
him. It wasa miserable object that was soon ushered
into the royal presence, a poor creature in rags, with
fetters on his hands, and deep lines of suffering upon
his face; a picture of misery, in fact.

He was asked if he understood surgery. “No,”
he replied ; saying that he was a slave, not a surgeon.
Darius did not believe him; these Greeks were art-
ful; but there were ways of getting at the truth.
He ordered that the scourge and the pricking instru-
ments of torture should be brought. Democedes,
who was probably playing a shrewd game, now ad-
mitted that he did have some little skill, but feared
to practise his small art on so great a patient. He
was bidden to do what he could, and went to work
on the royal foot.

The little skill of the Greek soon distanced the
great skill of the Egyptians. He succeeded perfectly
in alleviating the pain, and soon had his patient in a
deep and refreshing sleep. In a short time the foot
112 UISTORICAL TALES.

was sound again, and Darius could once more stand
without a twinge of pain.

The king, who had grown hopeless of a cure, was
filled with joy, and set no bounds to his gratitude.
Democedes had come before him in iron chains. As
a first reward the king presented him with two sets
of chains of solid gold. He next sent him to receive
the thanks of his wives. Being introduced into the
harem, Democedes was presented to the sultanas as
the man who had saved the king’s life, and whom
their lord and master delighted to honor. Hach of
the fair and grateful women, in reward for his great
deed, gave him a saucer-full of golden coins, which
were so many, and heaped so high, that the slave
who followed him grew rich by merely picking up
the pieces that dropped on the floor.

Nor did the generosity of Darius stop here. He
gave Democedes a splendid house and furniture,
made him eat at his own table, and showed him
every favor at his command. Egyptian surgeons, they would all have been cruci-
fied for their lack of skill had not Democedes begged
for their lives. He might safely have told Darius
that if he began to crucify men for ignorance and
assurance he would soon have few subjects left.

But with all the favors which Darius granted, there
was one which he steadily refused to grant. And it
was one on which Democedes had set his heart. He
wanted to return to Greece. Splendor in Persia was
very well in its way, but to his patriotic heart a crust
in Greece was better than a loaf in this land of
strangers. Ask as he might, however, Darius would
THE ADVENTURES OF DEMOCEDES. 113

not consent. A sprain or other harm might come to
him again. What would he then do without Demo-
cedes? He could not let him go.

As asking had proved useless, the wily Greek next
tried artifice. Atossa, the favorite wife of the king,
had a tumor to form on her breast. She said noth-
ing of it for a time, but at length it grew so bad that
she was forced to speak to the surgeon. He exam-
ined the tumor, and told her he could cure it, and
would do so if she would solemnly swear to do in
return whatever he might ask. As she agreed to
this, he cured the tumor, and then told her that the
reward he wished was liberty to return to Greece.
But he told Atossa that the king would not grant
that favor even to her, and that it could only be had
by stratagem. He advised her how she should act.

When next in conversation with the king, Atossa
told him‘that the Persians expected him to do some-
thing for the glory and power of the empire. He
must add to it by conquest.

“So I propose,” he replicd. “I have in view an
expedition against the Scythians of the north.”

“ Better lead one against the Greeks of the west,”
she replied. “I have heard much about the beauty
of the maidens of Sparta, Athens, Argos, and Corinth,
and I want to have some of these fair barbarians to
serve me as slaves. And if you wish to know more
about these Greek people, you have near you the best
person possible to give you information,—the Greek
who cured your foot.”

The suggestion seemed to Darius one worth consid-
ering. He would certainly like to know more about

h : 10*
114 HISTORICAL TALES.

this land of Greece. In the end, after conversing
with his surgeon, he decided to send some confidential
agents there to gain information, with Democedes as
their guide. Fifteen such persons were chosen, with
orders to observe closely the coasts and cities of
Greece, obeying the suggestions and leadership of
Democedes. They were to bring back what informa-
tion they could,—and on peril of their lives to bring
back Democedes. If they returned without him it
would be a sorry home-coming for them.

The king then sent for Democedes, told him of the
proposed expedition and what part he was to take in
it, but imperatively bade him to return as soon as his
errand was finished. He was bidden to take with him
the wealth he had received, as presents for his father
and brothers. He would not suffer from its loss, since
as much, and more, would be given him on his return.
Lastly, orders were given that a store-ship, “ filled
with all manner of good things,” should be taken with
the expedition.

Democedes heard all this with the aspect of one to
whom it was new tidings. Come back? Of course
he would. He wished ardently to see Greece, but
for a steady place of residence he much preferred
Susa and the palace of his king. As for the gold
which had been given him, he would not take it
away. He wanted to find his house and property
on his return. The store-ship would answer for all
the presents he cared to make.

His shrewd reply left no shadow of doubt in the
heart of the king. The envoys proceeded to Sidon,
in Pheenicia, where two armed triremes and a large
THE ADVENTURES OF DEMOCEDES. 115

store-ship were got ready by their orders. In these
they sailed to the coast of Greece, which they fully
surveyed, and even went as far as Italy. The cities
were also visited, and the story of all they had seen
was carefully written down.

At length they arrived at Tarentum, in Italy, not
far from Crotona, the native place of Democedes.
Here, at the secret suggestion of the wily surgeon,
the king seized the Persians as spies, and, to prevent
their escape, took away the rudders of their ships.
Their treacherous leader took the opportunity to
make his way to Crotona, and here the Persians,
who had been released and given back their ships,
found him on their arrival. They seized him in the
market-place, but he was rescued from them by his
fellow-citizens in spite of the remonstrances and
threats of the envoys. The Crotonians even took
from them the store-ship, and forced them to leave
the harbor in their triremes.

On their way home the unlucky envoys suffered a
second misfortune; they were shipwrecked and made
slaves,—as was the cruel way of dealing with unfor-
tunates in those days. An exile from Tarentum,
named Gillis, paid their ransom, and took them to
Susa,—for which service Darius offered him any
reward he chose to ask. Like Democedes, all he
wanted was to go home. But this reward he did
not obtain. Darius brought to bear on Tarentum
all the influence he could wield, but in vain. The
Tarentines were obdurate, and would not have their
exile back again. And Gillis was more honorable
than Democedes. He did not lay plans to bring a
116 HISTORICAL TALES.

Persian invasion upon Greece through bis selfish wish
to get back to his native land.

A few words more will tell all else we know about
Democedes. His last words to his Persian com-
panions bade them tell Darius that he was about to
marry the daughter of Milo of Crotona, famed as
the greatest wrestler of his time. Darius knew well
the reputation of Milo. He had probably learned it
from Democedes himself. Anda Persian king was
more likely to admire a muscular than a mental
giant. Milo meant more to him than Homer or any
hero of the pen. Democedes did marry Milo’s daugh-
ter, paying a high price for the honor, for the sole
purpose, so far as we know, of sending back this
boastful message to his friend, the king. And thus
ends all we know of the story of the surgeon of
Crotona,
DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS.

Tue conquest of Asia Minor by Cyrus and his
Persian army was the first step towards that in-
vasion of Greece by the Persians which proved
such a vital element in the history of the Hellenic
people. The next step was taken in the reign of
Darius, the first of Asiatic monarchs to invade
Kurope. This ambitious warrior attempted to win
fame by conquering the country of the Scythian
barbarians,—now Southern Russia,—and was taught
such a lesson that for centuries thereafter the peril-
ous enterprise was not repeated.

It was about the year 516 n.c. that the Persian
king, with the ostensible purpose—invented to ex-
cuse his invasion—of punishing the Scythians for a
raid into Asia a century before, but really moved
only by the thirst for conquest, reached the Bos-
phorus, the strait that here divides Europe from
Asia. He had with him an army said to have
numbered seven hundred thousand men, and on the
seas was a fleet of six hundred ships. A bridge of
boats was thrown across this arm of the sea,—on
which Constantinople now stands,—and the great
Persian host reached European soi! in the country

of Thrace.
117
118 HISTORICAL TALES.

Happy was it for Greece that the ambitious
Persian did not then seek its conquest, as Democedes,
his physician, had suggested. The Athenians, then
under the rule of the tyrant Pisistratus, were not
the free and bold people they afterwards became,
and had Darius sought their conquest at that time,
the land of Greece would probably have become a
part of the overgrown Persian empire. Fortunately,
he was bent on conquering the barbarians of the
north, and left Greece to grow in valor and pa-
triotism.

While the army marched from Asia into Europe
across its bridge of boats, the fleet was sent into
the Euxine, or Black Sea, with orders to sail for two
days up the Danube River, which empties into that
sea, and build there also a bridge of boats. When
Darius with his army reached the Danube, he
found the bridge ready, and on its swaying length
crossed what was then believed to be the greatest
river on the earth. Reaching the northern bank,
he marched onward into the unknown country of
the barbarous Scythians, with visions of conquest
and glory in his mind.

What happened to the great Persian army and
its ambitious leader in Scythia we do not very well
know. Two historians tell us the story, but prob-
ably their history is more imagination than fact.
Ctesias tells the fairy-tale that Darius marched
northward for fifteen days, that he then exchanged
bows with the Scythian king, and that, finding the
Scythian bow to be the largest, he fied back in terror
to the bridge, which he hastily crossed, having left
DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS. 119

a tenth of his army as a sacrifice to his mad ambi-
tion.

The story told by Herodotus is probably as much
a product of the imagination as that of Ctesias,
though it reads more like actual history. He says
that the Scythians retreated northward, sending
their wives and children before them in wagons,
and destroying the wells and ruining the harvests
as they went, so that little was left for the invaders
to eat and drink. On what the vast host lived we
do not know, nor how they crossed the various
rivers in their route. With such trifling considera-
tions as these the historians of that day did not
concern themselves. There were skirmishes and
combats of horsemen, but the Scythian king took
care to avoid any general battle. Darius sent him
a herald and taunted him with cowardice, but King
Idanthyrsus sent word back that if the Persians
should come and destroy the tombs of the fore-
fathers of the Scythians they would learn whether
they were cowards or not.

Day by day the monster Persian army advanced,
and day by day its difficulties increased, until its
situation grew serious indeed. The Scythians de-
clined battle still, but Idanthyrsus sent to his dis-
tressed foe the present of a bird, a mouse, a frog,
and five arrows. This signified, according to the
historian, “Unless you take to the air, like a bird;
to the earth, like a mouse; or to the water, like a
frog, you will become the victim of the Scythian
arrows.”

This warning frightened Darius. In truth, he
120 HISTORICAL TALES.

was in a desperate strait. Leaving the sick and
weak part of his army encamped with the asses he
had brought,—animals unknown to the Scythians,
who were alarmed by their braying,—he began a
hasty retreat towards his bridge of boats. But
rapidly as he could march, the swifter Scythians
reached the bridge before him, and counselled with
the Ionian Greeks, who had been left in charge,
and who were conquered subjects of the Persian
king, to break down the bridge and leave Darius
and his army to their fate.

And now we get back into real history again.
The story of what happened in Scythia is all
romance. All we really know is that the expedition
failed, and what was left of the army came back
to the Danube in hasty retreat. And here comes
in an interesting part of the narrative. The fleet
of Darius was largely made up of the ships of the
Jonians of Asia Minor, who had long been Persian
subjects. It was they who had bridged the Danube,
and who were left to guard the bridge. After
Darius had crossed the bridge, on his march north,
he ordered the Ionians to break it down and follow
him into Seythia, leaving only the rowers and sea-
men in the ships. But one of his Greek generals
advised him to let the bridge stand under guard of
its builders, saying that evil fortune might come to
the king’s army through the guile and shrewdness
of the Scythians.

Darius found this advice good, and promised to
reward its giver after his return. He then took a
cord and tied sixty knots in it, This he left with
DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS. 121

the Ionians. “Take this cord,” he said, “ Untie one
of the knots in it each day after my advance from
the Danube into Scythia. Remain here and guard
the bridge until you shall have untied all the knots;
but if by that time I shall not have returned, then
depart and sail home.”

Such were the methods of counting which then
prevailed. And the knowledge of geography was
not more advanced. Darius had it in view to march
round the Black Sea and return to Persia along its
eastern side,—with the wild idea that sixty days
would suffice for this great march.

Fortunately for him, as the story goes, the Jonians
did not obey orders, but remained on guard after
the knots were all untied. Then, to their surprise,
Scythians instead of Persians appeared. These told
the Jonians that the Persian army was in the great-
est distress, was retreating with all speed, and that
its escape from utter ruin depended on the safety
of the bridge. They urged the Greeks to break
the bridge and retire. If they should do so the
Persians would all be destroyed, and Ionia would
regain its freedom.

This was wise advice. Had it been taken it
might have saved Greece from the danger of Per-
sian invasion. The Ionians were at first in favor of
it, and Miltiades, one of their leaders, and after-
wards one of the heroes of Greek history, warmly
advised that it should be done. But Histisus, the
despot of Miletus, advised the other Ionian princes
that they would lose their power if their countries
became free,‘ since the Persians alone supported

FE 11
122 HISTORICAL TALES.

them, while the people everywhere were against
them. They determined, therefore, to maintain the
bridge.

But, to rid themselves of the Seyiiiane they pre-
tended to take their advice, and destroyed the bridge
for the length of a bow-shot from the northern shore
of the stream. The Scythians, thinking that they
now had their enemies at their mercy, departed in
search of their foes. That night the Persian army,
in a state of the greatest distress and privation,
reached the Danube, the Scythians having missed
them and failed to check their march. To the horror
of Darius and his starving and terror-stricken men,
the bridge, in the darkness, appeared to be gone.
An Egyptian herald, with a voice like a trumpet, was
ordered to call for Histiceus, the Milesian. He did so,
an answer came through the darkness, and the hopes
of the fleeing king were restored. The bridge was
speedily made complete again, and the Persian army
hastily crossed, reaching the opposite bank before
the Seythians, who had lost their track, reappeared
in pursuit.

Thus ended in disaster the first Persian invasion
of Europe. It was to be followed by others in
later years, equally disastrous to the invaders. As
for the despots of Ionia, who had through selfish-
ness lost the chance of freeing their native land,
they were to live to see, before many years, Ionia
desolated by the Persian tyrant whom they had
saved from irretrievable ruin. We shall tell how
this came about, as a sequel to the story of the in-
vasion of Scythia.
’ DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS. 123

Histiaus, despot of Miletus, whose advice had
saved the bridge for Darius, was richly rewarded
for his service, and attended Darius on his return
to Susa, the Persian capital, leaving his son-in-law
Aristagoras in command at Miletus. Some ten
years afterwards this regent of Miletus made an
attempt, with Persian aid, to capture the island of
Naxos. The effort failed, and Aristagoras, against
whom the Persians were incensed by their defeat
and their losses, was threatened with ruin. He
began to think of a revolt from Persian rule.

While thus mentally engaged, he received a
strangely-sent message from Histieus, who was
still detained at Susa, and who eagerly desired to
get away from dancing attendance at court and

return to his kingdom. Histisus advised his regent

to revolt. But as this message was far too danger-
ous to be sent by any ordinary channels, he adopted
an extraordinary method to insure its secrecy.
Selecting one of his most trusty slaves, Histisus
had his head shaved, and then pricked or tattooed
upon the bare scalp the message he wished to send.
Keeping the slave in seclusion until his hair had
grown again, he sent him to Miletus, where he was
instructed simply to tell Aristagoras to shave and
examine his head. Aristagoras did so, read the
tattooed message, and immediately took steps to
obey.

Word of the proposed revolt was sent by him to
the other cities along the coast, and all were found
ready to join in the attempt to secure freedom. Not
only the coast settlements, but the island of Cyprus,
124 HISTORICAL TALES.

joined in the revolt. At the appointed time all the
coast region of Asia Minor suddenly burst into a
flame of war.

Aristagoras hurried to Greece for aid, seeking it
first at Sparta. Finding no help there, he went to
Athens, which city lent him twenty ships,—a gift
for which it was to pay dearly in later years. Hur-
rying back with this small reinforcement, he quickly
organized an expedition to assail the Persians at the
centre of their power.

Marching hastily to Sardis, the capital of Asia
Minor, the revolted Ionians took and burned that
city. But the Persians, gathering in numbers, de-
feated and drove them back to the coast, where the
Athenians, weary of the enterprise, took to their
ships and hastened home.

When word of this raid, and the burning of
Sardis by the Athenians and Jonians, came to the
ears of Darius at his far-off capital city, he asked
in wonder, “The Athenians!—who are they?” The
name of this distant and insignificant Greek city
had not yet reached his kingly ears.

He was told who the Athenians were, and, calling
for his bow, he shot an arrow high into the air, at
the same time calling to the Greek deity, “Grant
me, Zeus, to revenge myself on those Athenians.”

And he bade one of his servants to repeat to him
three times daily, when he sat down to his mid-day
meal, “ Master, remember the Athenians!”

The invaders had been easily repulsed from Sardis,
but the revolt continued, and proved a serious and
stubborn one, which it took the Persians years to
DARIUS AND THE SCYTHIANS. 125

overcome. The smaller cities were conquered one
by one, but the Persians were four years in pre-
paring for the siege of Miletus. Resistance here
was fierce and bitter, but in the end the city fell.
The Persians now took a savage revenge for the
burning of Sardis, killing most of the men of this
important city, dragging into captivity the women
and children, and burning the temples to the
ground. ‘The other cities which still held out were
quickly taken, and visited like Miletus, with the
same fate of fire and bloodshed. It was now 495
B.c., more than twenty years after the invasion of
Scythia.

As for Histieus, he was at first blamed by Darius
for the revolt. But as he earnestly declared his
innocence, and asserted that he could soon bring
it to an end, Darius permitted him to depart.
Reaching Miletus, he applied at the gates for ad-
mission, saying that he had come to the city’s aid.
But Aristagoras was no longer there, and the
Mileseans had no use for their former tyrant. They
refused him admission, and even wounded him
when he tried to force his way in at night. He
then went to Lesbos, obtained there some ships,
occupied the city of Byzantium, and began a life
of piracy, which he kept up till his death, pillaging
the Ionian merchant ships as they passed into and
out of the Euxine Sea. Thus ended the career of
this treacherous and worthless despot, to whom
Darius owed his escape from Scythia.

11*
LHE ATHENIANS AT MARA-
THON.

Tux time came when Darius of Persia did not need
the bidding of a slave to make him “ Remember the
Athenians.” He was taught a lesson on the battle-
field of Marathon that made it impossible for him
ever to forget the Athenian name. Having dismally
failed in his expedition against the Scythians, he in-
vaded Greece and failed as dismally. It is the story
of this important event which we have next to tell.

And here it may be well to remark what terrible
consequences to mankind the ambition of a single
man may cause. The invasion of Greece, and all that
came from it, can be traced in a direct line of events
from the deeds of Histizus, tyrant of Miletus, who
first saved Darius from annihilation by the Scythians,
then roused the Jonians to rebellion, and, finally,
through the medium of Aristagoras, induced the
Athenians to come to their aid and take part in the
burning of Sardis. This roused Darius, who had
dwelt at Susa for many years in peace, to a thirst
for revenge on Athens, and gave rise to that series
of invasions which ravaged Greece for many years,
and whose fitting sequel was the invasion and con-
quest of Persia by Alexander the Great, a century
and a half later.

And now, with this preliminary statement, we may

126
THE ATHENIANS AT MARATHON, 127

proceed with our tale, No sooner had the Ionian re-
volt been brought to an end, and the Ionians punished
for their daring, than the angry Oriental despot pre-
pared to visit upon Athens the vengeance he had
vowed. His preparations for this enterprise were
great. His experience in Scythia had taught him
that the Western barbarians—as he doubtless consid-
ered them—were not to be despised. For two years,
in every part of his vast empire, the note of war was
sounded, and men and munitions of war were actively
gathered. On the coast of Asia Minor a great fleet,
numbering six hundred armed triremes and many
transports for men and horses, was prepared. The
Ionian and /Molian Greeks largely manned this fleet,
and were forced to aid their late foe in the effort to
destroy their kinsmen beyond the archipelago of the
Migean Sea.

An Athenian traitor accompanied the Persians,
and guided their leader in the advance against his
native city. We have elsewhere spoken of Pisistra-
tus, the tyrant of Athens, whose treason Solon had
in vain endeavored to prevent. After his death, his
sons Hipparchus and Hippias succeeded him in the
tyranny. Hipparchus was killed in 514 3.c., and in
511 Hippias, who had shown himself a cruel despot,
was banished from Athens. He repaired to the
court of King Darius, where he dwelt many years.
Now he came back, as guide and counsellor to the
Persians, hoping, perhaps, to become again a despot
of Athens; but only, as the fates decreed, to find a
grave on the fatal field of Marathon.

The assault on Greece was a twofold one. The
128 HISTORICAL TALES,

first was defeated by nature, the second by man.
A land expedition, led by the Persian general Mar-
donius, crossed the Hellespont in the year 493 B.c.,
proposing to march to Athens along the coast, and
with orders to bring all that were left alive of its in-
habitants as captives to the great king. On marched
the great host, nothing doubting that Greece would
fallan easy prey to their arms. Andas they marched
along the land, the fleet followed them along the ad-
joining sea, until the stormy and perilous promontory
of Mount Athos was reached.

No doubt the Greeks viewed with deep alarm this
formidable progress. They had never yet directly
measured arms with the Persians, and dreaded them
more than, as was afterwards shown, they had
reason to. But at Mount Athos the deities of the
winds came to their aid. As the fleet was rounding
that promontory, often fatal to mariners, a frightful
hurricane swooped upon it, and destroyed three hun-
dred of its ships, while no less than twenty thousand
men became victims of the waves. Some of the
crews reached the shores, but of these many died of
cold, and others were slain and devoured by wild
beasts, which roamed in numbers on that uninhabited
point of land. The land army, too, lost heavily from
the hurricane; and Mardonius, fearing to advance
farther after this disaster, ingloriously made his way
back to the Hellespont. So ended the first invasion
of Greece.

Three years afterwards another was made. Da-
rius, indeed, first sent heralds to Grecce, demanding
earth and water in token of submission to his will.
THE ATHENIANS AT MARATHON. 129

To this demand some of the cities cowardly yielded ;
but Athens, Sparta, and others sent back the heralds
with no more earth than clung to the soles of their
shoes. And so, a8 Greece was not to be subdued
through terror of his name, the great king prepared
to make it feel his power and wrath, incited thereto
by his hatred of Athens, which Hippias took care to
keep alive. Another expedition was prepared, and
put under the command of another general, Datis by
name.

The army was now sent by a new route. Darius
himself had led his army across the Bosphorus,
where Constantinople now stands, and where By-
zantium then stood. Mardonius conveyed his across
the southern strait, the Hellespont. The third expe-
dition was sent on shipboard directly across the sea,
landing and capturing the islands of the Aigean as it
advanced. Landing at length on the large island of
Bubeea, near the coast of Attica, Datis stormed and
captured the city of Eretria, burnt its temples, and
dragged its people into captivity. Then, putting his
army on shipboard again, he sailed across the narrow
strait between Bubcea and Attica, and landed on Attic
soil, in the ever-memorable Bay of Marathon.

It seemed now, truly, as if Darius was about to
gain his wish and revenge himself on Athens. The
plain of Marathon, where the great Persian army had:
landed and lay encamped, is but twenty-two miles
from Athens by the nearest road,—scarcely a day’s
march. The plain is about six miles long, and from
a mile and a half to three miles in width, extending
back from the sca-shore to the rugged hills and

1—i
130 HISTORICAL TALES,

mountains which rise to bind it in. A brook flows ©
across it to the sea, and marshes occupy its ends.
Such was the field on which one of the decisive bat-
tles of the world was about to be fought.

The coming of the Persians had naturally filled the
Athenians and all the neighboring nations of Greece
with alarm. Yet if any Athenian had a thought of
submission without fighting, he was wise enough to
keep it to himself. The Athenians of that day were
a very different people from what they had been fifty
years before, when they tamely submitted to the
tyranny of Pisistratus. They had gained new laws,
and with them a new spirit. They were the freest
people upon the earth,—a democracy in which every
man was the equal of every other, and in which each
had a full voice in the government of the state.
They had their political leaders, it is true, but these
were their fellow-citizens, who ruled through intel-
lect, not through despotism.

There were now three such men in Athens,—men
who have won an enduring fame. One of these was
that Miltiades who had counselled the destruction
of Darius’s bridge of boats. The others were named
Themistocles and Aristides, concerning whom we
shall have more to say. These three were among the
ten generals who commanded the army of Athens,
and each of whom, according to the new laws, was
to have command foraday. It was fortunate for the
Athenians that they had the wit to set aside this law
on this important occasion, since such a divided gen-
eralship must surely have led to defeat and disaster.

But before telling what action was taken there is




RUINS OF THE PARTHENON.
THE ATHENIANS AT MARATHON, 131

an important episode to relate. Athens—as was
common with the Greek cities when threatened—
did not fail to send to Sparta for aid. When the
Persians landed at Marathon, a swift courier, Phi-
dippides by name, was sent to that city for assist-
ance, and so fleet of foot was he that he performed
the journey, of one hundred and fifty miles, in forty-
eight. hours’ time.

The Spartans, who knew that the fall of Athens
would soon be followed by that of their own city,
promised aid without hesitation. But superstition
stood in their way. It was, unfortunately, only the
ninth day of the moon. Ancient custom forbade them
to march until the moon had passed its full. This
would be five days yet,—five days which might cause
the ruin of Greece, But old laws and observances
held dominion at Sparta, and, whatever came from
it, the moon must pass its full before the army could
march.

When this decision was brought back by the
courier to Athens it greatly disturbed the public
mind. Of the ten generals, five strongly counselled
that they should wait for Spartan help. The other
five were in favor of immediate action. Delay was
dangerous with an enemy at their door and many
timid and doubtless some treacherous citizens within
their walls.

Fortunately, there was an eleventh general, Calli-
machus, the war archon, or polemarch, who had a
casting vote in the council of generals, and who,
under persuasion of Miltiades, cast his vote for an
immediate march to Marathon. The other generals
132 HISTORICAL TALES.

who favored this action gave up to Miltiades their
days of command, making him sole leader for that
length of time. Herodotus says that he refused to
fight till his own day came regularly round,—but we
can scarcely believe that a general of his ability
would risk defeat on such a childish point of honor.
If so, he should have been a Spartan, and waited for
the passing of the full moon.

To Marathon, then, the men of Athens marched,
and from its surrounding hills looked down on the
great Persian army that lay encamped beneath, and
on the fleet which seemed to fill the sea. Of those
brave men there were no more than ten thousand.
And from all Greece but one small band came to join
them, a thousand men from the little town of Plata.
The numbers of the foe we do not know. They may
have been two hundred thousand in all, though how
many of these landed and took part in the battle
no one can tell. Doubtless they outnumbered the
Athenians more than ten to one.

Far along the plain stretched the lines of the Per-
sians, with their fleet behind them, extended along
the beach. On the high ground in the rear were
marshalled the Greeks, spread out so long that their
line was perilously thin. The space of a mile sepa-
rated the two armies.

And now, at the command of Miltiades, the valiant
Athenians crossed this dividing space at a full run,
sounding their pean or war-cry as they advanced.
Miltiades was bent on coming to close quarters at
once, so as to prevent the enemy from getting their
bowmen and cavalry at work.
THE ATHENIANS AT MARATHON. 133

The Persians, on seeing this seeming handful of
men, without archers or horsemen, advancing at a
run upon their great array, deemed at first that
the Greeks had gone mad and were rushing wildly
to destruction. The ringing war-cry astounded
them,—a Greek pean was new music to their
ears. And when the hoplites of Athens and Platea
broke upon their ranks, thrusting and hewing with
spear and sword, and with the strength gained
from exercises in the gymnasium, dread of these
courageous and furious warriors filled their souls.
On both wings the Persian lines broke and fled for
their ships. But in the centre, where Datis had
placed his best men, and where the Athenian line
was thinnest, the Greeks, breathless from their
long run, were broken and driven back. Seeing
this, Miltiades brought up his victorious wings, at-
tacked the centre with his entire force, and soon
had the whole Persian army in full flight for its
ships.

The marshes swallowed up many of the fleeing
host. Hundreds fell before the arms of the victors.
Into the ships poured in terror those who had
escaped, followed hotly by the victorious Greeks,
who made strenuous efforts to set the ships on fire
and destroy the entire host. In this they failed.
The Persians, made desperate by their peril, drove
them back. The fleet hastily set sail, leaving few
prisoners, but abandoning a rich harvest of tents
and equipments to the victorious Greeks. Of the
Persian host, some sixty-four hundred lay dead on
the field, the ships having saved them from further

12
134 HISTORICAL TALES.

slaughter. The Greek loss in dead was only one
hundred and ninety-two.

Yet, despite this signal victory, Greece was still
in imminent danger. Athens was undefended. The
fleeing fleet might reach and capture it before the
army could return. In truth, the ships had sailed in
this direction, and from the top of a lofty hill Mil-
tiades saw the polished surface of a shield flash in
the sunlight, and quickly guessed what it meant. It
was a signal made by some traitor to the Persian
fleet. Putting his army at once under march, despite
the weariness of the victors, he hastened back over
the long twenty-two miles at all possible speed, and
the worn-out troops reached Athens barely in time
to save it from the approaching fleet.

The triumph of Miltiades was complete. Only for
his quickness in guessing the meaning of the flashing
shield, and the rapidity of his march, all the results
of his great victory would have been lost, and Athens
fallen helpless into Persian arms. But Datis, finding
the city amply garrisoned, and baffled at every point,
turned his ships and sailed in defeat away, leaving
the Athenians masters of city and field.

And now the Spartans—to whom the full moon
had come too late—appeared, two thousand strong,
only in time to congratulate the victors and view the
dead Persians on the field. They had marched the
whole distance in less than three days. As for the
Athenian dead, they were buried with great cere-
mony on the plain where they fell, and the great
mound which covers them is visible there to this
day.
XERXES AND HIS ARMY.

Tue defeat of the Persian army at Marathon re-
doubled the wrath of King Darius against the
Athenians. He resolved in his autocratic mind to
sweep that pestilent city and all whom it contained
from the face of the earth. And he perhaps would
have done so had he not met a more terrible foe
even than Miltiades and his army,—the all-con-
queror Death, to whose might the greatest monarchs
must succumb. Burning with fury, Darius ordered
the levy of a mighty army, and for three years
busy preparations for war went on throughout the
vast empire of Persia. But, just as the mustering
was done and he was about to march, that grisly
foe Death struck him down in the midst of his
schemes of conquest, and Greece was saved,—the
great Darius was no more.

Xerxes, son of Darius, succeeded him on the
throne. This new monarch was the handsomest
and stateliest man in all his army. But his fair
outside covered a weak nature; timid, faint-hearted,
vain, conceited, he was not the man to conquer
Greece, small as it was and great as was the empire
under his control; and the death of Darius was in
all probability the salvation of Grecce.

185
136 HISTORICAL TALES.

Xerxes succeeded not only to the throne of Persia,
but also to the vast army which his father had
brought together. He succeeded, moreover, to a
war, for Egypt was in revolt. But this did not last
long; the army was at once set in motion, Egypt
was quickly subdued, and the Egyptians found
themselves under a worse tyranny than before.

Greece remained to conquer, and for that enter-
prise the timid Persian king was not eager. Mara-
thon could not be forgotten. Those fierce Athe-
nians who had defeated his father’s great host were
not to be dealt with so easily as the unwarlike
Egyptians. He held back irresolute, now persuaded
to war by one councillor, now to peace by another,
and finally—so we are told—driven to war by a
dream, in which a tall, stately man appeared to him
and with angry countenance commanded him not
to abandon the enterprise which his father had de-
signed. This dream came to him again the succeed-
ing night, and when Artabanus, his uncle, and the
advocate of peace, was made to sit on his throne
and sleep in his bed, the same figure appeared to
him, and threatened to burn out his eyes if he still
opposed the war. Artabanus, stricken with terror,
now counselled war, and Xerxes determined on the
invasion of Greece.

This story we are told by Herodotus, who told
many things which it is not very safe to believe.
What we really know is that Xerxes began the
most stupendous preparations for war that had ever
been known, and added to the army left by his
father until he had got together the greatest host
XERXES AND HIS ARMY. 137

the world had yet beheld. For four years those
preparations, to which Darius had already given
three years of time, were actively continued. Horse-
men and foot-soldiers, ships of war, transports,
provisions, and supplies of all kinds were collected
far and near, the vanity of Xerxes probably inciting
him to astonish the world by the greatness of his
army.

In the autumn of the year 481 Bc. this vast army,
marching from all parts of the mighty empire,
reached Lydia and gathered in and around the city
of Sardis, the old capital of Croesus. Besides the
land army, a fleet of twelve hundred and seven
ships of war, and numerous other vessels, were
collected, and large magazines of provisions were
formed at points along the whole line of march.
For years flour and other food, from Asia and
Egypt, had been stored in cities on the route, that
the fatal enemy starvation might not attack the
mighty host.

Two important questions occupied the mind of
Xerxes. How was he to get his vast army on
European soil, and how escape those dangers from
storm which had wrecked his father’s fleet? He
might cross the sea in ships, as Datis had done,—
and be like him defeated. Xerxes thought it safest
to keep on solid land, and decided to build a bridge
of boats across the Hellespont, that ocean river now
known as the Dardanelles, the first of the two straits
which connect the Mediterranean with the Black
Sea. As for the other trouble, that of storms at sea,
he remembered the great gale which had wrecked

12*
138 HISTORICAL TALES.

the fleet of Mardonius off the stormy cape of Mount
Athos, and determined to avoid this danger. A
narrow neck of land connects Mount Athos with
the mainland. Xerxes ordered that a ship-canal
should be cut through this isthmus, wide and deep
enough to allow two triremes—war-ships with three
ranks of oars—to sail abreast.

This work was done by the Pheenicians, the ablest
engineers at that time in the world. A canal was
made through which his whole fleet could sail, and
thus the stormy winds and waves which hovered
about Mount Athos be avoided.

This work was successfully done, but not so the
bridge of boats. Hardly had the latter been com-
pleted, when there came so violent a storm that the
cables were snapped like pack-thread and the bridge
sweptaway. With the weakness of a man of small
mind, on hearing of this disaster Xerxes burst into a
fit of insane rage. He ordered that the heads of the
chief engineers should be cut off, but this was far
from satisfying his anger. The elements had risen
against his might, and the elements themselves must
be punished. The Hellespont should be scourged for
its temerity, and three hundred lashes were actually
given the water, while a set of fetters were cast into
its depths. It is further said that the water was
branded with hot irons, but it is hard to believe that
even Xerxes was such a fool as this would make him.

The rebellious water thus punished, Xerxes re-
gained his wits, and ordered that the bridge should
be rebuilt more strongly than before. Huge cables
were made, some of flax, some of papyrus fibre, to
XERXES AND HIS ARMY. 139

anchor the ships in the channel and to bind them to
the shore. Two bridges were constructed, composed
of large ships laid side by side in the water, while
over each of them stretched six great cables, to moor
them to the land and to support the wooden cause-
way. In one of these bridges no less than three
hundred and sixty ships were employed.

And now, everything being ready, the mighty
army began its march. It presented a grand spec-
tacle as it made its way from Sardis to the sea.
First of all came the baggage, borne on thousands
of camels and other beasts of burden. Then came
one-half the infantry. The other half marched in
the rear, while between them were Xerxes and his
great body-guard, which is thus described by the
Greek historian :

First came a thousand Persian cavalry and as
many spearmen, each of the latter having a golden
pomegranate on the rear end of his spear, which
was carried in the air, the point being turned down-
ward. Then came ten sacred horses, splendidly
caparisoned, and following them rolled the sacred
chariot of Zeus, drawn by eight white horses. This
was succeeded by the chariot of Xerxes himself, who
wag immediately attended by a thousand horse-
guards, the choicest troops of the kingdom, of whose
spears the ends glittered with golden apples. Then
came detachments of one thousand horse, ten thou-
sand foot, and ten thousand horse. These foot-
soldiers, called the Immortals, because their number
was always maintained, had pomegranates of silver
on their spears, with the exception of one thousand,
140 HISTORICAL TALES.

who marched in front and rear and on the sides, and
bore pomegranates of gold. After these household
troops followed the vast remaining host.

The army of Xerxes was, as we have said, superior
in numbers to any the world had ever seen. Forty-
six nations had sent their quotas to the host, each
with its different costume, arms, mode of march, and
system of fighting. Only those from Asia Minor
bore such arms as the Greeks were used to fight
with. Most of the others were armed with javelins
or other light weapons, and bore slight shields or
none at all. Some came armed only with daggers
and a lasso like that used on the American plains.
The Ethiopians from the Upper Nile had their
bodies painted half red and half white, wore lion-
and panther-skins, and carried javelins and bows.
Few of the whole army bore the heavy weapons or
displayed the solid fighting phalanx of those whom
they had come to meet in war.

As to the number of men thus brought together
from half the continent of Asia we cannot be sure.
Xerxes, after reaching Hurope, took an odd way of
counting his army. Ten thousand men were counted
and packed close together. Then a line was drawn
around them, and a wall built about the space. The
whole army was then marched in successive detach-
ments into this walled enclosure. Herodotus tells
us that there were one hundred and seventy of these
divisions, which would make the whole army one
million seven hundred thousand foot. In addition
there were eighty thousand horse, many war-chariots,
and a fleet of twelve hundred and seven triremes
XERXES AND HIS ARMY. 141

and three thousand smaller vessels. According to
Herodotus, the whole host, soldiers and sailors, num-
bered two million six hundred and forty thousand
men, and there were as many or more camp-followers,
so that the whole number present, according to this
estimate, was over five million men. It is not easy
to believe that such a marching host as this could be
fed, and it has probably been much exaggerated ; yet
there is no doubt that the host was vast enough
almost to blow away all the armies of Greece with
the wind of its coming.

On leaving Sardis a frightful spectacle was pro-
vided by Xerxes: the army found itself marching
between two halves of aslaughtered man. Pythius,
an old Phrygian of great riches, had entertained
Xerxes with much hospitality, and offered him all
his wealth, amounting to two thousands talents of
silver and nearly four million darics of gold. This
generous offer Xerxes declined, and gave Pythius
enough gold to make up his darics to an even four
millions. Then, when the army was about to march,
the old man told Xerxes that he had five sons in the
army, and begged that one of them, the eldest, might
be left with him as a stay to his declining years.
Instantly the despot burst into a rage. The request
of exemption from military service was in Persia an
unpardonable offence. The hospitality of Pythius
was forgotten, and Xerxes ordered that his son
should be slain, and half the body hung on each side
of the army, probably as a salutary warning to all
who should have the temerity to question the des-
pot’s arbitrary will.
142 HISTORICAL TALES.

On marched the great army. It crossed the plain
of Troy, and here Xerxes offered libations in honor
of the heroes of the Trojan war, the story of which
was told him. Reaching the Hellespont, he had a
marble throne erected, from which to view the pas-
sage of his troops. The bridges—which the scourged
and branded waters had now spared—were perfumed
with frankincense and strewed with myrtle boughs,
and, as the march began, Xerxes offered prayers to
the sun, and made libations to the sea with a golden
censer, which he then flung into the water, together
with a golden bowl and a Persian scimitar, perhaps
to repay the Hellespont for the stripes he had in-
flicted upon it.

At the first moment of sunrise the passage began,
the troops marching across one bridge, the baggage
and attendants crossing the other. All day the
march continued, and all night long, the whip being
used to accelerate the troops; yet so vast was the
host that for seven days and nights, without cessa-
tion, the army moved on, and a week was at its end
before the last man of the great Persian host set
foot on European soil.

Then down through the Grecian peninsula Xerxes
marched, doubtless inflated with pride at the great-
ness of his host and the might of the fleet which
sailed down the neighboring seas and through the
canal which he had cut to baffle stormy Athos. One
regret alone seemed to come into his mind, and that
was that in a hundred years not one man of that
vast army would be alive. It did not occur to him
that in less than one year few of them might be
XERXES AND HIS ARMY. 143

alive, for all thought of any peril to his army and
fleet from the insignificant numbers of the Greeks
must have been dismissed with scorn from his mind.

Like locusts the army marched southward through
Thrace, eating up the cities as it advanced, for each
was required to provide a day’s meals for the mighty
host. For months those cities had been engaged in
providing the food which this army consumed in a
day. Many of the cities were brought to the verge
of ruin, and all of them were glad to see the army
march on. At length Xerxes saw before him Mount
Olympus, on the northern boundary of the land of
Hellas or Greece. This was the end of his own
dominions. He was now about to enter the territory
of his foes. With what fortune he did so must be
left for later tales.
HOW THE SPARTANS DIED AT
THERMOPYLA.

Wuen Xerxes, as his father had done before him,
sent to the Grecian cities to demand earth and water
in token of submission, no heralds were sent to
Athens or Sparta. These truculent cities had flung
the heralds of Darius into deep pits, bidding them
to take earth and water from there and carry it to
the great king. This act called for revenge, and
whatever mercy he might show to the rest of Greece,
Athens and Sparta were doomed in his mind to be
swept from the face of the earth. How they
escaped this dismal fate is what we have next to tell.

As one of the great men of Athens, Miltiades, had
saved his native land in the former Persian invasion,
so a second patriotic citizen, Themistocles, proved
her savior in the dread peril which now threatened
her. But the work of Themistocles was not done in
a single great battle, as at Marathon, but in years of
preparation. And a war between Athens and the
neighboring island of Aigina had much to do with
this escape from ruin.

To make war upon an island a land army was of
noavail.
accustomed to a commercial, though not to a war-
like, life upon the sea. Many of them were active,

144
HOW THE SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLA, 145

daring, and skilful sailors, and when Themistocles
urged that they should build a powerful fleet he
found approving listeners. Longer of sight than his
fellow-citizens, he warned them of the coming peril
from Persia. The conflict with the small island of
Aigina was a small matter compared with that
threatened by the great kingdom of Persia. But to
prepare against one was to prepare against both.
And Athens was just then rich. It possessed valu-
able silver-mines at Laurium, in Attica, from which
much wealth came to the state. This money The-
mistocles urged the citizens to use in building ships,
and they were wise enough to take his advice, two
hundred ships of war being built. These ships, as it
happened, were not used for the purpose originally
intended, that of the war with /Ngina. But they
proved of inestimable service to Athens in the Per-
sian war.

The vast preparations of Xerxes were not beheld
without deep terror in Greece. Spies were sent into
Persia to discover what was being done. They were
captured and condemned to death, but Xerxes
ordered that they should be shown his total army
and fleet, and then sent home to report what they
had seen. He hoped thus to double the terror of the
Grecian states.

At home two things were done. Athens and
Sparta called a congress of all the states of Greece
on the Isthmus of Corinth, and urged them to lay
aside all petty feuds and combine for defence against
the common foe. It was the greatest and most suc-
cessful congress that Greece had ever yet held. All

@ k 13
146 HISTORICAL TALES.

wars came to an end. That between Athens and
/Kigina ceased, and the fleet which Athens had built
was laid aside for a greater need. The other thing
was that step always taken in Greece in times of
peril, to send to the temple at Delphi and obtain
from the oracle the sacred advice which was deemed
so indespensable.

The reply received by Athens was terrifying.
“Quit your land and city and fice afar!” cried the
prophetess. “Fire and sword, in the train of the
Syrian chariot, shall overwhelm you. Get ye away
from the sanctuary, with your souls steeped in
sorrow.”

The envoys feared to carry back such a sentence
to Athens. They implored the priestess for a more
comforting reply, and were given the following
enigma to solve: “This assurance I will give you,
firm as adamant. When everything else in the land
of Cecrops shall be taken, Zeus grants to Athéné
that the wooden wall alone shall remain uncon-
quered, to defend you and your children. Stand not
to await the assailing horse and foot from the conti-
nent, but turn your backs and retire; you shall yet
live to fight another day. O divine Salamis, thou
too shalt destroy the children of women, either at
the seed-time or at the harvest.”

Here was some hope, though small. “The wooden
wall?” What could it be but the fleet? This was
the general opinion of the Athenians. But should
they fight? Should they not rather abandon Attica
forever, take to their wooden walls, and seek a new
home afar? Salamis was to destroy the children of
HOW THE SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLE. 147

women! Did not this portend disaster in case of a
naval battle ?

The fate of Athens now hung upon a thread.
Had its people fiown to a distant land one of the
greatest chapters in the history of the world would
never have been written. But now Themistocles, to
whom Athens owed its fleet, came forward as its
savior. Ifthe oracle, he declared, had meant that the
Greeks should be destroyed, it would have called Sala-
mis, where the battle was to be fought, “ wretched
Salamis.” But it had said “divine Salamis.” What
did this mean but that it was not the Greeks, but the
enemies of Greece, who were to be destroyed? He
begged his countrymen not to desert their country,
but to fight boldly for its safety. Fortunately for
Athens his solution of the riddle was accepted, and
the city set itself diligently to building more ships,
that they might have as powerful a fleet as possible
when the Persians came,

But not only Athens was to be defended; all
Greece was in peril; the invaders must be met by
land as well as by sea. Greece is traversed by moun-
tain ranges, which cross from sea to sea, leaving only
difficult mountain paths and narrow seaside passes.
One of these was the long and winding defile to
Tempé, between Mounts Olympus and Ossa, on the
northern boundary of Greece. There a few men
could keep back a numerous host, and thither at first
marched the small army which dared to oppose the
Persian millions, a little band of ten thousand men,
under the command of a Spartan general.

But they did not remain there. The Persians
148 HISTORICAL TALES.

were still distant, and while the Greeks awaited their
approach new counsels prevailed. There was another
pass by which the mountains might be crossed,—
which pass, in fact, the Persians took. Also the fleet
might land thousands of men in their rear. On the
whole it was deemed best to retreat to another pass,
much farther south, the famous pass of Thermopyle.
Here was a road a mile in width, where were warm
springs ; and at each end were narrow passes, called
gates—the name Thermopyle meaning “hot gates.”
Adjoining was a narrow strait, between the main-
land and the island of Eubcea, where the Greek fleet
might keep back the Persian host of ships. There
was an old wall across the pass, now in ruins. This
the Greeks rebuilt, and there the devoted band, now
not more than seven thousand in all, waited the
coming of the mighty Persian host.

It was in late June, of the year 480 B.c., that the
Grecian army, led by Leonidas, king of Sparta,
marched to this defile. There were but three hun-
dred Spartans * in his force, with small bodies of men
from the other states of Greece. The fleet, less
than three hundred ships in all, took post beside
them in the strait. And here they waited while day
by day the Persian hordes marched southward over
the land.

The first conflict took place between some vessels
of the fleets, whereupon the Grecian admirals, filled



* The army of Sparta, which before had stayed at home
to await the full of the moon, did so now to complete certain
religious ceremonies, sparing but this handful of men for the
vital need of Greece.
HOW THE SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLE. 149

with sudden fright, sailed southward and left the
army to the mercy of the Persian ships. Fortu-
nately for Greece, thus deserted in her need, a strong
ally now came to the rescue. The gods of the winds
had been implored with prayer. The answer came
in the form of a frightful hurricane, which struck
the great fleet while it lay at anchor, and hurled
hundreds of ships on the rocky shore. For three
days the storm continued, and when it ended more
than four hundred ships of war, with a multitude of
transports and provision craft, were wrecked, while
the loss of life had been immense. The Greek fleet
had escaped this disaster, and now, with renewed
courage, came sailing back to the post it had aban-
doned, and so quickly as to capture fifteen vessels of
the Persian fleet.

While this gale prevailed Xerxes and his army lay
encamped before Thermopyle, the king in terror for
his fleet, which he was told had been all destroyed.
As for the Greeks, he laughed them to scorn. He
was told that a handful of Spartans and other Greeks
were posted in the pass, and sent a horseman to tell
him what was to be seen. The horseman rode near
the pass, and saw there the wall and outside it the
small Spartan force, some of whom were engaged in
gymnastic exercises, while others were combing their
long hair.

The great king was astonished and puzzled at this
news. He waited expecting the few Greeks to dis-
perse and leave the pass open to his army. The
fourth day came and went, and they were still there.
Then Xerxes bade the Median and Kissian divisions

13*
150 HISTORICAL TALES.

of his army to advance, seize these insolent fellows,
and bring them to him as prisoners of war. For-
ward went his troops, and entered the throat of the
narrow pass, where their bows and arrows were of
little use, and they must fight the Greeks hand to
hand. And now the Spartan arms and discipline
told. With their long spears, spreading shields,
steady ranks, and rigid discipline, the Greeks were
far more than a match for the light weapons, slight
shields, and open ranks of their foes. The latter
had only their numbers, and numbers there were of
little avail. They fell by hundreds, while the Greeks
met with little loss. For two days the combat com-
tinued, fresh defenders constantly replacing the
weary ones, and a wall of Persian dead being heaped
up outside the wall of stone.

Then, as a last resort, the Immortals,—the Persian
guard of ten thousand,—with other choice troops,
were sent; and these were driven back with the
same slaughter as the rest. The fleet in the strait
doubtless warmly cheered on the brave hoplites in
the pass; but as for Xerxes, “ Thrice,” says Herodo-
tus, “did he spring from his throne, in agony for his
army.”

The deed of a traitor rendered useless this noble
defence. A recreant Greek, Ephialtes by name,
sought Xerxes and told him of a mountain pass over
which he could guide a band to attack the defenders
of Thermopyle in the rear.
tachment was ordered to cross the pass, and did so
under shelter of the night. At daybreak they
reached the summit, where a thousand Greeks from
HOW THE SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLH. 151

Phocis had been stationed as a guard. These men,
surprised, and overwhelmed with a shower of arrows,
fied up the mountain-side, and left the way open to
the Persians, who pursued their course down the
mountain, and at mid-day reached the rear of the pass
of Thermopyle.

Leonidas had heard of their coming. Scouts had
brought him word. The defence of the pass was at
anend. They must fly or be crushed. A council
was hastily called, and it was decided to retreat.
But this decision was not joined in by Leonidas and
his gallant three hundred. The honor of Sparta
would not permit her king to yield a pass which he
had been sent to defend. The laws of his country
required that he should conquer or die at his post.
It was too late to conquer; but he could still die.
With him and his three hundred remained the Thes-
pians and Thebans, seven hundred of the former and
about four hundred of the latter. The remainder of
the army withdrew.

Xerxes had arranged to wait till noon, at which
hour the defenders of the pass were to be attacked
in front and rear. But Leonidas did not wait. All
he and his men had now to do was to sell their lives
as dearly as possible, so they marched outside the
pass, attacked the front of the Persian host, drove
them back, and killed them in multitudes, many of
them being driven to perish in the sea and the
morass. The Persian officers kept their men to the
deadly work. by threats and the liberal use of the
whip.

But one by one the Spartans fell. Their spears
152 HISTORICAL TALES.

were broken, and they fought with their swords,
Leonidas sank in death, but his men fought on more
fiercely still, to keep the foe back from his body.
Here many of the Persian chiefs perished, among
them two brothers of Xerxes. It was like a combat
of the Iliad rather than a contest in actual war.
Finally the Greeks, worn out, reduced in numbers,
their best weapons gone, fell back behind the wall,
bearing the body of their chief. Here they still
fought, with daggers, with their unarmed hands,
even with their mouths, until the last man fell dead.

The Thebans alone yielded themselves as prisoners,
saying that they had been kept in the pass against
their will. Of the thousand Spartans and Thespians,
not a man remained alive.

Meanwhile the fleets had been engaged, to the ad-
vantage of the Greeks, while another storm that

.suddenly rose wrecked two hundred more of the

Persian ships on Hubcea’s rocky coast. When word
came that Thermopyle had fallen the Grecian fleet
withdrew, sailed round the Attic coast, and stopped
not again until the island of Salamis was reached.

As for Leonidas and his Spartans, they had died,
but had won imperishable fame. The same should
be said for the Thespians as well, but history has
largely ignored their share in the glorious deed. In
after-days an inscription was set up which gave all
glory to the Peloponnesian heroes without a word
for the noble Thespian band. Another celebrated
inscription honored the Spartans alone:

“Go, stranger, and to Lacedemon tell
That here, obeying her behests, we fell,”’
HOW THE SPARTANS DIED AT THERMOPYLE. 153

or, in plain prose, “Stranger, tell the Lacedsemo-
nians that we lie here, in obedience to their orders.”
On the hillock where the last of the faithful band
died was erected a monument with a marble lion in
honor of Leonidas, while on it was carved the fol-
lowing epitaph, written by the poet Simonides:

“In dark Thermopyle they lie.
Oh, death of glory, thus to die!
Their tomb an altar is, their name
A mighty heritage of fame.
Their dirge is triumph; cankering rust,
And time, that turneth all to dust,
That tomb shall never waste nor hide,—
The tomb of warriors true and tried.
The full-voiced praise of Greece around
Lies buried in this sacred mound ;
‘Where Sparta’s king, Leonidas,
In death eternal glory has!”
£. HE WOODEN WALLS OF
ALHENS,

Tue slaughter of the defenders of Thermopyle
exposed Athens to the onslaught of the vast Persian
army, which would soon be on the soil of Attica.
A few days’ march would bring the invaders to its
capital city, which they would overwhelm as a flight
of locusts destroys a cultivated field. The states of
the Peloponnesus, with a selfish regard for their own
safety, had withdrawn all their soldiers within the
peninsula, and began hastily to build a wall across
the isthmus of Corinth with the hope of keeping
back the invading army. Athens was left to care
for itself. It was thus that Greece usually let itself
be devoured piecemeal.

There was but one thing for the Athenians to do,
to obey the oracle and fly from their native soil.
In a few days the Persians would be in Athens, and
there was not an hour to lose. The old men, the
women and children, with such property as could be
moved, were hastily taken on shipboard and carried
to Salamis, Aigina, Troezen, and other neighbaring
islands. The men of fighting age took to their ships
of war, to fight on the sea for what they had lost
on land. A few of the old and the poverty-stricken
remained, and took possession of the hill of the

154
THE WOODEN WALLS OF ATHENS. 155

Acropolis, whose wooden fence they fondly fancied
might be the wooden wall which the oracle had
meant. Apart from these few the city was de-
serted, and Athens had embarked upon the seas.
Not only Athens, but all Attica, was left desolate,
and in the whole state Xerxes made only five hundred
prisoners of war.

Onward came the great Persian host, destroying
all that could be destroyed on Attic soil, and sending
out detachments to ravage other parts of Greece.
The towns that submitted were spared. Those that
resisted, or whose inhabitants fled, were pillaged and
burnt. A body of troops was sent to plunder Delphi,
the reputed great wealth of whose temple promised
a rich reward. The story of what happened there
is a curious one, and well worth relating.

The frightened Delphians prepared to fly, but first
asked the oracle of Apollo whether they should take
with them the sacred treasures or bury them in
secret places. The oracle bade them not to touch
these treasures, saying that the god would protect
his own. With this admonition the people of Delphi
fled, sixty only of their number remaining to guard

. the holy shrine.

These faithful few were soon encouraged by a
prodigy. The sacred arms, kept in the temple’s
inmost cell, and which no mortal hand dared touch,
were seen lying before the temple door, as if Apollo
was prepared himself to use them. As the Persians
advanced by a rugged path under the steep cliffs of
Mount Parnassus, and reached the temple of Athené
Pronewa, a dreadful peal of thunder rolled above
156 HISTORICAL TALES.

their affrighted heads, and two great crags, torn
from the mountain’s flank, came rushing down with
deafening sound, and buried many of them beneath
their weight. At the same time, from the temple of
' Athené, came the Greek shout of war.

In a panic the invaders turned and fied, hotly
pursued by the few Delphians, and, so the story
goes, by two armed men of superhuman size, whose
destructive arms wrought dire havoc in the fleeing
host. And thus, as we are told, did the god preserve
his temple and his wealth.

But no god guarded the road to Athens, and at
length Xerxes and his army reached that city,—four
months after they had crossed the Hellespont. It
was an empty city they found. The few defenders
of the Acropolis—a craggy hill about one hundred
and fifty feet high—made a vigorous defence, for a
time keeping the whole Persian army at bay. But
some Persians crept up a steep and unguarded part
of the wall, entered the citadel, and soon all its de-
fenders were dead, and its temples and buildings in
flames.

While all this was going on, the Grecian fleet lay
but a few miles away, in the narrow strait between
the isle of Salamis and the Attic coast, occupying
the little bay before the town of Salamis, from which
narrow channels at each end led into the Bay of
Eleusis to the north and the open sea to the south.
In front rose the craggy heights of Mount Aigaleos,
over which, only five miles away, could be seen
ascending the lurid smoke of blazing Athens. It
was a spectacle calculated to infuriate the Athe-
THE WOODEN WALLS OF ATHENS. 157

nians, though not one to inspire them with courage
and hope.

The fleet of Greece consisted of three hundred and
sixty-six ships in all, of which Athens supplied two
hundred, while the remainder came in small numbers
from the various Grecian states. The Persian fleet,
despite its losses by storm, far outnumbered that
of Greece, and came sweeping down the Attic coast,
confident of victory, while the great army marched
southward over Attic land.

And now two councils of war were held,—one by
the Persian leaders, one by the Greeks. The fleet of
Xerxes, probably still a thousand ships strong, lay in
the Bay of Phalerum, a few miles from Athens; and
hither the king, having wrought his will on that
proud and insolent city, came to the coast to inspect
his ships of war and take counsel as to what should
next be done.

Here, before his royal throne, were seated the
kings of Tyre and Sidon, and the rulers of the many
other nations represented in his army. One by one
they were asked what should be done. “Fight,” was
the general reply ; “fight without delay.” Only one
voice gave different advice, that of Queen Artemisia
of Halicarnassus. She advised Xerxes to march to
the isthmus of Corinth, saying that then all the
ships of the Peloponnesus would fly to defend their
own homes, and the fleet of Greece would thus be dis-
persed. Xerxes heard her with calmness, but declined
to take her prudent advice. The voice of the others
and his own confidence prevailed, and orders were
given for the flect to make its attack the next day.

14
158 HISTORICAL TALES,

The almost unanimous decision of this council,
over which ruled the will of an autocratic king, was
very different from that which was reached by the
Greeks, in whose council all who spoke had equal
authority. The fleet had come to Salamis to aid the
flight of the Athenians. This done, it was necessary
to decide where it was best to meet the Persian
fleet. Only the Athenians, under the leadership of
Themistocles, favored remaining where they were.
The others perceived that if they were defeated
here, escape would be impossible. Most of them
wished to sail to the isthmus of Corinth, to aid the
land army of the Peloponnesians, while various other
plans were urged.

While the chiefs thus debated news came that
Athens and the Acropolis were in flames. At once
some of the captains left the council in alarm, and
began hastily to hoist sail for flight. Those that re-
mained voted to remove to the isthmus, but not to
start till the morning of the next day.

Themistocles, who had done his utmost to prevent
this fatal decision, which he knew would end in the
dispersal of the fleet and the triumph of Persia, re-
turned to his own ship sad of heart. Many of the
women and children of Athens were on the island
of Salamis, and if the fleet sailed they, too, must be
removed.

“What has the council decided?” asked his friend
Mnesiphilus.

Themistocles gloomily told him.

“This will be ruinous!” burst out Mnesiphilus.
“Soon there will be no allied fleet, nor any cause or
THE WOODEN WALLS OF ATHENS. 159

country to ‘fight for. You must have the council
meet again; this vote must be set aside; if it be
carried out the liberty of Greece is at an end.”

So strongly did he insist upon this that Themisto-
cles was inspired to make another effort. He went
at once to the ship of Eurybiades, the Spartan who
had been chosen admiral of the fleet, and represented
the case so earnestly to him that Eurybiades was
partly convinced, and consented to eall the council
together again.

Here Themistocles was so excitedly eager that he
sought to win the chiefs over to his views even be-
fore Eurybiades had formally opened the meeting
and explained its object. For this he was chided by
the Corinthian Adeimantus, who said,—

“Themistocles, those who in the public festivals
rise up before the proper signal are scourged.”

“True,” said Themistocles; “but those who lag
behind the signal win no crowns.”

When the debate was formally opened, Themisto-
cles was doubly urgent in his views, and continued
his arguments until Adeimantus burst out in a rage,
bidding him, a man who had no city, to be silent.

This attack drew a bitter answer from the insulted
Athenian. If he had no city, he said, he had around
him two hundred ships, with which he could win a
city and country better than Corinth. Then he
turned to Hurybiades, and said,—

“Tf you will stay and fight bravely here, all will be
well. If you refuse to stay, you will bring all Greece
to ruin. If you will not stay, we Athenians will
migrate with our ships and families. Then, chiefs,
160 HISTORICAL TALES.

when you lose an ally like us, you will remember
what I say, and regret what you have done.”

These words convinced Eurybiades. Without the
Athenian ships the fleet would indeed be powerless.
He asked for no vote, but gave the word that they
should stay and fight, and bade the captains to make
ready for battle. Thus it was that at dawn of day
the fleet, instead of being in full flight, remained
drawn up in battle array in the Bay of Salamis.
The Peloponnesian chiefs, however, were not con-
tent. They held a secret council, and resolved to
steal secretly away. This treacherous purpose came
to the ears of Themistocles, and to prevent it he took
a desperate course. He sent a secret message to
Xerxes, telling him that the Greek fleet was about
to fly, and that if he wished to capture it he must at
once close up both ends of the strait, so that flight
would be impossible.

He cunningly represented himself as a secret
friend of the Persian king, who lost no time in
taking the advice. When the next day’s dawn was
at hand the discontented chiefs were about to fly, as
they had secretly resolved, when a startling message
came to theirears. Aristides, a noble Athenian who
had been banished, but had now returned, came on
the fleet from Salamis and told them that only battle
was left, that the Persians had cooped them in like
birds in a cage, and that there was nothing to do but
to fight or surrender.

This disturbing message was not at first believed,
But it was quickly confirmed. Persian ships appeared
at both ends of the strait. Themistocles had won.




THE VICTORS AT SALAMIS.
THE WOODEN WALLS OF ATHENS. 161

Escape was impossible. They must do battle like
heroes or live as Persian slaves. There was but one de-
cision,—to fight. The dawn of day found the Greeks
actively preparing for the most famous naval battle
of ancient times.

The combat about to be fought had the largest
audience of any naval battle the world has ever
known. For the vast army of Persia was drawn
up as spectators on the verge of the narrow strait
which held the warring fleets, and Xerxes himself
sat on a lofty throne erected at a point which closely
overlooked the liquid plain. His presence, he felt
sure, would fill his seamen with valor, while by his
side stood scribes prepared to write down the names
alike of the valorous and the backward combatants.
On the other hand, the people of Athens and Attica
looked with hope and fear on the scene from the island
of Salamis. It was a unique preparation for a battle at
sea, such as was never known before or since that day.

The fleet of Persia outnumbered that of Greece
three toone. But the Persian seamen had been busy
all night long in carrying out the plan to entrap the
Greeks, and were weary with labor. The Greeks
had risen fresh and vigorous from their night's rest.
And different spirits animated the two hosts. The
Persians were moved solely by the desire for glory ;
the Greeks by the stern alternatives of victory,
slavery, or death. These differences in strength and
motive went far to negative the difference in num-
bers; and the Greeks, caught like lions in a snare,
dashed into the combat with the single feeling that
they must now fight or dic.

t 14*
162 HISTORICAL TALES,

History tells us that the Greeks hesitated at first ;
but soon the ship of Ameinias, an Athenian captain,
dashed against a Pheenician trireme with such fury
that the two became closely entangled. While their
crews fought vigorously with spear and javelin, other
ships from both sides dashed to their aid, and soon
numbers of the war triremes were fiercely engaged.

The battle that followed was hot and furious, the
ships becoming mingled in so confused a mass that
no eye could follow their evolutions. Soon the
waters of the Bay of Salamis ran red with blood.
Broken oars, fallen spars, shattered vessels, filled the
strait. Hundreds were hurled into the waters,—the
Persians, few of whom could swim, to sink; the
Greeks, who were skilful swimmers, to seek the shore
of Salamis or some friendly deck.

From the start the advantage lay with the Greeks.
The narrowness of the strait rendered the great num-
bers of the Persians of no avail. The superior disci-
pline of the Greeks gave them a further advantage.
The want of concert in the Persian allies was another
aid to the Greeks. They were ready to run one an-
other down in the wild desire to escape. Soon the
Persian fleet became a disorderly mass of flying
ships, the Greek fleet a well-ordered array of furious
pursuers. In panic the Persians fled; in exultation
the Greeks pursued. One trireme of Naxos captured
five Persian ships. A brother of Xerxes was slain by
an Athenian spear. Great numbers of distinguished
Persians and Medes shared his fate. Before the day
was old the battle on the Persian side had become a
frantic effort to escape, while some of the choicest
THE WOODEN WALLS OF ATHENS. 163

troops of Persia, who had been landed before the
battle on the island of Psyttaleia, were attacked by
Aristides at the head of an Athenian troop, and put
to death to a man.

The confident hope of victory with which Xerxes
saw the battle begin changed to wrath and terror
when he saw his ships in disorderly flight and the
Greeks in hot pursuit. The gallant behavior of
Queen Artemisia alone gave him satisfaction, and
when he saw her in the flight run into and sink an

‘ opposing vessel, he cried out, “ My men have become
women; and my women, men.” He was not aware
that the ship she had sunk, with all on board, was
one of his own fleet.

The mad flight of his ships utterly distracted the
mind of the faint-hearted king. His army still vastly
outnumbered that of Greece. With all its losses, his
fleet was still much the stronger. An ounce of cour-
age in his soul would have left Greece at his mercy.
But that was wanting, and in panic fear that the
Greeks would destroy the bridge over the Hellespont,
he ordered his fleet to hasten there to guard it, and
put his army in rapid retreat for the safe Asiatic
shores.

He had some reason to fear the loss of his bridge.
Themistocles and the Athenians had it in view to
hasten to the Hellespont and break it down. But
Kurybiades, the Spartan leader, opposed this, saying
that it was dangerous to keep Xerxes in Greece.
They had best give him every chance to fly.

Themistocles, who saw the wisdom of this advice,
not only accepted it, but sent a message to Kerxes—
164 HISTORICAL TALES.

as to a friend—advising him to make all haste, and
saying that he would do his best to hold back the
Greeks, who were eager to burn the bridge.

The frightened monarch was not slow in taking
this advice. Leaving a strong force in Greece, under
the command of his general Mardonius, he marched
with the speed of fear for the bridge. But he had
nearly exhausted the country of food in his advance,
and starvation and plague attended his retreat, many
of the men being obliged to eat leaves, grass, and the
bark of trees, and great numbers of them dying
before the Hellespont was reached.

Here he found the bridge gone. A storm had de-
stroyed it. He was forced to have his army taken
across in ships. Not till Asia Minor was reached
did the starving troops obtain sufficient food—and
there gorged themselves to such an extent that many
of them died from repletion. In the end Xerxes
entered Sardis with a broken army and a sad heart,
eight months after he had left it with the proud ex-
pectation of conquering the western world.
PLATAZAS FAMOUS DAY.

On a certain day, destined to be thereafter famous,
two strong armies faced each other on the plain
north of the little Beeotian town of Platewa. Greece
had gathered the greatest army it had ever yet put
into the field, in all numbering one hundred and ten
thousand men, of whom nearly forty thousand were
hoplites, or heavy-armed troops, the remainder light-
armed or unarmed. Of these Sparta supplied five
thousand hoplites and thirty-five thousand light-
armed Helots, the greatest army that warlike city had
ever brought into action. The remainder of Laconia
furnished five thousand hoplites and five thousand
Helot attendants. Athens sent eight thousand hop-
lites, and the remainder of the army came from
various states of Greece. This host was in strange
contrast to the few thousand warriors with which
Greece had met the vast array of Xerxes at Ther-
mopyle.

Opposed to this force was the army which Xerxes
had left behind him on his flight from Greece, three
hundred thousand of his choicest troops, under the
command of his trusted general Mardonius. This
host was not a mob of armed men, like that which
Xerxes had led. It embraced the best of the Persian

165
166 HISTORICAL TALES.

forces and Greek auxiliaries, and the hopes of Greece
still seemed but slight, thus outnumbered three to
one. But the Greeks fought for liberty, and were
inspired with the spirit of their recent victories ; the
Persians were disheartened and disunited: this dif-
ference of feeling went far to equalize the hosts.

And now, before bringing the waiting armies to
battle, we must tell what led to their meeting on the
Platwan plain. After the battle of Salamis a vote
was taken by the chiefs to decide who among them
should be awarded the prize of valor on that glorious
day. Hach cast two ballots, and when these were
counted each chief was found to have cast his first
vote for—himself! But the second votes were nearly
all for Themistocles, and all Greece hailed him as its
preserver. The Spartans crowned him with olive,
and presented him with a kingly chariot, and when
he left their city they escorted him with the honors
due to royalty.

Meanwhile Mardonius, who was wintering with his
army in Thessaly, sent to Athens to ask if its people
still proposed the madness of opposing the power of
Xerxes the king. “Yes,” was the answer; “while
the sun lights the sky we will never join in alliance
with barbarians against Greeks.”

On receiving this answer Mardonius broke up his
winter camp and marched again to Athens, which
he found once more empty of inhabitants. Its
people had withdrawn as before to Salamis, and left
the shell of their nation to the foe,

The Athenians sent for aid to Sparta, but the
people of that city, learning that Athens had defied
PLATA’S FAMOUS DAY. 167

Mardonius, selfishly withheld their asistance, and
the completion of the wall across the isthmus was
diligently pushed. Fortunately for Greece, this self-
ish policy came to a sudden end. “ What will your
wall be worth if Athens joins with Persia and gives
the foe the aid of her fleet?” was asked the Spartan
kings; and so abruptly did they change their opinion
that during that same night five thousand Spartan
hoplites, each man with seven Helot attendants,
marched for the isthmus, with Pausanias, a cousin
of Leonidas, the hero of Thermopyle, at their head.

On learning of this movement, Mardonius set fire
to what of Athens remained, and fell back on the
city of Thebes, in Boeotia, as a more favorable field
for the battle which now seemed sure to come.
Here his numerous cavalry could be brought into
play, the country was allied with him, the friendly
city of Thebes lay behind him, and food for his great
army was to be had. Here, then, he awaited the
coming of the Greeks, and built for his army a forti-
fied camp, surrounded with walls and towers of
wood.

Yet his men and officers alike lacked heart. Ata
splendid banquet given to Mardonius by the Thebans,
one of the Persians said to his Theban neighbor,—

“Seest thou these Persians here feasting, and the
army which we left yonder encamped near the river?
Yet a little while, and out of all these thou shalt
behold but a few surviving.”

“Tf you feel thus,” said the Theban, “thou art
surely bound to reveal it to Mardonius.”

“ My friend,’ answered the Persian, “ man cannot
168 HISTORICAL TALES.

avert what God has decreed. No one will believe
the revelation, sure though it be. Many of us Per-
sians know this well, and are here serving only under
the bond of necessity. And truly this is the most
hateful of all human sufferings, to be full of knowl-
edge, and at the same time to have no power over
any result.”

Not long had the lukewarm Persians to wait for
their foes. Soon the army of Greece appeared, and,
seeing their enemy encamped along the little river
Asopus in the plain, took post on the mountain de-
clivity above. Here they were not suffered to rest
in peace. The powerful Persian cavalry, led by
Masistius, the most distinguished officer in the army,
broke like a thunderbolt on the Grecian ranks. The
Athenians and Megarians met them, and a sharp
and doubtful contest ensued. At length Masistius
fell from his wounded horse and was slain as he lay
on the ground. The Persians fought with fury to
recover his body, but were finally driven back, leav-
ing the corpse of their general in the hands of the
Greeks.

This event had a great effect on both armies.
Grief assailed the army of Mardonius at the loss of
’ their favorite general. Loud wailings filled the camp,
and the hair of men, horses, and cattle was cut in
sign of mourning. The Greeks, on the contrary,
were full of joy. The body of Masistius, a man of
great stature, and clad in showy armor, was placed
in a cart and paraded around the camp, that all
might see it and rejoice. Such was their confidence
at this defeat of the cavalry, which they had sorely
PLATMA’S FAMOUS DAY. 169

feared, that Pausanias broke up his hill camp and
marched into the plain below, where he took station
in front of the Persian host, only the little stream
of the Asopus dividing the two hostile armies.

And here for days they lay, both sides offering
sacrifices, and both obtaining the same oracle,—that
the side which attacked would lose the battle, the
side which resisted would win. Under such circum-
stances neither side cared to attack, and for ten days
the armies lay, the Greeks much annoyed by the
Persian cavalry, and having their convoys of pro-
visions cut off, yet still waiting with unyielding faith
in the decision of the gods.

Mardonius at length grew impatient. He asked
his officers if they knew of any prophecy saying
that the Persians would be destroyed in Greece.
They were all silent, though many of them knew
of such prophecies.

“Since you either do not know or will not tell,”
he at length said, “I well know of one. There is an
oracle which declares that Persian invaders shall
plunder the temple of Delphi, and shall afterwards
all be destroyed. Now we shall not go against that
temple, so on that ground we shall not be destroyed.
Doubt not, then, but rejoice, for we shall get the
better of the Greeks.” And he gave orders to pre-
pare for battle on the morrow, without waiting
longer on the sacrifices.

That night Alexander of Macedon, who was in the
Persian army, rode up to the Greek outposts and
gave warning of the coming attack. “I am of
Greek descent,’ he said, “and ask you to free me

H 15
170 HISTORICAL TALES.

from the Persian yoke. I cannot endure to seo
Greece enslaved.”

During the night Pausanias withdrew his army
to a new position in front of the town of Plates,
water being wanting where they were. One Spar-
tan leader, indeed, refused to move, and when told
that there had been a general vote of the officers, he
picked up a huge stone and cast it at the feet of
Pausanias, crying, “This is my pebble. With it I
give my vote not to run away from the strangers.”

Dawn was at hand, and the Spartans still held
their ground, their leader disputing in vain with
the obstinate captain. At length he gave the order
to march, it being fatal to stay, since the rest of the
army had gone. Amompharetus, the obstinate cap-
tain, seeing that his general had really gone, now
lost his scruples and followed.

When day dawned the Persians saw with surprise
that their foes had disappeared. The Spartans alone,
detained by the obstinacy of Amompharetus, were
‘still in sight. Filled with extravagant confidence at
this seeming flight, Mardonius gave orders for hasty
pursuit, crying to a Greek ally, “There go your
boasted Spartans, showing, by a barefaced flight,
what they are really worth.”

Crossing the shallow stream, the Persians ran
after the Greeks at full speed, without a thought of
order or discipline. The foe seemed to them in full
retreat, and shouts of victory rang from their lips as
they rushed pell-mell across the plain.

The Spartans were quickly overtaken, and found
themselves hotly assailed. They sent in haste to
PLATAA’S FAMOUS DAY. 171

the Athenians for aid. The Athenians rushed for-
ward, but soon found themselves confronted by
the Greek allies of Persia, and with enough to do to
defend themselves. The remainder of the Greek
army had retreated to Plateea and took no. part in
the battle.

The Persians, thrusting the spiked extremities of
their long shields in the ground, formed a breast-
work from which they poured showers of arrows on
the Spartan ranks, by which many were wounded or
slain. Yet, despite their distress, Pausanias would
not give the order to charge. He was at the old
work again, offering sacrifices while his men fell
around him. The responses were unfavorable, and
he would not fight.

At length the victims showed favorable signs.
“Charge!” was the word. With the fury of un-
chained lions the impatient hoplites sprang forward,
and like an avalanche the serried Spartan line fell
on the foe.

Down went the breastwork of shields. Down
went hundreds of Persians before the close array
and the long spears of the Spartans. Broken and
disordered, the Persians fought bravely, doing their
utmost to get to close quarters with their foes.
Mardonius, mounted on a white horse, and attended
by a body-guard of a thousand select troops, was
among the foremost warriors, and his followers dis-
tinguished themselves by their courage.

At length the spear of Acimnestus, a distinguished
Spartan, brought Mardonius dead to the ground.
His guards fell in multitudes around his body. The
172 HISTORICAL TALES.

other Persians, worn out with the hopeless effort to
break the Spartan phalanx, and losing heart at the
death of their general, turned and fled to their forti-
fied camp. At the same time the Theban allies of
Persia, whom the Athenians had been fighting, gave
ground, and began a retreat, which was not ended
till they reached the walls of Thebes.

On rushed the vic