Citation
True to the old flag

Material Information

Title:
True to the old flag a tale of the American war of independence
Creator:
Henty, G. A ( George Alfred ), 1832-1902
Briggs, William ( Publisher )
Blackie & Son ( publisher )
Copp Clark Company ( publisher )
Place of Publication:
Glasgow
Toronto
Publisher:
Blackie & Son
William Briggs :
Copp, Clark Company
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
390 p., [8] leaves of plates : ill., maps ; 20 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Youth -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Farms -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Battles -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Indians of North America -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Soldiers -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Voyages and travels -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
Adventure and adventurers -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
War -- Juvenile fiction ( lcsh )
History -- Juvenile fiction -- United States -- Revolution, 1775-1783 ( lcsh )
Publishers' catalogues -- 1896 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1896
Genre:
Publishers' catalogues ( rbgenr )
novel ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
Scotland -- Glasgow
Canada -- Toronto
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Publisher's catalogue precedes and follows text.
Statement of Responsibility:
by G.A. Henty ; with eight full-page illustrations by Gordon Browne and six maps.

Record Information

Source Institution:
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:
002391819 ( ALEPH )
ALZ6713 ( NOTIS )
233034928 ( OCLC )

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Full Text




















PEARSON TRIES THE ICE,





TRUE TO THE OLD FLAG

A TALE OF THE

AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE,

BY

GA HENDTY

Author of “The Lion of the North,” “ With Clive in India,” “Through the Fray,”
“Tn Freedom's Cause,” ‘The Dragon and the Raven,” “Facing Death,” &e.

WITH EIGHT FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS BY GORDON BROWNE,
AND SIX MAPS.



GLASGOW :
BLACKIE & SON, Limrtep.

TORONTO:

WILLIAM BRIGGS, 29-33 Ricumonp St. Wust.
Taz COPP, CLARK COMPANY, Limrrep, 9 Front Sr. Wzsr.



ENTERED according to Act of the Parliament of Canada, in the year one
thousand eight hundred and ninety-six, by BLackin & Son, Limited, at the
Department of Agriculture.



PREFACE

My prEAR Laps,

You have probably been accustomed to regard tho
war between England and her Colonies in America as one in
which we were not only beaten but to some extent humiliated.
Owing to the war having been an unsuccessful one for our
arms, British writers have avoided the subject, and it has been
left for American historians to describe. These, writing for
their own countrymen, and drawing for their facts upon
gazettes, letters, and other documents emanating from one side
only, have naturally, and no doubt insensibly, given a very
strong colour to their own views of the events, and English
writers have been too much inclined to accept their account
implicitly. There is, however, another and very different side
to the story, and this I have endeavoured to show you. The
whole of the facts and details connected with the war can be
relied upon as accurate. ‘They are drawn from the valuable
account of the struggle written by Major Stedman, who served
under Howe, Clinton, and Cornwallis, and from other authentic
contemporary sources. You will see that although unsuccess-
ful—and success was, under the circumstances, a sheer impossi-
bility-—the British troops fought with a bravery which was

never exceeded. and that their victories in actual conflict



vi PREFACE.

vastly outnumbered their defeats. Indeed it may be doubted
whether in any war in which this country has been engaged
have our soldiers exhibited the qualities of endurance and

courage in a higher degree.

Yours very sincerely,

G. A. HEN'T'Y.



Chap.

IT.
Til.
IV.

VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.

XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.

XVI.
XVII.
XVIII.
XIX,
XX.
XXI.

CONTENTS.

. A Frontier Fary, .

An Inpran Rain,
THE RED-SKIN ATTACK,

Tus Ficut at LEXINGTON,

. BUNKER’s HILL,

ScovTine,

In tHE FoREST, . Sie
QUEBEC, . .

Tur SuRPRISE OF TRENTON,

. A TREACHEROUS PLANTER, .

Tur Carturk or PHILADELPHIA, .
Tue Sertier’s Hur,
SARATOGA,

REscueEn, .

. THe Isnanp ReErucE,

THE GREAT SToRM,

Tue Scovt’s Srory, .

Tue Simck or SAVANNAH, .

In an AMERICAN Prison, .
Tur War in South Carona. .

Tue END oF THE STRUGGLE,. .. .

rage

25
42
60
76
95

. 114
. 182
. 152
. 172
. 200
. 218
. 237
. 258
-2tt
» 295
. 810

328

. 849
. 867
. 885



ILLUSTRATIONS.

Page
PEARSON TRIES THF ICE, . . 2 »« + + © « ~ Avontispiece, 322

‘‘THAT WAS A PRETTY GOOD SHOT,” . . . . . .. « « 988

84

Tue Seconp ADVANCE AT Bunker’s Ht,
Joun CoFFIN AND BAIRNSFEATHER IN THE Barrery,. . . . 186
A TrEAcHEROUS FRIEND CAUGHT, . . . . . + - 6 « « 181
Tur Derenog or tap Hur, . . 1. 2 1 we ew ee te 226
“Tuy INDIAN DARTED OFF ACROSS THE ICE,” . . . . . ~ 280

«(Tue HIGHLANDERS MAINTAINED A DESPERATE RESISTANCE,” . 834

MAPS.
Puan or tHE Action at Bunxer’s Hinzt, . . .. .. . 88
Skxercu or Gen. Purrennam’s Posirton anp British ADVANCE, 147
Puan oF Burcoyne’s Posrrion AT SARATOGA, . . . 2 « © 245
PLAN oF THE SIEGE OF SAVANNAH, . . . «© © © « « + 309
PLAN oF THE BATTLE FOUGHT NEAR CAMDEN, . . . . . .« 847

PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF GUILDFORD,. 2 «6 « © 2» « » « 8/1







TRUE TO THE OLD FLAG:

A TALE OF THE AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.

CHAPTER I.

A FRONTIER FARM.

“Concord, March 1, 1774.
Wi yy Dear Cousin,—I am leaving next week with
ip my husband for England, where we intend to
pass some time visiting his friends. John and
I have determined to accept the invitation
you gave us last summer for Harold to come and spend
a few months with you. His father thinks that a great
future will ere many years open in the West, and that
it is therefore well the boy should learn something of
frontier life; for myself, I would rather that he stayed
quietly at home, for he is at present over fond of adven-
ture; but as my husband is meditating selling his estate
here and moving west, it is perhaps better for him.”
“Massachusetts is in a ferment, as indeed are all the Eas-
tern states, and the people talk openly of armed resistance
against the government. My husband being of English
birth, and having served in the king’s army, cannot brook





10 THE BEGINNING OF TROUBLE.

what he calls the rebellious talk which is common among
his neighbours, and is already on bad terms with many
around us. I myself am, as it were, a neutral; as an Ame-
rican woman, it seems to me that the colonists have been
dealt with somewhat hardly by the English parliament,and
that the measures of the latter have been high-handed and
arbitrary; upon the other hand, I naturally incline toward
my husband’s views. He maintains that as the king’s army
has driven out the French and gives protection to the
colony, it is only fair that the colonists should contribute to
its expenses. The English ask for no contributions towards
the expenses of their own country, but demand that at
least the expenses of the protection of the colony shall
not be charged upon the heavily-taxed people at home.
As to the law that the colony shall trade only with the
mother country, my husband says that this is the rule in
the colonies of Spain, France, Portugal, and the Nether-
lands, and that the people here, who can obtain what land
they choose, and till it without rent, should not grumble
at paying this small tax to the mother country. How-
ever it be, I fear that troubles will come; and this place
being the head and focus of the party hostile to England,
my husband, feeling himself out of accord with all his
neighbours, saving a few loyal gentlemen like himself,
is thinking much and seriously of selling our estate here
and of moving away into the new countries of the West,
where he will be free from all the disputation and con-
tentious talk which occupies men’s time here.

“Indeed, Cousin, times have sadly changed since you
were staying with us five years ago. Then our life was a
peaceful and quiet one; now there is nothing but wrang-
ling and strife. The dissenting clergy are, as my husband



REASONS FOR MOVING WEST. 11

says was the case in England before the great civil
war, the fomenters of this discontent. There are many
busybodies who pass their time in stirring up the people
by violent harangues and seditious writing; therefore
everyone takes one side or the other, and there is neither
peace nor comfort in life.

“ Accustomed as I have always been {0 living in ease and
affluence, I dread somewhat the thought of a life on the
Indian frontier. One has heard so many dreadful stories
of Indian fights and massacres, that I tremble a little at the
prospect; but I do not mention this to Jobn, for as other
women are, like yourself, brave enough to support these
dangers, I would not appear a coward in hiseyes. You will
see, Cousin, that as this prospect is before us, it is well that
Harold should learn the ways of a frontier life. Moreover,
John does not like the thoughtof leaving him here while we
are in England, for, as he says, the boy. might learn to be-
come a rebel in his absence; therefore, my dear cousin, we
have resolved to send him to you. An opportunity offers
in the fact that a gentleman of our acquaintance is, with
his family, going this week west with the intention of
settling there; and he will, he tells us, go first to Detroit,
whence he will be able to send Harold forward to your
farm. The boy himself is delighted at the thought,
and promises to return an accomplished backwoodsman.
John joins me in kind love to yourself and your husband,
and believe me to remain your affectionate cousin,

“MARY WILSON.”

Four months after the date of the above letter a lad
some fifteen years old was walking with a man of middle
age, on the shores of Lake Huron. Behind them was



12 A BACKWOODS CLEARING.

a large clearing of about a hundred acres in extent; a
comfortable house, with buildings for cattle, stood at a
distance of some three hundred yards from the lake;
broad fields of yellow corn waved brightly in the sun;
and from the edge of the clearing came the sound of
a woodman’s axe, showing that the proprietor was still
enlarging the limits of his farm. Surrounding the house,
at a distance of twenty yards, was a strong stockade
some seven feet in height, formed of young trees pointed
at the upper end, squared and fixed firmly in the ground.
The house itself, although far more spacious and comfort-
able than the majority of backwood farmhouses, was
built in the usual fashion, of solid logs, and was evidently
designed to resist attack.

William Welch had settled ten years before on this
spot, which was then far removed from the nearest habi-
tation. It would have been a very imprudent act, under
ordinary circumstances, to have established himself in so
lonely a position, so far removed from the possibility of
assistance in case of attack. He settled there, however,
just after Pontiac, who was at the head of an alliance of
all the Indian tribes of those parts, had, after the long
and desperate siege of Fort Pitt, made peace with us upon
finding that his-friends the French had given up all
thought of further resistance to the English, and had
entirely abandoned the country. Mr. Welch thought,
therefore, that a permanent peace was likely to reign
on the frontier, and that he might safely establish him-
self in the charming location he had pitched upon, far
removed from the confines of civilization.

The spot was a natural clearing of some forty acres in
extent, sloping down to the water’s edge, and a more



A SETTLER’S TROUBLES, 13

charming site could hardly have been chosen. Mr. Welch
had brought with him three farm-labourers from the
East, and as time went on he extended the clearing by
cutting down the forest giants which bordered it.

In spite, however, of the beauty of the position, the
fertility of the soil, the abundance of his crops, and the
advantages afforded by the lake, both from its plentiful
supply of fish and as a highway by which he could
convey his produce to market, he had more than once
regretted his choice of the location. It was true that
there had been no Indian wars on a large scale; but
the Indians had several times broken out in sudden in-
cursions; three times he had been attacked, but fortu-
nately only by small parties which he had been enabled
to beat off; once, when a more serious danger threatened
him, he had been obliged to embark with his wife and
child and his more valuable chattels in the great scow in
which he carried his produce to market, and had to take
refuge in the settlements, to find on his return his build-
ings destroyed and his farm wasted. At that time he
had serious thoughts of abandoning his location alto-
gether; but the settlements were extending rapidly to-
wards him, and, with a prospect of having neighbours
before long, and the natural reluctance to give up a place
upon which he had expended so much toil, he decided to
hold on, hoping that more quiet times would prevail, until
other settlers would take up land around him.

The house had been rebuilt more strongly than before.
He now employed four men, and had been unmolested
since his return to his farm, three years before the date
of this story. Already two or three locations had been
taken up on the shores of the lake beyond him; a village



14 BAD NEWS.

had grown up thirty-five miles away, and several settlers
had established themselves between that place and his
home.

“So you are going out fishing this morning, Harold?”
Mr. Welch said. “I hope you will bring back a good
supply, for the larder is low. I was looking at you yes-
terday, and I see that you are becoming a first-rate hand
at the management of a canoe.”

“So I ought to be,” the boy said, “ considering that for
nearly three months I have done nothing but shoot and
fish.”

“You have a sharp eye, Harold, and will make a first-
rate backwoodsman one of these days. You can shoot
nearly as well as I can now. It is lucky that I had a
good stock of powder and lead on hand; firing away
by the hour together as you do consumes a large amount
of ammunition. See, there is a canoe on the lake; it is
coming this way too. There is but one man in it; he is
a white by his clothes.”

For a minute or two they stood watching the boat,
and then seeing that its course was directed towards
the shore, they walked down to the edge of the lake to
meet it.

“Ah! Pearson, is that you?” Mr. Welch asked. “I
thought I knew your long sweeping stroke at a distance.
You have been hunting, I see; that is a fine stag you
have got there. What is the news?”

“About as bad as can be, Master Welch,” the hunter
said. “The Irroquois have dug up the tomahawk again,
and are out on the war-path. They have massacred
John Brent and his family. I heard a talk of it amongst
some hunters I met ten days since in the woods. They



AN INDIAN OUTBREAK. 15

said that the Irroquois were restless, and that their chief,
War Eagle, one of the most troublesome varmint on the
whole frontier, had been stirring them up to war. He
told them, I heard, that the Pale-faces were pushing
farther and farther into the Injun woods, and that, un-
less they drove them back, the Red-skin hunting-grounds
would be gone. I hoped that nothing would come of it,
but I might have known better. When the Red-skins
begin to stir there is sure to be mischief before they are
quiet again.”

The colour had somewhat left Mr. Welch’s cheeks as
the hunter spoke.

“This is bad news indeed, Pearson,” he said gravely.
“Are you sure about the attack on the Brents?”

“Sartin sure,” the hunter said. “I met their herd; he
had been down to Johnson’s to fetch a barrel of pork.
Just when he got back he heard the Injun yells, and
saw smoke rising in the clearing, so he dropped the barrel
and made tracks. I met him at Johnson’s, where he had
just arrived. Johnson was packing up with all haste,
and was going to leave; and so I said I would take my
canoe and come down the lake, giving you all warning
on the way. I stopped at Burns’ and Hooper’s. Burns
said he should clear out at once, but Hooper talked about
seeing it through. He has got no wife to be skeary
about, and reckoned that with his two hands he could
defend his log-hut. I told him I reckoned he would get
his har raised if the Injuns came that way; but in course
that’s his business.”

“What do you advise, Pearson? I do not like aban-
doning this farm again to the mercy of the Red-skins,”

“It would be a pity, Master Welch, that’s as true as



16 A DIFFICULT DECISION.

gospel; it’s the likeliest clearing within fifty miles round,
and you've fixed the place up as snug and comfortable as
if it were a farm in the old provinces. In course the ques-
tion is, what this War Eagle intends to do. His section
of the tribe is pretty considerable strong, and although
at present I ain’t heard that any others have joined, these
Injuns are like barrels of gunpowder: when the spark is
once struck there is no saying how far the explosion may
spread. When one band of them sees as how another is
taking scalps, and getting plunder and honour, they all
want to be at the same work. I reckon War Eagle has
got some two hundred braves who will follow him; but
when the news spreads that he has begun his work, all
the Irroquois, to say nothing of the Shawnees, Delawares,
and other varmint, may dig up the hatchet. The question
is, what War Hagle’s intentions are? He may make a
clean sweep down, attacking all the outlying farms, and
waiting till he is joined by a lot more of the red reptiles
before attacking the settlements. Then, on the other
hand, he may think himself strong enough to strike a
blow at Gloucester and some other border villages at
once. In that case he might leave the outlying farms
alone, as the news of the burning of these would reach
the settlements and put them on their guard, and he
knows in course that if he succeeds there he can eat you
all up at his leisure.”

“The attack upon Brent’s place looks as if he meant
to make a clean sweep down,” Mr. Welch said.

“Well,” the hunter continued thoughtfully, “I don’t know
as I sees it in that light. Brent’s place was a long way
from any other. He might have wished to give his band

a taste of blood, and so raise their spirits, and he might
: (245)



THE HUNTER’S ARGUMENTS. 17

reasonably conclude that nout would be known about
it for days, perhaps weeks to come. Then, again, the
attack might have been made by some straggling party
without orders. It’s a dubious question. You have got
four hands here, I think, and yourself; I have seen your
wife shoot pretty straight with a rifle, so she can count
as one; and as this young ’un here has a good idea too
with his shooting-iron, that makes six guns; your place
is a strong one, and you could beat off any straggling
party. My idea is, that War Eagle, who knows pretty
well that the place would make a stout fight, won’t waste
his time by making a regular attack upon it. You might
hold out for twenty-four hours; the clearing is open, and
there ain’t no shelter to be had. He would be safe to
lose a sight of men, and this would be a bad beginning,
and would discourage his warriors greatly. No, I reckon
War Eagle will leave you alone for the present. Maybe
he will send a scout to see whether you are prepared; it’s
as likely as not that one is spying at us somewhere
among the trees now. I should lose no time in driving
in the animals and getting well in shelter; when they
see you are prepared they will leave you alone, at least
for the present; afterwards there’s no saying, that will
depend on how they gets on at the settlements. If they
succeed there and get lots of booty and plenty of scalps,
they may march back without touching you; they will
be in a hurry to get to their villages and have their feasts
and dancings. If they are beaten off at the settlements,
I reckon they will pay you a visit for sure; they won’t
go back without scalps. They will be savage like, and
won't mind losing some men for the sake of having

something to brag about when they get back. And now,
(245) B



18 CALLING IN THE HANDS.

Master Welch, I must be going on, for I want to take
the news down to the settlements before War Eagle gets
there, and he may be ahead of me now for aught I know.
I don’t give you no advice as to what you had best do;
you can judge the circumstances as well as I can. When
I have been to the settlements and put them on their
guard, maybe I shall be coming back again, and in that
case you know Jack Pearson's rifle is at your disposal.
You may as well tote this stag up to the house; you
won’t be doing much hunting just for the present, and
the meat may come in handy.”

The stag was landed, and a minute later the canoe shot
away from shore under the steady stroke of the hunter's
powerful arms. Mr. Welch at once threw the stag over
his shoulders, and, accompanied by Harold, strode away
towards the house. On reaching it he threw down the
stag at the door, seized a rope which hung against the
wall, and the sounds of a large bell rung in quick sharp
strokes summoned the hands’from the fields. The sound
of the woodman’s axe ceased at once, and the shouts of
the men as they drove the cattle towards the house rose
on the still air.

“What is the matter, William?” Mrs. Welch asked as
she ran from the house.

“J have bad news, my dear; the Indians are out again,
and I fear we have trouble before us. We must hope
that they will not come in this direction, but must be
prepared for the worst. Wait till I see all the hands
and beasts in the stockade, and then we can talk the
matter over quietly.”

In a few minutes the hands arrived, driving before
them the horses and cattle.



PREPARATIONS FOR DEFENCE, 19

“What is it, boss?” they asked; “that was the alarm-
bell sure enough?”

“The Indians are out again,” Mr. Welch said, “and in
force. They have massacred the Brents, and are making
towards the settlements. They may come this way or
they may not; at anyrate we must be prepared for them.
Get the beasts into the sheds, and then do you all take
scythes and set to work to cut down that patch of corn,
which is high enough to give them shelter; there’s
nothing else which will cover them within a hundred
yards of the house. Of course you will take your rifles
with you and keep a sharp look-out; but they will have
heard the bell if they are in the neighbourhood, and will
guess that we are on the alert, so they are not likely to
attempt a surprise. Shut one of the gates and leave the
other ajar, with the bar handy to put up in case you
have to make a run for it. Harold will go up to the
look-out while you are at work.”

Having seen that all was attended to, Mr. Welch went
into the house, where his wife was going about her work
as usual, pale, but quiet and resolute.

“Now, Jane,” he said, “sit down and I will tell you
exactly how matters stand, as far as Pearson, who brought
the news, has told me. Then you shall decide as to the
course we had better take.”

After he had told her all that Pearson had said, and
the reasons for and against expecting an early attack, he
went on, “Now, it remains for you, my dear, to decide
whether we shall stay and defend the place till the last
against any attack that may be made, or whether we
shall at once embark in the scow, and make our way
down to the settlements.”



20 THE FINAL DECISION.

“What do you think, William?” his wife asked.

“I scarcely know myself,” he answered; “but if I had
quite my own way, I should send you and Nelly down to
the settlements in the scow, and fight it out here with the
hands.”

“You certainly will not have your own way in that,”
his wife said. “If you go, of course I go; if you stay, I
stay. I would a thousand times rather go through a
siege here and risk the worst, than go down to Gloucester
and have the frightful anxiety of not knowing what was
happening here. Besides, it is very possible, as you say,
that the Indians may attack the settlement itself; many
of the people there have had no experience in Indian war,
and the Red-skins are likely to be far more successful in
their surprise there than they would be here. If we go,
we should have to leave our house, our barns, our stacks,
and our animals to the mercy of the savages. Your
capital is pretty nearly all embarked here now, and the
loss of all this would be ruin to us. At anyrate,
William, I am ready to stay here, and to risk what may
come, if you are. A life on the frontier is necessarily a
life of danger; and if we are to abandon everything, and
to have to commence life afresh every time the Indians
go on the war-path, we had better give it up at o once and
return to Massachusetts.”

“Very well, my dear,” her husband said gravely. “You
are a true frontierman’s wife; you have chosen as I
should have done. It is a choice of evils; but God has
blessed and protected us since we came out into the
wilderness; we will trust and confide in him now. At
anyrate,” he went on more cheerfully, “there is no fear
of the enemy starving us out. We got in our store of



ON THE ALERT. 21

provisions only a fortnight since, and have enough of
everything for a three months’ siege. There is no fear of
our well failing us; and as for ammunition, we have abun-
dance; seeing how Harold was using powder and ball, I
had an extra supply when the stores came in the other
day; there is plenty of corn in the barn for the animals
for months, and I will have the corn which the men are
cutting brought in as a supply of food for the cows.
It will be useful for another purpose too; we will keep a
heap of it soaked with water, and will cover the shingles
with it in case of attack. It will effectually quench
their fire-arrows.”

The day passed off without the slightest alarm, and by
nightfall the patch of corn was cleared away, and an
uninterrupted view of the ground for the distance of a
hundred yards from the house was afforded. When night
fell, two out of the four dogs belonging to the farm were
fastened out in the open, at a distance of from seventy to
eighty yards of the house, the others being retained
within the stockade. The garrison was divided into three
watches, two men being on the alert at a time, relieving
each other every three hours. Mr. Welch took Harold as
his companion on the watch. The boy was greatly
excited at the prospect of a struggle. He had often
read of the desperate fights between the frontier settlers
and the Indians, and had longed to take share in the ad-
venturous work ; he could scarcely believe that the time
had come, and that he was really a sharer in what might
be a desperate struggle.

The first watch was set at nine, and at twelve Mr.
Welch and Harold came on duty; the men they relieved
reported that all was silent in the woods, and that they



22 INDIAN SCOUTS.

had heard no suspicious cries of any kind. When the
men had retired to their room Mr. Welch told Harold
that he should take a turn round the stockade and visit
the dogs. Harold was to keep watch at the gate, to close
it after he went out, to put up the bar, and to stand beside
it ready to open it instantly if called upon.

Then the farmer stepped out into the darkness, and,
treading noiselessly, at once disappeared from Harold's
sight, The latter closed the gate, replaced the heavy bar,
and stood with one hand on this and the other holding his
rifle, listening intently. Once he thought he heard a low
growling from one of the dogs, but this presently ceased,
and all was quiet again. ‘The gate was a solid one,
formed of strong timbers placed at a few inches apart,
and bolted to horizontal bars.

Presently he felt the gate upon which his hand rested
quiver as if pressure was applied from without. His
first impulse was to say “Is that you?” but Mr. Welch had
told him that he would give a low whistle as he ap-
proached the gate; he therefore stood quiet with his
whole attention absorbed in listening. Without making
the least stir he peered through the bars, and made out ~
two dark figures behind them. After once or twice
shaking the gate, one took his place against it and the
other sprang upon his shoulders.

Harold looked up and saw a man’s head appear against
the sky. Dim as was the light, he could see that it was
no European head-gear, a long feather or two projecting
from it. In an instant he levelled his rifle and fired.
There was a heavy fall, and then all was silent. Harold
again peered through the bars. The second figure had
disappeared, and a black mass lay at the foot of the gate.



THE WATCH-DOG SLAIN. 23

In an instant the men came running from the house,
rifles in hand. “What is it?” they exclaimed. “Where
is Mr. Welch?”

“He went out to scout round the house, leaving me at
the gate,” Harold said. “Two men, I think Indians,
came up; one was getting over the gate when I shot him.
I think he is lying outside—the other has disappeared.”

“We must get the master in,” one of the men said; “he
is probably keeping away, not knowing what has hap-
pened. Mr, Welch,” he shouted, “it is all safe here, so far
as we know; we are all on the look-out to cover you as
you come up.”

Immediately a whistle was heard close to the gate;
this was cautiously.opened a few inches, and was closed
and barred directly Mr. Welch entered.

Harold told him what had happened.

«I thought it was something of the sort. I heard Wolf
growl, and felt sure that it was not at me. I threw myself
down and crept up to him, and found him shot through
the heart with an Indian arrow. I was crawling back to
the house when I heard Harold’s shot. Then I waited to
see if it was followed by the war-whoop, which the Red-
skins would have raised at once on finding that they-were
discovered, had they been about to attack in force. Seeing
that all was quiet, I conjectured that it was probably an
attempt on the part of a spy to discover if we were upon
the alert. Then I heard your call and at once came on.
I do not expect any attack to-night now, as these fellows
must have been alone; but we will all keep watch till the
morning. You have done very well, Harold, and have
shown yourself a keen watchman. It is fortunate that
you had the presence of mind neither to stir nor to call



24 THE DEAD INDIAN.

out when you first heard them, for, had you done so, you
would probably have got an arrow between your ribs, as
poor Wolf has done.”

When it was daylight and the gate was opened, the
body of an Indian was seen lying without; a small mark
on his forehead showed where Harold’s bullet had entered,
death being instantaneous. His war-paint and the em-
broidery of his leggings showed him at once to be an
Irroquois. Beside him lay his bow, with an arrow which
- had evidently been fitted to the string for instant work.
Harold shuddered when he saw it, and congratulated
himself on having stood perfectly quiet. A grave was
dug a short distance away, the Indian was buried, and
the household proceeded about their work. —

The day, as was usual in households in America, was
begun with prayer, an¢ the supplications of Mr. Welch for
the protection of God over the household were warm
and earnest. The men proceeded to feed the animals; -
these were then turned out of the inclosure, one of the
party being always on watch in the little tower which
had been erected for that purpose some ten or twelve feet
above the roof of the house. From this spot a view was
obtainable right over the clearing to the forest which
surrounded it on three sides. The other hands proceeded
to cut down more of the corn, so as to extend the level
space around the house.













CHAPTER II.

AN INDIAN RAID.

-\|HAT day and the next passed quietly. The first
>) night the man who was on watch up to midnight
eomarked to Mr. Welch when he relieved him,
that it seemed to him that there were noises in

Se

the air.

“What sort of noises, Jackson; calls of night- birds ot
animals? for if so the Indians are probably around us.”

“No,” the man said; “all is still round here, but I seem
to feel the noise rather than hear it. I should say that
it was firing very many miles off.”

“The night is perfectly still, and the sound of a gun
would be heard a long way.”

“T cannot say that I have heard a gun; it is rather a
tremble in the air than a sound.”

When the man they had relieved had gone down, and
all was still again, Mr. Welch and Harold ‘stood listening
intently.

“ Jackson was right,” the farmer said, “there is some-
thing in the air. I can feel it rather than hear it. It is
a sort of murmur no louder than a whisper. Do you
hear it, Harold?”

“Tseem to hear something,” Harold said. “It might be



26 RETURN OF THE HUNTER.

the sound of the sea a very long way off, just as one can
hear it many miles from the coast, on a still night at
home. What do you think it is?”

“If it is not fancy,’ Mr. Welch replied, “and I do not
think that we should all be ee it is an attack
upon Gloucester.”

“ But Gloucester is 35 miles away,” Harold answered.

“Tt is,’ Mr. Welch replied; “but on so still a night as
this sounds can be heard from an immense distance. If
it is not this, I cannot say what it is.”

Upon the following night, just as Mr. Welch’s watch
was at an end, a low whistle was heard near the gate.
“Who is there?” Mr. Welch at once challenged.

“Jack Pearson, and the sooner you open the gate the
better; there is no saying where these red devils may be
lying round.”

Harold and the farmer instantly ran down and opened
the gate.

“JT should advise you to stop down here,” the hunter
said, as they replaced the bars; “if you did not hear me,
you certainly would not hear the Red-skins, and they
would all be over the palisade before you had time to
fire a shot. I am glad to see you safe, for I was badly

scared lest I should find nothing but a heap of ashes here.”
' The next two men now turned out, and Mr. Welch led
his visitor into the house and struck a light. “Hallo!
Pearson, you must have been in a skirmish,” he said,
seeing that the hunter’s head was bound up with a blood-
stained bandage.

“Jt was all that,” Pearson said, “and wuss. I went
down to Gloucester and told ’em what I had heard; but
the darned fools tuk it as quiet as if all King George's







RASH CONFIDENCE. 27

troops with fixed bayonets had been camped round ’em.
The council got together and palavered for an hour, and
concluded that there was no chance, whatever, of the
Trroquois venturing to attack such a powerful place as
Gloucester. I told them that the Red-skins would go
over their stockade at a squirrel’s jump; and that as War
Eagle alone had at least 150 braves, while there warn’t
more than fifty able-bodied men in Gloucester and all
the farms around it, things would go bad with ’em if
they did not mind. But, bless yer, they knew more than
I did about it; most of them had moved from the East,
and had never seen an Injun in his war-paint. Glou-
cester had never been attacked since it was founded nigh
ten years ago, and they did not see no reason why it
should be attacked now. There was a few old frontiers-
men like myself among them, who did their best to stir
them up; but it was no manner of good. When the
council was over we put our heads together, and just
went through the township a talking to the women, and
we had not much difficulty in getting up such a scare
among ’em, that before nightfall every one of ’em in the
farms around made their husbands move into the stockade
of the village.

“When the night passed off quietly, most of the men
were just as savage with us as if it had been a false
alarm altogether. I pinted out that it was not because
War Eagle had left them alone that night that he was
bound to do so the next night, or any night after. But
in spite of the women they would have started out to
their farms the fust thing in the morning, if a man
had not come in with the news that Carter’s farm had
been burned, and the whole of the people killed and



28 AN ATTACK ON A SETTLEMENT,

scalped. As Carter’s farm lay only about 15 miles off,
this gave them a scare, and they were as ready now to
believe in the Injuns as I had tried to make them the
night before. Then they asked us old hands to take the
‘lead, and promised to do what we told them; but’ when
it came to it their promises were not worth the breath
they had spent upon them. There were eight or ten
houses outside the stockade, and in course we wanted
these pulled down; but they would not hear of it. How-
ever, we got them to work to strengthen the stockades,
to make loopholes in the houses near them, to put up
barricades from house to house, and to prepare generally
for a fight. We divided into three watches.

“Well, just as I expected, about eleven o'clock at night
the Injuns attacked. Our watch might just as well have
been asleep for any good they did, for it was not till the
Red-skins had crept up to the stockade all round, and
opened fire between the timbers on them, that they knew
that they were near. I do them justice to say that they
fought stiff enough then, and for four hours they held the
line of houses; every Red-skin who climbed the stockade
fell dead inside it.. Four fires had been lighted directly
they attacked to enable us to keep them from scaling the
stockade; but they showed us too to the enemy, of course.

“The Red-skins took possession of the houses which we
had wanted to pull down, and precious hot they made
it for us) Then they shot such showers of burning
arrows into the village that half of the houses were soon
alight. We tried to get our men to sally out and to hold
the line of stockade, when we might have beaten them
off if all the village had been burned down; but it were no
manner of good; each man wanted to stick to his wife and







DESTRUCTION OF THE VILLAGE. 29

family till the last. As the flames went up every man who
showed himself was shot down; and when at last more
than half our number had gone under, the Red-skins
brought up fagots, piled them against the stockade out-
side, and then the hull tribe came bounding over. Our
rifles were emptied, for we could not get the men to hold
their fire, but some of us chaps as knew what was coming
gave the Red-skins a volley as they poured in.

“T don’t knowmuch as happened after that. Jack Robins
and Bill Shuter, who were old pals of mine, and me, made
up our minds what to do, and we made a rush for a small
gate that there was in the stockade, just opposite where
the Injuns came in. We got through safe enough, but
they had left men all round. Jack Robins he was shot
dead. Bill and I kept straight on; we had a grapple
with some of the Red-skins; two or three on them went
down, and Bill and I got through and had a race for it
till we got fairly into the forest. Bill had a ball in the
shoulder, and I had a clip across the head with a toma-
hawk. We had a council, and Bill went off to: warn
some of the other settlements, and I concluded to take
to the water and paddle back to you, not knowing
whether I should find that the Red-skins had been before
me. I thought at anyrate that I might stop your going
down to Gloucester, and that if there was a fight you
would be none the worse for an extra rifle.”

Mr. Welch told the hunter of the visit of the two
Indian spies two nights before.

“Wall,” the hunter said, “I reckon for the present you
are not likely to be disturbed. The Injuns have taken
a pile of booty and something like two hundred scalps,
counting the women and children, and they moved off



30 AWAITING ATTACK.

at daybreak this morning in the direction of Totten-
ham, which I reckon they will attack to-night. How-
somever, Bill has gone on there to warn them, and after
the sack of Gloucester the people of Tottenham won't be
caught napping, and there are two or three old frontiers-
men who have settled down there, and War Eagle will
get a hot reception if he tries it. “As far as his band
is concerned you are safe for some days; the only fear
is that some others of the tribe, hurrying up at hearing
of his success, may take this place as they go past. And
now, I guess that I will take a few hours’ sleep; I have
not closed an eye for the last two nights.”

A week passed quietly. Pearson, after remaining two
days, again went down the lake to gather news, and
returned a day later with the intelligence that almost all
the settlements had been deserted by their inhabitants;
the Indians were out in great strength, and had attacked
the settlers at many points along the frontier, commit-
ting frightful devastations.

Still another week passed, and Mr. Welch began to
hope that his little clearing had been overlooked and
forgotten by the Indians. The hands now went about
their work as usual, but always carried arms with them,
while one was constantly stationed on the watch-tower.
Harold resumed his fishing, never, however, going out
of sight of the house. Sometimes he took with him
little Nelly Welch, it being considered that she was as
safe in the canoe as she was in the house, especially as
the boat was always in sight, and the way up from the
landing to the house was under cover of the rifles of the
defenders; so that, even in case of an attack, they would
probably be able to make their way back.





THE HIDDEN FOE. 31

One afternoon they had been out together for two or
three hours; everything looked as quiet and peaceable as
usual; the hands were in the fields near the house, a few
of the cows were grazing close to the gate. Harold had
been successful in his fishing, and had obtained as many
fish as he could carry. He stepped out from the canoe,
helped Nelly to land, slung his rifle across his back, and
picked up the fish, which were strung on a withy passed
through their gills.

He had made but a few steps when a yell arose so loud
and terrible that for a moment his heart seemed to stop
beating. Then from the corn-fields leaped up a hundred
dark figures; then came the sharp crack of rifles, and two
of the hands dashed down at full speed towards the house.
‘One had fallen. The fourth man was in the watch-
tower. The surprise had been complete. The Indians
had made their way like snakes through the long corn,
whose waving had been unperceived by the sentinel, who
was dozing at his post, half-asleep in the heat of the sun.
Harold saw in a moment that it was too late for him to
regain the house; the Red-skins were already nearer to
it than he was.

“Now, Nelly! into the boat again; quick!” he said.
“We must keep out of the way till ’tis all over.”

Nelly was about twelve years old, and her life in the
_ woods had given her a courage and quickness beyond her
years. Without wasting a moment on cries or lamenta-
tions she sprang back into the canoe. Harold took his place

- beside her, and the light craft darted rapidly out into the

| lake. Not until he was some three or four hundred yards
| from the shore did Harold pause to look round. Then,when
he felt he was out of gunshot distance, he ceased paddling.





32 THE CANOE ON THE LAKE.

The fight was raging now around the house; from
loopholes and turret the white puffs of smoke darted
angrily out. The fire had not been ineffectual, for several
dark forms could be seen lying round the stockade; and
the bulk of the Indians, foiled in their attempt to carry the
place at a rush, had taken shelter in the corn, and kept
up a scattering fire round the house, broken only on the
side facing the lake, where there was no growing crop to
afford them shelter.

“They are all right now,” Harold said cheerfully.
“Do not be anxious, Nelly; they will beat them off.
Pearson is a host in himself. I expect he must have been
lying down when the attack was made. I know he was
scouting round the house all night. If he had been on
the watch, those fellows would never have succeeded in
creeping up so close unobserved.”

“I wish we were inside,” Nelly said, speaking for the
first time. “If I were only with them I should not mind.”

“T am sure I wish we were,” Harold agreed. “It is
too hard being useless out here when such a splendid
fight is going on. Ah! they have their eyes on us!”
he exclaimed as a puff of smoke burst out from some
bushes near the shore, and a ball came skipping along
on the surface of the water, sinking, however, before it
reached it.

“Those Indian muskets are no good,” Harold said con-
temptuously, “and the trade powder the Indians get is
very poor stuff; but I think that they are well within
range of my rifle.”

The weapon which Harold carried was an English rifle
of very perfect make and finish which his father had
given him on parting.









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Ve vy,

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Hay EIN es






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FEN 4) ¢

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“THAT WAS A PRETTY GOOD sHoT.”





A LURKING FOE. 33

“Now,” he said, “do you paddle the canoe a few strokes
nearer the shore, Nelly. We shall still be beyond the
range of that fellow. He will fire again, and I shall see
exactly where he is lying.”

Nelly, who was efficient in the management of a canoe,
took the paddle, and, dipping it in the water, the boat
moved slowly towards the shore. Harold sat with his
rifle across his knees, looking intently over the bows
of the boat towards the bush from which the shot had
come.

“That’s near enough, Nelly,” he said. The girl stopped
paddling; and the hidden foe, seeing that they did not
mean to come nearer the shore, again fired.

Harold’s rifle was in an instant against his shoulder;
he sat immovable for a moment, and then fired.

Instantly a dark figure sprang from the bush, stag-
gered a few steps up the slope, and then fell headlong.

“That was a pretty good shot,” Harold said. “Your
father told me when I saw a stag’s horns above a bush,
to fire about two feet behind them and eighteen inches
lower. I fired a foot below the flash, and I expect I hit
him through the body. I had the sight at 300 yards,
and fired a little above it. Now, Nelly, paddle out again.
See!” he said, “there is a shawl waving from the top of
the tower. Put your hat on the paddle and wave it.”

“What are you thinking of doing, Harold?” the girl
asked presently.

“That is just what I have been asking myself for the
last ten minutes,” Harold replied. “It is quite clear that
as long as the siege is kept up we cannot get back again,
and there is no saying how long it may last. The first

thing is, What chance is there of their pursuing us?
(245 ) oe



34 AN UNSUCCESSFUL ATTEMPT.

Are there any other canoes on the lake within a short
distance?”

“They have one at Braithwaite’s,” the girl said, “four
miles off; but look, there is Pearson’s canoe lying by the
shore.”

“So there is,” Harold exclaimed. “I never thought of
that. I expect the Indians have not noticed it. The
bank is rather high where it is lying. They are sure to
find it sooner or later. I think, Nelly, the best plan
would be to paddle back again so as to be within the
range of my rifle while still beyond the reach of theirs;
I think I can keep them from using the boat until it is
dark.”

“But after it is dark, Harold ?”

_ “Well, then, we must paddle out into the lake so as to

“be well out of sight; when it gets quite dark we can

paddle in again, and sleep safely anywhere a mile or two
from the house.”

An hour passed without change. Then Nelly said,
“There is a movement in the bushes near the canoe.”

Presently an arm was extended, and proceeded to haul
‘the canoe towards the shore by its head rope. As it touched
the bank an Indian rose from the bushes and was about to
step in, while a number of flashes of smoke burst out along
the shore and the bullets skipped over the water towards.
the canoe, one of them striking it with sufficient force to
penetrate the thin bark a few inches above the water's
edge. Harold had not moved; but as the savage stepped
into the canoe he fired, and the Indian fell heavily into
the water, upsetting the canoe as he did so.

A yell of rage broke from his comrades.

“T don’t think they will try that game again as long



OUT ON THE LAKE. 35

as it is daylight,” Harold said. “Paddle a little farther
out again, Nelly. If that bullet had hit you it would
have given you a nasty blow, though I don’t think it
would have penetrated; still we may as well avoid acci-
dents.”

After another hour passed the fire round the house
ceased,

“Do you think the Indians have gone away?” Nelly
asked.

“J am afraid there is no chance of that,” Harold said,
“T expect they are going to wait till night and then try
again. They are not fond of losing men, and Pearson and
your father are not likely to miss anything that comes
within their range as long as daylight lasts.”

“ But after dark, Harold 2”

“Oh they will try all sorts of tricks; but Pearson is up’ *
to them all. Don’t you worry about them, dear.”

The hours passed slowly away until at last the sun
sank and the darkness came on rapidly. So long as he
could see the canoe, which just floated above the water's
edge, Harold maintained his position; then taking one
paddle, while Nelly handled the other,he sent the boat
flying away from the shore out into the lake.

For a quarter of an hour they paddled straight out.
By this time the outline of the shore could be but dimly
perceived. Harold doubted whether it would be possible
to see the boat from shore; but in order to throw the
Indians off the scent, should this be the case, he turned
the boat’s head to the south and paddled swiftly until it
was perfectly dark.

“I expect they saw us turn south,” he said to Nelly.
“The Red-skins have wonderful eyes; so if they pursue



o

36 LANDING.

at all, they will do it in that direction. At anyrate no
human being, unless he borrowed the eyes of an owl,
could see us now; so we will turn and paddle the other
way.”

For two hours they rowed in this direction. “We can
go into shore now,” Harold said at last. “We must be
seven or eight miles beyond the house.”

The distance to the shore was longer than they ex-
pected, for they had only the light of the stars to guide
them, and neither had any experience in night travelling.
They had therefore made much further out into the lake
than they had intended. At length, however, the dark
line of trees rose in front of them, and in a few minutes
the canoe lay alongside the bank, and its late occupants
were stretched on a soft layer of moss and fallen leaves.

“What are we going to do to-morrow about eating ?”
Nelly asked.

“There are four or five good-sized fish in the bottom
of the canoe,” Harold replied. “Fortunately we caught
more than I could carry, and I intended to make a
second trip from the house for these. I am afraid we
shall not be able to cook them, for the Indians can see
smoke any distance. If the worse comes to the worst we
must eat them raw, but we are sure to find some berries
in the wood to-morrow. Now, dear, you had better go to
sleep as fast as you can; but first let us kneel down and
pray God to protect us and your father and mother.”

The boy and girl knelt in the darkness and said
their simple prayers. Then they lay down, and Harold
was pleased to hear in a few minutes the steady breath-
ing which told him that his cousin was asleep. It was a
long time before he followed her example. During the



AN ANXIOUS VIGIL 37

day he had kept up a brave front and had endeavoured
to make the best of their position; but now that he was
alone he felt the full weight of the responsibility of guid- .
ing his companion through the extreme danger which
threatened them both. He felt sure that the Indians
would prolong the siege for some time, as they would be
sure that no reinforcements could possibly arrive in aid
of the garrison. Moreover, he by no means felt so sure,
as he had pretended to his companion, of the power of the
defenders of the house to maintain a successful resistance
to so large a number of their savage foes. In the day-
light he felt certain they could beat them off, but dark-
ness neutralizes the effect both of superior arms and
better marksmanship. It was nearly midnight before
he lay down with the determination to sleep, but scarcely
had he done so when he was aroused by an outburst
of distant firing. Although six or seven miles from
the scene of the encounter the sound of each discharge
came distinct to the ear along the smooth surface of the
lake; and he could even hear, mingled with the musketry
fire, the faint yells of the Indians. For hours, as it seemed
to him, he sat listening to the distant contest, and then
he, unconsciously to himself, dozed off to sleep, and awoke
with a start, to find Nelly sitting up beside him and the
sun streaming down through the boughs, i
He started to his feet. “Bless me,” he exclaimed, “I
did not know that I had been to sleep. It seems but an
instant ago that I was listening—” and here he checked
himself—“that is, that I was wide awake, and here we are
in broad daylight.” “
Harold’s first care was to examine the position of -
the canoe, and he found that fortunately it had touched



38 A FOREST BREAKFAST.

the shore at a spot where the boughs of the trees over-
head drooped into the water beyond it, so that it could
not be seen by anyone passing along the lake. This was
the more fortunate, as he saw some three miles away a
canoe with three figures on board. For a long distance
on either side the boughs of the trees drooped into the
water, with only an opening here and there such as that
through which the boat had passed the night before.

“We must be moving, Nelly; here are the marks where
we scrambled up the banks last night. If the Indians
take it into their heads to search the shore both ways, as
likely enough they may do, they will be sure to see them.
In the first place let us gather a stock of berries, and then
we will get into the boat again, and paddle along under
this arcade of boughs till we get to some place where we
can land without leaving marks of our feet. If the
Indians find the place where we landed here they will sup-
pose that we went off again before daylight.” :

For some time they rambled in the wood, and succeeded
in gathering a store of berries and wild fruit. Upon
these Nelly made her breakfast, but Harold’s appetite
was sufficiently ravenous to enable him to fall to upon
the fish, which, he declared, were not so bad after all.
Then they took their places in the canoe again, and
paddled on for nearly a mile.

“See, Harold!” Nelly exclaimed, as she got a glimpse
through the boughs into the lake, “there is another canoe;
they must have got the Braithwaite boat; we passed their
place coming here, you know. I wonder what has
happened there.”

“What do you think is best to do, Nelly?” Harold asked.
“Your opinion is just as good as mine about it: shall we



A FRIENDLY STREAM. 39

leave our canoe behind, land, and take to the woods; or
shall we stop quietly in the canoe in shelter here; or shall
we take to the lake and trust to our speed to get away,
in which case, you know, if they should come up I could
pick them off with my gun before they got within reach?”

“T don’t think that would do,” the girl said, shaking

‘her head. “You shoot very well, but it is not an easy
thing to hit a moving object if you are not accustomed to
it, and they paddle so fast that if you miss them once
they would be close alongside—at anyrate we should be
within reach of their guns—before you could load again.
They would be sure to catch us, for although we might
paddle nearly as fast for a time, they would certainly tire
us out. Then as to waiting here in the canoe, if they
come along on foot looking for us, we should be in their
power. It is dreadful to think of taking to the woods
with Indians all about, but I really think that would be
our safest plan.”

“I think so too, Nelly, if we can manage to do it with-
out leaving a track. We must not go much farther, for
the trees are getting thinner ahead, and we should be
seen by the canoes.”

Fifty yards farther Harold stopped paddling. “Here
is just the place, Nelly.”

At this point a little stream of three or four feet wide
emerged into the lake; Harold directed the boat’s head to-
wards it. The water in the stream was but a few inches
deep.

“Now, Nelly,” he said, “we must step out into the
water and walk up it as far as we can go—it will puzzle
even the sharpest Red-skin to find our track then.”

_ They stepped into the water, Harold taking the head-



40 HIDING THEIR TRACKS.

rope of the canoe and towing the light boat—which,
when empty, did not draw more than two inches of
water—behind him. He directed Nelly to be most care-
ful, as she walked, not to touch any of the bushes, which
at times nearly met across the stream.

“A broken twig or withered leaf would be quite enough
to tell the Indians that we came along this way,” he said:
“Where the bushes are thick you must manage to crawl
under them; never mind about getting wet, you will soon
dry again.”

Slowly and cautiously they made their way up the
stream for nearly a mile; it had for some distance been
narrowing rapidly, being only fed by little rills from the
surrounding swamp land. Harold had so far looked in
vain for some spot where they could land without leaving
marks of their feet. Presently they came to a place
where a great tree had fallen across the stream.

“This will do, Nelly,” Harold said. “Now, above all
things, you must be careful not to break off any of the
moss or bark; you had better take your shoes off, then I
will lift you on to the trunk, and you can walk along it
without leaving a mark.”

It was hard work for Nelly to take off her drenched
boots, but she managed at last. Harold lifted her on to
the trunk, and said, “Walk along as far as you can, and

‘get down as lightly as possible on to a firm piece of
ground; it rises rapidly here, and is, I expect, a dry soil
where the upper end of the tree lies.”

“How are you going to get out, Harold?”

“I can swing myself up by that projecting root.”

Before proceeding to do so, Harold raised one end of
the canoe and placed it on the trunk of the tree; then



IN THE WOODS. 41

having previously taken off his shoes, he swung himself
on to the trunk; hauling up the light bark canoe, and
taking especial pains that it did not grate upon the trunk,
he placed it on his head, and followed Nelly along the tree.
He found, as he had expected, that the ground upon which
the upper end lay was firm and dry. He stepped down
with great care, and’ was pleased to see as he walked for-
ward that not the slightest trace of a footmark was left.

“Be careful, Nelly,” he exclaimed, when he joined her,
“not to tread on a stick or disturb a fallen leaf with your
feet, and, above all, to avoid breaking the smallest twig
as you pass. Choose the most open ground, as that is the
hardest.” :

In about a hundred yards they came upon a large
clump of bushes. “Now, Nelly, raise those lower boughs
as gently and as carefully as you can. I will push the
canoe under. I don’t think the sharpest Indian will be
able to take up our track now.”

Very carefully the canoe was stowed away, and when
the boughs were allowed to fall in their natural: position
it was completely hidden from sight to every passer-by.
Harold took up the fish, Nelly had filled her apron with
the berries, and carrying their shoes—for they agreed that
it would be safer not to put them on—they started on
their journey through the deep forest.









CHAPTER IIL

THE RED-SKIN ATTACK.

WYER. WELCH was with the men two or three hun-
dred yards away from the house when the In-
dians suddenly sprang out and opened fire. One
of the men fell beside him; the farmer stooped
to lift him, but saw that he was shot through the head.
Then he ran with full speed towards the house, shouting
to the hands to make straight for the gate, disregarding
the cattle. Several of these, however, alarmed at the
sudden outburst of fire and the yells of the Indians, made,
of their own accord for the stables, as their master rushed
up at full speed. The Indians were but fifty or sixty
yards behind when Mr. Welch reached his gate. They
had all emptied their pieces, and after the first volley no
shots had been fired save one by the watchman on the
look-out. Then came the crack of Pearson’s rifle, just as
Mr. Welch shut the gate and laid the bar in its place.
Several spare guns had been placed in the upper chambers,
and three reports rang out together, for Mrs. Welch had
run upstairs at the first alarm to take her part in the
defence.

In another minute the whole party, now six in all,
were gathered in the upper room,






~ THE PARENTS ANXIETY. 43

“Where are Nelly and Harold?” Mr. Welch exclaimed.

“I saw the canoe close to the shore just before the
Indians opened fire,” the watchman answered.

“You must. have been asleep,” Pearson said savagely.
“Where were your eyes to let them Red-skins crawl up
through the corn without seeing them? With such a crowd
of them, the corn must have been waving as if it were
blowing a gale. You ought to have a bullet in yer ugly
carkidge, instead of its being in ye’r mate’s out there.”

While this conversation was going on, no one had been
idle; each took up his station at a loophole, and several
shots were fired whenever the movement of a blade of
corn showed the lurking-place of an Indian.

The instant the gate had been closed War Eagle had
called his men back to shelter, for he saw that all chance
of a surprise was now over, and it was contrary to all
Red-skin strategy to remain for one moment unnecessarily
exposed to the rifles of the whites. The farmer and his
wife had rushed at once up into the look-out as the
Indians drew off, and to their joy saw the canoe darting
away from shore.

“They are safe for the present, thank God!” Mr. Welch
said. “It is providential indeed that they had not come
a little farther from the shore when the Red-skins broke
out. Nothing could have saved them had they fairly
started for the house.”

“What will they do, William?” asked his wife anxiously.

“T cannot tell you, my dear; I do not know what I
should do myself under the circumstances. However, the
boy has got a cool head on his shoulders, and you need
not be anxious for the present. Now, let us join the
others; our first duty is to take our share in the defence



44 A BAD LOOK-OUT.

of the house. The young ones are in the hands of God.
We can do nothing for them.”

“Well?” Pearson asked, looking round from his loop-
hole as the farmer and his wife descended into the room,
which was a low garret extending over the whole of the
house. “Do you see the canoe?”

“Yes, it has got safely away,” William Welch said;
“but what that lad will do now is more than I can say.”

Pearson placed his rifle against the wall. “Now keep
your eyes skinned,” he said to the three farm hands; “one
of yer’s done mischief enough this morning already, and
you will get your hair raised as sure as you are born
unless you look out sharp. Now,” he went on, turning
to the Welches, “let us go down and talk this matter over,
The Injuns may keep on firing, but I don’t think they
will show in the open again as long as it is light enough
for us to draw bead upon them. Yes.” he went on, as he
looked through a loophole in the lower story, over the
lake, “there they are, just out of range.”

“What do you think they will do?” Mrs. Welch asked.

- The hunter was silent for a minute.

“Tt ain’t a easy thing to say what they ought to do,
much less what they will do; it ain’t a good look-out
any way, and I don’t know what I should do myself.
The whole of the woods on this side of the lake are full
of the darned red critters; there are a hundred eyes on
that canoe now, and go where they will they will be
watched.”

“But why should they not cross the lake and land on
the other side?” Mr. Welch said.

“Tf you and I were in that canoe,” the hunter answered,
“that’s about what we should do; but, not to say that it



WELL NIGH HOPELESS. 45

is a long row for them, they two young uns would never
get across; the Injuns would have them before they had
been gone an hour. There is my canoe lying under the
bushes, she would earry four, and would go three feet to
their two.”

“T had forgotten about that,’ William Welch said, and
then added after a pause: “the Indians may not find it.”

“You need not hope that,” the hunter answered; “ they
have found it long before this. I don’t want to put you
out of heart; but I tell ye’, ye will see them on the water
before many minutes have passed.”

“Then they are lost,” Mrs. Welch said, sinking down
in her chair and bursting into tears.

“They air in God’s hands, mam,” the hunter said, “and
it is no use trying to deceive you.”

“Would it be of any use,” William Welch asked, after
a pause, “for me to offer the Red-skins that my wife and
I will go out ‘and put ourselves in their hands, if they
will let the canoe go off without pursuit.”

“Not it,” the hunter replied decidedly; “you would be
throwing away your own lives without saving theirs, not
to mention, although that does not matter a straw, the
lives of the rest of us here. It will be as much as we
ean do, when they attack us in earnest, to hold this place
with six guns, and with only four the chance would be
worth nothing. But that is neither here nor there. But
you would not save the young ones if you gave up. You
cannot trust the word of an Indian on the war-path, and |
if they went so far as not to kill them, they would carry
them off; and after all I ain’t sure as death ain’t better for
them than to be brought up as Indians. There,” he said,
stopping suddenly as a report of a musket sounded at



46 THE ATTEMPT FOILED.

some little distance off, “the Injuns are trying their range
against them; let us go up to the look-out.”

The little tower had a thick parapet of logs some three
feet high, and crouching behind this they watched the
canoe.

“He is coming nearer in shore, and the girl has got
the paddle,” Pearson muttered. “What's he doing now?”
—A puff of smoke was seen to rise near the border of
the lake, then came the sharp crack of Harold’s rifle.
They saw an Indian spring from the bushes and fall dead.

“Well done, young un,” Pearson exclaimed; “1 told
yer he had got his head screwed on the right way. He
is keeping just out of range of their guns, and that piece
of his can carry twice as far as theirs; I reckon he has
thought of the canoe and means to keep them from using
it. I begins to think, Mr. Welch, that there is a chance
for them yet; now let’s talk a little to these red devils
in the corn.”

For some little time Pearson and William Welch turned
their attention to the Indians, while the mother sat with
her eyes fixed upon the canoe.

“He is coming closer again,” she exclaimed presently.

“He is watching the canoe, sure enough,” Pearson said.
Then came the volley along the bushes on the shore, and
they saw an Indian rise to his feet. “That's just where
she lies,” Pearson exclaimed; “he is getting into it. There!
well done, young un.”

The sudden disappearance of the Indian, and the
vengeful yell of the hidden foe, told of the failure of
the attempt. “I think they are safe now till nightfall,
the Indians won’t care about putting themselves within
range of that ’ere rifle again.”



THE GARRISON OF THE FARM. 47

Gradually the fire of the Indians ceased, and the de-
fenders were able to leave the loopholes. Two of the
men went down and fastened up the cattle, which were
still standing loose in the yard inside the stockade; the
other set to to prepare a meal, for Mrs. Welch could not
take her eyes off the canoe.

The afternoon seemed of interminable length. Nota
shot was fired; the men, after taking their dinner, were
occupied in bringing some great tubs on to the upper
storey, and filling them to the brim with water from the
well.

This storey projected two feet beyond the one below it,
having been so built in order that, in case of attack, the
defenders might be able to fire down upon any foe who
might cross the stockade and attack the house itself; the
floor boards over the projecting portion were all removable.
The men also brought a quantity of the newly-cut corn
to the top of the house, first drenching it with water.

The sun sank, and as dusk was coming on the anxious
watchers saw the canoe paddle out far into the lake.

“An old frontiersman could not do better,’ Pearson
exclaimed; “he has kept them out of the canoe as long
as daylight lasted; now he has determined to paddle
away, and is making down the lake,’ he went on pre-
sently; “it is a pity he turned so soon, as they can see
the course he is taking.”

They watched until it was completely dark, but before
the light quite faded they saw another canoe put out
from shore and start in the direction taken by the fugi-
tives.

“Will they catch them, do you think?” Mrs, Welch’
asked.



48 AWAITING THE ATTACK.

“No, ma'am,” Pearson said confidently; “the boy has
got sense enough to have changed his course after it gets
dark, though whether he will make for shore or go out
towards the other side is more than I can say. You see
they will know that the Injuns are all along this side of
the lake, but then on the other hand they will be anxious
about us, and will want to keep close at hand; besides,
the lad knows nothing of the other side; there may be
Injuns there for ought he knows, and besides, it’s a skearey
thing for a young un to take to the forest, especially
with a gal in his charge. There ain’t no saying what he
will do, And now we have got to look after ourselves,
don’t let us think about them at present; the best thing
we can do for them, as well as for ourselves, is to hold
this here place; if they live they will come back to it
sooner or later, and it will be better for them to find it
standing, and you here to welcome them, than to get
back to a heap of ruins and some dead bodies.” __

“When will the Red-skins attack, do you think?” the
farmer asked.

“We may expect them any time now,” the hunter
answered; “the Injuns’ time of attack is generally just
before dawn, but they know well enough they ain’t likely
to catch us asleep any time, and as they know exactly what
they have got to do they will gain nothing by waiting.
I wish we had a moon; if we had, we might keep them
out of the stockade; but there, it is just as well as ’tis
dark after all, for if the moon was up the young uns
would have no chance of getting away.”

The garrison now all took their places at the loopholes,
having first carried the wet fodder to the roof and spread
it over the shingles. There was nothing to do now but



THE NIGHT ATTACK, 49

to wait. The night was so dark that they could not see
the outline of the stockade. Presently a little spark shot
through the air, followed by a score of others. Mr. Welch
had taken his post on the tower, and he saw the arrows
whizzing through the air, many of them falling on the
roof. The dry grass dipped in the resin, which was
tied round their heads, was instantly extinguished as the
arrows fell upon the wet corn, and a yell arose from the
Indians.

The farmer descended and told the others of the failure
of the Indians’ first attempt.

“That ’ere dodge is a first-rate un,” Pearson said; “we
are safe from fire, and that’s the only thing we have got -
to be afeard on; you will see them up here in a few
minutes.”

Everything was perfectly quiet; once or twice the
’ watchers thought that they could hear faint sounds, but
could not distinguish their direction. After half an
hour’s anxious waiting a terrific yell was heard from
below, and at the doors and windows of the lower rooms
came the crashing blows of tomahawks.

The boards had already been removed from the flooring
above, and the defenders opened a steady fire into the
dark mass, that they could faintly make out clustered
round the windows and doors. At Pearson’s suggestion
the bullets had been removed from the guns, and heavy
charges of buck-shot had been substituted for them, and
yells of pain and surprise rose as they fired. A few shots
were fired up from below, but a second discharge from
the spare guns completed the effect from the first volley.
The dark mass broke up, and in a few seconds all was as

quiet as before.
(245) D



50 TRYING FIRE.

Two hours passed and then slight sounds were heard.

“They have got the gate opened, I expect,” Pearson
said; “fire occasionally at that; if we don’t hit them, the
flashes may show us what they are doing.”

It was as he had expected; the first discharge was
followed by a cry, and by the momentary light they saw
a number of dark figures pouring in through the gate.
Seeing that concealment was no longer possible, the
Indians opened a heavy fire round the house; then came
a crashing sound near the door.

“Just as I thought,” Pearson said; “they are going to
try to burn us out.”

For some time the noise continued as bundle after
bundle of dried wood was thrown down by the door.
The garrison were silent, for, as Pearson said, they could
see nothing, and a stray bullet might enter at the loop-
holes if they placed themselves there, and the flashes of
the guns would serve as marks for the Indians.

Presently two or three faint lights were seen approach-
ing.

“Now,” Pearson said, “pick them off as they come up.
You and I will take the first man, Welch; you fire just
to the right of the light, I will fire to the left; he may
be carrying the brand in either hand.” They fired together,
and the brand was seen to drop to the ground. The
same thing happened as the other two sparks of light
approached; then it was again quiet. Now a score of
little lights flashed through the air.

“They are going to light the pile with their flaming
arrows,” Pearson said; “War Eagle is a good leader.”

Three or four of the arrows fel! on the pile of dry
wood. A moment later the flames crept up, and the



EXTINGUISHED. 51

smoke of burning wood rolled up into the room above,
A yell of triumph burst from the Indians, but this
changed into one of wrath as those above emptied the
contents of one of the great tubs of water on to the pile
_ of wood below them; the flames were instantly extin-
guished.

_ “What will they do next?” Mrs. Welch asked.

“Tt is like enough,” Pearson replied, “that they will
give the job up altogether; they have got plenty of
plunder and scalps at the settlements, and their attacking
us here in such force looks as if the hull of them were
on their way back to their villages. If they could have
tuk our scalps easy they would have done it; but War
Eagle ain’t likely to risk losing a lot of men, when he
ain’t sartin of winning after all. He has done good work
as it is, and has quite enough to boast about when he
gits back. If he were to lose a heap of his braves here,
it would spoil the success of his expedition. No, I think
as he will give it up now.”

“ He will be all the more anxious to catch the children,”
Mrs. Welch said despondently.

“It cannot be denied, ma’am, as he will do his best that
way,” Pearson answered; “it all depends, though, on the
boy. I wish I was with ten in that canoe. Howsomever,
I can’t help thinking as he will sarcumvent them some-
how.”

The night passed without any further attack; by turns
half the garrison watched while the other lay down, but
there was little sleep taken by any. With the first gleam
of daylight Mrs. Welch and her husband were on the
look-out. ~

“There’s two canoes out on the lake,” Pearson said;



52 A QUIET DAY.

“they are paddling quietly; which is which I can't
say.”

As the light became brighter, Pearson pronounced posi-
tively that there were three men in one canoe and four
in the other. “I think they are all Injuns,” he said;
“they must have got another canoe somewhere along the
lake; wall, they have not caught the young uns yet.”

“The boats are closing up to each other,’ Mrs. Welch
said.

“They are going to have a talk, I reckon. Yes; one
of them is turning and going down the lake, while the
other is going up. I would give a heap to know where
the young uns have got to.”

The day passed quietly. An occasional shot towards
the house showed that the Indians remained in the
vicinity, and indeed dark forms could be seen moving
about in the distant parts of the clearing.

“Will it be possible,” the farmer asked Pearson when
night again fell, “to go out and see if we can discover
any traces of them ?”

“Worse than no use,” Pearson said positively; “we
should just lose our har without doing no good what-
ever. If the Injuns in these woods—and I reckon alto-
gether there’s a good many hundred of them—can’t find
them, ye may swear that we can’t. That's just what
they’re hoping, that we shall be fools enough to put
ourselves outside the stockade. They will lie close round
all night, and a weasel would not creep through them.
Ef I thought there was jest a shadow of chance of find-
‘ing them young uns I would risk it, but there is no
chance—not a bit of it.”

A vigilant watch was again kept up all night, but all



INDIAN WAYS. 53

was still and quiet. The next morning the Indians were
still round them.

“Don’t yer fret, ma’m!” Pearson said as he saw how
pale and wan Mrs. Welch looked in the morning light;
“you may bet your last shilling that they have not caught
them.”

“Why are you so sure?” Mrs. Welch asked; “they may
be dead by this time.”

“Not they, ma’am; I am as sartin as they are living and
free as I am that I am standing here. I know these
Injuns’ ways. Ef they had caught them they would jest
have brought them here and would have fixed up two
posts, jest out of rifle range, and would have tied them
there, and then would have offered you the choice of giving
up this place and your scalps or of secing them tortured
and burnt under your eyes. That's their way. No,
they ain’t caught them alive, nor they ain’t caught them
dead neither; for ef they had they would have brought
their scalps to have shown yer. No, they have got away,
though it beats me to say how. I have only got one fear,
and that is that they might come back before the Injuns
have gone. Now I tell ye what we had better do—we
had better keep up a dropping fire all night, and all day
to-morrow, and so on until the Red-skins have gone. Ef
the young uns come back across the lake at night and all
is quiet they will think the Injuns have taken themselves
off, but if they hear firing still going on they will know
well enough that they are still around the house.”

William Welch at once agreed to this plan, and every
quarter of an hour or so all through the night a few shots
were fired.

The next morning no Indians could be seen, and there



54 CLEAR OF INDIANS.

was a cessation of the dropping shots which had before
been kept up at the house.

“They may be in hiding,” Pearson said in the afternoon,
“trying to tempt us out; but I am more inclined to think
as how they have gone. I don’t see a blade of that corn
move; I have had my eyes fixed on it for the last two
hours. It are possible, of course, that they are there;
but I reckon not. I expect they have been waiting ever
since they gave up the attack, in hopes that the young
uns would come back; but now as they see that we are
keeping up a fire to tell them as how they are still round
us, they have given it up and gone. When it gets dark
to-night I will go out and scout round.”

At ten o'clock at night Pearson dropped lightly from
the stockade on the side opposite to the gate, as he knew
that if the Indians were there this would be the point
that they would be watching; then crawling upon his
stomach, he made his way slowly down to the lake;
entering the water and stooping low, he waded along by
the edge of the bushes for a distance of a mile; then he
left the water and struck into the forest. Every few
minutes he could hear the discharges of the rifles at the
house, but, as before, no answering shots were heard.
Treading very cautiously, he made a wide detour and
then came down again on the clearing at the end farthest
from the lake, where the Indians had been last seen
moving about. All was still. Keeping among the trees
and moving with great caution, he made his way for a
considerable distance along the edge of the clearing; then
he dropped on his hands and knees and entered the corn-
field, and for two hours he crawled about, quartering the
ground like a dog in search of game. Everywhere he



THE HUNTER’S REPORT. 55

found lines where the Indians had crawled along to the
edge nearest to the house, but nowhere did he discover a
’ sign of life. Then, still taking great care, he moved down
towards the house and made a circuit of it at a short
distance outside the stockade; then he rose to his feet.

“Yer may stop shooting,” he shouted; “the pesky rascals
are gone.” Then he walked openly up to the gate; it
was opened at once by William Welch.

“Are you sure they have gone?” he asked.

“Sure as gospel,” he answered; “and they have been
gone four-and-twenty hours at least.”

“How do you know that ?”

“Hasy enough. I found several of their cooking-places
in the woods; the brands were out, and even under the
ashes the ground was cold; so they must have been out
for a long time. I could have walked straight on to the
house then, but I thought it safer to make quite sure by
searching everywhere; for they might have moved deeper
into the forest, and left a few men on guard here in case
the young uns should come back. But it ain’t so; they
have gone, and there ain’t a living soul anywhere nigh
the clearing. The young uns can come back now, if they
will, safely enough.”

Before doing anything else the farmer assembled the
party together in the living-room, and there solemnly
offered up thanks to God for their deliverance from dan-
ger, and implored his protection for the absent ones.
When this was over he said to his wife:

“Now, Jane, you had better lie down and get a few
hours’ sleep. It is already two o'clock, and there is no
chance whatever of their returning to-night, but I shall
go down to the lake and wait till morning. Place candles”



56 A GLAD SOUND.

in two of the upper windows. Should they be out on the
lake they will see them and know that the Indians have
not taken the house.”

Morning came without any signs of the absent ones.
At daybreak Pearson went out to scout in the woods, and
returned late in the afternoon with the news that the
Indians had all departed, and that for a distance of ten
miles at least the woods were entirely free.

When it became dark the farmer again went down to
the lake and watched until two, when Pearson took his
place. Mr. Welch was turning to go back to the house
- when Pearson placed his hand on his shoulder.

“Listen!” he said, and for a minute the men stood im-
movable.

“What was it?” the farmer asked.

“T thought I heard the stroke of a paddle,” Pearson
said; “it might have been the jump of a fish. There!
there it is again!” He lay down and put his ear close
to the water. “There is a canoe in the lake to the north-
ward; I can hear the strokes of the paddle plainly.”

Mr. Welch could hear nothing. Some minutes passed,
then Pearson exclaimed:

“There! I saw a break in the water over there! There
it is!” he said, straining his eyes in the darkness; “that’s
a canoe, sure enough, although they have ceased paddling.
It is not a mile away.”

Then he arose to his feet and shouted “Halloo!” at the
top of his voice. An answering shout faintly came back
across the water. He again hailed loudly, and this time
the answer came in a female voice.

“It's them, sure enough; I can swear to Nelly’s
voice.”



THE RETURN OF THE FUGITIVES. 57

William Welch uncovered his head, and, putting his
hand before his face, returned fervent thanks to God for
the recovery of his child.) Then he dashed off at full
speed toward the house. Before he reached it, however,
he met his wife running down to meet him, the shouts
having informed her that something was seen. Hand-
in-hand they ran down to the water’s edge. The canoe
was now swiftly approaching. The mother screamed:

“Nelly, is that you?”

“Mamma! mamma!” came back in the girl’s clear
tones.

With a low cry of gladness Mrs. Welch fell senseless to
the ground. The strain which she had for four days
endured had been terrible, and even the assurances of
Pearson had failed to awaken any strong feeling of hope
in her heart. She had kept up bravely, and had gone
about her work in the house with a pale, set face, but
the unexpected relief was too much for her.

Two minutes later the bow of the canoe grated on the
shore, and Nelly leaped into her father’s arms.

“Where is mamma?” she exclaimed.

“She is here, my dear; but she has fainted. The joy
of your return has been too much for her.”

Nelly knelt beside her mother and raised her head, and
the farmer grasped Harold’s hand.

“My brave boy,” he said, “I have to thank you for
saving my child’s life. God bless you!”

He dipped his hat in the lake and sprinkled water in
his wife’s face; she soon recovered, and a few minutes
afterwards the happy party walked up to the house,
Mrs. Welch being assisted by her husband and Pearson.
' The two young ones were soon seated at a table raven-



58 HAROLD’S STORY.

ously devouring food, and when their hunger was satis-
fied they related the story of their adventures, the whole
of the garrison being gathered round to listen. After
relating what had taken place up to the time of their
hiding the canoe, Harold went on:

“We walked about a quarter of a mile until we came
to a large clump of underwood; we crept in there, taking
great pains not to break a twig or disturb a leaf. The
ground was fortunately very dry, and I could not see
that our footprints had left the smallest marks. There
we have lain hid ever since. We had the fish and the
berries, and fortunately the fruit was ripe and juicy, and
quenched our thirst well enough, and we could sometimes
hear the firing by day and always at night. On the day
we took refuge we heard the voices of the Indians down
towards the lake quite plainly, but we have heard nothing
of them since. Last night we heard the firing up to the
middle of the night, and then it suddenly stopped. To-
day I crept out and went down to the lake to listen, but
it seemed that everything was still. Nelly was in a
terrible way, and was afraid that the house had been ©
taken by the Indians, but I told her that could not
be, for that there would certainly have been a tremendous
lot of firing at last, whereas it stopped after a few shots,
just as it had been going on so long. Our provisions
were all done, and Nelly was getting very bad for want
of water. I of course got a drink at the lake this
morning. So we agreed that if everything was still
again to-night we would go back to the place where
we had hidden the canoe, launch it, and paddle here.
Everything was quiet, so we came along as we had ar-
ranged. When I saw the lights in the windows I made



PEARSON’S VERDICT. 59

sure all was right; still it was a great relief when |
heard the shout from the shore. I knew, of course, that
it wasn’t a Red-skin’s shout. Besides, Indians would
have kept quiet till we came alongside.”

Very hearty were the commendations bestowed on the
boy for his courage and thoughtfulness.

“You behaved like an old frontiersman,” Pearson said.
“T could not have done better myself. You only made
one blunder from the time you set out from shore.”

“What was that?” Harold asked.

“You were wrong to pick the berries. The Red-skins, of
course, would find where you had landed, they would
see the marks where you lay down, and would know
that you had paddled away again. Had it not been for |
their seeing the tracks you made in picking the berries
they might have supposed you had started before day-
break, and had gone out of sight across the lake; but those
marks would have shown them that you did not take
to your canoe until long after the sun was up, and,
therefore, that you could not have made across the lake
without their seeing you, but must either have landed or
be in your canoe under shelter of the ttees somewhere
along of the shore. It is a marvel to me that they did
‘not find your traces, however careful you were to conceal
them. But that’s the only error you made, and I tell
you, young un, that you have a right to be proud of
having outwitted a hull tribe of Red-skins.”







CHAPTER IV.

THE FIGHT AT LEXINGTON.

his cousin. The Indians had made several
attacks upon settlements at other points of
the frontier, but they had not repeated their
incursion in the neighbourhood of the lake. The farming
operations had gone on regularly, but the men always
worked with their rifles ready to their hand. Pearson
had predicted that the Indians were not likely to return
to that neighbourhood. Mr. Welch’s farm was the only
one along the lake that had escaped, and the loss the
Indians had sustained in attacking it had been so heavy
that they were not likely to make an expedition in
that quarter, where the chances of booty were so small
and the certainty of a desperate resistance so great.

Other matters occurred which rendered the renewal
of the attack improbable. The news was brought by a
wandering hunter that a quarrel had arisen between
the Shawnees and the Iroquois, and that the latter
had recalled their braves from the frontier to defend
their own villages in case of hostilities breaking out
between them and the rival tribe.

There was no occasion for Harold to wait for news

a

his remained for four months longer with

ele



BACK IN CONCORD. 61

from home, for his father had before starting definitely
fixed the day for his return, and when that time ap-
proached Harold started on his eastward journey, in
order to be at home about the date of their arrival.
Pearson took him in his canoe to the end of the lake,
and accompanied him to the settlement, whence he was
able to obtain a conveyance to Detroit. Here he took
a passage ina trading boat, and made his way by water
to Montreal, thence down through Lake Champlain and
the Hudson River to New York, and thence to Boston.

The journey had occupied him longer than he expected,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson were already in their home
at Concord when he arrived. The meeting was a joyful
one. His parents had upon their return home found letters
from Mr. Welch and his wife, describing the events which
had happened at the farm, and speaking in the highest
terms of the courage and coolness in danger which Harold
had displayed, and giving him full credit for the saving
of their daughter's life.

Upon the day after Harold’s return, two gentlemen
called upon Captain Wilson, and asked him to sign the
agreement which a number of colonists had entered into,
to resist the Mother Country to the last. This Captain
Wilson positively refused to do.

“T am an Englishman,” he said, “and my sympathies
are wholly with my country. I do not say that the
whole of the demands of England are justifiable; I think
that Parliament has been deccived as to the spirit existing
here. But I consider that it has done nothing whatever to
justify the attitude of the colonists. The soldiers of
England have fought for you against French and Indians,
and are still stationed here to protect you. The colonists



62 THE CAUSES OF DISPUTE.

pay nothing for their land; they pay nothing towards
the expenses of the government of the mother country;
and it appears to me to be perfectly just that people here,
free as they are from all the burdens that bear so heavily
on those at home, should at least bear the expense of the
army stationed here. I grant that it would have been
far better had the colonists taxed themselves to pay the
extra amount, instead of the mother country taxing
them; but this they would not do. Some of the colonists
paid their quotum, others refused to do so, and this being
the case, it appears to me that England is perfectly
Justified in laying on a tax. Nothing could have been
fairer than the tax that she proposed. The stamp-tax
would in no way have affected the poorer classes in the
colonies. It would have been borne only by the rich,
and by those engaged in such business transactions as
required stamped documents. I regard the present re-
bellion as the work of a clique of ambitious men, who have
stirred up the people by incendiary addresses and writing.
There are, of course, among them a large number of the
men—among them, gentlemen, I place you—who conscien-
tiously believe that they are justified in doing nothing
whatever for the land which gave them or their ancestors
birth, who would enjoy all the great natural wealth of
this vast country without contributing towards the ex-
pense of the troops to whom it is due that you enjoy
peace and tranquillity. Such, gentlemen, are not my
sentiments. You consider it a gross hardship that the
colonists are compelled to trade only with the mother
country. I grant that it would be more profitable and
better for us had we an open trade with the whole
world; but in this England only acts as do all other



ee ———

A LOYAL GENTLEMAN. 63

countries towards their colonies. France, Spain, Portugal,
and the Netherlands all monopolize the trade of their
colonies; all, far more than does England, regard their
colonies as sources of revenue. I repeat, I do not think
that the course that England has pursued towards us
has been always wise; but I am sure that nothing that
she has done justifies the spirit of disaffection and rebellion
which is ripe throughout these colonies.”

“The time will come, sir,” one of the gentlemen said,
“when you will have reason to regret the line which you
have now taken.”

“No, sir,” Captain Wilson said haughtily. “The time
may come when the line that I have taken may cost me
my fortune, and even my life, but it will never cause
me one moment’s regret that I have chosen the part of
a loyal English gentleman.”

When the deputation had departed, Harold, who had
been a wondering listener to the conversation, asked his
father to explain to him the exact position in which
matters stood.

It was indeed a serious one. The success of England
in her struggle with France for the supremacy of North
America had cost her a great deal of money. At home
the burdens of the people were extremely heavy. The
expense of the army and navy was great, and the min-
istry, in striving to lighten the burdens of the people,
turned their eyes to the colonies. .They saw in America
a population of over 2,000,000 people, subjects of the
king, like themselves, living free from rent and taxes on
their own land, and paying nothing whatever to the
expenses of the country. They were, it is true, forced to
trade with England, but this obligation was set wholly at



64 THE STAMP-TAX.

nought. The custom-house officials had no force at their disposal
which would have enabled them to check these operations,
and the law enforcing a trade with England was virtu-
ally a dead letter.

Their first step was to strengthen the naval force on
the American coast, and by additional vigilance to put
some sort of check on the wholesale smuggling which
prevailed. This step caused extreme discontent among
the trading classes of America, and these set to work
vigorously to stir up a strong feeling of disaffection
against England. ‘The revenue officers were prevented
sometimes by force from carrying out their duties.

After great consideration the English government
came to the conclusion that a revenue sufficient to pay a
considerable proportion of the cost of the army in America
might be raised by means of a stamp-tax imposed upon all
legal documents, receipts, agreements, and licenses—a, tax,
in fact, resembling that on stamps now in use in England.
The colonists were furious at the imposition of this tax.
A Congress, composed of deputies from each State, met,
and it was unanimously resolved that the stamp-tax
should not be paid. Meetings were everywhere held, at
which the strongest and most treasonable language was
uttered, and such violent threats were used against the
persons employed as stamp-collectors that these, in fear
of their lives, resigned their posts.

The stamp-tax remained uncollected, and was treated
by the colonists as if it were not in existence.

The whole of the States now began to prepare for war.
The Congress was made permanent; the militia drilled,
and prepared for fighting, and everywhere the position



THE BREACH WIDENS. 65

grew more and more strained. Massachusetts was the
head-quarters of disaffection, and here a total break with
the mother country was openly spoken of. At times
the more moderate spirits attempted to bring about a
reconciliation between the two parties. Petitions were
sent to the Houses of Parliament, and even at this time,
had any spirit of wisdom prevailed in England, the final
consequences might have been prevented. Unfortunately,
the majority in parliament were unable to recognize that
the colonists had any rights upon their side. Taxation
was so heavy at home that men felt indignant that they
should be called upon to pay for the keeping up of the
army in America, to which the untaxed colonists, with
their free farms and houses, would contribute nothing.
The plea of the colonists that they were taxed by a
chamber in which they were unrepresented, was answered
by the statement that such was also the case with Man-
chester, Leeds, and many other large towns which were
unrepresented in parliament.

In England neither the spirit nor the strength of the
colonists was understood. Men could not bring them-
selves to believe that these would fight rather than
submit, still less that if they did fight it would be suc-
cessfully. They ignored the fact that the population of
the States was one-fourth as large as that of England;
that by far the greater proportion of that population were
men trained, either in border warfare or in the chase, to
the use of the rifle; that the enormous extent of country
offered almost insuperable obstacles to the most able army
composed of regular troops, and that the vast forests
and thinly populated country were all in favour of a

population fighting as guerrillas against trained troops.
(245) E



66 WAR IMMINENT.

- Had they perceived these things the Enelish people would
have hesitated before embarking upon such a struggle,
even if convinced, as assuredly the great majority were
convinced, of the fairness of their demands. It is true
that even had England at this point abandoned altogether
her determination to raise taxes in America, the result
would probably have been the same. The spirit of dis-
affection in the colony had gone so far, that a retreat
would have been considered as a confession of weakness,
and a separation of the colonists from the mother country
would have happened ere many years had elapsed. As
it was, parliament agreed to let the stamp-tax drop, and
in its place established some import duties on goods
entering the American ports.

The colonists, however, were determined that they
would submit to no taxation whatever. The English
government, in its desire for peace, abandoned all the
duties, with the exception of that on tea; but even this
concession was not sufficient to satisfy the colonists.
These entered into a bond to use no English goods. A
riot took place at Boston, and the revenue officers were
forced to withdraw from their posts. Troops were de-
spatched from England, and the House of Commons
declared Massachusetts to be in a state of rebellion.

It must not be supposed that the colonists were by
any means unanimous in their resistance to England.
There were throughout the country a large number of
gentlemen, like Captain Wilson, wholly opposed to the
general feeling. New York refused to send members to
the Congress, and in many other provinces the adhesion
given to the disaffected movement was but lukewarm.
It was in the New England provinces that the spirit of re-



THE EXPEDITION TO CONCORD. 67

bellion was hottest. These states had been peopled for the
most part by Puritans; men who had left England vol-
untarily, exiling themselves rather than submit to the
laws and religion of the country, and among them, as
among a portion of the Irish population of America at
the present time, the feeling of hatred against the gov-
ernment of England was, in a way, hereditary.

So far but few acts of violence had taken place; nothing
could be more virulent than the language of the news-
papers of both parties against their opponents, but be-
yond a few isolated tumults the peace had not been
broken. It was the lull before the storm. The great
majority of the New England colonists were bent upon
obtaining nothing short of absolute independence; the
loyalists and the English were as determined to put
down any revolt by force.

The Congress drilled, armed, and organized; the Eng-
lish brought over fresh troops and prepared for the
struggle. It was December when Harold returned home
to his parents, and for the next three months the lull
before the storm continued.

The disaffected of Massachusetts had collected a large
quantity of military stores at Concord. These General
Gage, who commanded the troops at Boston, determined
to seize and destroy, seeing that they could be collected
only for use against the government; and on the night of
the 19th of April the grenadier and light infantry com-
panies of the various regiments, 800 strong, under com-
mand of Lieut.-Col. Smith, of the 10th Regiment, and
Major Pitcairne of the marines, embarked in boats, and
were conveyed up Charles River as far as a place called
Phipp’s Farm. There they landed at midnight, having



68 POMPEY’S REPORT.

a day’s provisions in their haversacks, and started on their
march to Concord, twenty miles distant from Boston.

The design, however, had been discovered by some of
the revolutionary party in the town, and two of their
number were despatched on horseback to rouse the whole
country on the way to Concord, where the news arrived
at two o’clock in the morning.

Captain Wilson and his household were startled from
sleep by the sudden ringing of the alarm-bells, and a negro
servant, Pompey, who had been for many years in their
service, was sent down into the town, which lay a quarter
of a mile from the house, to find out what was the news.
He returned in half an hour.

“Me tink all de people gone mad, massa; dey swarm-
ing out of der houses and filling de streets, all with guns
on dem shoulders; all de while shouting and _halloing,
‘Down with de English! Down with de Red-coats! dey
sha’n’t have our guns; dey sha’n’t take de cannon and de
powder.’ Der were ole massa, Bill Emerson, the preacher,
with his gun in his hands, shouting to de people to stand
firm, and to fight till de last; dey all shout, ‘We will’
Dey bery desperate; me fear great fight come on.”

“What are you going to do, father?” Harold asked.

“Nothing, my boy; if, as it is only too likely, this is
the beginning of a civil war, I have determined to offer my
services to the government. Great numbers of loyalists
have sent in their names, offering to serve if necessary,
and from my knowledge of drill I shall, of course, be
useful. To-day I can take no active part in the fight,
but I shall take my horse and ride forward to meet the
troops, and warn the commanding officer that resistance
will be attempted here.”



LEXINGTON. 69

“ May I go with you, father?”

“Yes, if you like, my boy.”

“Pompey, saddle two horses at once. You are not
afraid of being left alone, Mary?” he said, turning to his
wife; “there is no chance of any disturbance here. Our
house lies beyond the town, and whatever takes place
will be in Concord. When the troops have captured the
guns and stores they will return.”

Mrs. Wilson said she was not frightened, and had no
fear whatever of being left alone. ‘The horses were soon
brought round, and Captain Wilson and his son mounted
and rode off at full speed. They made a detour to avoid
the town, and then, gaining the highroad, went forward
at full speed. .The alarm had evidently been given all
along the line; at every village the bells were ringing,
the people were assembling in the streets, all carrying
arms, while numbers were flocking in from the farm-
houses around. Once or twice Captain Wilson was
stopped and asked where he was going.

“T am going to tell the commander of the British force,
now marching hither, that if he advances there will be
bloodshed; that it will be the beginning of civil war. If
he has orders to come at all hazards, my words will not
stop him; if it is left to his discretion, possibly he may
pause before he brings on so dire a calamity.”

It was just dawn when Captain Wilson and Harold
rode into Lexington, where the militia, 130 strong, had
assembled. Their guns were loaded and they were ready
to defend the place, which numbered about 700 inhabi-
tants.

Just as Captain Wilson rode in a messenger ran up
with the news that the head of the British column was

i



70 THE FIRST SHOT.

close at hand. Some of the militia had dispersed to lie
down until the English arrived. John Parker, who
commanded them, ordered the drums to beat and the
alarm-guns to be fired, and his men drew up in two ranks
across the road. ;

“Tt is too late now, Harold,” Captain Wilson said; “let
us get out of the line of fire.”

The British, hearing the drums and the alarm-guns,
loaded, and the advance company came on at the double.
Major Pitcairne was at their head, and shouted to the
militia to lay down their arms.

It is a matter of dispute, and will always remain one,
as to who fired the first shot. The Americans assert that
it was the English; the English say that as they advanced
several shots were fired at them from behind a stone wall
and from some of the adjoining houses, which wounded
one man, and hit Major Pitcairne’s horse in two places.

The militia disregarded Major Pitcairne’s orders to lay
down their arms. The English fired; several of the
militia were killed, and nine wounded, and the rest dis-
persed. There was no further fighting, and the English
marched on unopposed to Concord.

As they approached the town the militia retreated
from it. The English took possession of a bridge behind
the place, and held this while the troops were engaged
in destroying the ammunition and gun-carriages. Most
of the guns had been removed, and only two 24-pounders
were taken. In destroying the stores by fire the court-
house took flames. At the sight of this fire the militia
and armed countrymen advanced down the hill towards
the bridge. The English tried to pull up the planks, but
the Americans ran forward rapidly. The English guard



THE ATTACK ON THE COLUMN. 71

fired; the colonists returned the fire. Some of the English
were killed and wounded, and the party fell back into the
town. Half an hour later Colonel Smith, having per-
formed the duty that he was sent to do, resumed the
homeward march with the whole of his troops.

Then the militiamen of Concord, with those from
many villages around, and every man in the district
capable of bearing arms, fell upon the retiring English.

The road led through several defiles, and every tree,
every rock, every depression of ground, was taken advan-
tage of by the Americans. Scarcely a man was to be seen,
but their deadly fire rained thick upon the tired troops.
This they vainly attempted to return, but they could do
nothing against an invisible foe, every man of whom pos-
sessed a skill with his rifle far beyond that of the British
soldier. Very many fell, and the retreat was fast becoming
a rout, when, near Lexington, the column met a strong
reinforcement which had been sent out from Boston. This
was commanded by Lord Perey, who formed his detach-
ment into square, in which Colonel Smith’s party, now so
utterly exhausted that they were obliged to lie down for
some time, took refuge. When they were rested, the
whole force moved forward again towards Boston, har-
assed the whole way by the Americans, who, from behind
stone walls and other places of shelter, kept up an
incessant fire upon both flanks, as well as in the front
and rear, against which the troops could do nothing. At
last the retreating column safely arrived at Boston, spent
and worn out with fatigue. Their loss was 65 men killed,
136 wounded, 49 missing.

Such was the beginning of the War of Independence.
Many American writers have declared that, previous to



72 WHO WAS TO BLAME?

that battle, there was no desire for independence on the part
of the colonists; but this is emphatically contradicted by
the language used at the meetings and in the newspapers
which have come down to us. The leaders may not have
wished to go so far, may not have intended to gain more
than an entire immunity from taxation, and an absolute
power for the colonists to manage their own affairs. But
experience has shown that when the spark of revolution
is once lighted, when resistance to the law has once com-
menced, things are carried to a point far beyond that
dreamed of by the first leaders.

Those who commenced the French Revolution were
moderate men, who desired only that some slight check
should be placed on the arbitrary power of the king, that
the people should be relieved in some slight degree from
the horrible tyranny of the nobles, from the misery and
wretchedness in which they lived. These just demands
increased step by step until they culminated in the reign
of terror and the most horrible scenes of bloodshed and
massacre of modern times.

Men like Washington, and Franklin, and Adams may
have desired only that the colonists should be free from
imperial taxation, but the popular voice went far beyond
this. Three years earlier wise counsels in the British
Parliament might have averted a catastrophe, and delayed
for many years the separation of the colonies from their
mother country. At the time the march began from
Boston to Concord the American colonists stood virtually
in armed rebellion. The militia throughout New Eng-
land were ready for fight. Arms, ammunition, and mili-
tary stores were collected in Rhode Island and New
Hampshire. The cannon and military stores belonging



THE DIE IS CAST. 73

to the crown had been carried off by the people, 40
cannon being seized in Rhode Island alone. Such being
the case, it is nonsense to speak of the fray at Lexington
as the cause of the revolutionary war. It was but the
spark in the powder. The magazine was ready and
primed, the explosion was inevitable, and the fight at
Lexington was the accidental incident which set fire
to it.

The efforts of American writers, however, to conceal the
real facts of the case, to minimize the rebellious language,
the violent acts of the colonists, and to make England re-
sponsible for the war because a body of troops were sent
to seize cannon and military stores intended to be used
against them, are so absurd, as well as so untrue, that it is
astonishing how wide a credence such statements have
received.

From an eminence at some distance from the line of
retreat Captain Wilson and his son watched sorrowfully
the attack upon the British troops. When at last the
combatants disappeared from sight through one of the
defiles Captain Wilson turned his horse’s head home-
wards.

“The die is cast,” he said to his wife as she met him at
the door. “The war has begun, and I fear it can have
but one termination. The colonists can place forces in
the field twenty times as numerous as any army that
England can spare. They are inferior in drill and in
discipline; but these things, which are of such vast con-
sequence in a European battlefield, matter but little in
such a country as this. Skill with the rifle and know-
ledge of forest warfare are far more important. In |
these points the colonists are as superior to the English



74 CAPTAIN WILSON’S DETERMINATION.

soldiers as they are in point of numbers. Neverthe-
less, my dear, my duty is plain. I am an Englishman,
and have borne His Majesty’s commission, and I must
fight for the king. Harold has spoken to me as we rode
home together, and he wishes to fight by my side. I
have pointed out to him that as he was born here he can
without dishonour remain neutral in the struggle. He,
however, insists that, as a loyal subject of the king, he is
entitled to fight for him. He saw to-day many lads not
older than himself in the rebel ranks, and he has pleaded
strongly for permission to go with me. To this I have
agreed. Which would you prefer, Mary ?—to stay
quietly here, where I imagine you would not be molested
on account of the part I take, or will you move into
Boston and stop with your relations there until the
struggle has ended one way or the other.”

As Mrs. Wilson had frequently talked over with her
husband the course that he would take in the event of
civil war actually breaking out, the news that he would
at once offer his services to the British authorities did
not come as a shock upon her. Even the question of
Harold accompanying his father had been talked over;
and although her heart bled at the thought of husband
and son being both engaged in such a struggle, she agreed
to aequiesce in any decision that Harold might arrive at.
He was now nearly sixteen, and in the colonies a lad of
this age is, in point of independence and self-reliance,
older than an English boy. Harold, too, had already
shown that he possessed discretion and coolness as well
as courage; and although now, that the moment had
come, Mrs. Wilson wept passionately at the thought of
their leaving her, she abstained from saying any word to



ARRIVAL AT BOSTON. 75

dissuade them from the course they had determined
upon. When she recovered from her fit of crying she
said that she would accompany them at once to Boston,
as in the first place their duties might for some time lie
in that city, and that in any case she would obtain far
more speedy news there of what was going on through-
out the country than she would at Concord. She would,
too, be living among her friends, and would meet with
many of the same convictions and opinions as her hus-
band’s, whereas in Concord the whole population would
be hostile.

Captain Wilson said that there was no time to be lost,
as the whole town was in a tumult. He therefore advised
her to pack up such necessary articles as could be carried
in the valises on the horses’ backs.

Pompey and the other servants were to pack up the
most valuable effects, and to forward them to a relation
of Mrs. Wilson’s, who lived about three miles from
Boston. There they would be in safety, and could be
brought into the town if necessary. Pompey and two
other old servants were to remain in charge of the house
and its contents. Jake, an active young negro some
twenty-three or twenty-four years old, who was much
attached to Harold, whose personal attendant and com-
panion he had always been, was to accompany them on
horseback, as was Judy, Mrs. Wilson’s negro maid.

As evening fell the five horses were brought round, and
the party started by a long and circuitous route, by
which, after riding for nearly forty miles, they reached
Boston at two o’clock next morning.









CHAPTER V.

BUNKER’S HILL

a HE excitement caused by the news of the fight at
=) Concord was intense, and as it spread through
pi the colonies the men everywhere rushed to arms.
The fray at Lexington was represented as a
wanton outrage, and the facts wholly ignored that the
colonists concerned in it were drawn up in arms to oppose
the passage of the king’s troops, who were marching on
their legitimate duty of seizing arms and ammunition col-
lected for the purpose of warring against the king. The
colonial orators and newspaper writers affirmed then, as
they have affirmed since, that up to the day of Lexington
no one had a thought of firing a shot against the govern-
ment. A more barefaced misstatement was never made.
Men do not carry off cannon by scores and accumulate
everywhere great stores of warlike ammunition without a
thought of fighting. The colonists commenced the war by
assembling in arms to oppose the progress of British troops
obeying the orders of the government. It matters not a
whit on which side the first shot was fired. American
troops have many times since that event fired upon
rioters in the streets, under circumstances no stronger
than those which brought on the fight at Lexington.





EXCITEMENT IN BOSTON. 77

From all parts of New England the militia and volun-
teers poured in, and in three days after the fight 20,000
armed men were encamped between the rivers Mystic and
Roxburgh, thus besieging Boston. They at once set to
work throwing up formidable earthworks; the English
troops remaining within their intrenchments across the
neck of land joining Boston with the mainland.

The streets of Boston were crowded with an excited
populace when Captain Wilson and his party rode into it
at two in the morning. No one thought of going to bed,
and all were excited to the last degree at the news of the
battle. All sorts of reports prevailed. On the colonial
side it was affirmed that the British in their retreat had
shot down the women and children; while the soldiers
affirmed that the colonists had scalped many of their
number who fell in the fight. The latter statement was
officially made by Lord Perey in his report of the engage-
ment.

Captain Wilson rode direct to the house of his wife’s
friends. They were still up, and were delighted to see Mary
Wilson, for such exaggerated reports had been received of
the fight that they were alarmed for her safety. They
belonged to the moderate party, who saw that there were
faults on both sides, and regretted bitterly both the obsti-
nacy of the English parliament in attempting to coerce
the colonists, and the determination of the latter to oppose
by force of arms the legitimate rights of the mother
country. .

Until the morning the events of the preceding day
were talked over; a few hours’ repose were then taken,
after which Captain Wilson went to the headquarters of
General Gage and offered his services. Although Boston



78 SPREAD OF THE INSURRECTION.

was the headquarters of the disaffected party, no less
than 200 men came forward as volunteers in the king’s
service; and Captain Wilson was at once appointed to
the command of a company of 50 men. He had, before
leaving the army, taken part in several expeditions
against the Indians, and his knowledge of forest warfare
rendered him a valuable acquisition. Boston was but
poorly provisioned; and as upon the day when the news of
Lexington reached New York two vessels laden with flour
for the use of the troops at Boston were seized by the
colonists, and many other supplies cut off, the danger of
the place being starved out was considerable. General
Gage therefore offered no opposition to the exit from the
city of those who wished to avoid the horror of a siege,
and a considerable portion of the population made their
way through to the rebel lines. Every day brought news
of fresh risings throughout the country; the governors ot
the various provinces were powerless; small garrisons of
English troops were disarmed and made prisoners; and
the fortress of Ticonderoga, held only by fifty men, was
captured by the Americans without resistance. In one
month after the first shot was fired the whole of the
American colonies were in rebellion.

The news was received in England with astonishment
and sorrow. Great concessions had been made by parlia-
liament, but the news had reached America too late to .
avoid hostilities. Public opinion was divided; many
were in favour of granting at once all that the colonists
demanded, and many officers of rank and position resigned
their commissions rather than fight against the Ameri-
cans, ‘The division, indeed, was almost as general and
complete as it had been in the time of our own civil war.



FEELING IN ENGLAND, — 79

In London the feeling in favour of the colonists was
strong, but in the country generally the determination to
repress the rising was in the ascendant. The colonists
had with great shrewdness despatched a fast-sailing ship
to Europe upon the day following the battle of Lexing-
ton, giving their account of the affair and representing it
as a massacre of defenceless colonists by British troops;
and the story thus told excited a sympathy which would
not, perhaps, have been extended to them had the real
facts of the case been known. Representatives from all the
colonists met at Philadelphia to organize the national re-
sistance; but as yet, although many of the bolder spirits
spoke of altogether throwing off alleciance to England, no
resolution was proposed to that e‘fect.

For the first six weeks after his arrival at Boston
Captain Wilson was engaged in drilling his company.
Harold was, of course, attached to it, and entered with
ardour upon his duties. Captain Wilson did not attempt to
form his men into a band of regular soldiers; accuracy of
movement and regularity of drill would be of little avail
in the warfare in which they were likely to be engaged.
Accuracy in shooting, quickness in taking cover, and
steadiness in carrying out any-general orders were the
principal objects to be attained. Most of the men had
already taken part in frontier warfare; the majority of
them were gentlemen—Englishmen who, like their cap-
tain, had come out from home and purchased small estates
in the country. The discipline, therefore, was not strict,
and off duty all were on terms of equality.

Towards the end of May and beginning of June con-
siderable reinforcements arrived from England; and, as
a step preparatory to offensive measures, General Gage,



80 BUNKER’S HILL.

on the 12th of June, issued a proclamation offering in
His Majesty’s name a free pardon to all who should forth-
with lay down their arms, John Hancock and General
Adams only excepted, and threatening with punishment
all who should delay to avail themselves of the offer.
This proclamation had no effect whatever.

Near the peninsula of Boston, on the north, and sepa-
rated from it by the Charles river, which is navigable and
about the breadth of the Thames at London Bridge, is
another neck of land called the “ Peninsula of Charles-
town.” On the north bank, opposite Boston, lies the town
of Charlestown, behind which in the centre of the penin-
sula rises an eminence called “Bunker’s Hill.” Bunker’s
Hill is sufficiently high to overlook any part of Boston,
and near enough to be within cannon-shot. This hill was
unoccupied by either party; and about this time the
Americans, hearing that General Gage had come to a
determination to fortify it, resolved to defeat his resolu-
tion by being the first to occupy it.

About 9 in the evening of the 16th of June a detach-
ment from the colonial army, 1000 strong, under the
command of Colonel Prescott, moved along the Charles-
town road and took up a position on a shoulder of
Bunkers Hill, which was known as “Breed’s Hill,” just
above the town of Charlestown. They reached this
position at midnight. Each man carried a pick and
shovel, and all night they worked vigorously in intrench-
ing the position. Not a word was spoken, and the watch
on board the men-of-war in the harbour were ignorant of
what was going on so near at hand. At daybreak the alarm
was given, and the Lively opened a cannonade upon the
redoubt. A battery of guns was placed on “ Copp’s Hill,”



THE AMERICAN POSITION. 81

behind Boston, distant 1200 yards from the works, and
this also opened fire. The Americans continued their
work, throwing up fresh intrenchments, and singularly
only one man was killed by the fire from the ships and
redoubt, A breastwork was carried down the hill to the
flat ground, which, intersected by fences, stretched away
to the Mystic. By 9 o’clock they had completed their
intrenchments.

Prescott sent off for reinforcements; but there was
little harmony among the colonial troops. Disputes be-
tween the contingents of the various provinces: were
common; there was no head of sufficient authority to
enforce his orders upon the whole; and a long delay took
place before the reinforcements were sent forward.

In the meantime the English had been preparing to
attack the position. The 5th, 38th, 43d, and 52d Regi-
ments, with ten companies of the grenadiers and ten of
the light infantry, with a proportion of field-artillery,
embarked in boats, and, crossing the harbour, landed on
the outward side of the peninsula near the Mystic, with
a view of outflanking the American position and surround-
ing them. The force was under the command of Major-
General Howe, under whom was Brigadier-General Pigott.

Upon seeing the strength of the American position,
General Howe halted and sent back for further rein-
foreements. The Americans improved the time thus
given them by forming a breast-work in front of an
old ditch. Here there was a post and a rail-fence. They
ran up another by the side of this and filled the space
between the two with the new-mown hay, which, cut
only the day before, lay thickly over the meadows.

Two battalions were sent across to reinforce Howe,
(245 ) F



82 THE BRITISH ADVANCE.

while large reinforcements, with six guns, arrived to the
assistance of Prescott. The English had now a force
consisting, according to different authorities, of between
2000 and 2500 men. The colonial force is also variously
estimated, and had the advantage both in position and
in the protection of their intrenchments, while the British
had to march across open ground. As individual shots
the colonists were immensely superior, but the British
had the advantages given by drill and discipline.

The English lines advanced in good order, steadily
and slowly, the artillery covering them by their fire. -
Presently the troops opened fire, but the distance was too
great and they did but little execution. Encumbered
with their knapsacks they ascended the steep hill towards
the redoubt with difficulty, covered as it was by grass
reaching to their knees. The colonists did not fire a shot
until the English line had reached a point about 150
yards from the intrenchments. Then Prescott gave the
order, and from the redoubt and the long line of intrench-
ments flanking it flashed a line of fire. Each man had
taken a steady aim with his rifle resting on the earth-
work before him, and so deadly was the fire that nearly
the whole front line of the British fell. For ten minutes
the rest stood with dogged courage firing at the hidden
foe; but these, sheltered while they loaded, and only
exposing themselves momentarily while they raised their
heads above the parapets to fire, did such deadly execu-
tion that the remnant of the British fell back to the foot
of the hill.

While this force, which was under the command of
General Pigott, had been engaged, another division under
Howe himself moved against the rail-fence. The combat



PLAN OF THE ACTION. 83



OF THE
ACTION AT BUNKERS HILL,
on the 17"of June 1775.
Between HIS MAFESTY'S TROOPS,
Under the Command of Major Gen. Howe,
AND THE AMERICAN FORCES.
Scale of Yards
0 100 200 300 400 500
ee apes
tema......Royalists
Americans









84 A HEAVY REPULSE.

was a repetition of that which had taken place on the
hill. Here the Americans reserved their fire until the
enemy were close; then, with their muskets resting on
the rails, they poured in a deadly fire; and after in vain
trying to stand their ground, the troops fell back to the
shore.

Captain Wilson was standing with Harold on Copp’s
Hill watching the engagement.

“What beautiful order they go in!” Harold said, look-
ing admiringly at the long lines of red-coated soldiers.

“It is very pretty,” Captain Wilson said sadly, “ and
may do in regular warfare; but I tell you, Harold, that
sort of thing won’t do here. There is scarce a man
carrying a gun behind those intrenchments who cannot
with certainty hit a bull’s-eye at 150 yards. It is simply
murder, taking the men up in regular order against such
a foe sheltered by earthworks.”

At this moment the long line of fire darted out from
the American intrenchments.

“Look there!” Captain Wilson cried in a pained voice;
“the front line is nearly swept away! do you see them
lying almost in an unbroken line on the hillside? I tell
you, Harold, it is hopeless to look for success if we fight
in this way. The bravest men in the world could not
stand such a fire as that.”

“What will be done now?” Harold asked as the men
stood huddled upon the shore.

“They will try again,” Captain Wilson said. “ Look at
the officers running about among them and getting them
into order.”

In a quarter of an hour the British again advanced both
towards the redoubt and the grass fence. As before the







THE SECOND ADVANCE AT BUNKER'S HILL.



THE POSITION STORMED. 85

Americans withheld their fire, and this time until the
troops were far closer than before, and the result was even
more disastrous. Some of the grenadier and light infantry
companies who led lost three-fourths, others nine-tenths,
of their men. Again the British troops recoiled from that
terrible fire. General Howe and his officers exerted them-
selves to the utmost to restore order when the troops
again reached the shore, and the men gallantly replied to
their exhortations. Almost impossible as the task ap-
peared, they prepared to undertake it for the third time.
This time a small force only were directed to move against
the grass fence, while the main body, under Howe, were
to attack the redoubt on the hill.

Knapsacks were taken off and thrown down, and each
man nerved himself to conquer or die. The ships in the
harbour prepared the way by opening a heavy cannonade.
General Clinton, who was watching the battle from
Copp’s Hill, ran down to the shore, rowed across the
harbour, and put himself at the head of two battalions.
Then with loud cheers the troops again sprang up the
ascent. The American ammunition was running short,
many of the men not having more than three or four
rounds left, and this time they held their fire until the
British troops were within twenty yards. These had not
fired a shot, the order being that there was to be no
pause, but that the redoubt was to be carried with the
bayonet. For a moment they wavered when the deadly
volley was poured in upon them. ‘Then with a cheer
they rushed at the intrenchments. All those who first
mounted were shot down by the defenders, but the troops
would not be denied, and pouring over the earthworks
leaped down upon the enemy.



86 HEAVY LOSSES.

For a few minutes there was a hand-to-hand fight, the
Americans using the butt-ends of their muskets, the Eng-
lish their bayonets. The soldiers were exhausted with
the climb up the hill and their exertions under a blazing
sun, and the great majority of the defenders of the re-
doubt were therefore enabled to retreat unharmed, as,
fresh and active, they were able to outrun their tired
opponents, and as the balls served out for the English
field-pieces were too large, the artillery were unable to
come into action.

The colonists at the rail-fence maintained their posi-
tion against the small force sent against them till the
main body at the redoubt had made their escape. The
British were unable to continue the pursuit beyond the
isthmus.

In the whole history of the British army there is no
record of a more gallant feat than the capture of Bun-
ker’s Hill; and few troops in the world would, after
two bloody repulses, have moved up the third time to
assail such a position, defended by men so trained to the
use of the rifle. A thousand and fifty-four men, or nearly
half their number, were killed and wounded, among whom
were eighty-three officers. In few battles ever fought
was the proportion of casualties to the number engaged
so great. The Americans fought bravely, but the extra-
ordinary praise bestowed upon them for their valour
appears misplaced. Their position was one of great
strength, and the absence of drill was of no consequence
whatever in such an engagement. They were perfectly
sheltered from their enemy’s fire while engaged in calmly
shooting him down, and their loss up to the moment
when the British rushed among them was altogether



THE LESSON OF THE BATTLES. 87

insignificant. Their casualties took place after the posi-
tion was stormed and on their retreat along the peninsula,
and amounted in all to 145 killed and captured and 304
wounded. It may be said that both sides fought well,
but from the circumstances under which they fought the
highest credit is due to the victors.

The battle, however, though won by the English, was a
moral triumph for the Americans, and the British pavrlia-
ment should at once have given up the contest. It was
from the first absolutely certain that the Americans, with
their immense superiority in numbers, could, if they were
only willing to fight, hold their vast country against the
British troops, fighting with a base thousands of miles
away. The battle of Bunker’s Hill showed that they
were so willing, that they could fight sternly and bravely:
and this point once established, it was little short of mad-
ness for the English government to continue the contest.
They had not even the excuse of desiring to wipe out the
dishonour of a defeat. Their soldiers had won a brilliant
victory, and had fought with a determination and valour
never exceeded, and England could have afforded to say,
“We will fight no more; if you, the inhabitants of a vast
continent, are determined to go alone, are ready to give
your lives rather than remain in connection with us, go
and prosper; we acknowledge we cannot subdue a nation
in arms.”

From the height of Copp’s Hill it could be seen that
the British had suffered terribly. Captain Wilson was
full of enthusiasm when he saw the success of the last
gallant charge of the English soldiers, but he said to
Harold:

“Tt is a disastrous victory. A few such battles as



88 DEFECTIVE GENERALSHIP.

these and the English army in America would cease
to exist.”

But although they were aware that the losses were
heavy they were not prepared for the truth. The long
grass had hidden from view many of those who fell, and
when it was known that nearly half of those engaged
were killed or wounded the feeling among the English
was akin to consternation.

The generalship of the British was wholly unworthy of
the valour of the troops. There would have been no diffi-
culty in placing some of the vessels of light draught so
far up the Mystic as to outflank the intrenchments held
by the colonists; indeed the British troops might have been
landed farther up the Mystic, in which case the Americans
must have retreated instantly to avoid capture. Lastly,
the troops, although fighting within a mile of their
quarters, were encumbered with three days’ provisions,
and their knapsacks, constituting, with their muskets
and ammunition, a load of 125 lbs. This was indeed
heavily handicapping men who had, under a blazing sun,
to climb a steep hill, with grass reaching to their knees,
and intersected by walls and fences.

American writers describe the defenders of the position
as inferior in numbers to the assailants; but it is due to
the English to say that their estimate of the number of
the defenders of the intrenchments differs very widely
from this. General Gage estimated them as being fully
three times as numerous as the British troops. It is pro-
bable that the truth lies between the two accounts.

Captain Wilson returned with Harold greatly dis-
pirited to his house.

“The look-out is dreadfully bad,” he said to his wife,



A BAD LOOK-OUT. 89

after describing the events of the day. “So far as I can
see there are but two alternatives—either peace, or a
long and destructive war, with failure at its end It
is even more hopeless trying to conquer a vast country
like this, defended by irregulars, than if we had a trained
and disciplined army to deal with. In that case two or
three signal victories might bring the war to a conclusion;
but, fighting with the irregulars, a victory means nothing
beyond so many of the enemy killed. There are scarcely
any cannon to take, no stores or magazines to capture.
When the enemy is beaten he disperses, moves off, and in
a couple of days gathers again in a fresh position. The
work has no end. There are no fortresses to take, no
strategical positions to occupy, no great roads to cut.
The enemy can march anywhere, attack and disperse as
he chooses, scatter, and reform when you have passed by.
It is like fighting the wind.”

“Well, John, since it seems so hopeless, cannot you give
it up? is it too late?”

“Altogether too late, Mary; and if I were free to-
morrow I would volunteer my services again next day.
It is not any the less my duty to fight in my country’s
cause because I believe the cause to be a losing one. You
must see that yourself, dear. If England had been sure
to win without my aid I might have stood aloof. It is
because everyone’s help is needed that such services as I
can render are due to her. A country would be in a bad
way, indeed, whose sons were only ready to fight when
their success was a certainty.”

The Congress determined now to detach Canada from
the English side, and prepared a force for the invasion of
that state, where the British had but a few regular troops.



90 MONTREAL THREATENED.

Captain Wilson was one morning summoned to head-
quarters. On his return he called together four or five of
the men best acquainted with the country. These had
been in their early days hunters or border scouts, and
knew every foot of the forest and lakes.

“T have just seen the general,” Captain Wilson said.
“A royalist brought in news last night that the rebels are
raising a force intended to act against Montreal. They
reckon upon being joined by a considerable portion of the
Canadians, among whom there is, unfortunately, a good
deal of discontent. We have but two regiments in the
whole colony. One of these is at Quebec. The rebels,
therefore, will get the advantage of surprise, and may
raise the colony before we are in a condition to resist.
General Howe asked me to take my company through
the woods straight to Montreal. We should be landed a
few miles up the coast at night. I suppose some of you
know the country well earn to be able to guide us.’

Several of the men expressed their ability to act as
guides.

“T have fought the Indians through them woods over
and over again,” said one of them, a sinewy, weather-
beaten man of some sixty years old, who was known as
Peter Lambton. He had for many years been a scout
attached to the army, and was one of the most experienced
hunters on the frontier. He was a tall angular man,
except that he stooped slightly, the result of a habit of
walking with the head bent forward in the attitude of
listening. The years which had passed over him had had
no effect upon his figure. He walked with a long noise-
less tread, like that of an Indian, and was one of the
men attached to his company, in whom, wisely, Cap-



PETER LAMBTON. 91

tain Wilson had made no attempt to instil the very
rudiments of drill. It was, the captain thought, well
that the younger men should have such a knowledge of
drill as would enable them to perform simple manceuvres,
but the old hunters would fight in their own way, a way
infinitely better adapted for forest warfare than any that
he could teach them. Peter and some of his companions
were in receipt of small pensions, which had been be-
stowed upon them for their services with the troops. Men
of this kind were not likely to take any lively interest in
the squabbles as to questions of taxation; but when they
found that it was coming to fighting they again offered
their services to government, as a matter of course. Some
were attached to the regular troops as scouts, while others
were divided among the newly-raised companies of loy-
alists.

’ Peter Lambton had for the last four years been settled
at Concord. He had, during the war with the French,
served as a scout with the regiment to which Captain
Wilson belonged, and had saved that officer's life when
with a portion of his company he was surrounded and cut
oft by hostile Indians. A strong feeling of friendship had
sprung up between them, and when, four years before,
there had been a lull in the English fighting on the
frontier, Peter had retired on his pension and the savings
which he had made during his many years’ work as a
hunter, and had located himself in a cottage on Captain
Wilson’s estate. It was the many tales told him by the
hunter of his experiences in Indian warfare that had
fired Harold with a desire for the life of a frontier hunter,
and had given him such a knowledge of forest life as
had enabled him to throw off the Indians from his trail.



92 A FAVOURABLE OCCURRENCE.

On Harold’s return the old hunter had listened with
extreme interest to the story of his adventures, and had
taken great pride in the manner in which he had utilized
his teachings. Peter made his appearance in the city
three days after the arrival of Captain Wilson there.

“T look upon this here affair as a favourable occurrence
for Harold,” he said to Captain Wilson. “The boy has
lots of spirits, but if it had not been for this he might
have grown up a regular town greenhorn, fit for nothing
but to walk about in a long coat, and to talk pleasant to
women; but this will just be the making of him. With
your permission, Cap., I shall take him under my charge
and teach him to use his eyes and his ears, and I reckon
he will turn out as good an Indian fighter as you will
see on the frontier.”

“ But it is not Indians that we are going to fight, Peter,”
Captain Wilson said; “I heartily wish it was.”

“Tt will be the same thing,” Peter said; “not here, in
course; there will be battles between the regulars and
the colonists, regular battles like that at Quebec, where
both parties was fools enough to march about in the open
and get shot down by hundreds. I don’t call that fight-
ing; that’s just killing, and there ain’t no more sense in it
than in two herd of buffalo charging each other on the
prairie. But there will be plenty of real fighting; expe-
ditions in the woods and Indian skirmishes, for you will
be sure that the Indians will join in, some on one side
and some on the other; it ain’t in their nature to sit still
in their villages while powder is being burnt. A few
months of this work will make a man of him, and he
might have a worse teacher than Peter Lambton. You
just hand him over to my care, Cap., and I will teach



PETER LAMBTON ON EDUCATION. 93

him all I know of the ways of the woods, and I tell yer
there ain’t no better kind of edication for a young fellow.
He larns to use the senses God has given him, to keep
his head when another man would lose his presence of
mind, to have the eye of a hawk and the ear of a hound,
to get so that he scarcely knows what it is to be tired
or hungry, to be able to live while other men would
starve, to read the signs of the woods like a printed book,
and to be in every way a man and not a tailor’s figure.”

“There is a great deal in what you say, old friend,”
Captain Wilson answered, “and such a training cannot
but do a man good. I wish with all my heart that it
had been entirely with red foes that the fighting was to
be done; however, that cannot be helped, and as he is to
fight he could not be in better hands than yours. So
long as we remain here I shall teach him what drill I can
with the rest of the company; but when we leave this
town and the work really begins, I shall put him in your
charge to learn the duties of a scout.”

The young negro, Jake, had also enlisted, for through-
out the war the negroes fought on both sides, according
to the polities of their masters. There were only two
other negroes in the company, and Captain Wilson had
some hesitation in enlisting them, but they made good
soldiers. In the case of Jake, Captain Wilson knew
that he was influenced in his wish to join solely by his
affection for Harold, and the lad’s father felt that in the
moment of danger the negro would be ready to lay down
his life for him.

There was great satisfaction in the band when they
received news that they were at last about to take the
field. The long inaction had been most wearisome to



94 A PITIFUL PARTING.

them, and they knew that any fighting that would take
place round Boston would be done by the regular troops.
Food too was very scarce in town, and they were heartily
weary of the regular drill and discipline. They were
then in high spirits as they embarked on board the
Thetis sloop of war and sailed from Boston harbour.

It was a pitiful parting between Mrs. Wilson and her
husband and son. It had been arranged that she should
sail for England in a ship that was leaving on the fol-
lowing week, and should there stay with her husband’s
family, from whom she had a warm invitation to make
their home her own until the war was over.

The Thetis ran out to sea. As soon as night fell her
bow was turned to land again, and about midnight the
anchor was let fall near the shore some twenty miles
north of Boston. The landing was quickly effected, and
with three days’ provisions in their knapsacks the little
party started on their march. One of the scouts had
come from that neighbourhood and led them by paths
avoiding all villages and farms. At daybreak they
bivouacked in a wood, and at nightfall resumed the
march. By the next morning they had left the settle-
ments behind and entered a belt of swamp and forest
extending west to the St. Lawrence.





CHAPTER VI.
SCOUTING.

PARTY of six men were seated around a fire in

the forest which covered the slopes of the
northern shore of Lake Champlain. The spot
had been chosen because a great tree had fallen,
bringing down several others in its course, and opening
a vista through which a view could be obtained of the
surface of the lake. The party consisted of Peter Lambton,
Harold, Jake, Ephraim Potter, another old frontiersman,
and two Indians.

The company under Captain Wilson had made its way
safely to the St. Lawrence, after undergoing considerable
hardships in the forest. They had been obliged to de-
pend entirely on what game they could shoot, and such
fish as they could catch in the rivers whose course they
followed. They had, however, reached Montreal without
loss, and there they found that General Carleton had in
all about 500 regulars, and about 200 volunteers who
had recently been engaged.

It was clear that if the people of Canada were as hos-
tile to the connection with England as were those of
the other colonies, the little force at the disposal of the
English general could do nothing to defend the colony





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'347049' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABELX' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
7f0d0f581ac53c7c605577ddba2b445b
f890954beaad9d914099a615b449018ca30243c1
'2011-11-17T23:42:24-05:00'
describe
'32624' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABELY' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
6a4ce2f06af1d4ad6ca4b2ab8f8a7cae
352d1f329f678c34f73eacb45a949520a132dfa7
'2011-11-17T23:43:41-05:00'
describe
'6838' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABELZ' 'sip-files00012.pro'
aa9a561621b27b12b7d08c0e27b6a579
d131d5d1a592477d8922a6a84b14881cbaef00c9
'2011-11-17T23:38:43-05:00'
describe
'8826' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMA' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
9fa18ba819c4528d63911ca6a05d6685
d35b1fe98699c95c9afec3b178a6f0ea078697b8
'2011-11-17T23:40:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMB' 'sip-files00012.tif'
c9a78761b5b456a12e65563f52e69042
27b1c6c2f11e0755b9ff66f6af1da05b9f012086
'2011-11-17T23:34:49-05:00'
describe
'359' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMC' 'sip-files00012.txt'
e752569b618f34879830b5244df53ae6
57684d96a8c3294019d1ffb1f6bc5f240bb7535f
'2011-11-17T23:37:09-05:00'
describe
'2618' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMD' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
1b1cc6124404e7052f35439d8579ccfb
988613909ee7e5aab7a807e9be018ba54ff055a3
'2011-11-17T23:34:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEME' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
b5481d9bb2fb2fc2eaa0588628df4f06
3734cc27a6012e42da6d4cdbb48f64a033cb05da
'2011-11-17T23:44:08-05:00'
describe
'58066' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMF' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
a9ad257385164948db457a73ee127bf9
890b7c098681dda2cc5a5f5023ad12fae8e15864
'2011-11-17T23:41:20-05:00'
describe
'30745' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMG' 'sip-files00013.pro'
7b317081e79fe17ad849598c082cf1cc
1e46e82cae2a7e70b2d0132b1c05b021e74ab556
describe
'21672' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMH' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
74666ebb084ea6728a3bcb949d607162
b52412c682c124f7ab337436131019bd94f2e40b
'2011-11-17T23:35:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMI' 'sip-files00013.tif'
f25ddc4179af4bc624eed0af29bc2a49
de205efb06b4656c877699a32ff08972ae80b249
'2011-11-17T23:44:00-05:00'
describe
'1295' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMJ' 'sip-files00013.txt'
4ee68e371e8f4cf0010bd6b63c86696f
bf3bff00a675396d02b1e10f163a32886952811b
'2011-11-17T23:38:40-05:00'
describe
'5635' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMK' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
ad306aebcba67d850caf0294c940b25c
7642f9a1f280634268b5edeab0c359b756395e45
'2011-11-17T23:43:48-05:00'
describe
'346970' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEML' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
b6559d9e76ace6cf2d259911da66dec8
42e409fe00de94ed24219304069842bf8208ef38
'2011-11-17T23:39:32-05:00'
describe
'57203' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMM' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
e566221f032a85cac1f588b960be9386
a133f02a680c1488b65db441623cdd7dff2da104
'2011-11-17T23:35:45-05:00'
describe
'20607' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMN' 'sip-files00014.pro'
bd45a9cfc7cbebd9482c8758b1a0283e
006a4368bfd1cfc2e2723ab5b9c00e3f158b76ba
describe
'16723' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMO' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
07b0d08e34403663f0d121abb85826c5
80f4f3d339908e0dc1c8ba4bfb7d65fc5b0b8906
'2011-11-17T23:47:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMP' 'sip-files00014.tif'
fad5baf00c34ef954c999a065065eea9
06dd0b56719269e9080c2b87c1d9d3a4c76f912d
'2011-11-17T23:40:52-05:00'
describe
'985' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMQ' 'sip-files00014.txt'
867cac01470c65e6c4d2237cbe14ae0e
188053358e2b15579046c01e8c59d7e3c92b79bc
describe
'5530' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMR' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
85aaa74232551c06e63e52490ca86a92
d1b4b93c3745b36149af10f323d4df7ad2f53f78
'2011-11-17T23:39:17-05:00'
describe
'347012' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMS' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
db5f2d33e207c37fc0f9d001b66a030d
28e526dbdac0801d4f7afbe54c4f212dcb1cc189
'2011-11-17T23:46:18-05:00'
describe
'125774' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMT' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
a8843acf8fe07070ee2292f40a933d9e
07a02cd2f275e763ec1a216a843877947c4173aa
'2011-11-17T23:45:51-05:00'
describe
'25638' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMU' 'sip-files00015.pro'
b78134f4046df158ca3fc6bb239988a6
3b32478758774064cf149770df942df7318012b0
'2011-11-17T23:42:11-05:00'
describe
'36470' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMV' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
edcb496292584162b36485aab32b3b3b
035c01e3f161f542ed5c525f6fcc8d34c515ac15
'2011-11-17T23:46:23-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMW' 'sip-files00015.tif'
ef72e70566cbd4c6fd44452b348f9a09
0976a5635ae469fe46a5cdd7012d4c9185b5bd26
'2011-11-17T23:39:05-05:00'
describe
'1137' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMX' 'sip-files00015.txt'
218801eae22aed3099ef8e6defa2fcd0
b37edf95915004104677b4d631e0c725b7853d28
'2011-11-17T23:36:41-05:00'
describe
'9383' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMY' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
341cea873c8d6a6b2e0157531222077f
5538b19d6cc0ce51868c3ff84568c76efb961ee5
'2011-11-17T23:34:50-05:00'
describe
'346972' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEMZ' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
379a884e79a496d9129c1e3d7c90f2d4
ad7ec4517d70ca539471d10cc975012293592b5e
'2011-11-17T23:38:24-05:00'
describe
'155143' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENA' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
f651ba21b6477cc8e692ed7c0ae87239
de8c59b20104c6d56f5901beed8226d71f4852d8
'2011-11-17T23:34:39-05:00'
describe
'47821' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENB' 'sip-files00016.pro'
45ffd06511f4c34808e6a7edd1c51db9
fec65964eec51a56822c6497b7b8f3509b04ed38
'2011-11-17T23:35:34-05:00'
describe
'47261' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENC' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
2c7bfb90fbb7d608ec4d3cc6db17418b
c9ea27116d0cf3a0b99759685700fc8220640d5e
'2011-11-17T23:41:09-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEND' 'sip-files00016.tif'
0283c0869924a89a178c08b993ac066a
a2f66938e6edbedb29436581b9ecc38ad5e0cfd0
'2011-11-17T23:39:59-05:00'
describe
'1878' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENE' 'sip-files00016.txt'
db62863c8edfb07cc5a76cac855c003c
e44ca5291e66ede86bda0e54e0acc2d5d9206065
'2011-11-17T23:43:09-05:00'
describe
'10637' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENF' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
f411b165d119fff35a1a1b784d7ba9ec
75e80f270f568818284e027c5d86196aeb3ed118
describe
'347009' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENG' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
1ea885a48e1ea3a664c9156dbcca7b86
dfa43a16a6545cb50fb3ce3dcaf443d617d62d66
'2011-11-17T23:41:17-05:00'
describe
'145586' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENH' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
6560a115d8bbb0c8c214ff77c82a56ce
b9078b6642f2ed6c2e41b7bb8d246e49eed8f22e
'2011-11-17T23:40:04-05:00'
describe
'44973' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENI' 'sip-files00017.pro'
609db44c09532414f5ae508471740a79
d06cc013a9c8fb6d295d54992ad52adc8e7e15ff
'2011-11-17T23:45:48-05:00'
describe
'44627' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENJ' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
a2618c0af9fe710dafed5efef00e484b
3c2e0b41e28d2b90af499405af0f9cfb39e8eecb
'2011-11-17T23:35:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENK' 'sip-files00017.tif'
a78988a1f03efc5280aa9df1a4aa3467
85d94f188e7908fa07a853803b168e1f935cb5b8
'2011-11-17T23:47:19-05:00'
describe
'1812' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENL' 'sip-files00017.txt'
a53d2c41fd78f2a44f2ec71d48384afe
9ed4c30d0741d55a02e95bcabfd6d22da91d8b1c
'2011-11-17T23:37:54-05:00'
describe
'9970' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENM' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
4319c29b7d3e04516987fb9c89459329
b6e259c7bc821b17a772074477d427595f092ce3
describe
'347037' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENN' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
d49f333b9c45cc5a8190f16dfe6cd995
c211eef55f5e03555d14b0dad3a8732c9871222a
'2011-11-17T23:44:56-05:00'
describe
'148262' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENO' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
1c0f1332585e84542469aba9f881205c
c0956f284be290e3559f19a2df8277fe66bbcfe9
describe
'45951' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENP' 'sip-files00018.pro'
e1003f8c20f71ab58da1f8d55dc32a67
a32ff0be27e45fd7abfd26eaca223b41da9b2181
'2011-11-17T23:39:55-05:00'
describe
'45869' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENQ' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
5ecec4ead90502fc7bd54f164b14e909
748305723e68b6c3be71a253e1ee5d91aa5268e4
'2011-11-17T23:38:32-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENR' 'sip-files00018.tif'
700b55bad1c26878b6f19f9e9cbf90d0
a566f01605a94056d97c2e60bfae31e6428f198d
'2011-11-17T23:39:25-05:00'
describe
'1825' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENS' 'sip-files00018.txt'
af5295d9c8276d291b2729004197697e
f721b99e65645ead56bd6bf4b1db71690e08e013
'2011-11-17T23:35:07-05:00'
describe
'10783' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENT' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
dd911ced538022af6bf59e27ec1c1bf5
b4b5dc36d9f3ae161bd7ccaf2d59cfe56d46aca2
'2011-11-17T23:37:57-05:00'
describe
'347058' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENU' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
02cc5c7adff7fa7ab0567a2be3d04833
64cfe7b182380d856b2cddfbf805261394625b5c
'2011-11-17T23:35:52-05:00'
describe
'152301' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENV' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
696220b22095db6f758afe1ff0e91913
86efa87966250fe3131f9d35664297ac60984b26
'2011-11-17T23:37:49-05:00'
describe
'46428' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENW' 'sip-files00019.pro'
45a7f605765ac72f944362ddb7481d15
55891abedf6a30b93b2b92369e66064e35acc3eb
describe
'47047' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENX' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
4e1b5f90e50bd687f1208e0066fa62c6
e11643bb43a02dd4af0d85657ae8c7e1b56fbc59
'2011-11-17T23:35:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENY' 'sip-files00019.tif'
2575fd4727f315092934f07a5a173385
e30b3f570a8a26164ad4a406d595e0d1d5d0f80b
'2011-11-17T23:45:24-05:00'
describe
'1872' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABENZ' 'sip-files00019.txt'
2e6ab15e3d11c70faa81d479d1511f65
af89c32bfbe5600d6f65c789bb65adadd82954fd
'2011-11-17T23:39:23-05:00'
describe
'10917' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOA' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
98cc9a8c8c7a12a0bfee23518ce167f6
89336c33c4deca991cf773d2eeda9f19b563243b
'2011-11-17T23:41:19-05:00'
describe
'347051' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOB' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
2e751bff8b4b67c42699b8714e5a93ad
66f7d1064dba7c47c5730abbfc121ceb639ce1b2
'2011-11-17T23:40:51-05:00'
describe
'133566' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOC' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
cf21914fdc4bc25762cb58313904dc2d
58524a2f041b05288f3228457361964b94da1e72
'2011-11-17T23:41:59-05:00'
describe
'39108' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOD' 'sip-files00020.pro'
5fafd00120180400d5f803a434496d5e
26cb5ff4c27f7d108f02987565d0e420f934c507
'2011-11-17T23:42:18-05:00'
describe
'42795' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOE' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
613dc19a0a2be70d996a35e544d435ae
baf101c36ea5b209b70eb4041c16f4f2ec6f63e4
'2011-11-17T23:38:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOF' 'sip-files00020.tif'
ca1434bf5d3a74d731ad9ad676fab2d1
cd87d1a1b4c9ce57db298d2258f11a2fd70e748c
'2011-11-17T23:43:53-05:00'
describe
'1593' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOG' 'sip-files00020.txt'
d6e5fb0c5e5f76156ddac01868902dcc
c9e0cfa014607007ecdd19f9c25fe61282f563c3
'2011-11-17T23:40:16-05:00'
describe
'10702' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOH' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
04b0acadb3ec9134e9c4bd7dbe4ca31d
34ccdbb86767868c85c40f30359476f5ccb4c665
'2011-11-17T23:36:45-05:00'
describe
'347040' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOI' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
42a46bc269d722427adbd90def0f5edc
6ff0990402f6f6096f82cc338970345bc5412a3b
'2011-11-17T23:43:19-05:00'
describe
'146322' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOJ' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
c23a7fc08ff0cafbba5a8ca67fff7797
288b1e466988621ce261c368dd9867f58eabad67
'2011-11-17T23:35:51-05:00'
describe
'42988' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOK' 'sip-files00021.pro'
8ce85891ccb7883da594ee11de30be2e
65f068910920ac25af0e7434000317bf32970c64
'2011-11-17T23:39:15-05:00'
describe
'46235' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOL' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
54297ebb11d46cf213c573b725f2fc09
20b65d0829ca2db8d5302d3deb0f1260733f603e
'2011-11-17T23:41:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOM' 'sip-files00021.tif'
a7699d866c50c0a681fef854cc9d5d88
5cb25d74c63d7b4c8676d885213507e1cd04fbf0
'2011-11-17T23:35:21-05:00'
describe
'1787' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEON' 'sip-files00021.txt'
a3028af56f6b00a95679bf0657d53619
4f97f6b039587b940576a6ba84a0622308334e23
'2011-11-17T23:41:27-05:00'
describe
'11130' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOO' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
1b9bfc19f437421cee5bef8d89a5097a
611c4272bfe011d33a1e2d59fababd14a751f09d
'2011-11-17T23:36:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOP' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
4552c66ec448294c489bc3a1e0b7861b
ee6d1caef54575c0f5e7086fe84cbdab3998af47
'2011-11-17T23:47:11-05:00'
describe
'152853' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOQ' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
3c17238848958c86e7a10ce2b922f1f3
2f6e7cdc3c1db652388c2df06148cf703e7f11f3
'2011-11-17T23:36:00-05:00'
describe
'46474' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOR' 'sip-files00022.pro'
2417394025aa8bfd213832ee1786a116
1ef260f9d119e92be1533000553ca73abe289010
'2011-11-17T23:46:38-05:00'
describe
'47268' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOS' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
d5ff1c75791477a2b650245bc3b8ef22
380a7de7024822544134ec998e4b4de26b52e264
'2011-11-17T23:34:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOT' 'sip-files00022.tif'
fc613fe37966c33b03ce68ea5fa97ee1
b2b7cec12eafc21e7f1d6d38b77b5af394fdd49b
'2011-11-17T23:38:37-05:00'
describe
'1886' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOU' 'sip-files00022.txt'
e578afd97e65bcff261182b5cc6a9d74
b2179748ce67f0281f754baf57151613505936d7
'2011-11-17T23:37:44-05:00'
describe
'10737' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOV' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
687bfa3acacef960c8f140d2e192134c
2ec59bda4e48099b1dca2a63029bfa53ece56871
'2011-11-17T23:36:06-05:00'
describe
'346941' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOW' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
c9b6d159333f775d01c69373a92364a6
08ef5ec5acefccbf633744dae380c290b5681781
'2011-11-17T23:34:38-05:00'
describe
'155085' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOX' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
c7ffdba6098187d2d4c76192adf816ef
346146bab5410d72f7d006edc6a181def658cc3f
'2011-11-17T23:44:25-05:00'
describe
'47496' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOY' 'sip-files00023.pro'
7dcee1efecd7d73997cff2fa6d15f852
590920dbeb77e5de817152a759655531ac76ebbd
'2011-11-17T23:39:45-05:00'
describe
'48159' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEOZ' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
d615e527cc25e04c7c5f9731e7e68ee8
31ce7b5daccfe9e27985fe6139860460062f9eee
'2011-11-17T23:36:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPA' 'sip-files00023.tif'
ce0f988a74e7f376cd1501df1ee44930
ca8e21f5f0bdd21dfc64ed0371b77c18e9bdf59f
'2011-11-17T23:40:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPB' 'sip-files00023.txt'
bc5be7d9437426693b31e6fec43e795b
fc3668c016c6e282e565313b5368763506c4904b
'2011-11-17T23:34:40-05:00'
describe
'11161' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPC' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
f46b0c73b131f2ed44db185fec2b3ce8
424508470373266c8881ab74b08a70fe7430bd4d
'2011-11-17T23:37:31-05:00'
describe
'347041' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPD' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
e484a2a418e82991958059e2e78504f1
f397abfc2e8cf27ddaee9ffe6972e06258cb5f01
'2011-11-17T23:38:21-05:00'
describe
'140522' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPE' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
e95d6ef520e6fb84e1733c1c05046798
3565fffc746f36728f71e763376d028b6f6c3947
'2011-11-17T23:44:31-05:00'
describe
'42316' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPF' 'sip-files00024.pro'
4d372658a8a34b38043852a9ebb6e19a
d226adc1ebc6a0ce33b685ea6a7d8180794ddc13
'2011-11-17T23:37:32-05:00'
describe
'43451' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPG' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
20ad90726b58d41ff4dc1aff54ccbf4e
fd967febd8ef1d172a5207d2447c4a79f2e24b13
'2011-11-17T23:47:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPH' 'sip-files00024.tif'
693bb24b4e4d07b26ecbfee390974534
6a7465ce3eb64a83b6358c7fc35253c1b95bd22a
'2011-11-17T23:42:19-05:00'
describe
'1692' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPI' 'sip-files00024.txt'
88e85cac00291b5dfd1f5a915870f904
ea6cce110e7b7b74de81da1c2ec453156b98c6cc
'2011-11-17T23:38:03-05:00'
describe
'10789' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPJ' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
3d52a0ab4daf03cee275adb78dbbcfd6
214134742fb3bd314cd4f4cc2b1271400948aa82
'2011-11-17T23:47:22-05:00'
describe
'347010' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPK' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
1d52c4b6695a3a8a3264dddfcf706e1d
1ffb11122088aaeb45f52a833a32c6f23c6517e6
'2011-11-17T23:46:02-05:00'
describe
'143773' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPL' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
772d8d74d529711752b15a7d3ee2bcb4
76d0d6aa286f91bd3a6c1250eb2a9f2054a2e5c7
'2011-11-17T23:36:34-05:00'
describe
'43078' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPM' 'sip-files00025.pro'
501a7b42a952f9235164a1e51c78ab89
62d75e8e33a5f73fb501837735c6543230a516f1
'2011-11-17T23:37:45-05:00'
describe
'45146' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPN' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
e75852e4e7d047773e2cd3ade0ce2823
c2bf9e0f1c7b9223197294933fe96ddec7a0d9b1
'2011-11-17T23:39:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPO' 'sip-files00025.tif'
e1be4a261c45a597c5379b5c77107c2a
b71c86a953bdba08e75b22999197e8b4d7dbb7ef
describe
'1722' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPP' 'sip-files00025.txt'
4d551569e02b2f815d9d2cbadef23a03
71290cd8d975fa1f0b6febdc683f8db6d5a3c5af
'2011-11-17T23:42:02-05:00'
describe
'11016' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPQ' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
bd5f51bb4165ef774d5eff7a0cdee838
1d4ca494d30d51b8978071488f29d7aaf178e12a
'2011-11-17T23:41:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPR' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
658429eb7a55d2e42eed60b56ffeeb65
e87213e33412cb0841334d8f222f0ad97dd9bca8
'2011-11-17T23:38:35-05:00'
describe
'143561' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPS' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
b63982485bae62edd80fc15f11a0a772
54e478842c15319e7818bf3ed13279ac97a07b95
'2011-11-17T23:37:59-05:00'
describe
'44507' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPT' 'sip-files00026.pro'
090e951f0d2fd9f5239865642b4e8b00
2fcb0388e073a74111895286397832e4638f4ab0
'2011-11-17T23:35:41-05:00'
describe
'44619' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPU' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
abc8b9a40d4d12e73e92b526bc638e48
a5b718ac5f931d4abbe2302447067727b4abe4b7
'2011-11-17T23:36:22-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPV' 'sip-files00026.tif'
b676909444dbbf7c0d64c335afe69a8a
b70c81414c2af4c2f0c329bc4acfd145c9cd730f
'2011-11-17T23:34:25-05:00'
describe
'1764' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPW' 'sip-files00026.txt'
ef04d7383cc0360f30ed93e53448ee14
8516ba2103ac62e9f4561276ccf8f618dcc3a9ce
describe
'10488' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPX' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
7bf300a641c68f595c8e6b2396dd239b
0d9c3eb1f4d81121aa6da1ea00f027f9b935f81b
'2011-11-17T23:41:33-05:00'
describe
'347002' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPY' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
23d36b0335362c784ff73fbecac0e991
7f5b0bf593b3d12d7e8d040ef95b2ace07f3d1ba
'2011-11-17T23:35:24-05:00'
describe
'150183' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEPZ' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
46c6d3a817110da08b194893e623a90a
e4abc46f6033854631ff1b601dfae4ae25b478ea
'2011-11-17T23:43:54-05:00'
describe
'45145' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQA' 'sip-files00027.pro'
eec79fe9320b32114c51698d96b1bde2
fa48ae8369f4333fab6245e1f5df68457fbec4f8
'2011-11-17T23:41:12-05:00'
describe
'46065' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQB' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
5aecbcc3c1dd8d9d3376470c82b8087f
12b4ee029a34fe18a2c2be85c4bfa5c9add94a8b
'2011-11-17T23:47:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQC' 'sip-files00027.tif'
7050f36e4467d9788dc5764f0195cf0c
41d66a26bfd728f8b08ea6b8abb80a4b7ce4d1e0
describe
'1772' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQD' 'sip-files00027.txt'
b9bdda284cb75224b691cadeabb07ad0
23c89dcecd3bb8b44152bd71f8dd99beef5a315c
'2011-11-17T23:34:24-05:00'
describe
'10510' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQE' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
53f88ac0eaa3ac82b100e6cd28f2776a
2c61aa19df4f165d4e4cfa7c795152fdd70cd291
describe
'346991' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQF' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
49e6036ea0a58df50660a8aef001d372
fb7d7b7fb9aa9aacf00627e42a258f1527c3a090
'2011-11-17T23:39:20-05:00'
describe
'148201' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQG' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
aaad53b98b4c35eb6abca2861aa05a33
1d5eab3057560746c55195520dd843eb77875013
'2011-11-17T23:42:44-05:00'
describe
'45313' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQH' 'sip-files00028.pro'
a4b2d79ead2070e7e8b775558b81399c
22fcf417ba900c00069a5dccc09f7dfc6ba982d2
'2011-11-17T23:34:22-05:00'
describe
'45901' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQI' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
8b44ee717d0c67a07f3d5a8acef8d199
5f74b5874922c7b6e8a65630416221f72cefb55c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQJ' 'sip-files00028.tif'
02eed8fb3cb5912996faf7771de3f1ff
b9fc77f0b761503a19dc3afc73203b3c7e8fdbb0
describe
'1785' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQK' 'sip-files00028.txt'
80d5f6d98fed46879c878c7df38fc1a1
9dc74b08157ff02a46c24772d07febbc0b302bed
'2011-11-17T23:38:17-05:00'
describe
'10906' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQL' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
94a20a1da65ad70ac90cc33805678580
7f1855ed6a8c95d04e0a5ddef4c7242f52377077
'2011-11-17T23:38:06-05:00'
describe
'346944' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQM' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
76348b3d27cc21e5a896c45894e54cd8
d753a021d1e96697ca29d82d5cb94149bb3ceda5
describe
'145520' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQN' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
956b171d773d40be4803d55cfa5b2ad0
94d5574e370bf5aefea4cb3e436af5d04eba211e
'2011-11-17T23:42:17-05:00'
describe
'43062' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQO' 'sip-files00029.pro'
ddca36c2a9ef1bcb8c1017acd84b2b4e
257981873034db2932fdeb0195342a03794ec295
describe
'45039' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQP' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
a061c7ce7806068a320d980b4f9ae9d2
aa7be43c918ec9c526edee6de452702cedbb7fb6
'2011-11-17T23:43:22-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQQ' 'sip-files00029.tif'
026ad88aaafccbdfddaeed9d96380dc9
156a6985d5c305d355832a71f3cc13f09da4468a
'2011-11-17T23:36:58-05:00'
describe
'1748' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQR' 'sip-files00029.txt'
49e4db788c8d23067bc958f26484a7a0
ff622b32d70d40e7d1a1431ba177b7c192f60908
describe
'10689' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQS' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
4a4fffbc3c8172eb5c66330b89cc1962
d93faaabba589bae7198b1b32d8c6178b2cfff60
'2011-11-17T23:43:00-05:00'
describe
'347053' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQT' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
25e608ebfbbf70be035d7fb5dc61bcae
c41a21b531321835160042c44d967398d516ff9e
describe
'119313' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQU' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
ffec3ecc6cba56479a4c80bad060913f
0666ed9d6c3f9739566e25d703ff3fb0fb7fea9b
describe
'35730' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQV' 'sip-files00030.pro'
909e00a684f6f7cd71a6bc3a162d1f3a
d2a2202e1f0b21bb176f006b2a75dc130f9964a6
describe
'36821' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQW' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
97fbaa9114d296346d8e8c3c702aaf98
8c7c4f328c6ca70ca823b958d1777bc142e74228
'2011-11-17T23:42:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQX' 'sip-files00030.tif'
dba33bd920088d5c007251b83a5777ad
0f57e17d1dff7d2c9bf92148eeac192c34597691
'2011-11-17T23:35:20-05:00'
describe
'1424' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQY' 'sip-files00030.txt'
026404795d4e79036467edc2513bb0ca
e6c9fd783e3395ec6ffdfd02c40a075309597eec
'2011-11-17T23:37:38-05:00'
describe
'8326' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEQZ' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
005e344b540a97bf0d77c23a31f60f0a
b6b7ff86bfa3d2d41402128ef2d97c7a6a61d7fe
'2011-11-17T23:38:41-05:00'
describe
'347059' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERA' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
e7ba8cd04514327d9e38ec15c60910b4
e2bf62d02ecb793276f876a5eba8ea29c3611eff
'2011-11-17T23:46:40-05:00'
describe
'120769' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERB' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
af84eb124a67997fd6ded55dfcbf1cc6
e7cf895671a480f562a934e7df10fa815a362054
'2011-11-17T23:40:00-05:00'
describe
'26737' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERC' 'sip-files00031.pro'
abe2af62a016d963f48c329828ff920a
60539f8ddefd22bebf869c4058589156879362a7
'2011-11-17T23:42:56-05:00'
describe
'36674' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERD' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
eecda448d0c8e996a77b671639c4a4e1
e175a955674310c6b0c577332678b421744f0554
'2011-11-17T23:37:58-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERE' 'sip-files00031.tif'
ff6b6c1e85d1a22dd9a8735434977f32
cb7211a4388297faddee3a518d7567b777bf7840
'2011-11-17T23:35:01-05:00'
describe
'1121' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERF' 'sip-files00031.txt'
94733ede87d3f3cebd27370df404ec5b
bb822284984d82268a35ec6ef0e876acc2517986
describe
'9379' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERG' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
74b56e5543b4f4c38634bea546ba323e
4d5cd5a7e1efcd82a604b1475f8e81ac7387c1fb
'2011-11-17T23:44:15-05:00'
describe
'346934' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERH' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
dc613a2c10b079deb2d132881087f745
25f1d472be212284fd3907f30cc605b878e9afbe
describe
'135725' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERI' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
7716c865c67433747a23865f805a69f7
7522723bd737326690642dfccfd0063f9ce5fcfd
describe
'41170' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERJ' 'sip-files00032.pro'
0b07f237df264e45cfea8f0bdc8edde0
1fd7e360df7560726e484212d5980038cfd4e7f1
describe
'42449' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERK' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
ba881f1011b2f1fc98623567f42e4108
9c8cd0351830db037bdf69e3f21db6f4036dcbfa
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERL' 'sip-files00032.tif'
efb797cde5d567ff542d268257a2a81a
5d812115a43a3a45414c8dd30f92ff7efd963e1b
describe
'1631' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERM' 'sip-files00032.txt'
a2ad4ca506d520bdf8d0ba438a305d1b
4c6a53fcde0dc128bb5a0c3217abdcbd24158dff
'2011-11-17T23:44:32-05:00'
describe
'10614' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERN' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
18d6304cbef020f976ebdb05c44c1740
d7ed1fcf609b69ac3b30a8fe5de740e19cb4a7e0
'2011-11-17T23:46:10-05:00'
describe
'347013' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERO' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
365f70adc66ee6ec2c518500ec71c847
76a8ff167299d993754c088aada75270d5614f5b
'2011-11-17T23:41:50-05:00'
describe
'149571' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERP' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
48171d0b2e10cbf0525cb46cae1ed4d2
963f06eab55ee038987e99aea5074535d5745851
describe
'44718' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERQ' 'sip-files00033.pro'
524bff654a1d38ae78c5d6997a5f0347
d62da962f891676ae5a1651464dd2ab2a223d61d
'2011-11-17T23:37:56-05:00'
describe
'46696' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERR' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
2caf450d66db9494af2a9cb7d52e5d05
bc46646e79306fce071ed073ba425c9266397e08
'2011-11-17T23:41:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERS' 'sip-files00033.tif'
445d430c3071a1ec494873d2832c85cb
cb3466974c235aa53402036b2416b52d792d6c99
describe
'1757' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERT' 'sip-files00033.txt'
87fba6e9f421e2e64b7069485e201fa0
115c3adf7d6fd35b43999ca6b62b937ba95fe761
describe
'11269' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERU' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
dbc582215063d3d27a41876635c89b69
a890edeacc3658e2859e32ed1e94b7c52c46cb2e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERV' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
cc955ec3994927228374f2b343b42f12
f5069bd928aecd3f0870085b998cbcbb9a3ce4e2
'2011-11-17T23:38:13-05:00'
describe
'152354' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERW' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
8c9d02ffbe8a5a200bd341695355b4e9
c1b4b74d6a1a7d0f8c5541e0daed3fb02d47a9a0
'2011-11-17T23:43:17-05:00'
describe
'46935' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERX' 'sip-files00034.pro'
e38a4af11e36e78a5093473366f94929
69e3abf2ece0108373146b9b685a2a5b91ec4941
describe
'46820' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERY' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
495f7d19028fa16428c4b6ec576d3f63
64441382236389eb5f2fed8104e3307dc5a00dec
'2011-11-17T23:35:23-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABERZ' 'sip-files00034.tif'
2e3ef96325ed6b20931bc15482b0f758
a1aff11d979e36753bec74aa583dc7a05c16cf6f
'2011-11-17T23:39:44-05:00'
describe
'1838' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESA' 'sip-files00034.txt'
faa2130c9e709c297033d3b223d50b6a
2c006afe66eb40260e0991bb17ac129ebcfa50eb
'2011-11-17T23:37:40-05:00'
describe
'10900' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESB' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
eacf73f7389602e03a3d0dd3bbea16fd
091f064ecf63e7579f27d0e7883baa13c3b1fc47
'2011-11-17T23:42:31-05:00'
describe
'346979' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESC' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
3e8f0a41b98ebcd4af3fd4741343d8ee
eff64cac48b6e5a5f52164ae519e57dc9124c2a1
'2011-11-17T23:41:35-05:00'
describe
'146797' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESD' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
186fa8d5a189c8fa5a2bb0418495b8ea
e39e7e8597379d161f11761cf51a244b4904f1d0
'2011-11-17T23:45:42-05:00'
describe
'44223' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESE' 'sip-files00035.pro'
164b6c385798adcc3cc9cb01a303ac05
b97b69970109fe6067385c1f780190e5ccdf9ed4
'2011-11-17T23:36:20-05:00'
describe
'45883' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESF' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
10b7acfd499a346168cf4947b2bbbda3
d08cc3defd45791720cb7c84aef1792d8192a171
'2011-11-17T23:38:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESG' 'sip-files00035.tif'
633f88f43183de583f2344d0f0c09bcc
4d71bbd001e91321a19f93a9cafb73685ec774d7
'2011-11-17T23:38:38-05:00'
describe
'1788' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESH' 'sip-files00035.txt'
6b980bca04ab0ad66ec73c8b0c811ab7
37507fd53bad5be1971e2f6d4dcb33550b24211f
'2011-11-17T23:35:54-05:00'
describe
'10431' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESI' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
ba96ab89cd3e8c3d766173564859a53c
0a81681a0c1485f7fe7bcb7825c3811ef92af8e0
describe
'347042' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESJ' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
68d6408344093559beb563178ad5254c
14906bb0264bde4ed16a682ab1bd5d69db23ebf2
'2011-11-17T23:39:34-05:00'
describe
'147302' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESK' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
d35185ff8680dfedf155f57eb26343d1
1d19bd90fb8c8f072ce758cfb14bc799b73dd74a
'2011-11-17T23:40:55-05:00'
describe
'45282' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESL' 'sip-files00036.pro'
75bbae7a6c19fc820c4e603185d12bb0
99c56e5b4e4db3605f256ea9a450a59bb0543e37
'2011-11-17T23:41:16-05:00'
describe
'45673' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESM' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
a038c0e71893eddfc40135da89829194
30fd3b0658215ae19161e5a5e80edce393894318
'2011-11-17T23:46:03-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESN' 'sip-files00036.tif'
a682913d7a439312704ae6bd381bbcab
88644eead71191ba69ceb4ac1be074e0eebeaddf
'2011-11-17T23:35:25-05:00'
describe
'1776' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESO' 'sip-files00036.txt'
4581d9d45602ec954ff7186d943a920f
48292dc18cc3be30245c471443e2076810fa0292
describe
'10699' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESP' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
5135d98e94dbf146328f09125da14c4a
cb6ce922a6d61c453ab1aa3fb62d03a3a770d5dc
'2011-11-17T23:35:02-05:00'
describe
'346876' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESQ' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
0414af263f54a4884008f327b1adc96f
22ae862fefe4dd2c7176c78a49d36c8e982810be
'2011-11-17T23:35:00-05:00'
describe
'151890' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESR' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
e437549b556428e5cc2b726c3d6f75e2
6d8a10275e1097da2229dc5fe8a2b1778a3a0403
describe
'46496' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESS' 'sip-files00037.pro'
da38cbfc7193f925ac0e0e1f0729c86e
5bf66091e73e3e32648fbcfca0369cfdf1335542
'2011-11-17T23:42:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEST' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
d45b49edd31690c84ab21c8dfe3af7ad
69285d174ba8ca9b4e7654d27fb4e6ddacb85861
'2011-11-17T23:41:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESU' 'sip-files00037.tif'
e5a4597b1ec595befcaae305cea30e82
6489a2f97ef5a0a4eb61f3b379234216b32d00b5
'2011-11-17T23:41:46-05:00'
describe
'1923' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESV' 'sip-files00037.txt'
52d8ec46946a41578f4f7cbc58471b7a
a8b5acd79726f06975b7c1b72af83d0b015c4c01
describe
Invalid character
'10471' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESW' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
43549c6ee2746639e5d9a5de0deba059
0f4431efa7144076ce6104b80ae691cd286047e1
'2011-11-17T23:38:36-05:00'
describe
'347060' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESX' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
8f7be5c9d452ca64e22a2743ca70c0a1
30cf44427f1247046d359d4b5671eb28749785da
describe
'137223' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESY' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
cfa051ddba62e3d0811428524af03f9c
a923990a084461c00bdc9920e709686194c2137c
'2011-11-17T23:38:28-05:00'
describe
'42477' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABESZ' 'sip-files00038.pro'
820c973b8b43612cf2736ba6feed8f5a
12f500b59fe8aa4881243c6ee0388c54bd74f05d
'2011-11-17T23:44:23-05:00'
describe
'42694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETA' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
2feaaa2de5b98d1e1cd3138da174ff7f
33de6512d3c23616f9c9e9870313ddedcb316eed
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETB' 'sip-files00038.tif'
e9d07dc2d7beb9ed0d64c41fc1d8c013
a60e8522c59f21ca7aa7d7060d36e1f80e1b3c46
'2011-11-17T23:37:28-05:00'
describe
'1707' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETC' 'sip-files00038.txt'
6cf6081c87d92e9be52d32503b0c9f2e
0b9afae9dc9501cbb5d119821dc72417087c785f
'2011-11-17T23:43:36-05:00'
describe
'9829' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETD' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
a8f3130e8ed95bf249dacfe2d0301191
fc97234e5737ee3cca09fcefc5d3bdf5cc964d50
'2011-11-17T23:34:59-05:00'
describe
'347025' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETE' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
fa482b42e09132482085e12d195384f4
999ea8feb7e140f2d98372b3327f7224af38d5e2
'2011-11-17T23:41:15-05:00'
describe
'152467' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETF' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
dbe83ab1f68125119e083017a40f5c6f
5f38c98ccd76250ad01791d8348fb7d57fff48df
'2011-11-17T23:46:26-05:00'
describe
'1417' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETG' 'sip-files00039.pro'
733f6f6c63495c57f246507cc4d2b727
45e18d5a9ad12c65c6503f937762f709517a181f
'2011-11-17T23:34:48-05:00'
describe
'38619' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETH' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
fc6c90c596d6330ad2c75bad9e275113
3119f8358623d2da8f7d3d5a5abbfbdc426a9ac9
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETI' 'sip-files00039.tif'
c22a375d24445967c68e36929feb87c9
c6f4693690fba198c0282657e018a47fb00bc96c
'2011-11-17T23:43:51-05:00'
describe
'122' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETJ' 'sip-files00039.txt'
b270ffbb69e05b583a77c14ae589f772
086e2e2859c6c49b365505cd419c504ea08598c5
describe
'9400' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETK' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
7d89772c11c86687d2c923d4e0cd3c00
f1088caa831d5a7124fbc44df59ed02ecf8f1986
'2011-11-17T23:34:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETL' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
46f3f8c7fa1d6067d80ad5eaab06a409
6d214221c6f397a0c4248b71e5c58b6a41759220
describe
'146562' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETM' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
2478fd5dbccfa3ab45575ac13e89bcfc
9084f6d0b05271ec1c29011097a16c1205691ef0
'2011-11-17T23:39:18-05:00'
describe
'43827' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETN' 'sip-files00041.pro'
af659d022a4268067729de3b9acbebcb
d80273fe53d5086ff26a9960fac4b89a14009ef6
describe
'45028' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETO' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
23904135856ac0bae997bcf546ad3fbf
1ca623164a856f366de38d08f326f05c7ae00962
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETP' 'sip-files00041.tif'
73142d1df8e503e16ac56d02c3f4bf52
4527c8cb782223e8acbc8f630e38dee18d27582d
'2011-11-17T23:42:50-05:00'
describe
'1863' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETQ' 'sip-files00041.txt'
b74e1c4ef17736afae25045a45c54043
5fad067c576116d433499b6bd821cfddeefa1831
'2011-11-17T23:47:16-05:00'
describe
'11021' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETR' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
33203b123624c70808fd3aea6deb73ad
98ee3e0fbd9137355ca6fafa5ec023d702479c3c
'2011-11-17T23:45:33-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETS' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
df4a69888826a0ca3e807e413f85f040
d77496693fda902b131fb5f56e96230f4f45d863
'2011-11-17T23:41:10-05:00'
describe
'137051' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETT' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
0da863c0e22210c3b4170e128f07fdc9
1c9507946b40b82c16b9d176a01898f492069dbc
'2011-11-17T23:38:30-05:00'
describe
'41436' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETU' 'sip-files00042.pro'
65619132cbc5736900406dc716f9e8d3
c2461b0fd2c5622b5bea8806daff0bc8303a627a
'2011-11-17T23:35:27-05:00'
describe
'42321' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETV' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
7fd4c2df0ed0ab441d2d51f900917feb
f8d6e329d7c0b2288f3d19881525de21ce624f3c
'2011-11-17T23:38:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETW' 'sip-files00042.tif'
49def36acd31f5f36312696228a551f1
8f6840be1188903368b36fd39822ba5ce5d07182
'2011-11-17T23:46:07-05:00'
describe
'1697' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETX' 'sip-files00042.txt'
e2a3159bde256c2e84a6573386bb0dc9
4229520e9443500bd8d388c290bc8abe99a16737
'2011-11-17T23:46:12-05:00'
describe
'10613' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETY' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
17a210c68aaadf9025055f5f564c5d24
4591b44c2d4d62241c51d63fc783d636bbbce89a
'2011-11-17T23:44:17-05:00'
describe
'347000' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABETZ' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
33d2e2ac4d01f4ed1831c6529b99181c
593271f6249bcc509ed4c9400ce7aba40ebc878c
describe
'137998' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUA' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
9f47e4561c8a23da2f37b4ab676cab36
bf93266dc1ab52ee92b934c2c9dce171758544ac
describe
'40441' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUB' 'sip-files00043.pro'
65b26496532ce253b59dcf59dcaae9c0
2b3663ad5b53898a27a1f072af22401c39595006
describe
'43176' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUC' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
3809436c509acee61dddc966190bb6cc
a12b67f4860a4e22a650283c16398dd973926db6
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUD' 'sip-files00043.tif'
adac9ff6839a390febb7088775444a2e
be704ac70671d1f5f37caab2e4b83569c931857c
'2011-11-17T23:47:28-05:00'
describe
'1622' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUE' 'sip-files00043.txt'
88d8cbe444ac7b324060a2b067329f32
4b2087507aab6a89a4957ceb78c1a1f5c27c66cb
describe
'10432' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUF' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
d84e4b89b1db78f717f3db366c09989e
cc93423eaf7c739ef77c8d301949564176b2958e
'2011-11-17T23:37:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUG' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
34828d44ebee3c7a0441cd3bf721fab0
364675e12c642bb41f92619407fe3df3e7d873e6
'2011-11-17T23:46:47-05:00'
describe
'143814' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUH' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
7eb55187b230f9fc8e2b7b2d9fdd4bec
307a71fbcb1882c63a192c134ed977faf31e6c01
describe
'43582' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUI' 'sip-files00044.pro'
f5e7bc43dc24f70503e983fe48362042
9f70575d1db7bbeaa1fb5a250ccfbfb02106dc6d
describe
'45083' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUJ' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
79666fc542269927816e5d03f2686308
afef2a8d439e6f35f186dcf4bea7843f38251e23
'2011-11-17T23:39:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUK' 'sip-files00044.tif'
73d93fb83a9edda331ed6385881aad50
6186a5276267bf43ff2c5bf8843f16be389dffcf
'2011-11-17T23:36:43-05:00'
describe
'1743' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUL' 'sip-files00044.txt'
65ab5f5d49729ed23f913c1f00faf059
fc5f9568ff866cc835e6780b8f36e7b6ea57c8ee
describe
'10490' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUM' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
f0947226cf75ec8f89358f5c11e1ab00
a2722503f6e7ee9c1f3e2bc9f2603c7a59632299
'2011-11-17T23:42:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUN' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
b0a177859176ac8fdfa73949214ad390
ce3b1d5670f2cdf09b5fcc93fad7af82da56aea3
'2011-11-17T23:41:34-05:00'
describe
'154429' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUO' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
b6e143d429f45046dd36665562423bcf
8c031a75885386a150b736208f200ac7440f15b7
'2011-11-17T23:35:37-05:00'
describe
'45802' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUP' 'sip-files00045.pro'
ed35171ebcd8655ff01a4e8bd45e16d5
ed6a1abb48d002ecffb365a05a437c6f93712f6e
describe
'48070' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUQ' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
a71acc86505af764b491d98487c3e7d3
e22afed8eb57bdaf87ea77f6b5e835a4f3a32f67
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUR' 'sip-files00045.tif'
442d01bcd7cbd60eb89272f2fc9d23b0
baf9c0d62983a157a7a69f6fdc17614f608525c3
'2011-11-17T23:40:28-05:00'
describe
'1798' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUS' 'sip-files00045.txt'
55372a8f879f88f47255e860c9524ab0
0681962ae489d7a57a6ba053beebc66525b07231
'2011-11-17T23:45:22-05:00'
describe
'10944' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUT' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
de3b957a31dc84bfbdf822e1f29997a4
baefca08ec4cf50d1274a5af59f966db408612b5
describe
'346975' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUU' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
eb749fd8ef8ec4ceed55ed0376c9301e
b8a556a8d48962f7d66cea0de09db778cf0c2d65
describe
'148321' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUV' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
c3db5c0ac7fc74559f650f2e74622631
1d42951ef97b75dfb1b192c0c5eab3787ef7fd0a
describe
'45101' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUW' 'sip-files00046.pro'
6fae9ab1dbd39bde0e410f3f517821a9
049a4063823866babfa0a0172aaffb0c6fc706ee
'2011-11-17T23:35:09-05:00'
describe
'45846' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUX' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
53221eaf1e7ffcee319992f4068951f2
7d9702e3728f6f7d3fc7f0198dfc8a24da40fb31
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUY' 'sip-files00046.tif'
909589cff7b01d7220bff6afb4af51b2
536e82c67a63203924e14a0ef684e2fa452e4fe8
'2011-11-17T23:41:48-05:00'
describe
'1795' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEUZ' 'sip-files00046.txt'
0280fe6af332424710cebf741af08df1
efbe53384d8cc49679e541a21f6cff96b0d9d347
'2011-11-17T23:34:58-05:00'
describe
'10739' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVA' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
120589ce9923f18ee436ea4abf67afa1
c7653cecd0f5251d4a8b4e9b4e8e8b612b548275
'2011-11-17T23:40:09-05:00'
describe
'347038' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVB' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
9d5848a2a0d727e0b0407288c62d2175
32351a41399def38e02f6efe24a0eb93622697b4
'2011-11-17T23:39:57-05:00'
describe
'141172' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVC' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
e5d87a77ee70e5abfa80aaa62aeb68d3
ae3e77ef980124b5377478b130d419a8a82d85ca
'2011-11-17T23:34:45-05:00'
describe
'43096' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVD' 'sip-files00047.pro'
58c2392f1b7fab6546b4d72f169b86e1
f2f51316525b3b71a66871975cb7f33526315259
'2011-11-17T23:35:16-05:00'
describe
'43169' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVE' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
5dccf87d47cefa727f0bcf1664190192
3f4df6093addad6bdf3dd527b9955b04c8014658
'2011-11-17T23:39:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVF' 'sip-files00047.tif'
e53c45e2a05563d56a09dbef52c7a2d2
bf93b3e9c11cf87f8b3fcd5347e78bdacde97046
'2011-11-17T23:36:36-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVG' 'sip-files00047.txt'
6608c2510614a9dd82e9be900cbf4024
517ad3acb948f006bb125849733e546acefa8697
'2011-11-17T23:38:22-05:00'
describe
'10312' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVH' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
b6f411adfc73d6ea86f00f9bbe98bceb
d5a883f54e5443f73981cad467d443eb8a18c370
'2011-11-17T23:38:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVI' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
f5088ce4a36a910fb99cf70ebc939464
8af2d32cbcc658626169fdfac39f8fd99bc6f4b4
'2011-11-17T23:37:01-05:00'
describe
'142696' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVJ' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
2f39b78836050ed2ac136f63da75805f
43ac28ae318c177e0ab27e26c3af104aa43081fc
describe
'43267' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVK' 'sip-files00048.pro'
25a1eb8887b72ede25d820c79e2eab64
9d5f8faea6a7af25e887dbf7972387747b330dd7
'2011-11-17T23:36:47-05:00'
describe
'44609' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVL' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
c17f727a74ba97ed21a48eee99c46a4d
768426c8d13aa5de5131ad85ebf106187a0c808c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVM' 'sip-files00048.tif'
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describe
'1713' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVN' 'sip-files00048.txt'
4c1f88991d7f8926eb39d29244bba064
4c9206d79448e7a59417c581fd51c1109a203d51
'2011-11-17T23:43:06-05:00'
describe
'10694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVO' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
739f94f31bd3e211e31c70dedf82de51
6a0208264fadb2e016cd1e3384ab5a9ccd6e9b27
'2011-11-17T23:42:06-05:00'
describe
'347024' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVP' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
95f7f6d020f963b0bd0c2ef47499954d
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'2011-11-17T23:45:46-05:00'
describe
'122029' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVQ' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
8fb22d9dc27f2a4a7b69a727d12241ac
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describe
'34868' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVR' 'sip-files00049.pro'
87fadde61c2d12c7dbc4c95be64b1124
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describe
'37687' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVS' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
2ba03c3ea6a201ed3d406e187ad712f3
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVT' 'sip-files00049.tif'
f3b330b391045990963e7c986c0174ab
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describe
'1376' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVU' 'sip-files00049.txt'
fcd30cea3ba8942150c0bcf2004dea9f
307f445ea669d1b403c0d5a3fe15c88a7cde11e2
'2011-11-17T23:35:50-05:00'
describe
'9116' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVV' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
daaac89c0d6c9e4cea0c99d907397bea
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'2011-11-17T23:36:08-05:00'
describe
'347045' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVW' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
b8a465ba4238ca806da50d22b7bc6f19
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'2011-11-17T23:45:27-05:00'
describe
'135325' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVX' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
e45cccae0eb7e1a240871ff2f612e345
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'2011-11-17T23:34:53-05:00'
describe
'30537' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVY' 'sip-files00050.pro'
173cd27b210701a8a0eea8cd29453ac8
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'2011-11-17T23:38:44-05:00'
describe
'40107' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEVZ' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
950912437f460ccb450ffbf7561c28bc
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'2011-11-17T23:40:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWA' 'sip-files00050.tif'
1d3029f80e772a9095677b83ff311dd8
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describe
'1266' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWB' 'sip-files00050.txt'
ce695cfb0b743089f0cdb082ed1bc8a6
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'2011-11-17T23:43:31-05:00'
describe
'9703' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWC' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
002db34d4d56455da941b5f6c8d2cb4d
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'2011-11-17T23:38:46-05:00'
describe
'347056' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWD' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
9846d21d875a89c9c86f375b8b44d5e8
dfd46251ac3fa3cf8ff3553fd5fe108db1b6efd8
'2011-11-17T23:42:48-05:00'
describe
'144697' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWE' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
2fd452624e32358527ba92a057e6f34d
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describe
'43976' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWF' 'sip-files00051.pro'
080f8203854c073f62575e8d52ca573e
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'2011-11-17T23:42:40-05:00'
describe
'45062' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWG' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
95453b41373ca9df37325f519b7822b0
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'2011-11-17T23:36:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWH' 'sip-files00051.tif'
926e0689ad9a21ccaefefa439e56f3f6
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'2011-11-17T23:44:58-05:00'
describe
'1749' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWI' 'sip-files00051.txt'
5a27c54992a60fce601ec600163663c5
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'2011-11-17T23:47:03-05:00'
describe
'10422' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWJ' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
6fd345a2c520ccb47b018f96b868a14c
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWK' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:40-05:00'
describe
'139473' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWL' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
acc464c6c5136c157807a89c187e5c6a
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'2011-11-17T23:37:27-05:00'
describe
'42739' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWM' 'sip-files00052.pro'
f240737199a5407bdc395cf32ed3ca44
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'2011-11-17T23:41:32-05:00'
describe
'43628' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWN' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
f3312496fc00421564603fdd824ceaaf
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'2011-11-17T23:43:26-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWO' 'sip-files00052.tif'
8b966f2fd8b7dd61717e3190b592932e
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'2011-11-17T23:38:25-05:00'
describe
'1689' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWP' 'sip-files00052.txt'
6838f13e4ee26343dae1a2c26bff206a
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'2011-11-17T23:44:03-05:00'
describe
'10446' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWQ' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
0e90dc43b4ae6e67bfb30168fd8e1a07
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'2011-11-17T23:43:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWR' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
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describe
'146042' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWS' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
d0e62128802fb51490ddfd0e7392620e
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describe
'44096' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWT' 'sip-files00053.pro'
29cdd08304eadc36896e81f77655e445
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describe
'45729' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWU' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
a8e47d118dfb479b46ffe444d70137ff
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'2011-11-17T23:35:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWV' 'sip-files00053.tif'
ca52e830a693f322657272a7a7fe7c12
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'2011-11-17T23:45:10-05:00'
describe
'1766' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWW' 'sip-files00053.txt'
eca1f3656c7bed37708986ba781d3c4a
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describe
'10647' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWX' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:35-05:00'
describe
'346956' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWY' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
0553454d4e8c91d28a1719c4e9a03947
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'2011-11-17T23:40:23-05:00'
describe
'139765' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEWZ' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
aa89cc013144ee8e8dd877245b22ff70
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describe
'42530' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXA' 'sip-files00054.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:18-05:00'
describe
'43362' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXB' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
a69b7d1bd8bc13fe7e615153f6f39042
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXC' 'sip-files00054.tif'
d341b95e9b1d2d6f2f79c38fccbfe9ab
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'2011-11-17T23:41:06-05:00'
describe
'1714' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXD' 'sip-files00054.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:18-05:00'
describe
'10544' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXE' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:03-05:00'
describe
'347031' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXF' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:30-05:00'
describe
'135401' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXG' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:44-05:00'
describe
'41156' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXH' 'sip-files00055.pro'
bf6832cac90dad463d2819736c46a5a7
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'2011-11-17T23:42:36-05:00'
describe
'42524' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXI' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
8dfe5c6c3aee4b21ff6c250cf12ed693
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'2011-11-17T23:46:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXJ' 'sip-files00055.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:59-05:00'
describe
'1639' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXK' 'sip-files00055.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:58-05:00'
describe
'10151' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXL' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXM' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:34-05:00'
describe
'150513' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXN' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:01-05:00'
describe
'45610' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXO' 'sip-files00056.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:12-05:00'
describe
'47269' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXP' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
08815337522ecbd27f5af96e426bf4cd
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXQ' 'sip-files00056.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:57-05:00'
describe
'1789' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXR' 'sip-files00056.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:01-05:00'
describe
'10818' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXS' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
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describe
'347057' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXT' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
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describe
'140652' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXU' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:49-05:00'
describe
'42994' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXV' 'sip-files00057.pro'
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describe
'44175' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXW' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXX' 'sip-files00057.tif'
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describe
'1724' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXY' 'sip-files00057.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:25-05:00'
describe
'10207' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEXZ' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
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describe
'346958' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYA' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:55-05:00'
describe
'139719' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYB' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
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describe
'42592' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYC' 'sip-files00058.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:14-05:00'
describe
'43681' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYD' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYE' 'sip-files00058.tif'
ca62103e44c8eadda552b60c2f67b0e2
fa8ae042d35931cb4f2c1b92b683acf166907be2
'2011-11-17T23:38:53-05:00'
describe
'1694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYF' 'sip-files00058.txt'
e4f80c656e91d6c3db202c411cae4989
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'2011-11-17T23:43:08-05:00'
describe
'10359' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYG' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
438223402ce09ebe0556397c26b18a0f
358a47f70d63a2b6391196ada208ebc65a6ba8c6
'2011-11-17T23:35:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYH' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
94b8394f945cf36a0ad43cc5be70c6a7
f9c855382e1110f31a7e761fe7ef79afe91292b1
'2011-11-17T23:45:59-05:00'
describe
'135820' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYI' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
33353dd5dcef78f8377fc9e0b1f0f419
167ae3787ced0afe7b06a373ee9083ec3e7d5b42
describe
'41308' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYJ' 'sip-files00059.pro'
6e5f15062d32fa190483108e6f11cdc0
ff4959de30228c6264dbd430b9c0aa4f4847c57f
'2011-11-17T23:46:58-05:00'
describe
'42616' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYK' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
43462c0f60c4bae4c79dde09716e5fc8
22239d0f82773daa88c657077a818524aff9931b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYL' 'sip-files00059.tif'
177df68763c7106008c57f9e9b9ed259
298be9c2109d2db549126af5f95f70c8498ecc13
'2011-11-17T23:41:03-05:00'
describe
'1635' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYM' 'sip-files00059.txt'
451340305fbe75c31704a325d2675888
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describe
'10547' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYN' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
6e9110ff9f81fd9d7cb45bc8a5f6331c
a35bb9437a9825f22d1ba67b7a783e01d0810ddd
'2011-11-17T23:42:51-05:00'
describe
'347006' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYO' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
e2100a0220bd7d7cd4af34ae764b377c
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describe
'133110' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYP' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
4c4947aee464502b62670e5b18e15f07
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describe
'40535' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYQ' 'sip-files00060.pro'
b9343b5bd1ad47dbf01e71e44303ddeb
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'2011-11-17T23:39:36-05:00'
describe
'41279' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYR' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
633fca25f0d8f3260e9cf4906b1cd666
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'2011-11-17T23:41:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYS' 'sip-files00060.tif'
cb83af30f67040c6d8598c10fddbf09d
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'2011-11-17T23:46:25-05:00'
describe
'1629' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYT' 'sip-files00060.txt'
19b0e3a3b710e03053247bbb8b6b6f89
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'2011-11-17T23:39:50-05:00'
describe
'10297' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYU' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
b6c0f15adc90016ce336b5e35aaa2d71
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'2011-11-17T23:39:47-05:00'
describe
'346936' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYV' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
aa2a12a85f5a09b907019d30bf83ee4e
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'2011-11-17T23:43:21-05:00'
describe
'140051' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYW' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
4e40000e46b8eecf9de3cea69e57ea11
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describe
'42339' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYX' 'sip-files00061.pro'
eb0b306d2aad40689bf3913a08c27d9d
ea2de5c8ae7ed0929c977fdec63d61ea90c3a9de
'2011-11-17T23:46:33-05:00'
describe
'42758' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYY' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
59ee0b8b6c9ead7054bf69512fff1c97
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'2011-11-17T23:42:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEYZ' 'sip-files00061.tif'
b3164cbcdea93e586f1700e7a39248c7
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'2011-11-17T23:44:52-05:00'
describe
'1673' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZA' 'sip-files00061.txt'
409a4df17ce9af58c6d796f23fe042ba
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describe
'10271' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZB' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZC' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:24-05:00'
describe
'149533' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZD' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:04-05:00'
describe
'45421' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZE' 'sip-files00062.pro'
98101bfce851e21417ef82c101c8ef65
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describe
'46882' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZF' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
5d57a3e959b7352cff0eb62116fc24dc
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'2011-11-17T23:46:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZG' 'sip-files00062.tif'
83f16613410dd15051187b46ce94835a
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'2011-11-17T23:46:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZH' 'sip-files00062.txt'
12c48abd0cb27e451e4b793a2a1221a6
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'2011-11-17T23:42:07-05:00'
describe
'10508' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZI' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
86b31ff6277c6e2c17f0d6a5d82bff92
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'2011-11-17T23:39:28-05:00'
describe
'346982' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZJ' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
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describe
'143473' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZK' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:38-05:00'
describe
'43433' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZL' 'sip-files00063.pro'
65a5313a8835e0cc6d511f0c9e9152fe
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'2011-11-17T23:38:04-05:00'
describe
'44653' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZM' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
ab7bce140a39c821deb7327a7d9e9163
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZN' 'sip-files00063.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:30-05:00'
describe
'1727' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZO' 'sip-files00063.txt'
ec7e412b6e3ae52f9f4b6f6dc1f693ca
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'2011-11-17T23:41:01-05:00'
describe
'10771' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZP' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
7a617b51b767920139727f6b0193ceb1
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZQ' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:16-05:00'
describe
'130639' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZR' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
94d01a873760340d9e3f7717ac2e4766
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'2011-11-17T23:34:51-05:00'
describe
'39779' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZS' 'sip-files00064.pro'
5826459b74d5ca2452e1e6e3bea1c99f
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describe
'40452' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZT' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
684064ef9d866ecec7bd5988d7f2a51f
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'2011-11-17T23:41:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZU' 'sip-files00064.tif'
dc0954b7c8b83e37a61109a23c50be6a
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'2011-11-17T23:40:25-05:00'
describe
'1575' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZV' 'sip-files00064.txt'
043467e5536980812aa0d74188468e8a
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'2011-11-17T23:39:03-05:00'
describe
'9971' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZW' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
0635a462ff9565e6fcbf5f520fddfe8c
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'2011-11-17T23:40:08-05:00'
describe
'347022' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZX' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:39-05:00'
describe
'137997' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZY' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
09ae6ec791e6a46b1ca1feb60b2bc1d1
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describe
'41219' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABEZZ' 'sip-files00065.pro'
26517dc5a7f271309b96c5a0be9e073b
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'2011-11-17T23:42:13-05:00'
describe
'43495' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAA' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
c0f8bc629adc227865d9592e40ae883b
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'2011-11-17T23:40:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAB' 'sip-files00065.tif'
7276506391e2c9e889b1c1ab3aad11d1
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'2011-11-17T23:40:37-05:00'
describe
'1652' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAC' 'sip-files00065.txt'
99bcd54e1e8c8d572654fd2a8e64a3fd
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'2011-11-17T23:36:48-05:00'
describe
'10469' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAD' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
23ebfc9bef11409f30b890e90f58f9aa
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'2011-11-17T23:46:54-05:00'
describe
'347047' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAE' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:32-05:00'
describe
'149969' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAF' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
4ad5a0748fb9ba8af8a377048d56c552
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'2011-11-17T23:37:36-05:00'
describe
'45777' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAG' 'sip-files00066.pro'
38d95577a036ed9073b5af19751716c5
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describe
'46884' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAH' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAI' 'sip-files00066.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:57-05:00'
describe
'1819' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAJ' 'sip-files00066.txt'
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describe
'10880' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAK' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:15-05:00'
describe
'347021' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAL' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
a8674210779fea985b3b5284325e5b40
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'2011-11-17T23:47:29-05:00'
describe
'123892' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAM' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
42e5fa5ca4a090bfcb5f4198b9fd3183
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'2011-11-17T23:44:18-05:00'
describe
'37045' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAN' 'sip-files00067.pro'
120b6cbb2e8434052b58806829ed67a8
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'2011-11-17T23:43:33-05:00'
describe
'38657' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAO' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAP' 'sip-files00067.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:58-05:00'
describe
'1467' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAQ' 'sip-files00067.txt'
1da165320921625e5f2737fbb0b17cda
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'2011-11-17T23:35:33-05:00'
describe
'9271' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAR' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:44-05:00'
describe
'346950' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAS' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:37-05:00'
describe
'126589' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAT' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
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describe
'30507' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAU' 'sip-files00068.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:12-05:00'
describe
'39975' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAV' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
fe8b4388a86fedf0b9ed06a905d1271e
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAW' 'sip-files00068.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:54-05:00'
describe
'1262' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAX' 'sip-files00068.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:13-05:00'
describe
'9666' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAY' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:41-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFAZ' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
f7036c83cec888b74b531c20e8c0e868
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'2011-11-17T23:36:21-05:00'
describe
'133311' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBA' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
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describe
'44842' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBB' 'sip-files00069.pro'
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describe
'43592' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBC' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
d8ff3419a1c1a2562001603b762a61cc
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBD' 'sip-files00069.tif'
fb4e58e4116f70a96a4cd918cf6770d2
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'2011-11-17T23:46:48-05:00'
describe
'1790' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBE' 'sip-files00069.txt'
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describe
'10457' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBF' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
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describe
'346992' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBG' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
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describe
'137502' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBH' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
37c07b8a45a42027bee6f87ec89cea0e
ebbc5eeb3db39c86d8a41740e44cb0d912dbccf8
describe
'46660' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBI' 'sip-files00070.pro'
b79bacaefbeed5962cdb8ae6a3de4189
c06d317f4e99d391fc88ea4b74f6efee040b8355
'2011-11-17T23:34:55-05:00'
describe
'44217' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBJ' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
08a50203a9badf6eb64addd26e523454
ddb8288f25dea9925583e2ceb96e8fcce3b44982
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBK' 'sip-files00070.tif'
664a37b433fdada3b00186dcb0b052fa
8592aadd984e129a01a52473099485d5c9a8da47
'2011-11-17T23:35:59-05:00'
describe
'1826' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBL' 'sip-files00070.txt'
76e36698fd32b4a32b967e86d8f44a40
4fb1bb244ac9c60e00ad2179d6e7fade02ca1cc2
'2011-11-17T23:38:39-05:00'
describe
'10407' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBM' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
a41fafd0e7aebe6890e8fe51ca498fd0
aa508cbd0e136f56abb2311e7cf04d779e4bfd43
'2011-11-17T23:41:31-05:00'
describe
'346804' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBN' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
5e033c1fe05d9da0676c5c2f1a30ca42
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describe
'128887' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBO' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
f93ad0bc84c88b44a051cba781592968
3febd3211ac9818b75104f4d6f6dc36a178136ce
'2011-11-17T23:34:30-05:00'
describe
'43334' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBP' 'sip-files00071.pro'
52b84df1cb3ebbea952a9739aa6cc51f
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describe
'42785' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBQ' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
5b32e61d25f7df9894d686b85e8ade3e
9a7642c0e80173fe2a73e95f1c2cff21309b55c9
'2011-11-17T23:46:34-05:00'
describe
'2790784' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBR' 'sip-files00071.tif'
1f6267faee4b87a24d0056125f0bf18a
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'2011-11-17T23:35:13-05:00'
describe
'1712' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBS' 'sip-files00071.txt'
9364f3a1469706d0c753611ec53e7465
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describe
'10356' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBT' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
0a6a1fca121f2b65fb06a2e24da16cd9
415e07774c6e7cd86fb756c3b0368dfb0c5a2e31
describe
'347032' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBU' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
e3a3415aa8ccb01abfafd2990b2db05f
c39740b2c2ef54a1c670021b9a0748031d0fe3d0
'2011-11-17T23:35:03-05:00'
describe
'135785' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBV' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
ceb022cea2e43c8e48d4aff21331b6bc
a04a54bb888608f327fb1232a4ab06bded38d7e7
describe
'45108' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBW' 'sip-files00072.pro'
ada524f124c09bb9cdfc0aca6ef8246a
35f41e5076f200e75b537e487f0f1530952ebf97
'2011-11-17T23:39:42-05:00'
describe
'42753' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBX' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
04c77263d788662259b7e7a519b54e36
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'2011-11-17T23:46:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBY' 'sip-files00072.tif'
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describe
'1771' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFBZ' 'sip-files00072.txt'
8e9cce335cac41d2f8d8d691821e1f47
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describe
'10484' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCA' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
5253322f31cb8097d41c0947c4481e14
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'2011-11-17T23:37:46-05:00'
describe
'346787' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCB' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
fcbb2d8313bb868092ee294e27059534
dbc5672f13fab44bc6a342e1f7cbbd6b44847ef3
'2011-11-17T23:43:13-05:00'
describe
'137033' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCC' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
86fc2b956c4dd1b4d80adfa1103d73d3
cf81e331f9980f74d662d5e2cb79787977584aeb
describe
'46773' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCD' 'sip-files00073.pro'
d104de9513acf0983df92e267111fcc4
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'2011-11-17T23:45:54-05:00'
describe
'44133' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCE' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
8fc6b70b97416ffc3fbdf48b73d80ec2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCF' 'sip-files00073.tif'
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describe
'1877' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCG' 'sip-files00073.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCH' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
6d2d53d7a6cfa5194f745fbb1f52206f
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'2011-11-17T23:36:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCI' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
3c767fb0f4e273b9675339a5dd599a14
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describe
'131385' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCJ' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
8d807eff9b3f7b2de79c8b02c30a852e
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'2011-11-17T23:35:14-05:00'
describe
'45404' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCK' 'sip-files00074.pro'
61a6e77c582b82ccfab804594de2dbdd
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'2011-11-17T23:39:13-05:00'
describe
'42276' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCL' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
025f3eeed485d23b052f2bace4c416dd
bbed4e256ac7d4d4d0fcfe91d3ac32dc98fa4059
'2011-11-17T23:46:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCM' 'sip-files00074.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:21-05:00'
describe
'1781' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCN' 'sip-files00074.txt'
455d1a80d11b65dd11f6f88eb93d1f92
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'2011-11-17T23:46:44-05:00'
describe
'9751' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCO' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
5f844dbf145f3655d9d8820c84f82e40
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describe
'346581' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCP' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
00fc6e61c24090efe7b53ac1f81a7d5d
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describe
'130322' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCQ' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
ddea92e8cf11b7b856c130ed5710e87a
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describe
'44641' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCR' 'sip-files00075.pro'
1386e62b0cf2f6825caaeeebb8b67b24
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describe
'41576' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCS' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
c4d388a4a4ae04e5084c2fe9b59f673b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCT' 'sip-files00075.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:50-05:00'
describe
'1760' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCU' 'sip-files00075.txt'
c6213872bc81dce7203f1560cc9a38be
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describe
'9518' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCV' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
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describe
'346987' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCW' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:06-05:00'
describe
'127750' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCX' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
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describe
'44898' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCY' 'sip-files00076.pro'
5639f132798cfd35be4767d9fcb1488f
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describe
'41003' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFCZ' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDA' 'sip-files00076.tif'
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describe
'1767' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDB' 'sip-files00076.txt'
adf4dcea7c166b80e15d9c624e8b0f4a
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'2011-11-17T23:47:10-05:00'
describe
'9484' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDC' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
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describe
'346742' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDD' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:02-05:00'
describe
'124331' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDE' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
42ef8c3f67f7544c581a4dc852769110
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describe
'41225' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDF' 'sip-files00077.pro'
cb109eaf5d6c0414ac364e22869932bf
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'2011-11-17T23:44:29-05:00'
describe
'40190' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDG' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDH' 'sip-files00077.tif'
1fa34065fbaed220cfedf78a4a83de79
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'2011-11-17T23:34:33-05:00'
describe
'1677' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDI' 'sip-files00077.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:56-05:00'
describe
'9675' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDJ' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDK' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
53bc58f520677f02aef50b817a3b6daa
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describe
'126782' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDL' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:38-05:00'
describe
'43647' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDM' 'sip-files00078.pro'
7b57aa053dad1ddb83954ebfbcad9488
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'2011-11-17T23:42:25-05:00'
describe
'40344' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDN' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
99f36ef98246718c93807d7542b2db86
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDO' 'sip-files00078.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:13-05:00'
describe
'1725' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDP' 'sip-files00078.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:24-05:00'
describe
'9617' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDQ' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
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describe
'346751' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDR' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:54-05:00'
describe
'130711' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDS' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
1c1031f2d9c069a621cf12b9c5b0dee0
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'2011-11-17T23:37:18-05:00'
describe
'45957' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDT' 'sip-files00079.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:29-05:00'
describe
'41292' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDU' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDV' 'sip-files00079.tif'
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describe
'1811' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDW' 'sip-files00079.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:41-05:00'
describe
'9704' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDX' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDY' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:46-05:00'
describe
'135383' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFDZ' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
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describe
'45375' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEA' 'sip-files00080.pro'
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describe
'42930' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEB' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEC' 'sip-files00080.tif'
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describe
'1782' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFED' 'sip-files00080.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:46-05:00'
describe
'10042' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEE' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEF' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
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describe
'122984' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEG' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:07-05:00'
describe
'42983' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEH' 'sip-files00081.pro'
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describe
'39366' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEI' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEJ' 'sip-files00081.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEK' 'sip-files00081.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:32-05:00'
describe
'9554' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEL' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
f23cd6b783ac0c9d68fc229a92e9b5c4
b64b7ef1eb678e0ea18202c6f08a0ba5f33dbebd
'2011-11-17T23:41:28-05:00'
describe
'346985' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEM' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
f8cda337617e3aaf8448cb28da209426
638c76fec95cd444e8a25180b6f00b899a94d7c2
'2011-11-17T23:42:59-05:00'
describe
'131888' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEN' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
3c5fc483db1eb5531e93097cfcfde412
99a38a9b5aa8cc3bcd5a53c9f638835d39d61e57
'2011-11-17T23:35:08-05:00'
describe
'46202' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEO' 'sip-files00082.pro'
732c00176aaa8e122647f247f56671f4
41c09b33ae6e482a3ec20d2febddd6a8a0669c03
'2011-11-17T23:37:12-05:00'
describe
'42976' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEP' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
7166ac31d71c02feff32396896b746db
80c138b9ce3ea84d966853e09d90f3595ef4bd2d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEQ' 'sip-files00082.tif'
2321dae6a762eb1b7e98a9acdbf13ee4
a7d4395320f947446e11be408db7d795dd0fa38b
'2011-11-17T23:37:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFER' 'sip-files00082.txt'
336654ea072bd9c9d424ebaf1918893c
b58ed2e12260c65cc3dbb7828e0043dbf03c134a
describe
'9988' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFES' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
aceb87e192a0d051672454cb0f9053f1
775baace109823056f74371dbd2c30d90c78fb9d
'2011-11-17T23:44:36-05:00'
describe
'346746' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFET' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
49cba3d7dd174774e3300069b722d8ea
ff3fac173f5b26ca8aeced0529b66db9e3cb166e
describe
'115269' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEU' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
95871c4cc3b94be3ce225857be1366a7
6e5cfd3997c4532c3ac6e8d7492ef5e82d37205b
describe
'40661' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEV' 'sip-files00083.pro'
2f8088f4fee12864085d8fc383f912d6
433d7d882af31f39f839ba4760f198c6b1504194
describe
'37203' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEW' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
36d36e52faf322b0d18fbb18450e4f81
d09728fbcccf26e99c3cb2e6a0c91e4d7201a5b3
'2011-11-17T23:45:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEX' 'sip-files00083.tif'
86324cc5fc8bbaec1b91d1985848935f
9ba985ba4e4a1c040976a412d0e53bfbb2621f22
'2011-11-17T23:47:04-05:00'
describe
'1628' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEY' 'sip-files00083.txt'
f3d3a3ae74ab007c57d1bcd87e4d505e
92a89d8586700f2e60df3a7a20c26050fa8f518a
describe
'8815' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFEZ' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
bb962d7211e8cde1257d82e7617fcba8
963b10e4c4d23a938d4949220e0232c1e92e3a26
'2011-11-17T23:35:38-05:00'
describe
'347030' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFA' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
36f9868220de5840c139d0cd9ca8511d
4802127c89450558a2fa4d8468f2e75e2e024010
'2011-11-17T23:38:48-05:00'
describe
'118957' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFB' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
1c5622bf8da45a53a0fb40a0390b8fca
caa8fe32d04bcfd9c8efcda9d454da9811a4cbf0
describe
'32526' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFC' 'sip-files00084.pro'
1c5525d806fcee47a931f705bf22337a
d02478a3c6199d03fde04536cb8f40bb1477c795
describe
'35859' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFD' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
10e38c71cdc05e11a1195ae02a5a73a0
4db1cf392c9d3966b56b5e93d707f89ab47706e7
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFE' 'sip-files00084.tif'
debef99b79dea39707a4871fd8954314
648e689dd611d69fe6cc08a4a686f7788327fb6e
describe
'1322' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFF' 'sip-files00084.txt'
f8ea5b235359687cfa9059abcd29b71d
00d68166b15f25aedae96ef3acd792e234a3966f
describe
'8527' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFG' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
87a030803e7a3fbc314049936781dcc6
89e228fde754e5e3e1abc2a5d4ecdee153b7b1dc
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFH' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
d6a90aae616cc44dc8d01c8b33e34bed
075ddd696070c9aed50a1414bb8a06cb4be3ad7c
describe
'125382' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFI' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
322eedecc54ea5d6d73a9ea571d3d5df
fc2522f1fa61002def3d41eff804ca5a492e728f
describe
'44262' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFJ' 'sip-files00085.pro'
0ff0edbcf9d74a452872912d4633bd99
273502d0749ee7558aee6618579d924c05389597
describe
'39590' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFK' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
64811eb6339b743e188db993b4ec8f38
f2c53f27ad42b359b1803fa82b3694e1d7c5d77d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFL' 'sip-files00085.tif'
0422dd851459b941eef4548e8b74607c
7ecbca00b56c05c746ade346d3c2defdfd540321
'2011-11-17T23:36:38-05:00'
describe
'1763' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFM' 'sip-files00085.txt'
9c283661f03e320819b6013575e3f622
024e344a4f1fb23532148b6c39d1c16f67150ff3
'2011-11-17T23:37:13-05:00'
describe
'9424' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFN' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
c1b9e7a94564537df0a5aeb813356832
3403bdece2a734a0e704524f7359285d1457958c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFO' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
5ee0861d223ce8d77146396f1a578b11
e9fe883b7f4819fcc688bf8808b0f3a908a427be
'2011-11-17T23:38:27-05:00'
describe
'135409' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFP' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
679ad6c3fbecd2803d54c9a60bad080e
dbd0ea5c36503116ff4e4614aa6f3d629f4d6257
describe
'46590' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFQ' 'sip-files00086.pro'
f7c6df8344b5a2b21acd78dcd496c52e
3acf86fff255aaf3e0adb0a3c595e823190fb70e
'2011-11-17T23:40:27-05:00'
describe
'43253' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFR' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
7424b1f98f806ccbfaaa5fb923e3481d
8c3457f660c88576785a10b29a05c02d6f4c5606
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFS' 'sip-files00086.tif'
edadd79b61c5249e4c449398153c7e5d
d9b9af4f39ff121545ec90eae3d3512ee03bde6d
'2011-11-17T23:35:42-05:00'
describe
'1833' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFT' 'sip-files00086.txt'
826f447ee94a104b7f7217891d69612a
d0b734f9d674af21ed03b55ce9269dcc3a16c78d
'2011-11-17T23:39:37-05:00'
describe
'10071' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFU' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
e49abc97b9659ba5a7a9141f39f23f37
0569d614b2e01c3df3ae4a43dfad9f9f224bce31
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFV' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
17fa521fff49bbefd865fff204be792f
03b452e5f58faba90b2c7ce9802ca04c34c6e2da
'2011-11-17T23:42:58-05:00'
describe
'135227' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFW' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
5cc8f35582a86661357b9b781016cb82
1bf864325d8f6a0a5bf3044c308e9e2b4dbbf850
describe
'46743' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFX' 'sip-files00087.pro'
ed2eabfdc9c7f0b670fa8254006f1713
89aef0ae265c72386187843151e1266239f6dcf2
'2011-11-17T23:45:40-05:00'
describe
'42230' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFY' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
46342a49b62a3fb28b15dd0b6f324df8
fcf79356192a221fb8ec1a2d27b7cd8efa56375d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFFZ' 'sip-files00087.tif'
aae25c94e9c2fc4424012da8859c3654
acfcd0ded57ba00fc2fa8054d1ec2739549dc24e
'2011-11-17T23:38:49-05:00'
describe
'1869' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGA' 'sip-files00087.txt'
21e87f97ca555d7fe8886456e2e8c969
24748b19ca1f12fe15b0eaf7846e3862472a9ce9
'2011-11-17T23:42:26-05:00'
describe
'9695' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGB' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
3a23bba75029624ee2c2c74bdef38df0
67d925c912c94eda4351586d459f06b84c4dda09
describe
'347061' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGC' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
9ff8b1844bf0ed69a8a5e50c33db5c5d
04a1b034f76ba7de441b313b0fa00775d775a9f2
describe
'134066' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGD' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
e4a05c7a191c5fabfc1d56aab1704e54
dc210db43d4266ea4320202dd7ef00fbe348c411
describe
'45994' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGE' 'sip-files00088.pro'
89834ba53de54ab057b7339a9120581c
700c98f6a83dc5c7a96950850cce8e0e4463df61
'2011-11-17T23:40:38-05:00'
describe
'43312' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGF' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
5835e3c3608468610e477a1314ff8914
0e7eeb5bca4374f3ef4020af987be959dcf99a99
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGG' 'sip-files00088.tif'
ca60b17c799f4fc95426435c3f4f0640
905029d539ba99081bf7a7d178bcf5989341fe2b
describe
'1808' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGH' 'sip-files00088.txt'
0b9b8a2b4d6919084909650b0189c247
9061ca43db4da06e1acbfe568708a74aa2e72a14
'2011-11-17T23:37:52-05:00'
describe
'9843' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGI' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
6b7e9ec093aeef1be510eb2d43a17508
3003b273cbe57f8972470191ecf5a22f1c706681
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGJ' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
5de26978e72d02cc61b49c58e9532b5c
8744377b2147913833e98ad3ed6c74acf9f6b7ba
'2011-11-17T23:40:46-05:00'
describe
'132478' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGK' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
df756cdb2744836090e474318f18d30a
65ee840b3f87cd7d695d595acda364027fd6adef
'2011-11-17T23:46:59-05:00'
describe
'44630' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGL' 'sip-files00089.pro'
183818fa5dd80d9d5862c1123c14044c
e40276c83325c65907e97415222f172b11263972
describe
'42470' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGM' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
dc06417cb6fae18091cb0df51be007db
917c127462f5d742e6feea46d9a74242e2b1b7dd
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGN' 'sip-files00089.tif'
8517363b9260a8dd9736b7ebc0a2e515
f106aeb4d44c5617e751f6ba168939fd6982f2a7
'2011-11-17T23:34:26-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGO' 'sip-files00089.txt'
1e4a6dead9a2770881cd12deb19519cd
f10d8fb0a996191206a09ec88d3a2cf0501bea24
'2011-11-17T23:42:21-05:00'
describe
'10014' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGP' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
1a269b0245971944b7740334528105a0
239f07c60031e9137ebd00599c032386da0e9620
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGQ' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
7ef758e85699a705808f8ed4b671358f
fb0173acba6e9e46b9a664fad08f6157aa040d0e
describe
'135716' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGR' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
49d4181ecbfd75b8802ab06df1d950c9
61d7c58bf41945eea0d9666a40ebf65c4085ba2a
'2011-11-17T23:38:01-05:00'
describe
'46083' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGS' 'sip-files00090.pro'
78bdd63a76e85aa556c4bcd7db0c0190
db36224977ed0f782db5829651d88b301333a3e3
'2011-11-17T23:41:14-05:00'
describe
'43116' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGT' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
4e820befca936b9040c7a2fb7279e9be
2935386e63eea75d18e8193c2e50a8543ad9520d
'2011-11-17T23:35:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGU' 'sip-files00090.tif'
8354863a299d7ce085d15f327dcd1a8d
f7092d8a5fa4c7fe999006012e0822b31319ed28
describe
'1807' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGV' 'sip-files00090.txt'
73b37a8e24a2f0f76dfb989266b55144
4f4f586005e45364d8fc868c3fab949a1c210528
describe
'10068' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGW' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
0d27118d51096de825d76c862fc3851a
a3c5bc3e8428501fbe021e346e5572d5cd777103
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGX' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
3672f88b63da95d693f4df8ba29e1937
a2a742f4bd5505b8a10ffe9bd61e9f7940e0d65a
'2011-11-17T23:36:32-05:00'
describe
'111482' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGY' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
58ff2d1858108f39693ec0aaf90a2c5f
ba41a58e8052acd482dcfe61d1c3e5da5fff3697
describe
'7536' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFGZ' 'sip-files00091.pro'
36cd0d59d9a3d6401e5eeb74ffad3358
27c5f020874fbdcae90762d776481e4c26020631
describe
'27767' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHA' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
4cf458fab5c968c1539178e9cea2dab6
8a306d973ea4c7f1bd55ec8cdd7ef62b78cb22ba
'2011-11-17T23:43:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHB' 'sip-files00091.tif'
2f899914675b88be796833168cb63cb7
f0d7a18975aa4b9c189342f77e3e8a9c6ceaa0f9
describe
'512' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHC' 'sip-files00091.txt'
ff8beaf0c64a0f5a18c4cafe61b45c1c
2c66835f6e8ce949ec4fe610095f003ca6589dbb
describe
Invalid character
'6352' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHD' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
71da2530112ec5f274d7b1095eaffa17
4edc6642a5e26da5ff7dab8d25c717657c17a860
'2011-11-17T23:38:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHE' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
48c7c43280d74ec99715fbd6b1690e88
33d0c2e4694883b7c908a16d15a1b6290bbb030f
describe
'120811' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHF' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
8acbd2145640411e20a63f22007cf8a6
042cde27fc77a89f6475110ed64e3f20de027569
describe
'41013' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHG' 'sip-files00092.pro'
5e1cd1f092207d128e54ada54c2ced13
fd959cd0edc9d4f24dd68ef403eda355911647f4
describe
'39310' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHH' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
4cf34f1878b5d9ad3110e84b15afc861
f58c7d00b8847b4f172fcdf7dfe5afd77674f72e
'2011-11-17T23:39:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHI' 'sip-files00092.tif'
d3e814137e666db3b14ade1a8268c101
02402488bbc35007b355b58361d61e5c16e1f22d
describe
'1648' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHJ' 'sip-files00092.txt'
2eb3741e73b94a817aa38dbb3cdcc30e
6d13c7a5e97dbbcd514c5e4aad08cc35ffdad1d9
'2011-11-17T23:41:41-05:00'
describe
'9525' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHK' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
53d3d2eb919f5d3652307e4b53c91f21
b347878901eb836accb11b7749fb6ae35437b020
describe
'346800' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHL' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
07c2d9a71ca14006ce132d1d2a3872ad
31ce42ac79e85b78be8a0d7eceb0232f9f2d6264
describe
'78032' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHM' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
a121ab3265706b68d36ec7f8b90c845e
8d011fbce5491d100452469e6ee9a3ec97500ebb
describe
'1306' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHN' 'sip-files00093.pro'
1e263aaad60835582d83300ce6a9be1b
245914f2cbf8719f3fe4d7bf1700f563a1d9f081
describe
'19882' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHO' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
daa18cea92e4954f0fe1ff03d4cfaeb4
31048ce8baea7a181f81588b558ee15032fd312b
'2011-11-17T23:34:28-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHP' 'sip-files00093.tif'
c3ef90b9865d7b5258de0c09d5140047
96aa65cf0afb1c38f51a300687803b40494f15cf
'2011-11-17T23:45:05-05:00'
describe
'157' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHQ' 'sip-files00093.txt'
e2aeb95b7165e82004d1a0b2bbd07468
3bee965e59d3e4fe6b3781d926d5fcae8e98938d
'2011-11-17T23:41:58-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
'4986' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHR' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
2be12605acdcc57172b0756d08bd8915
21f18d6d06522774d63a8ec94a249eceb4859433
'2011-11-17T23:37:48-05:00'
describe
'346723' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHS' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
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describe
'131181' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHT' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:12-05:00'
describe
'45355' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHU' 'sip-files00095.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:29-05:00'
describe
'43032' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHV' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHW' 'sip-files00095.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHX' 'sip-files00095.txt'
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describe
'10060' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHY' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFHZ' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:47-05:00'
describe
'130349' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIA' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:14-05:00'
describe
'44229' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIB' 'sip-files00096.pro'
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describe
'42038' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIC' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFID' 'sip-files00096.tif'
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describe
'1756' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIE' 'sip-files00096.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:57-05:00'
describe
'9765' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIF' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIG' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:23-05:00'
describe
'131905' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIH' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
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describe
'44975' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFII' 'sip-files00097.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:30-05:00'
describe
'42170' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIJ' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIK' 'sip-files00097.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIL' 'sip-files00097.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:44-05:00'
describe
'9886' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIM' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
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describe
'346964' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIN' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
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describe
'128544' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIO' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
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describe
'43410' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIP' 'sip-files00098.pro'
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describe
'40860' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIQ' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIR' 'sip-files00098.tif'
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describe
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'2011-11-17T23:39:22-05:00'
describe
'9574' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIT' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:00-05:00'
describe
'346797' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIU' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:40-05:00'
describe
'128829' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIV' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
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describe
'45064' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIW' 'sip-files00099.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:34-05:00'
describe
'41364' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIX' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIY' 'sip-files00099.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFIZ' 'sip-files00099.txt'
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describe
'9727' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJA' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
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describe
'347011' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJB' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
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describe
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describe
'44494' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJD' 'sip-files00100.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:16-05:00'
describe
'42721' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJE' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJF' 'sip-files00100.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:33-05:00'
describe
'1751' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJG' 'sip-files00100.txt'
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describe
'10031' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJH' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
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describe
'346744' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJI' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
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describe
'134362' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJJ' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
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describe
'45750' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJK' 'sip-files00101.pro'
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describe
'42831' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJL' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:23-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJM' 'sip-files00101.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:24-05:00'
describe
'1797' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJN' 'sip-files00101.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:26-05:00'
describe
'10344' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJO' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
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describe
'347028' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJP' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
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describe
'136492' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJQ' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
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describe
'46563' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJR' 'sip-files00102.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:09-05:00'
describe
'44053' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJS' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJT' 'sip-files00102.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:53-05:00'
describe
'1837' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJU' 'sip-files00102.txt'
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describe
'9956' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJV' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
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describe
'346794' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJW' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
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describe
'130291' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJX' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:16-05:00'
describe
'45408' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJY' 'sip-files00103.pro'
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describe
'42365' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFJZ' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKA' 'sip-files00103.tif'
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describe
'1804' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKB' 'sip-files00103.txt'
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describe
'9940' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKC' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
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describe
'346891' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKD' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
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describe
'105028' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKE' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
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describe
'33402' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKF' 'sip-files00104.pro'
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describe
'34283' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKG' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKH' 'sip-files00104.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:25-05:00'
describe
'1315' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKI' 'sip-files00104.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:45-05:00'
describe
'8082' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKJ' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:11-05:00'
describe
'346704' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKK' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
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describe
'121377' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKL' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
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describe
'29798' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKM' 'sip-files00105.pro'
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describe
'37452' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKN' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKO' 'sip-files00105.tif'
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describe
'1245' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKP' 'sip-files00105.txt'
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describe
'9177' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKQ' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
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describe
'347035' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKR' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
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describe
'136352' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKS' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
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describe
'46472' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKT' 'sip-files00106.pro'
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describe
'44452' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKU' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKV' 'sip-files00106.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKW' 'sip-files00106.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:49-05:00'
describe
'10189' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKX' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKY' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
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describe
'136764' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFKZ' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
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describe
'46073' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLA' 'sip-files00107.pro'
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describe
'44474' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLB' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLC' 'sip-files00107.tif'
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describe
'1842' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLD' 'sip-files00107.txt'
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feeb5bf220698e58476952d645e99ed89159a3f9
describe
'10225' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLE' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
dd9b5a3155f8c0e1ed58f320a55b6fce
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describe
'346952' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLF' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
e8d8bc2d8368d1ed57e2bf1dd8f86b12
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'2011-11-17T23:40:53-05:00'
describe
'129856' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLG' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
a05529d320c98a0f5ecbfba7d6c44854
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'2011-11-17T23:42:27-05:00'
describe
'45674' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLH' 'sip-files00108.pro'
80beea70eae19fa15de3f1675bb4dd94
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describe
'41472' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLI' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
da227a59fdcfb509a9f29ecf0f028d27
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLJ' 'sip-files00108.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:13-05:00'
describe
'1796' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLK' 'sip-files00108.txt'
859b65b8d2f33e7890bf9a6a017cd442
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describe
'9637' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLL' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
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describe
'346792' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLM' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:38-05:00'
describe
'131939' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLN' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
84150bbd421ed8bdaba727f5c54a17aa
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'2011-11-17T23:41:21-05:00'
describe
'45791' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLO' 'sip-files00109.pro'
d9381e3f7101d2b6a74a6f9fb08b7ac6
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'2011-11-17T23:43:29-05:00'
describe
'42808' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLP' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
544eaace3ea81c8ee8b8b723caa3650e
c90e27de135b6acab5524a83691f3ba248b46172
'2011-11-17T23:37:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLQ' 'sip-files00109.tif'
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describe
'1809' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLR' 'sip-files00109.txt'
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describe
'9975' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLS' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLT' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
b2211943595133dacfa49ada843288e5
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describe
'132358' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLU' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:42-05:00'
describe
'44513' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLV' 'sip-files00110.pro'
fd277779cc3008481b2c3d275fb5d76b
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'2011-11-17T23:39:01-05:00'
describe
'43341' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLW' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
a35176e8bae1e91654d83ab1002968d7
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'2011-11-17T23:38:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLX' 'sip-files00110.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:42-05:00'
describe
'1769' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLY' 'sip-files00110.txt'
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describe
'9688' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFLZ' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
eb0fca679712ca4948c75e7ec990beda
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'2011-11-17T23:36:12-05:00'
describe
'346773' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMA' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
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describe
'127432' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMB' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
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describe
'42661' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMC' 'sip-files00111.pro'
fb0cde17747e1d338fe5c1b09147aa66
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describe
'42191' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMD' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
2789dcb94f9ce622a9b07e62f076d52b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFME' 'sip-files00111.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:41-05:00'
describe
'1687' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMF' 'sip-files00111.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:02-05:00'
describe
'9978' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMG' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
003733c598bccd6470c1690ebda19bbf
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'2011-11-17T23:40:48-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMH' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
e484eae8552681d7f628840f5b4752b8
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'2011-11-17T23:39:48-05:00'
describe
'131139' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMI' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:40-05:00'
describe
'45189' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMJ' 'sip-files00112.pro'
1b26356a8942f5b670f914a01992679e
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'2011-11-17T23:44:19-05:00'
describe
'42165' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMK' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
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describe
'2792836' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFML' 'sip-files00112.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMM' 'sip-files00112.txt'
a52c29dcee4c7f433a87ad6063fc88a7
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describe
'9691' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMN' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
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describe
'346778' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMO' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
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describe
'121813' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMP' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:35-05:00'
describe
'42637' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMQ' 'sip-files00113.pro'
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describe
'39605' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMR' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:45-05:00'
describe
'2790780' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMS' 'sip-files00113.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:55-05:00'
describe
'1684' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMT' 'sip-files00113.txt'
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describe
'9240' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMU' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMV' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
81bbd94cb91614978604db76a6d319e4
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'2011-11-17T23:39:30-05:00'
describe
'131441' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMW' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
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describe
'44083' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMX' 'sip-files00114.pro'
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describe
'41658' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMY' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFMZ' 'sip-files00114.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:31-05:00'
describe
'1737' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNA' 'sip-files00114.txt'
8ab0767817dd12c5ac8e5a01bf40412b
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describe
'10363' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNB' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
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describe
'346781' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNC' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
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describe
'131779' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFND' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
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describe
'43959' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNE' 'sip-files00115.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:06-05:00'
describe
'43174' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNF' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
25fdbf2f78b6b19e5d0ac576116b7079
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNG' 'sip-files00115.tif'
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describe
'1741' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNH' 'sip-files00115.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:11-05:00'
describe
'10124' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNI' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNJ' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
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describe
'119791' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNK' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:29-05:00'
describe
'41522' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNL' 'sip-files00116.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:35-05:00'
describe
'38239' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNM' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNN' 'sip-files00116.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:52-05:00'
describe
'1642' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNO' 'sip-files00116.txt'
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describe
'9618' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNP' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:59-05:00'
describe
'346729' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNQ' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
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describe
'115046' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNR' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
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describe
'40391' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNS' 'sip-files00117.pro'
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describe
'37223' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNT' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNU' 'sip-files00117.tif'
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describe
'1620' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNV' 'sip-files00117.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:20-05:00'
describe
'9446' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNW' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
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describe
'347052' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNX' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
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describe
'122012' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNY' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFNZ' 'sip-files00118.pro'
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describe
'39734' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOA' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOB' 'sip-files00118.tif'
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describe
'1604' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOC' 'sip-files00118.txt'
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describe
'9987' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOD' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:23-05:00'
describe
'346779' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOE' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
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describe
'126093' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOF' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
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describe
'41834' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOG' 'sip-files00119.pro'
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describe
'41484' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOH' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
3b7e49853e6af1284067800f30468c20
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOI' 'sip-files00119.tif'
5169c2957b91bc8709bfe9c064b7d8ed
f663c104b8f036e105862d13dfc70d7b5beb8f81
describe
'1678' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOJ' 'sip-files00119.txt'
8d041c524d02580e3d7ef0ba377a7b00
cd76a18ab065fae0cb4c9bcee3096b5cbb38dcd4
'2011-11-17T23:47:01-05:00'
describe
'9930' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOK' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
b62a256e447d1bb77efc6fe1851deeb0
3d70bb19809ad7522a0782e4eb3d35d49b694b51
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOL' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
81c813499ab7ba5a7befdc35a84985f8
a5f5b934518449b707a318f1e3076f753a0f98f9
'2011-11-17T23:39:58-05:00'
describe
'124817' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOM' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
82acdf68d1e7f9e98248b051f473a786
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describe
'42946' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFON' 'sip-files00120.pro'
25cf2aec345431f908f83bb5fa55d309
442d5932ea6cea820b98e51806d31cf44b42c2d7
'2011-11-17T23:37:22-05:00'
describe
'40657' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOO' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
f07ae05d60cc740d51716e8592a2f9ba
c83322a0702b8daac92a5694740bf78e4f3df176
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOP' 'sip-files00120.tif'
dc18e83461ca9487da8fca00d781bc13
30f8806252dcd8d96d2262aeae87b47295e5ce28
'2011-11-17T23:39:53-05:00'
describe
'1702' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOQ' 'sip-files00120.txt'
12a0922aeb4c80b87f1383d336920d26
3bd2a8a8f5f2cb4b0ce34cd7016e0c0d89f45a32
describe
'9717' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOR' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
3a513a3fe3a175d087601ecba7620769
ffaddd9c63a4c0f903f1ff973e77a0dfa149a6e0
'2011-11-17T23:45:14-05:00'
describe
'346713' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOS' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
dc18aa3ab2204baf2c0930d0d98cb537
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describe
'126722' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOT' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
b4e6dad0c107155cde2d7f18af8fcc02
15fead3d57dff93fc9365301eb8874fc4e4c1ad5
describe
'43490' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOU' 'sip-files00121.pro'
e15ec64a737300562088737c1107ff70
906fa1903a8824dfd3f0ee94fefd490401dc5fa7
'2011-11-17T23:44:11-05:00'
describe
'40273' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOV' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
0d71a834673c0602b73f1fa50da8e8ea
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOW' 'sip-files00121.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:24-05:00'
describe
'1733' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOX' 'sip-files00121.txt'
7c373bb5caf171f2cdb5f36a991cd2a7
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describe
'9924' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOY' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
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describe
'347054' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFOZ' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
941f805cb40b0834396537a1c12cebd6
e93618b92f9e8b2691ba49ba7ad9d5a8808944be
'2011-11-17T23:40:58-05:00'
describe
'118014' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPA' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
fe799e2a8f88f01e4bfe9bf710d6c0a6
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describe
'38541' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPB' 'sip-files00122.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:24-05:00'
describe
'37416' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPC' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
d9f2e77318bac4dc0181f9617b8db1b4
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPD' 'sip-files00122.tif'
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a002406e1d59486bb308d4b888d7a80613b5ede3
'2011-11-17T23:38:00-05:00'
describe
'1533' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPE' 'sip-files00122.txt'
553b370407b1f0f5e2140bfd7f8cc5f7
d50eb005953391ddc3d02c014d7a6f9aaa171550
'2011-11-17T23:38:23-05:00'
describe
'9697' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPF' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
354eddafaf690f8565015e2f69c2de99
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'2011-11-17T23:35:55-05:00'
describe
'347039' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPG' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
58471768c2e3cae66c27d096801675fb
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describe
'88934' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPH' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
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449c2cd83b765caca5ac602c455b9553443a6ebe
describe
'27170' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPI' 'sip-files00123.pro'
891435432710084b64b305d2453d2a30
ec6a01ce1d61e5629f27d55294fe58a54e67a6ea
'2011-11-17T23:37:35-05:00'
describe
'28986' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPJ' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
58b507865fc1c338e5a55f1a27d41863
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'2011-11-17T23:41:02-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPK' 'sip-files00123.tif'
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describe
'1141' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPL' 'sip-files00123.txt'
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describe
'7282' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPM' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPN' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:47-05:00'
describe
'114871' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPO' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:56-05:00'
describe
'28695' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPP' 'sip-files00124.pro'
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describe
'35568' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPQ' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
1b3f44758ba968d9744d09aa3f87761e
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPR' 'sip-files00124.tif'
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describe
'1198' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPS' 'sip-files00124.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:34-05:00'
describe
'9050' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPT' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
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describe
'346775' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPU' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
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describe
'119772' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPV' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:23-05:00'
describe
'41149' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPW' 'sip-files00125.pro'
08228fa4901b1d95f7cec08226f03eef
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describe
'38787' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPX' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
8d7c535ad0ccb4bf7b1b01cb929c22af
695e4b9cdcbf07e62b974b4c57a86dfb852bc07d
'2011-11-17T23:43:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPY' 'sip-files00125.tif'
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describe
'1660' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFPZ' 'sip-files00125.txt'
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describe
'9150' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQA' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
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describe
'346959' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQB' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
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describe
'132214' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQC' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:10-05:00'
describe
'44248' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQD' 'sip-files00126.pro'
e615b5ffa8adf1f999991db8f4307fa8
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describe
'43013' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQE' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQF' 'sip-files00126.tif'
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describe
'1755' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQG' 'sip-files00126.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:51-05:00'
describe
'9774' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQH' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
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describe
'347017' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQI' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
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describe
'134051' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQJ' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
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describe
'45310' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQK' 'sip-files00127.pro'
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describe
'43696' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQL' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
73640214ecdb2aa135867db9e532c89b
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'2011-11-17T23:46:22-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQM' 'sip-files00127.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQN' 'sip-files00127.txt'
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describe
'10107' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQO' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQP' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
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describe
'133756' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQQ' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:01-05:00'
describe
'45343' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQR' 'sip-files00128.pro'
946e76dcc643837dea4a0288a24f529d
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'2011-11-17T23:42:28-05:00'
describe
'43449' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQS' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQT' 'sip-files00128.tif'
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describe
'1783' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQU' 'sip-files00128.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:07-05:00'
describe
'9736' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQV' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
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describe
'346782' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQW' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
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describe
'121635' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQX' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:51-05:00'
describe
'40345' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQY' 'sip-files00129.pro'
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describe
'40098' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFQZ' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:23-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRA' 'sip-files00129.tif'
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describe
'1594' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRB' 'sip-files00129.txt'
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describe
'9720' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRC' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRD' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
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describe
'121405' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRE' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:21-05:00'
describe
'39787' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRF' 'sip-files00130.pro'
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describe
'39594' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRG' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRH' 'sip-files00130.tif'
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describe
'1587' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRI' 'sip-files00130.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:15-05:00'
describe
'9753' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRJ' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
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describe
'346790' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRK' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
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describe
'136812' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRL' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
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describe
'45392' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRM' 'sip-files00131.pro'
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describe
'44481' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRN' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRO' 'sip-files00131.tif'
f2b4595f7eae77549230d335ab9951d6
81ca51b436a9a0cdf7c46925fc3ecac4fa9462c7
'2011-11-17T23:40:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRP' 'sip-files00131.txt'
5d27f4a1dea71854c57d7c481fbb1068
696cf67f18bf144a83264be5428e6e95c8c84e31
describe
'10193' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRQ' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
cb4a8acb5a3966a0f97ba83d2b026df0
24f689cba30212894c438d128d0d9742c5fad8e4
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRR' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
0ba62b90b5fb31d85544c49960d65e41
a82c5e2da23bcdacd4e776c9cdafcbb50bda3b2f
describe
'125742' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRS' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
a1f4488a8992dd949a31b5b34887f422
23297a9f72d10be51aefc27f691c0e14a2016350
'2011-11-17T23:38:45-05:00'
describe
'42497' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRT' 'sip-files00132.pro'
2d375da6ac351b5ca652bcd6aaa187b9
513af107c59c8373b6567d59c7c4adc05411b925
describe
'41617' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRU' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
45d9b0813a2101b33df17446a0bcd598
58b6688b5a590faf8e2d4ed03e733a3808a87e41
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRV' 'sip-files00132.tif'
5895e83c7a3b52cc32b2f8d6c3dfa1b5
d570f71d9ffe17cec78fd970832698b9768df4d6
describe
'1679' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRW' 'sip-files00132.txt'
e4876203e6474878f6733fe359aec9fe
dca77af9c1aad0e4180aebba26d42dbf71d4969b
'2011-11-17T23:44:42-05:00'
describe
'9449' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRX' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
dc4c499b1e3bc3dfbf3c574026db5d84
478f135a03b164ddc6d291d6a8aae28c07b642c3
describe
'346745' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRY' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
6fb068970ff50b3168ddd754917043e0
3d9286df1d5a6a1503236e27f38f4e32e224d0df
'2011-11-17T23:35:32-05:00'
describe
'129707' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFRZ' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
80e537a54b9365ec06d36a2ec906a3fa
d851e562317b8f3d9c9884a9f06d716ddcb71eee
'2011-11-17T23:45:28-05:00'
describe
'44030' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSA' 'sip-files00133.pro'
5d6ce75c97ffddabaf4481d457d42dc5
77c3d5520eef1b49701b753adb8eb345a669c387
describe
'41908' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSB' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
2b57a322a5b26898eaa5f8a372f8de7c
68aae82092f97591f04ce380f23302b42d5bbbf5
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSC' 'sip-files00133.tif'
9e7afcaaa3081824a1790b9363d84383
44e6213d1a8a7751846973358d6c5afd2ea2323f
describe
'1746' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSD' 'sip-files00133.txt'
b3f1f638455f2bcbf7fa3fc3ef50c525
05d9344522405d5964cd31b30202fa10df52f1a4
describe
'10097' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSE' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
58fb65fa40f1abdbf3db1aeaf062c150
b6911830e9c7fb2a993824ea2179962bd02c0b04
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSF' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
077740ee894431a659707b240516ef18
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describe
'133765' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSG' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
3c0610d8d309b18a939fda86865f686f
fe4b20c6ee6fd5a9a236120bbc70ff8460521c17
'2011-11-17T23:45:38-05:00'
describe
'43773' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSH' 'sip-files00134.pro'
7a9a5c855a9eb97d0a5763bcb5df2c6a
f789359277a479d56cfb10d3b9f5f2ec9e0b0098
'2011-11-17T23:36:37-05:00'
describe
'43468' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSI' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
8ebe1903eb2fe71a4328130d3e394ba5
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSJ' 'sip-files00134.tif'
f6a8ceb35aa48d1e3993a249aa4eab55
d8b0cafe193a0d59c431816d0ed09e62346b167e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSK' 'sip-files00134.txt'
01f3954c7eae93ff128beca533e707be
eda5d346995b0ad36d2486037df88896bd07daf9
'2011-11-17T23:40:19-05:00'
describe
'10278' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSL' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
917d42b3ce5fee01c45c99c682a0c499
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describe
'346796' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSM' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
6f9f3b8847494f745fbc2b42c8515e9b
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describe
'138802' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSN' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
d166135b6aef5c402c737c4c8f48e42f
ec97bc5cf51c4483f77b1cdf14ddc62b5ce29d9a
describe
'46966' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSO' 'sip-files00135.pro'
9dade8ae2fc175f80bcd756c34f6353d
d20133014fe91b82e91d01febf26370324f25752
describe
'44085' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSP' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
d89793e2ff84919db0fd0de097f770de
c4de74aabe2f98669a2de2e518f5b1f7883a6131
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSQ' 'sip-files00135.tif'
34dbc7c2d30ed8bc9811a44fbf8a2764
07ae7db6220445d5f18536b4442cb16bc4fd65a0
'2011-11-17T23:46:06-05:00'
describe
'1894' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSR' 'sip-files00135.txt'
d57236b8ea38a48407e11398157de4ff
69d3ed36b4cfecf7acb63e17affca7ef00f8a074
'2011-11-17T23:44:09-05:00'
describe
'10487' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSS' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
614a4c44256257f08c3590fa13d96711
fb23dc525b0381f7c716db952f637703ed66789f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFST' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
2b8935bb605557a26be427ff6cf39910
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describe
'132888' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSU' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
fbe5f04ce5a20d489b88018bdf2a57d8
d33274106cb5386e0be825f7a9ab5b66ffc72def
describe
'44562' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSV' 'sip-files00136.pro'
8a9d380cd61698ca449f97f5b7399ff4
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describe
'43195' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSW' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
1d22bd84ce14d2167c1a96e2a3c30728
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSX' 'sip-files00136.tif'
01c200ddd722c7dd52c1b49bed269edb
724e9b8be95d27f1bac5c45ec8d7f10f01f33ce8
'2011-11-17T23:47:17-05:00'
describe
'1752' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSY' 'sip-files00136.txt'
505110329f055b994b89d15c9a0c90da
0be560ad1583596ecafdccf4e8fc6ad055a78b37
'2011-11-17T23:35:48-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFSZ' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
a19f657e3b4a97c2dda910f308fac56e
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTA' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
179e70d585f3a6b07940275d871664d5
e42551bc05415ff737e73f812e1f0c23ab8244e8
describe
'130476' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTB' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
b01c7479e9398d9f30298cee865a0706
7c362e148d3d3a275d268bcf63efd1c1a34876bf
'2011-11-17T23:44:50-05:00'
describe
'44483' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTC' 'sip-files00137.pro'
534b03c1dc78a1ca8f3637b48145c686
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describe
'42195' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTD' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
c7e1baf2ade696fb06e42c025b925021
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTE' 'sip-files00137.tif'
41459b1a8a5b76be8bbff5fe85292d41
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describe
'1773' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTF' 'sip-files00137.txt'
365e906a02d1463a85921b1e303ec440
721a471c525e7197f763a4acc2243e328a449e45
'2011-11-17T23:41:47-05:00'
describe
'10111' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTG' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
44b1e3966314c135b41abc4bb9ae68af
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTH' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
91faed62d2aed464815c517567990c58
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'2011-11-17T23:43:44-05:00'
describe
'139605' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTI' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
01def79406495c5af5dff2543a336d5a
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describe
'46057' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTJ' 'sip-files00138.pro'
3273765279bcb7a43a500d3f798bc82c
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describe
'45140' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTK' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
e343450410592abdaa79a055a43f28bc
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'2011-11-17T23:41:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTL' 'sip-files00138.tif'
e5db2cb4fd7cbef4b6e72a5276cc52fd
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'2011-11-17T23:47:15-05:00'
describe
'1805' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTM' 'sip-files00138.txt'
6f32063fc240b67186ad13a4fb761da9
393e57177c1d0ea9e4a0458865bbbdf110846d24
'2011-11-17T23:38:47-05:00'
describe
'10236' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTN' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
a9372506a8059430327314c2b9aa8204
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describe
'346976' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTO' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
2a3067da32e56c09e060a24eb6a4b0d8
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describe
'119782' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTP' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
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describe
'41684' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTQ' 'sip-files00139.pro'
591ba1b7bc9109c7478e27affae2ea61
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describe
'39842' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTR' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
9a1d74cfa7d322ba7b99edb6550044e3
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'2011-11-17T23:42:52-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTS' 'sip-files00139.tif'
d0ede7953b36bc3aa4e4634c11bcf236
e12f6dec8e9a4033044a8e6c9b33a66e7864aaba
'2011-11-17T23:38:08-05:00'
describe
'1682' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTT' 'sip-files00139.txt'
cee9bcd0c9c180981680c517c79f864a
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describe
'9680' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTU' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
4ade72a12bb2e5532db7442bd27e53e1
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTV' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
d6fbe16a153819638ebd23f64b6b56da
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describe
'129332' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTW' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:19-05:00'
describe
'43784' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTX' 'sip-files00140.pro'
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describe
'42528' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTY' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFTZ' 'sip-files00140.tif'
f9fdbc33fdf86d79d72892301ea6b564
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUA' 'sip-files00140.txt'
8f0fe54533211955cb9455ba175d3f54
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'2011-11-17T23:41:52-05:00'
describe
'9951' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUB' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUC' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
428271d2fba0243abc4896c3b9269c79
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describe
'131238' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUD' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
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describe
'43672' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUE' 'sip-files00141.pro'
376415d4f0f104f566ea93f2c2380bf9
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describe
'41828' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUF' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUG' 'sip-files00141.tif'
ee5052a96c189c1cba0e0cb61fa356e5
393e8beea57b00ef6a685e47bc7e91db3d1ebcf6
'2011-11-17T23:44:12-05:00'
describe
'1718' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUH' 'sip-files00141.txt'
152c1da81f18bd1efc36c5022ce88c8f
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describe
'9678' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUI' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
10d3264d6be6b3dad090e9868b4a676a
ba2cf23e24919dfba3245ea50ee5e121ac8df42f
'2011-11-17T23:40:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUJ' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
a9a1e57112ca367042761dbcf4ef60d5
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describe
'122600' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUK' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
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describe
'31059' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUL' 'sip-files00142.pro'
82e6060dbe0425128a788c77af7d3d2a
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describe
'37982' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUM' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUN' 'sip-files00142.tif'
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describe
'1280' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUO' 'sip-files00142.txt'
123c24d799b7addef9de71badd9c7aba
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'2011-11-17T23:47:09-05:00'
describe
'8927' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUP' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
d19c67326a044e8b18429149978fb8ab
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'2011-11-17T23:44:37-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUQ' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
08010c5ccd14b5b0c5b7f3c2333639f5
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'2011-11-17T23:41:26-05:00'
describe
'127512' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUR' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
7adf1c6cb06202d77cf092384d71fc75
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describe
'44033' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUS' 'sip-files00143.pro'
819971b48833e18ac346e9783e0af137
f6113c954258860cade900b77a66e14982db086c
'2011-11-17T23:40:49-05:00'
describe
'41854' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUT' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUU' 'sip-files00143.tif'
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describe
'1758' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUV' 'sip-files00143.txt'
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describe
'9937' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUW' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
bdb47f767da44c2a66233b96f0d7a467
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describe
'347046' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUX' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
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describe
'134857' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUY' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFUZ' 'sip-files00144.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:04-05:00'
describe
'43764' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVA' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVB' 'sip-files00144.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVC' 'sip-files00144.txt'
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describe
'9883' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVD' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:27-05:00'
describe
'346711' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVE' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
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describe
'129963' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVF' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:55-05:00'
describe
'43963' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVG' 'sip-files00145.pro'
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describe
'41902' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVH' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVI' 'sip-files00145.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:10-05:00'
describe
'1735' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVJ' 'sip-files00145.txt'
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describe
'9811' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVK' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
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describe
'347019' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVL' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:32-05:00'
describe
'131907' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVM' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
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describe
'45116' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVN' 'sip-files00146.pro'
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describe
'42330' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVO' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:56-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVP' 'sip-files00146.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVQ' 'sip-files00146.txt'
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describe
'9959' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVR' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVS' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
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describe
'69969' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVT' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
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describe
'2601' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVU' 'sip-files00148.pro'
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describe
'18201' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVV' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVW' 'sip-files00148.tif'
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describe
'144' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVX' 'sip-files00148.txt'
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describe
'4555' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVY' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
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describe
'346788' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFVZ' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:56-05:00'
describe
'136572' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWA' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:23-05:00'
describe
'45967' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWB' 'sip-files00149.pro'
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describe
'43762' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWC' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWD' 'sip-files00149.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:54-05:00'
describe
'1814' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWE' 'sip-files00149.txt'
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describe
'10403' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWF' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWG' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
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describe
'143516' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWH' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
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describe
'44143' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWI' 'sip-files00150.pro'
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describe
'44213' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWJ' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWK' 'sip-files00150.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:25-05:00'
describe
'1739' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWL' 'sip-files00150.txt'
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describe
'10252' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWM' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
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describe
'346681' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWN' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
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describe
'145894' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWO' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
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describe
'44858' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWP' 'sip-files00151.pro'
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describe
'45687' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWQ' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWR' 'sip-files00151.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWS' 'sip-files00151.txt'
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describe
'10795' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWT' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
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describe
'346949' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWU' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
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describe
'148355' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWV' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
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describe
'45766' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWW' 'sip-files00152.pro'
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describe
'45851' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWX' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWY' 'sip-files00152.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:24-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFWZ' 'sip-files00152.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:10-05:00'
describe
'10549' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXA' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXB' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:53-05:00'
describe
'144504' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXC' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
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describe
'44406' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXD' 'sip-files00153.pro'
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describe
'44465' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXE' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXF' 'sip-files00153.tif'
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describe
'1759' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXG' 'sip-files00153.txt'
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describe
'10339' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXH' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
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describe
'347004' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXI' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
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describe
'149931' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXJ' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
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describe
'46333' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXK' 'sip-files00154.pro'
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describe
'46842' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXL' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXM' 'sip-files00154.tif'
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describe
'1821' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXN' 'sip-files00154.txt'
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describe
'10525' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXO' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
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describe
'346803' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXP' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
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describe
'145974' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXQ' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:26-05:00'
describe
'44184' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXR' 'sip-files00155.pro'
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describe
'45117' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXS' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXT' 'sip-files00155.tif'
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describe
'1750' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXU' 'sip-files00155.txt'
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describe
'10744' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXV' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:35-05:00'
describe
'346971' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXW' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
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describe
'150196' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXX' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
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describe
'45694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXY' 'sip-files00156.pro'
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describe
'46176' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFXZ' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYA' 'sip-files00156.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYB' 'sip-files00156.txt'
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describe
'10820' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYC' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:35-05:00'
describe
'346699' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYD' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
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describe
'152495' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYE' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
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describe
'46330' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYF' 'sip-files00157.pro'
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describe
'47292' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYG' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYH' 'sip-files00157.tif'
c3727fd8d636c59b6cbdfebf67d9d1fe
4804a820ac815838cc286d81f48df6f77f977e49
describe
'1874' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYI' 'sip-files00157.txt'
788f89dc42b6eb683870af5d3e80c38d
dc35dad20c41b8415dcd7e2b487dae21b90647b5
'2011-11-17T23:40:03-05:00'
describe
'11176' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYJ' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
2d71df1be3223b80f33fa8f51db08766
47dd1825a01be630a95f9e1db60f2e03d686888b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYK' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
e7a8214bc9795c4658a26032a4bde855
ce78a032fc01efaf672b73f55c073d12351f865e
describe
'145061' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYL' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
e456b734f275541f713bff5a46023282
0c8ed0ece3c4a15b023f174284556bade34c1cfb
describe
'44208' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYM' 'sip-files00158.pro'
379523e8509edff8d75235679b261008
3e10b4471c65b85117c47c45e95dc6f986cd3a5a
'2011-11-17T23:35:22-05:00'
describe
'45792' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYN' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
b971cf3aac6df1994d081908496214a0
02ef34b62e39049f42eb104d4336802ad5f22b13
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYO' 'sip-files00158.tif'
f08b6c0cbc1d01b24bee37aed72b6e00
0685361e75d1050c4d6504eea222ee2b2a54d7a3
describe
'1753' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYP' 'sip-files00158.txt'
a2baad9952d6f9f7e137cbd9ec326632
2c890cb81db93fcebff414ac309d9e1738def58e
describe
'10754' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYQ' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
d41820f69d8684a9226c23b8390b38e1
b1bcf276ca02fdba87c1ebea0b9b68860259a73c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYR' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
428837f0933935468de95375fc6857b8
485755ccc740b099db9319f22d29e97fd139ee25
describe
'104630' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYS' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
74dd71746168dff91585552dbf7eb151
1f6e28fc1551ebf840682a2d4fb1829eb03243df
describe
'9032' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYT' 'sip-files00159.pro'
b3bc4350fdc37defa8f55eb68d2d822a
9cf20d046fd9175ad67bc4b10d3c78c8996e7b52
describe
'27832' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYU' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
6ad943cf495f5dc637992d4b15b268ed
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYV' 'sip-files00159.tif'
a3077f3b0d2672ec33bdce517a92c42f
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describe
'602' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYW' 'sip-files00159.txt'
02a1cae429ec0e0b96981d3d41bca6ad
48636f8291fe762702320e782ba5a23df80da7fd
describe
Invalid character
'7510' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYX' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
bea38c46cbea9ec42de1f54d1422d0da
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describe
'346935' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYY' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
6c7ab6c677994a01c6d8acd4988c9c44
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describe
'144775' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFYZ' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
35790488153cbc674038bde1ce946850
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describe
'44553' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZA' 'sip-files00160.pro'
ab95cde415a78a235c68bb984393078c
f5f67225a4d991e14102564bf8b2047207a9ae4c
describe
'45036' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZB' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
c32c44fe97ac33692d1566a503c23d42
d996d374df1e493b3f642b75ab60982060ac0afe
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZC' 'sip-files00160.tif'
b28b8027377a2a7dcdca64314aec97db
64749409f7c24c1c2256b470943764b3ff349c08
'2011-11-17T23:40:17-05:00'
describe
'1762' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZD' 'sip-files00160.txt'
2b282651217cc353b49bf47681de314b
8870e6c4122af88f32d6dc1e564877392185981d
'2011-11-17T23:37:41-05:00'
describe
'10780' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZE' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
0a2cfa05315b1adf6714e90474b5f764
019c633d66f9b80d11ded861b5ef3bd6c496d930
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZF' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
b14d164c6eba8b067b6773ea43e02d15
432e0b5a8018f2a4001fa8b6edf1e5a1c749f412
'2011-11-17T23:44:49-05:00'
describe
'148632' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZG' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
e32c04648fb1a6e0313d5826643ce1a0
f9726ae0844b6d45ea26daffb6830d78c9b2099a
describe
'45471' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZH' 'sip-files00161.pro'
d756df4541f646b833b6644fdaf1da59
048dba8e41731b58caef8d18f747637646ab2f28
describe
'45751' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZI' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
5b342f0779d8a0fd703788e1132b883d
8160ace2d4259f235c4864bbddb5cd67fd413ff9
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZJ' 'sip-files00161.tif'
3c579a07dd6aafe50cefb3a6ac05bbef
927cfb15f0c9b8113dd9c0ce669a1cc37013c4d8
describe
'1813' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZK' 'sip-files00161.txt'
e0a0cd2bd76fe13624835d297ae792f8
352de271214232d77bfad0894573ccbdec6e036f
describe
'10406' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZL' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
44d9e189abf63fb83c1dadd3b27c886c
c8668df29bba0e8b8b115b9e1307d641a29bd467
'2011-11-17T23:45:01-05:00'
describe
'347026' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZM' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
ffd5ce17efaaa778c30ec91c39634ffc
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describe
'149817' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZN' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
fd31116e2c93ff48389b92ea8d85fb60
66d9521c90ccdd1d3684a9072ccf4dae8b4a7a51
describe
'45620' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZO' 'sip-files00162.pro'
597b936ac5617b5fcc387dde3783ef06
26478c7e3856f4368158864d3e26909efcc77672
describe
'46232' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZP' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
1975b268aa5888fa82bf11158f6845f2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZQ' 'sip-files00162.tif'
555305f01c4fe7e8443ebe70278c18ee
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describe
'1793' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZR' 'sip-files00162.txt'
05046f31749a9e54738c422fb9aee8f3
e0ee373b565bceb1183326885631bf7cdc79d04e
'2011-11-17T23:42:33-05:00'
describe
'10607' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZS' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
c915f96ba844371d8ac59ad993f9f34d
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describe
'346786' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZT' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
c7ceff9c42d1bb129aed11e837a5e3a0
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describe
'81190' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZU' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
d75b37427e415dd4c7aa82903629fcf1
38cf53d9c6b1ee8703b378cd772598dce0ee8042
describe
'21440' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZV' 'sip-files00163.pro'
3021d46d053379b94417257f360a4320
e211c439bed348f8c00ca23c5d3ce0069db97335
describe
'24845' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZW' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
5386933b85e6e5cc4a97c4cf879410ee
d17834a7ec139973af2fa833738248c46e60241d
'2011-11-17T23:43:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZX' 'sip-files00163.tif'
6665312be22d45928b3ab00b21cadb1b
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describe
'890' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZY' 'sip-files00163.txt'
dfadfacaa8ad80c3aa1c8460d0aad5ec
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describe
'5944' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABFZZ' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
27fa48090cabfb736b0ae0ddac2e539d
d4d5e5f08abe95851d7574b545ddd04c40f215df
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAA' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
22003f0e934b1992e7390dddcbf6c34f
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describe
'130509' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAB' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
2e2d123e9c3900b8e30a4a3865317714
3e74294c411e3adac6f1adeeb12eaada62633f3d
describe
'29449' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAC' 'sip-files00164.pro'
6b076790594fd9f2d830f376e47fa39b
d7a43e2416e9b67e4298d7cb12c377bf93419acc
'2011-11-17T23:35:31-05:00'
describe
'38376' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAD' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
84e5b2dfcf401bcd3bdc9946dd8483b2
b18bbc308d63441a1f84b5411f3c573009540a72
'2011-11-17T23:43:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAE' 'sip-files00164.tif'
5fa682fa882830838e7198e657c9ebf9
3c545d9b8d7c8f4c133a5964012ba2716a2102c2
describe
'1237' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAF' 'sip-files00164.txt'
7f9f736a6ddc48205909caa7a23d36ac
0ac1ee7f6cdb327099dcae1f9e3d9de6dd7546cb
describe
'9244' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAG' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
46fd0418177c785ce6d54305e99f88d1
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describe
'346766' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAH' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
8c88fd075fadef68565a9db036906dcc
05d3f733fd8e7f62e65e2f36adc3984986289650
'2011-11-17T23:46:05-05:00'
describe
'150337' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAI' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
a212b1712218ca515d688c5a0bffdf98
4868cef5f3e3e4e25e85d28a4891fc310167e58b
'2011-11-17T23:40:43-05:00'
describe
'45998' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAJ' 'sip-files00165.pro'
e0967b0d174577e73a85bd1882274194
d6326e82570902d156ae2e4b6fbcbdbb7992dbe9
'2011-11-17T23:36:59-05:00'
describe
'46143' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAK' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
482d26003c1247b5c05d76bdc65e5778
503aee569cd28374c58a8a74309f17bba06215ca
'2011-11-17T23:39:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAL' 'sip-files00165.tif'
b4efeea72f747aff7c6b89f3faa032a8
ade5a335df22c75777a6b43a8c2190778c801a16
describe
'1828' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAM' 'sip-files00165.txt'
fa5c741b6b2452ec547a69e5efa9277b
fefd3ab88e9d5e3f3b27faf1df4018f98e0dac08
describe
'10377' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAN' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
d7e24d8b0a6771c6b7416a96445791fe
db6a0b887ac0dd91f65bb7aab1ee2cd7c2f0147a
'2011-11-17T23:44:38-05:00'
describe
'347048' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAO' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
10079902c9e6daa362bfe1462b708b8c
1feea4a91a46d5b4ab4355124e1001501feda894
describe
'143959' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAP' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
877e8ef9f337609a0609b1c98fb69bf9
0fbbf12c3354ae0c3c0d023d9f456ddbd7d1853c
describe
'43453' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAQ' 'sip-files00166.pro'
744d6c789eb4340e06948fbb541f2a65
0cba7ade78b9ec867c743e90751944d636fc53ea
'2011-11-17T23:42:01-05:00'
describe
'44665' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAR' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
212a5a7c165d09f520b8294aa9eaf5eb
15749083948feefe2b7d279e87dee289791e76ad
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAS' 'sip-files00166.tif'
29caaadc81ed2adfc85c5c1fc402b5c1
1c081f9a46f57973096bebfa19e655f68f20aec6
describe
'1709' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAT' 'sip-files00166.txt'
c322be00b747610a1fb068fac3b2f332
812b84b8c945181c5436ebb86e6d6b4f4d2589c3
describe
'10421' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAU' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
c323c2c83f435b54caa8645db20302ec
b8311cb93f28a69dfe06b85a447db41d884b2369
describe
'346692' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAV' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
017c30400f05013ab23f3fd3f2d052ea
1f8c6fa72c6e3dd1bad4643828f8ec354c2bbf57
describe
'136819' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAW' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
457357da06a1233c4761844602ef0137
838cdd2e095e9f4886b2d9baa9d2b2d3f2b3ca9f
describe
'42037' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAX' 'sip-files00167.pro'
43a35721393dad3c0fc0b3f22b1a2cfe
451479544a0824d65c90ac98de56dddcae743fc9
describe
'43580' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAY' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
f78d56d534317b0009ab950d6aabe067
3b9edd4ca4407323c7bccc4fd73fd332dc99f66a
'2011-11-17T23:46:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGAZ' 'sip-files00167.tif'
8bf8d2c03c601183c3cb87aa82d6bfc3
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBA' 'sip-files00167.txt'
d6836f3bc539ba271061da604edadc0e
c3a4395419e67022e8466145f5b462b418603b30
describe
'10474' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBB' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBC' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
59bcfae7a00b75f5afb5d17db4cdc976
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describe
'146726' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBD' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
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b2a8754b179380088ed80b34e00c91324d1586e8
describe
'44586' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBE' 'sip-files00168.pro'
77613eef6f27bc7e5a3fd78d0ddbf09f
cd459c1c4f4db3bd4c9ee53ae08dc82446e53c4d
describe
'45185' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBF' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
103aaaaa11d330aa6027ce60b654421e
7cef3a9d454cd96f29e80a8955d45f501ff4b6e5
'2011-11-17T23:42:45-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBG' 'sip-files00168.tif'
7324d72f8a05950d0cd2e8aec19bfb7d
12433d05b7e042bfe7f86f1fe833f5cfb7290097
'2011-11-17T23:40:24-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBH' 'sip-files00168.txt'
e678480c45f8bed0c1db03d9295ec1ab
f0b90d4b8db19c931b796fa157bcc5ae90ba5ec9
describe
'10507' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBI' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
a788821c7846466c2e5852baa01c5dc3
a10b44cf41c7f6642459951d6f38078d68946f74
'2011-11-17T23:45:21-05:00'
describe
'346762' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBJ' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
e707789df1a511c58f84a0b38b5d6c14
443fb23961d05233ea7edfbfea19635b8885ab1b
'2011-11-17T23:38:09-05:00'
describe
'144257' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBK' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
1f3b7243e62b31e4f7197ebda5de6408
791e6474512d22212a04d6ef0c1bac2fa8268f82
describe
'43355' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBL' 'sip-files00169.pro'
2e55cf718d3c76b1f9203f619ee90eeb
b1fd4153f262e9f7100ba36aebfc092069a05dbe
'2011-11-17T23:44:45-05:00'
describe
'45336' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBM' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
66031a0cfcf14e93bb012265038d5615
00aa7cbe1285e5d9dcc4e215f68bee109783243d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBN' 'sip-files00169.tif'
8ef03a61441f6d829b79643eb76f2c5f
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBO' 'sip-files00169.txt'
6bc269c917d53bd5809921e525ec95a3
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBP' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
1367399d8867fd1c5155ac86f13bfd25
1e5c3f2a4afc513f32e8987bf2d2107b9456bb1d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBQ' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
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describe
'141995' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBR' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
a5aaf3c27ce64d282868cd50fd1bde0f
8f66257a713334f9920c42817269d14d3fde179d
'2011-11-17T23:35:06-05:00'
describe
'44435' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBS' 'sip-files00170.pro'
cb2bab054e61f2ee36d122af257d874a
e880ff44a290bc510273000c9fcb9b0162523a20
'2011-11-17T23:44:28-05:00'
describe
'44082' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBT' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
d4540d47690441f6c3b6be2a7c3013e6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBU' 'sip-files00170.tif'
f821348f43ce5bf8303c2d07e4edfdac
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBV' 'sip-files00170.txt'
433c2b2d78cbd2a393ad6379093c5783
beb3e9b9ea3e0b9b145bcc067cbd44a4c2e28a11
describe
'10554' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBW' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBX' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
59ec400f7abf4c203ba55bcc4d806f87
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describe
'136588' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBY' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
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describe
'41255' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGBZ' 'sip-files00171.pro'
b286ace79ef2729b05e589b9affaf42f
07451c255f99aeb4e314e998e2518c9fc544a4a2
describe
'43306' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCA' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
083161d8e75c69192f3b946c5a4345bd
8e54fdd531141fb835cc6c0b3f825d80f537fa8f
'2011-11-17T23:41:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCB' 'sip-files00171.tif'
cc746821f8fc0c10dc6e82a1ba167daf
fe68dc0dcafd02468ecd2a6f8ef942cf92a4f6f5
'2011-11-17T23:36:57-05:00'
describe
'1683' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCC' 'sip-files00171.txt'
5a3141c235de60f076ff9f6730004c94
0be6585d7d717b7a9c46490c00808795f02ec756
'2011-11-17T23:37:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCD' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
ec71d52d16e2c6b6560cfb5c39ec776d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCE' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
3411e873281c62b10b537b2ac0953514
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describe
'137534' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCF' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
f78cd8f5f017b9d48dd84aaef8e27e60
ea4856548213dd1a55133f9b9ecc89e60ad5971d
describe
'42367' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCG' 'sip-files00172.pro'
5daa42932cca8a0d5da4822841f84b51
28f8af331e3afee15386686d9437d29b7aa2427c
'2011-11-17T23:46:29-05:00'
describe
'42942' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCH' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
44ab8d453d083d53ca731a52019ead6c
7181ec0d6fd34b05ec130101e3df8bbfe6ce3bc5
'2011-11-17T23:34:52-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCI' 'sip-files00172.tif'
0dad3e4c206fc02accbbd560d644dbce
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describe
'1667' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCJ' 'sip-files00172.txt'
2f36f632b7b3ad6000d5e990b0defa36
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'2011-11-17T23:34:19-05:00'
describe
'10152' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCK' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
f9104806b3d51be1902994e84d7fa3db
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCL' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
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describe
'143310' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCM' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
5d46d471bf2edcdc7cfc09e1adfb1676
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'2011-11-17T23:36:31-05:00'
describe
'44329' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCN' 'sip-files00173.pro'
cc24089a3694d3fb34457d911a05b0da
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describe
'45102' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCO' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
94ac1c69036285d0e456bc9b2fc0ae6f
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCP' 'sip-files00173.tif'
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describe
'1888' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCQ' 'sip-files00173.txt'
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describe
'10837' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCR' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
6d42e1b3baed73a413cc12dbbeee8e3c
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'2011-11-17T23:46:45-05:00'
describe
'346981' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCS' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
8d0ca4b6b2bf2fd5a5f981f6380f8efc
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describe
'137937' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCT' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
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describe
'41498' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCU' 'sip-files00174.pro'
71556f4f682a4d1165132ef9e2c74c9a
d55dd68a47ecfd504c2320876640c2f761b8a1ba
'2011-11-17T23:36:46-05:00'
describe
'42496' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCV' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
0f779fecd69156f7c8fe46a2f0eb1e72
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCW' 'sip-files00174.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCX' 'sip-files00174.txt'
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describe
'10125' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCY' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
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describe
'346785' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGCZ' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
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describe
'139525' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDA' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
82e46d70e08b3b12d91b41dc282865ad
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'2011-11-17T23:37:33-05:00'
describe
'42941' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDB' 'sip-files00175.pro'
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describe
'43135' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDC' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDD' 'sip-files00175.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDE' 'sip-files00175.txt'
f6fb27db409536d1afc98692ee06000a
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describe
'10468' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDF' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDG' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
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describe
'146851' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDH' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
17df6d347096e9edebe085ab139d9f1e
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'2011-11-17T23:45:00-05:00'
describe
'45264' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDI' 'sip-files00176.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:52-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDJ' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDK' 'sip-files00176.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:00-05:00'
describe
'1775' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDL' 'sip-files00176.txt'
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describe
'10505' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDM' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDN' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
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describe
'143008' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDO' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
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describe
'43997' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDP' 'sip-files00177.pro'
869979802abbd800ae27ee33f24218f3
d60d871be7b40e3ab9b4ea6d09fa0e30a18e4173
'2011-11-17T23:39:29-05:00'
describe
'44833' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDQ' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
0175b00765292dd03c1381805bc51cbd
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDR' 'sip-files00177.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDS' 'sip-files00177.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:16-05:00'
describe
'10602' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDT' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
c80a647cebc8ffae4e49ce43bfb39a39
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describe
'346915' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDU' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:44-05:00'
describe
'143344' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDV' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
a1044aee69b1f3bda8e32df2e53e9476
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describe
'43960' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDW' 'sip-files00178.pro'
eeb5773ed52d19e8bb6ea8e41fe01c83
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'2011-11-17T23:35:40-05:00'
describe
'44918' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDX' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
e100c8f6b50e6bb3231fa910fcd31762
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'2011-11-17T23:45:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDY' 'sip-files00178.tif'
e18280617929fb01ba33c4b2cbe19fd0
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describe
'1738' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGDZ' 'sip-files00178.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:11-05:00'
describe
'10280' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEA' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:36-05:00'
describe
'346644' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEB' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
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describe
'141173' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEC' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:06-05:00'
describe
'44344' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGED' 'sip-files00179.pro'
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describe
'43533' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEE' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEF' 'sip-files00179.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEG' 'sip-files00179.txt'
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describe
'10118' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEH' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
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describe
'346909' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEI' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
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describe
'137612' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEJ' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
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describe
'41950' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEK' 'sip-files00180.pro'
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describe
'42832' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEL' 'sip-files00180.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEM' 'sip-files00180.tif'
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fc3320f4922a5114ce6d481f52a452067771ac24
'2011-11-17T23:38:18-05:00'
describe
'1675' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEN' 'sip-files00180.txt'
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describe
'10503' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEO' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEP' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
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describe
'146143' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEQ' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
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describe
'43898' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGER' 'sip-files00181.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:17-05:00'
describe
'44972' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGES' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGET' 'sip-files00181.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEU' 'sip-files00181.txt'
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describe
'10466' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEV' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEW' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
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describe
'149081' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEX' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
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describe
'45952' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEY' 'sip-files00182.pro'
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describe
'46504' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGEZ' 'sip-files00182.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFA' 'sip-files00182.tif'
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describe
'1803' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFB' 'sip-files00182.txt'
259fe18cce0f049e54ff66d7021e4e15
c341c85b6a9a0a00c892529df074ff683789afa4
'2011-11-17T23:37:02-05:00'
describe
'10757' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFC' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
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describe
'346598' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFD' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
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describe
'85341' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFE' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
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describe
'23350' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFF' 'sip-files00183.pro'
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describe
'25817' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFG' 'sip-files00183.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFH' 'sip-files00183.tif'
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describe
'958' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFI' 'sip-files00183.txt'
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describe
'6230' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFJ' 'sip-files00183thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFK' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
07269766e7ce8988e6695f08d3fa0b04
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describe
'138166' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFL' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
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describe
'32129' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFM' 'sip-files00184.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:19-05:00'
describe
'40726' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFN' 'sip-files00184.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFO' 'sip-files00184.tif'
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describe
'1312' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFP' 'sip-files00184.txt'
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describe
'9571' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFQ' 'sip-files00184thm.jpg'
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describe
'346793' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFR' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:58-05:00'
describe
'148458' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFS' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
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describe
'45767' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFT' 'sip-files00185.pro'
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describe
'45713' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFU' 'sip-files00185.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFV' 'sip-files00185.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:39-05:00'
describe
'1810' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFW' 'sip-files00185.txt'
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describe
'10448' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFX' 'sip-files00185thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFY' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
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describe
'148612' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGFZ' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
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describe
'46602' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGA' 'sip-files00186.pro'
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describe
'45818' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGB' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGC' 'sip-files00186.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGD' 'sip-files00186.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGE' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
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describe
'346700' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGF' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
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describe
'140404' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGG' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
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describe
'43934' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGH' 'sip-files00187.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:44-05:00'
describe
'43743' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGI' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGJ' 'sip-files00187.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGK' 'sip-files00187.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:09-05:00'
describe
'10238' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGL' 'sip-files00187thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:32-05:00'
describe
'346966' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGM' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
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describe
'140909' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGN' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
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describe
'43022' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGO' 'sip-files00188.pro'
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describe
'44128' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGP' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:52-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGQ' 'sip-files00188.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGR' 'sip-files00188.txt'
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describe
'10454' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGS' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGT' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
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describe
'137270' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGU' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
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describe
'42282' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGV' 'sip-files00189.pro'
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describe
'43086' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGW' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGX' 'sip-files00189.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:32-05:00'
describe
'1708' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGY' 'sip-files00189.txt'
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describe
'10279' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGGZ' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHA' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
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describe
'135694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHB' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHC' 'sip-files00190.pro'
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describe
'42543' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHD' 'sip-files00190.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHE' 'sip-files00190.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:18-05:00'
describe
'1664' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHF' 'sip-files00190.txt'
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describe
'10130' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHG' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
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describe
'346783' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHH' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
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describe
'135493' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHI' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:31-05:00'
describe
'41953' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHJ' 'sip-files00191.pro'
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describe
'42662' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHK' 'sip-files00191.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHL' 'sip-files00191.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHM' 'sip-files00191.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:37-05:00'
describe
'10511' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHN' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHO' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:05-05:00'
describe
'134861' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHP' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:46-05:00'
describe
'40957' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHQ' 'sip-files00192.pro'
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describe
'41732' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHR' 'sip-files00192.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHS' 'sip-files00192.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHT' 'sip-files00192.txt'
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describe
'10235' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHU' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
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describe
'346640' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHV' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
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describe
'208532' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHW' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
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describe
'967' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHX' 'sip-files00193.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:31-05:00'
describe
'49750' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHY' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
ea9dd0bd0f9b01ff37201b21f6e3355e
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'2011-11-17T23:42:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGHZ' 'sip-files00193.tif'
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describe
'175' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIA' 'sip-files00193.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:11-05:00'
describe
'11091' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIB' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
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describe
'346708' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIC' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
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describe
'137022' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGID' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
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describe
'42419' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIE' 'sip-files00195.pro'
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describe
'42754' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIF' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIG' 'sip-files00195.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIH' 'sip-files00195.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGII' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
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describe
'347003' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIJ' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
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describe
'143419' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIK' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
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9d2a8e19b1c9febc1ca18156f68473997fb930bd
describe
'44859' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIL' 'sip-files00196.pro'
b034b3632e2ae53dffd6dab3aa301313
22c107355c0644ff4169948a542fba2391aeb62c
describe
'44873' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIM' 'sip-files00196.QC.jpg'
2ac91d51152e9bb87aea2813ddf7622c
d4f9b95b8117f3d65d717d74e165ae628018a2cc
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIN' 'sip-files00196.tif'
def9c9aeaeba990744a4e3543ba33caf
af64405ac02674c65b8d711c768762dc19ebceaf
describe
'1780' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIO' 'sip-files00196.txt'
4316202c397c219e3ab77bf7006f7c8f
7ea27f0db1ee434f41afcde1361f873917c19f22
describe
'10343' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIP' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
9279c18a5b71ef4b1370be54db127d29
a6e0a2bf4a492fc6c60c3b506d81fe76f123a224
'2011-11-17T23:45:50-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIQ' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
ed7e9074da1c036d6f1acdfc032bdef2
c41497f416208d22b9e3d818316322d148542ef4
'2011-11-17T23:46:31-05:00'
describe
'140942' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIR' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
4183e770a0dd828daa8dd954d1c8f2bc
aea263d1d433d0eeebfc28d92f62550ae3ec3cdd
describe
'44455' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIS' 'sip-files00197.pro'
9337d61fdb889a75c0f040acb7428d81
931eda7acca85a5bfcff33ea3c4be1ed1541e373
describe
'44366' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIT' 'sip-files00197.QC.jpg'
a5e2d78771c9986092175a68be5df3cd
ace0769e78683772e65aaf10df0aef676c8c8a45
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIU' 'sip-files00197.tif'
73263341c8cb081244eec1b92ce9c1e2
1c484678b26def0cd045267e74cc3c4f252d0bda
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIV' 'sip-files00197.txt'
4cc771cba72566053a219b503c640269
789849201374bff875f4b1e1ef3ff65345e43736
describe
'10654' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIW' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
cacaf662ffbd613599ebc020731deb6e
6233f035f289718818d760d993bad1911d6c5e8e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIX' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
7b9211c24a5d5dc119cc63a6e9f971de
570c7f2d2d466cf3f15197bcf24666eaa31fcd3f
describe
'147521' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIY' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
ee98bccb994833242715db7c141eaa73
acdc291b7e83629993e42c2470c21766e018935e
describe
'46452' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGIZ' 'sip-files00198.pro'
4306ef6f66ede5fb95f02776f4eb23cf
9fef5a082fa19bfc954479a99e6e98a01c953795
describe
'46463' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJA' 'sip-files00198.QC.jpg'
729151623aca43f5eacd754ddcc2a8a3
fafe2801582ef13bd27c7c571fe3929e133037ff
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJB' 'sip-files00198.tif'
4c8db3dcdc52d66da9cf64e9e0205efe
f98eb01dc2851743b44966a08b39d65d82118367
describe
'1849' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJC' 'sip-files00198.txt'
7f557ffdde9e58f2be83d33ec7fb4d2a
b00a2af8ab49c97a548f73f7e852c4915b960a3a
describe
'10629' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJD' 'sip-files00198thm.jpg'
36e9b6d7311c51438ca0ced6c37ff4ae
74da82f78d43e38629dfeac90a729fb9e5aabcdd
describe
'346719' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJE' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
b3a85a3ce45b36c81f9ac4a409966707
1e5a33feb98eb8dcee92972e7a6a518e88458bc1
describe
'141499' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJF' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
f4ecc0345deff7373c86bd2e48429108
8d1b51026a7228c76a0545ea9c2121c93a7b81db
describe
'44346' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJG' 'sip-files00199.pro'
c52b9e190d7d45abae06c2f0c0e3a762
66f82db4851ddb2947b1fbafe9b571c6dc29bc72
describe
'45249' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJH' 'sip-files00199.QC.jpg'
b21f02dcbddfc29807dce2d2ad133e81
b4a4b6d58118836c414326e1260d7b61cfc66d8d
'2011-11-17T23:35:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJI' 'sip-files00199.tif'
f445c515c4b19ecfc437aff06f96be92
9c028968cf808b7a70ba9d1f6f52eb2c9a2d8772
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJJ' 'sip-files00199.txt'
1f856f69f1dc8ec712379a65b0516e38
9a001176cac2a141f1b5443a23406045f3ac9abf
describe
'10379' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJK' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
0b1b0539638250d2c74352b885e01cf4
3eb41d274c1e0ed31ea415e377b5958d1b102e73
describe
'347033' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJL' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
8fcfd8d68c0059bc612233fa8af40d35
d473cd2e9c81a7782d696c2404f0b612e5ff5dd8
describe
'132107' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJM' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
a0eaebbc6d7b7d12f587050fadad0574
3c9043ff51fb70bc6ba6c9fde41722281a4be797
describe
'41040' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJN' 'sip-files00200.pro'
9d8d7901a088d9077879db6c8e0b0e16
f6e1595d18838991c581a7b32972486220e6b3b7
describe
'41451' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJO' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
a1a44762824aecaccf8c4b573beed9ca
524c7ce9f4d5af5dd345870e339bdd31df452131
'2011-11-17T23:45:03-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJP' 'sip-files00200.tif'
8025972cfa5546b78e94cc3eff7de287
3e23a59e5a42fccc2e48e09675fe6ca5955da153
describe
'1618' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJQ' 'sip-files00200.txt'
65efb06ede0f216f88d0a34231275085
d1e7c072024284c33f0e6f57958dbb7e0e0dc498
describe
'10105' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJR' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
af76daf097ea23b5eb241efa3d95cefd
4e9b4f39dba0431c47aee578a417f3fb7d29e19b
describe
'346740' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJS' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
6838a4d969486f335e905393dc1dc339
45cfdbe679f542eb2d6bd84feb80be73475a284f
describe
'110375' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJT' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
64c20804003502af6b2f59bef9453a61
92e75921af37be61d7ef881600739481fe4a731b
describe
'33490' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJU' 'sip-files00201.pro'
4cbd0d58f848e44e6829137ec827d092
c710954024add15bb9c0deee68ea2731bfd36621
describe
'34827' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJV' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
1daf42d49e64df7f04be82f859eeb154
9f860226ab6106381d8463fc80294e79fd2d2983
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJW' 'sip-files00201.tif'
beaa1918cc1c06243bd53d2e6ee8c6a8
f02b433a83627dc69c7efe4cefdaa9ab2caba49b
'2011-11-17T23:45:13-05:00'
describe
'1375' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJX' 'sip-files00201.txt'
ea0a7bce25ce1058d7fd0bdbc4f5826a
f94e449f565aaa4b4150f6000563be202f56b3db
describe
Invalid character
'9175' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJY' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
6504b67425b284633bad905a74dab4c7
96a0eaa734e5a3f148e56b5d6898c031d04ec2b3
'2011-11-17T23:44:33-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGJZ' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
f383fe121fa51301e22959432f1fe57e
944ba49ec83b6510198d2ed9fea720248994beb1
'2011-11-17T23:39:26-05:00'
describe
'134799' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKA' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
528c80f38f585c3c9dd63ebffb9114ec
a43e5da7f2ec1b3bb1fe09b408056c33574a7c4a
'2011-11-17T23:45:39-05:00'
describe
'40664' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKB' 'sip-files00202.pro'
99f1b99bc2101e67e7ae3699ecd8fa28
91713c7a2658e0184b60fe8c29c01cc05da28647
'2011-11-17T23:41:43-05:00'
describe
'43485' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKC' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
7a3e3a31cb4dd79239e2d997fb87902f
7f8dc377e3501772046e4c1d6d2aefd6101d21c6
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKD' 'sip-files00202.tif'
ac5ecd0ead535dedef9523f54717d9ce
9229c581fb0a9201908ea9aa70e7d833faeea0aa
'2011-11-17T23:42:22-05:00'
describe
'1637' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKE' 'sip-files00202.txt'
3cdbe03a76f36575fc7fca56289d3b6f
c2a09b474ea430770a4f2d3bec8438a63200adb1
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKF' 'sip-files00202thm.jpg'
a90284149535a4f9e1bee5b822bdb51e
73d1831795c9b1ffd2d3e41fae78fc0b631ec772
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKG' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
78025f3da87fc249f2a67d9469276956
d7474330e62f1be2866fc5ecc9bf8ddda58bf46a
describe
'144442' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKH' 'sip-files00203.jpg'
35c371133ddee6c48e75bc9008352a39
8950caadeaeb81d1c81c060db904e57ac792280c
describe
'44610' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKI' 'sip-files00203.pro'
935217aac8f4c8c78ced2d8c3052290b
25b9518c0075782737fea15975fd588e42d6ce2c
describe
'44862' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKJ' 'sip-files00203.QC.jpg'
1c91e3c4802be5813873972a0e74eccb
d51c261bdf494e9f6a2dd58923e1af97b6fcdf6e
'2011-11-17T23:37:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKK' 'sip-files00203.tif'
b9f1d66c870ccdd8311c38d2b9828cca
514830045bb7e972a0066b0490774d3106a3bd34
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKL' 'sip-files00203.txt'
54ebc8d3848b878c2d262df68d1d511e
50e46c02ad328f2f9a6c93362d69f4fdbe55898c
describe
'10680' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKM' 'sip-files00203thm.jpg'
40125fc1fa828396e73bdc91169938dd
6b0636c1b0a8cae89be69baa043145c1039e315e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKN' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
d65f28f7062cf2bdf8560ca1b5efc1c0
a849d9184f5d71a74c9f5838a8dcb3d07a00869b
describe
'128569' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKO' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
6c7490f1710534a04d5f46d160c62f87
e89ced538a5a464f7bf5618c54c831af15d7b9df
describe
'39143' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKP' 'sip-files00204.pro'
c59e39e94f4fd10505a8b5531e0189a2
172ca03391a7a047b4c580b28eb2678cfccdeedf
describe
'39692' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKQ' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
989b7118efc1ea64307797702d15fc4c
08474ed62a310b283735391f22774e60850085bf
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKR' 'sip-files00204.tif'
ea9cbcaf32e36ae15120770a4441f0f4
f98aa53a28650a518cc6b304cf9a2b18bdbdf2e4
describe
'1581' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKS' 'sip-files00204.txt'
fcaca6c83160c082b598871937eb17ab
4631afbbd6ad6e20883075961b5d885dde75d52b
describe
'10033' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKT' 'sip-files00204thm.jpg'
d67576b6300332c2f6a3e08720713fe7
fe986c9aaafe5aa4717741fd333e8f0ac7ab459b
describe
'346739' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKU' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
2f4617d4656e67ec44d162ed5ccf6dc8
5bcdf83afb2488c790d5b6959a86a2d8966f7555
describe
'135372' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKV' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
c9aeba85d108fd08a23d53851215921e
45540c71016f9b1f00c8a857979b8e2a6fac1022
describe
'41592' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKW' 'sip-files00205.pro'
98501dcc382a7b560b7b71885307d019
117cc4058facd0211dd314e50b57d30fae038caf
describe
'42059' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKX' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
91fc1df91a975a80a6030830a7f0b6b3
c1108069bcfb1bf8facc9e5bbf12b78fbe760eef
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKY' 'sip-files00205.tif'
393d722f2160714b11dcede2a56c5cb2
154b643b2a433661a40117328f0c48464fa0c4ed
describe
'1691' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGKZ' 'sip-files00205.txt'
b5377f88a223545a0f015db05e6083fb
b72fb534b00894be14c38816f8f69ac8dbfec359
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLA' 'sip-files00205thm.jpg'
4af9ad4ede155309dd4e70dde1fedea4
0fa04c85d6154b45475ebe513bdcbf1e0d66fbdf
'2011-11-17T23:40:33-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLB' 'sip-files00206.jp2'
71a2aad0948a8011f90e9d021cc7c0d3
3c0bc5b282aafebc1de9bf9820bb6ea75b6924df
describe
'140374' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLC' 'sip-files00206.jpg'
824dea722943c15395a375f79f9f01dc
858e746ee12de950f0ccf9f5ec85f8ea27a8175b
describe
'43422' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLD' 'sip-files00206.pro'
45d933e4e6cb536993445108a16fa4c6
706dbc0656d941a219f36ff301ccf1b40dd7d026
describe
'44792' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLE' 'sip-files00206.QC.jpg'
92b90f2f7c386d924ba200229f9a8780
676afe8e8144aff8543e546b6dcdc5b85bcd13e2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLF' 'sip-files00206.tif'
49df352c7b5c7314ec8718f22ffba03c
c5cb63efc467ac79d2ce8adc510e0daa68bda52c
describe
'1704' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLG' 'sip-files00206.txt'
9b04e5865f6e876bb1d15e91b6386c6e
6b9b622bdac9b00e265a1485c1162fecfbd96214
describe
'10674' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLH' 'sip-files00206thm.jpg'
14a77a2fe6f2c37436cca0d6e0efb10e
0d2ab226fdb17652e059e077bba6679a12d5a2eb
describe
'346765' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLI' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
74511bb7c147f48a68282d6076f788c8
9f25f867205c325793e3953beb5cab9162e6c305
describe
'139081' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLJ' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
901688c2828caa936d3f9b2f52e16f00
87a0c1fd3a42a06cd0ac1dd7534cc0c554501448
describe
'44664' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLK' 'sip-files00207.pro'
c10be31a96ae33022b5dc115ab760df5
9154c6d8f456f5f9a5f21120e960c054d07d8dd3
describe
'43114' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLL' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
5aa208678647b70cfbcdef3dfb90cc59
33d99287f9abd24f63296d57e61f8a7ee3356160
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLM' 'sip-files00207.tif'
ce1c3e093c2ba0d836fa139883678fe4
2545896f41f3c95239c9cc49540fe224e5dd632a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLN' 'sip-files00207.txt'
19edc745eebd8414fdc1e76ecd66bbf2
b247c6376a8e0fdfa6292b0dc4708addefe62d6d
describe
'10104' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLO' 'sip-files00207thm.jpg'
60ac1f537df7c79cae741e11efcfb8d4
f46b1562e72951a333772d8a84321c1041a1fe59
describe
'347007' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLP' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
3ec9342df2b00efb512095d294cacb9a
fefa9a0afb58b58215044c1e94308bab3965cb58
describe
'142907' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLQ' 'sip-files00208.jpg'
f393860b0d1a168f2c342ea1e1666117
49242ca7ab926194393563f5e6dd1c7ee699e4f4
describe
'44337' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLR' 'sip-files00208.pro'
eb0eaecf64c38dd42643056ec747db2f
4814f4d164d8241f2a86d18cb2b962a19ce9fe1f
describe
'44205' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLS' 'sip-files00208.QC.jpg'
d7a6ab435bcecbc102bdd1d51c9b92f9
df918b7ee3cd8acbb4e423952c9864d2f5d8db5c
'2011-11-17T23:44:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLT' 'sip-files00208.tif'
75a5cf1c1f9a48c0c98389f9cb77dd3f
a42eb78977ed16ad2c4cfeca28f03e89e1966b89
'2011-11-17T23:45:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLU' 'sip-files00208.txt'
e3d5c5d7dc81ef97f1e6d2bc1fb40f97
2156b126a1326926aba1c5d6251c649f1c683b5a
'2011-11-17T23:37:42-05:00'
describe
'10552' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLV' 'sip-files00208thm.jpg'
900a0529205ce934945a539b4dce9401
6a973b252247eedd573ab073e4e68a33d60483d7
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLW' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
1a6dcedbb8f638efc808a5a3abd9e750
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describe
'141724' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLX' 'sip-files00209.jpg'
8db6c99055928f7f3a10f66edba459a9
4c5100087202a26f84dac7b1239a342c8962c92d
describe
'43932' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLY' 'sip-files00209.pro'
b56aa4b5e7703f26909a0f10f4e8b722
c11e242ab3673412633af64230f88ac3f81478b8
describe
'43717' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGLZ' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
2852857af7a7fb62801f6ebf8f76271c
96842c4c855f27bf1763e3ae2114a7eb7063efbf
'2011-11-17T23:44:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMA' 'sip-files00209.tif'
ed0f4d94a3f3cf15b17d3c78f9e4dd9c
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMB' 'sip-files00209.txt'
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b5be09dede49ff073c104a7dccc9c2071adf5a77
describe
'10453' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMC' 'sip-files00209thm.jpg'
dbad4a98d4b2c6b7c5f84ecb788451f6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMD' 'sip-files00210.jp2'
cf8c4bcd307324bc1de42e2dec7019f1
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describe
'134503' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGME' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
88ed40f3a9c96bd219545fd1190cb29c
0a7e1c51a107b5abaf277fa05112220a20f4234e
describe
'41864' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMF' 'sip-files00210.pro'
5960126ac9cbe68d6e24e42f4edc58c1
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describe
'40937' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMG' 'sip-files00210.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMH' 'sip-files00210.tif'
4e0486b6d7ff00d31b9cd78740dd8639
e6904c552081bc536fe8ffb526697b4c7257133f
'2011-11-17T23:42:09-05:00'
describe
'1674' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMI' 'sip-files00210.txt'
65774b82e64079fcdb7eeec1e2d6edc2
37e3e7d5e066042e3d39edce9fd30f7f451e2605
'2011-11-17T23:40:12-05:00'
describe
'9958' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMJ' 'sip-files00210thm.jpg'
f82315a627512e98b26067a676e9aef2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMK' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
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describe
'126425' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGML' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
a4adf4c66ac514f767d56c74a2aec31f
23ce9047aebfd3b2f4701b8d2eecd67c53e8ad6d
describe
'39575' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMM' 'sip-files00211.pro'
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describe
'40728' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMN' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
4a3f4b80ea177e88cd17b6f2369d883d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMO' 'sip-files00211.tif'
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describe
'1574' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMP' 'sip-files00211.txt'
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describe
'9555' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMQ' 'sip-files00211thm.jpg'
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describe
'346769' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMR' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
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describe
'139075' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMS' 'sip-files00212.jpg'
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describe
'42073' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMT' 'sip-files00212.pro'
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describe
'44187' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMU' 'sip-files00212.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMV' 'sip-files00212.tif'
fd78b313d6966bbf4c3b0636b99d4627
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'2011-11-17T23:46:52-05:00'
describe
'1665' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMW' 'sip-files00212.txt'
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describe
'10137' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMX' 'sip-files00212thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMY' 'sip-files00213.jp2'
06bc566e4ad09c74db20564efcf683f9
e85edfb27c6b735d9bf937e4dadd245ecb65530d
'2011-11-17T23:41:05-05:00'
describe
'96439' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGMZ' 'sip-files00213.jpg'
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describe
'26993' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNA' 'sip-files00213.pro'
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describe
'29284' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNB' 'sip-files00213.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNC' 'sip-files00213.tif'
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describe
'1101' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGND' 'sip-files00213.txt'
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describe
'6905' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNE' 'sip-files00213thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNF' 'sip-files00214.jp2'
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describe
'137892' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNG' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
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describe
'32138' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNH' 'sip-files00214.pro'
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describe
'40228' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNI' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
ad7b4c1dc6f03a078e20d3fcfe99e2a2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNJ' 'sip-files00214.tif'
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describe
'1313' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNK' 'sip-files00214.txt'
e0e746546e7917c423f642f1d815712e
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'2011-11-17T23:43:28-05:00'
describe
'9533' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNL' 'sip-files00214thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNM' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
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describe
'145724' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNN' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:20-05:00'
describe
'45024' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNO' 'sip-files00215.pro'
1b61f373ace579ab84d2669d188b9279
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describe
'45535' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNP' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNQ' 'sip-files00215.tif'
4dc1a75404d5a7cd5f3d5fcd952386d6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNR' 'sip-files00215.txt'
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describe
'10616' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNS' 'sip-files00215thm.jpg'
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describe
'346986' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNT' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
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describe
'150518' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNU' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
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describe
'45671' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNV' 'sip-files00216.pro'
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describe
'46723' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNW' 'sip-files00216.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNX' 'sip-files00216.tif'
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describe
'1791' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNY' 'sip-files00216.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:37-05:00'
describe
'10677' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGNZ' 'sip-files00216thm.jpg'
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describe
'346712' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOA' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
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describe
'147481' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOB' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
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describe
'45014' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOC' 'sip-files00217.pro'
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describe
'45092' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOD' 'sip-files00217.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOE' 'sip-files00217.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOF' 'sip-files00217.txt'
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describe
'10303' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOG' 'sip-files00217thm.jpg'
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describe
'346912' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOH' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
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describe
'145038' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOI' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
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describe
'44231' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOJ' 'sip-files00218.pro'
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describe
'45241' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOK' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
2b89e4476a0a514f4724d030c7f5074d
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'2011-11-17T23:35:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOL' 'sip-files00218.tif'
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describe
'1732' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOM' 'sip-files00218.txt'
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describe
'10306' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGON' 'sip-files00218thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOO' 'sip-files00219.jp2'
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describe
'143207' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOP' 'sip-files00219.jpg'
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describe
'44323' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOQ' 'sip-files00219.pro'
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describe
'43969' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOR' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOS' 'sip-files00219.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOT' 'sip-files00219.txt'
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describe
'10477' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOU' 'sip-files00219thm.jpg'
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describe
'347023' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOV' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
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describe
'142030' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOW' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
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describe
'42702' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOX' 'sip-files00220.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:56-05:00'
describe
'44530' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOY' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGOZ' 'sip-files00220.tif'
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describe
'1686' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPA' 'sip-files00220.txt'
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describe
'10397' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPB' 'sip-files00220thm.jpg'
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describe
'346798' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPC' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
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describe
'152492' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPD' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
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describe
'46706' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPE' 'sip-files00221.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:38:20-05:00'
describe
'47206' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPF' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
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describe
'2790776' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPG' 'sip-files00221.tif'
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describe
'1839' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPH' 'sip-files00221.txt'
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describe
'10396' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPI' 'sip-files00221thm.jpg'
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describe
'346924' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPJ' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
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describe
'146327' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPK' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPL' 'sip-files00222.pro'
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describe
'44268' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPM' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
a564286410bc52e41f8a36a3236ad564
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPN' 'sip-files00222.tif'
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describe
'1778' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPO' 'sip-files00222.txt'
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describe
'10559' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPP' 'sip-files00222thm.jpg'
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describe
'346703' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPQ' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
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describe
'147198' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPR' 'sip-files00223.jpg'
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describe
'45296' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPS' 'sip-files00223.pro'
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describe
'46089' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPT' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPU' 'sip-files00223.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPV' 'sip-files00223.txt'
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describe
'10594' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPW' 'sip-files00223thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPX' 'sip-files00224.jp2'
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describe
'146551' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPY' 'sip-files00224.jpg'
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describe
'44500' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGPZ' 'sip-files00224.pro'
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describe
'45567' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQA' 'sip-files00224.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQB' 'sip-files00224.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQC' 'sip-files00224.txt'
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describe
'10859' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQD' 'sip-files00224thm.jpg'
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describe
'346736' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQE' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
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describe
'142803' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQF' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
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describe
'45090' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQG' 'sip-files00225.pro'
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describe
'43314' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQH' 'sip-files00225.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQI' 'sip-files00225.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQJ' 'sip-files00225.txt'
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describe
'10251' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQK' 'sip-files00225thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQL' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
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describe
'134890' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQM' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
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describe
'40873' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQN' 'sip-files00226.pro'
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describe
'42454' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQO' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQP' 'sip-files00226.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:11-05:00'
describe
'1624' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQQ' 'sip-files00226.txt'
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describe
'10147' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQR' 'sip-files00226thm.jpg'
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describe
'346715' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQS' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
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describe
'138631' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQT' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:57-05:00'
describe
'42623' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQU' 'sip-files00227.pro'
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describe
'44299' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQV' 'sip-files00227.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQW' 'sip-files00227.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQX' 'sip-files00227.txt'
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describe
'10234' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQY' 'sip-files00227thm.jpg'
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describe
'346973' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGQZ' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
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describe
'142566' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRA' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
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describe
'44987' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRB' 'sip-files00228.pro'
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describe
'43864' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRC' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRD' 'sip-files00228.tif'
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describe
'1792' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRE' 'sip-files00228.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:28-05:00'
describe
'9882' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRF' 'sip-files00228thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:59-05:00'
describe
'346784' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRG' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
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describe
'133905' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRH' 'sip-files00229.jpg'
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describe
'41189' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRI' 'sip-files00229.pro'
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describe
'42187' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRJ' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRK' 'sip-files00229.tif'
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describe
'1650' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRL' 'sip-files00229.txt'
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describe
'10230' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRM' 'sip-files00229thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRN' 'sip-files00230.jp2'
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describe
'146946' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRO' 'sip-files00230.jpg'
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describe
'44719' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRP' 'sip-files00230.pro'
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describe
'46124' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRQ' 'sip-files00230.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRR' 'sip-files00230.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRS' 'sip-files00230.txt'
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describe
'10956' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRT' 'sip-files00230thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:20-05:00'
describe
'346763' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRU' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
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describe
'123000' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRV' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
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describe
'36260' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRW' 'sip-files00231.pro'
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describe
'38296' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRX' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRY' 'sip-files00231.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:55-05:00'
describe
'1426' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGRZ' 'sip-files00231.txt'
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describe
'8962' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSA' 'sip-files00231thm.jpg'
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describe
'346993' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSB' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:42:42-05:00'
describe
'125488' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSC' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
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describe
'27262' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSD' 'sip-files00232.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:43-05:00'
describe
'36997' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSE' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSF' 'sip-files00232.tif'
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describe
'1162' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSG' 'sip-files00232.txt'
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describe
'9119' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSH' 'sip-files00232thm.jpg'
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describe
'346676' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSI' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
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describe
'140911' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSJ' 'sip-files00233.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:29-05:00'
describe
'44345' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSK' 'sip-files00233.pro'
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describe
'43520' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSL' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSM' 'sip-files00233.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:39:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSN' 'sip-files00233.txt'
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describe
'10115' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSO' 'sip-files00233thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSP' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
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describe
'143949' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSQ' 'sip-files00234.jpg'
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describe
'44005' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSR' 'sip-files00234.pro'
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describe
'44959' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSS' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGST' 'sip-files00234.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSU' 'sip-files00234.txt'
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describe
'10497' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSV' 'sip-files00234thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:43:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSW' 'sip-files00235.jp2'
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describe
'138262' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSX' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
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describe
'43649' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSY' 'sip-files00235.pro'
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describe
'43588' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGSZ' 'sip-files00235.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTA' 'sip-files00235.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTB' 'sip-files00235.txt'
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describe
'10426' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTC' 'sip-files00235thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTD' 'sip-files00236.jp2'
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describe
'132749' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTE' 'sip-files00236.jpg'
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describe
'41270' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTF' 'sip-files00236.pro'
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describe
'41172' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTG' 'sip-files00236.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTH' 'sip-files00236.tif'
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describe
'1641' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTI' 'sip-files00236.txt'
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describe
'9763' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTJ' 'sip-files00236thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTK' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
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describe
'135561' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTL' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
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describe
'41505' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTM' 'sip-files00237.pro'
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describe
'41320' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTN' 'sip-files00237.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTO' 'sip-files00237.tif'
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describe
'1653' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTP' 'sip-files00237.txt'
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describe
'10324' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTQ' 'sip-files00237thm.jpg'
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describe
'347043' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTR' 'sip-files00238.jp2'
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describe
'137049' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTS' 'sip-files00238.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:08-05:00'
describe
'41994' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTT' 'sip-files00238.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:45:41-05:00'
describe
'42567' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTU' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTV' 'sip-files00238.tif'
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describe
'1666' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTW' 'sip-files00238.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTX' 'sip-files00238thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTY' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
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describe
'141957' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGTZ' 'sip-files00239.jpg'
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describe
'44351' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUA' 'sip-files00239.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:35:17-05:00'
describe
'44840' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUB' 'sip-files00239.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUC' 'sip-files00239.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUD' 'sip-files00239.txt'
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describe
'10165' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUE' 'sip-files00239thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUF' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
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describe
'138197' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUG' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
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describe
'42777' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUH' 'sip-files00240.pro'
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describe
'43526' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUI' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUJ' 'sip-files00240.tif'
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describe
'1696' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUK' 'sip-files00240.txt'
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describe
'10233' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUL' 'sip-files00240thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUM' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
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describe
'81629' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUN' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
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describe
'2426' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUO' 'sip-files00241.pro'
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describe
'19111' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUP' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUQ' 'sip-files00241.tif'
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describe
'113' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUR' 'sip-files00241.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:27-05:00'
describe
'4522' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUS' 'sip-files00241thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUT' 'sip-files00243.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:25-05:00'
describe
'143156' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUU' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
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describe
'44283' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUV' 'sip-files00243.pro'
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describe
'44362' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUW' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUX' 'sip-files00243.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUY' 'sip-files00243.txt'
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describe
'10563' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGUZ' 'sip-files00243thm.jpg'
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describe
'347055' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVA' 'sip-files00244.jp2'
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describe
'138991' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVB' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
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describe
'43578' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVC' 'sip-files00244.pro'
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describe
'43698' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVD' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVE' 'sip-files00244.tif'
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describe
'1731' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVF' 'sip-files00244.txt'
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describe
'10026' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVG' 'sip-files00244thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVH' 'sip-files00245.jp2'
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describe
'139277' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVI' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
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describe
'43281' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVJ' 'sip-files00245.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:18-05:00'
describe
'43372' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVK' 'sip-files00245.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVL' 'sip-files00245.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVM' 'sip-files00245.txt'
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describe
'10229' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVN' 'sip-files00245thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVO' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
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describe
'145447' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVP' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
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describe
'44157' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVQ' 'sip-files00246.pro'
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describe
'45631' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVR' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVS' 'sip-files00246.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVT' 'sip-files00246.txt'
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describe
'10568' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVU' 'sip-files00246thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVV' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
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describe
'142639' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVW' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
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describe
'44381' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVX' 'sip-files00247.pro'
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describe
'44737' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVY' 'sip-files00247.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGVZ' 'sip-files00247.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWA' 'sip-files00247.txt'
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describe
'9872' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWB' 'sip-files00247thm.jpg'
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describe
'346883' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWC' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
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describe
'140299' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWD' 'sip-files00248.jpg'
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describe
'43227' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWE' 'sip-files00248.pro'
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describe
'44079' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWF' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWG' 'sip-files00248.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWH' 'sip-files00248.txt'
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describe
'10598' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWI' 'sip-files00248thm.jpg'
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describe
'346689' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWJ' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
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describe
'143075' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWK' 'sip-files00249.jpg'
f0b0120726134f59e0f654df6e274792
8256162d1a8650856e91030dfeceac5d0de25f6a
describe
'43617' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWL' 'sip-files00249.pro'
7fa9c10eb2e08a04c809f5535d7d9f61
923c7d4d9007befefe3b18179f45e48cd4d3c1a7
describe
'45304' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWM' 'sip-files00249.QC.jpg'
93e4e5e07db28030b4e239258cf9a247
8e4eb0c07c6c64e924283df3b37d924c63e2bfb2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWN' 'sip-files00249.tif'
f0b693838e02633a38a86e65540ade13
2d350d4737349e747963d7715b9830123cab2343
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWO' 'sip-files00249.txt'
411e6ae71e2c0c55330356020d0bc75c
d259af536a9908b97379888555824144a9765b9d
'2011-11-17T23:37:20-05:00'
describe
'10502' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWP' 'sip-files00249thm.jpg'
33ebac1a47f1350d21d324d642b5f62d
e1726a2492e1cf9f5ab339db3df866c70c4e291f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWQ' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
c9dc91c942c8d1dffc0e7508f2d866fe
6df922c81e30837af24dac824ac7a8e9c5ced2cf
describe
'140481' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWR' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
ee600ac6eade28c7c5b0cdc39473ee05
3448150d6d963306366f2f04bb2e735d398a3251
describe
'43165' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWS' 'sip-files00250.pro'
900496a25879dbcc3cd59876977f0332
d3b646df29c8fc376e32ded90e69c6f90cd3f8e5
describe
'44211' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWT' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
074e7e06ba66f0f254226c1b91e16ab1
25f61cce23d77cd97fad6b125c5302d7241fc884
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWU' 'sip-files00250.tif'
eb0779e1c9bc9d0ffbf9e9cefbacd04b
4b2be80da39491b42b27f5a02c0290ef2237fdcf
describe
'1765' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWV' 'sip-files00250.txt'
fed98efc268e5d27c7a95f5e7ed75fc4
9ff121059192ca6a545e792a7e613fa704de57a8
'2011-11-17T23:46:43-05:00'
describe
'10263' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWW' 'sip-files00250thm.jpg'
97746119ace30328cd20404decb0aae8
657edb693ba83be967bdf10d418e3f6f2eca0149
describe
'346776' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWX' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
f40c0b7109659b3e71cfa396638501a3
951fac4aff2cf54e670eec91e928b1452fe60fcd
describe
'129048' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWY' 'sip-files00251.jpg'
8238734acd76a2ba1d5c19c4deaa718a
ab047bcfd21a024946e5ce70c98ce367a7ef9806
describe
'38319' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGWZ' 'sip-files00251.pro'
f6d344c56698fd83ea4ff95c44fc3811
ff7b859c96082ae5e36fde245f7db495fb357f2c
describe
'41035' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXA' 'sip-files00251.QC.jpg'
be0be9989518392bb9945684e6f3a6a4
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXB' 'sip-files00251.tif'
0166a42e9e532b3b377fa3e97eb9e9a4
de440e78ac7ee301bae220d3f8e6e82974ee43e7
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXC' 'sip-files00251.txt'
5cdc47f4dbd8520139461734b1d257c6
352ddf6bc23cb9f44e8b98c0cd2fca1e803dd327
'2011-11-17T23:40:41-05:00'
describe
'9594' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXD' 'sip-files00251thm.jpg'
c4372120c43de5e6fc583ece15522f2c
cbbb4eff480c92ceeae358727817183ff5ffe60e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXE' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
d4bda452c754f2511b28eedbf632e3f5
7a5d86be3f187f3fc3eacb54524c1bcf8bb44de1
describe
'62399' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXF' 'sip-files00252.jpg'
59f92344e3b277cea3b137a41f8d57da
46c01bafcc186527bfd6ec518888bb20e7e0c878
describe
'15520' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXG' 'sip-files00252.pro'
05c72e4d0a7d97f5bbaa955b881246ba
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describe
'19885' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXH' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
a4cda8af349e11035dd2bc6cf07a2abf
40ae58f410bcc162966025816a4b16401736faab
'2011-11-17T23:45:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXI' 'sip-files00252.tif'
0f2c6979d419f1e93d74d60c0309f35f
365c2ae96354bab6d0e08f36e0e6be30375c8ef7
describe
'624' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXJ' 'sip-files00252.txt'
1850dcad8f2ffa270ab2dfbf09f83923
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describe
'4960' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXK' 'sip-files00252thm.jpg'
65287a674ed7106cb76c91ff2c76f03c
a56d08cff6cde6a40087b3a33570560f1074613f
describe
'346747' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXL' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
7825223404a93500078fb5d84f9ed97e
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describe
'128450' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXM' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
4b14efcaccf3f43e91a48d7a19cde824
3cc365663f343cf606f8aff7175770704c3405a0
describe
'27691' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXN' 'sip-files00253.pro'
f3896a798630f7fac4aa8d4d9bd9b92f
e0351632f8a8ce2c7489f38aad1d0c7e8c92d40f
describe
'38446' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXO' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
8c64315a0f17d1b3c1f611d6954bb101
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXP' 'sip-files00253.tif'
7e3fd2c007a22ed9b0318eb7736e6d7c
14c73d717a37c0f743659ef8189825abb20f1ef4
describe
'1185' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXQ' 'sip-files00253.txt'
a6f253f5ddd9f868bd41c60e4886a9a9
a3e40e1e1d58f55dff91318d5158119609bb88d7
describe
'9599' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXR' 'sip-files00253thm.jpg'
1bf9df970bdcd5bd4e5565440f6c9261
fa22dc8973011a7211bd36037b6e4228ced4f6a7
describe
'347001' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXS' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
af9668964a424c3a955d956850f45bbb
7022f2a8c26b723355fa24df74e73e5028759db3
'2011-11-17T23:40:18-05:00'
describe
'150885' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXT' 'sip-files00254.jpg'
8d714ae8040dbf022c8b8295c0ce06f1
cd979566556c1d328273929d553645538fee28b5
describe
'45327' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXU' 'sip-files00254.pro'
709994832a0ad295c2adf618758797c1
809eef9e9d9afd92f99c74380cee9e1033a8eea1
describe
'46682' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXV' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
2cc98d8ddc2435d44d021ae2763cbced
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXW' 'sip-files00254.tif'
14e39d6f6ed36ebf951535eb5ed284db
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXX' 'sip-files00254.txt'
9449200128ae097c4fbad2312655da14
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describe
'10953' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXY' 'sip-files00254thm.jpg'
221cff8e2ef71f19c22b0d6ef459c3ba
1e2c5b50527e3e2a9a749336d3db7f1a57399a12
describe
'346670' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGXZ' 'sip-files00255.jp2'
8879ff0a571b260771ec22a491f6eba9
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describe
'138909' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYA' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
77d66aa99fc0322be68d86552eb21a56
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describe
'41157' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYB' 'sip-files00255.pro'
a33f5516ac884d27c86ccaceb24b771c
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describe
'43277' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYC' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
aaaf1c1cc75ae922a52c385e5681cf02
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYD' 'sip-files00255.tif'
885c5ae3229d15b8e5f2ae756b77f210
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describe
'1638' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYE' 'sip-files00255.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYF' 'sip-files00255thm.jpg'
92cbd27785e40b9977afc29b5a7b2072
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describe
'346951' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYG' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
2fa5b13a3d23faf2a263ee006d0cdb47
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describe
'148484' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYH' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
6d50f3744619c6ab105b98df6442a724
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describe
'44516' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYI' 'sip-files00256.pro'
b6557462bf870de3c5cfe3f32e056efc
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describe
'46150' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYJ' 'sip-files00256.QC.jpg'
c22cc24327d6cedbe59e51c4dcfd80da
af6c26f24265cca6613d96854c901ee5f40bf5a8
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYK' 'sip-files00256.tif'
ce509acf353cd9c674099adf0580dbc6
d72e0760e82caca96157cc607167010e8f80b953
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYL' 'sip-files00256.txt'
3988c117f3a8d9701fbc1ba49375d047
efcdc763b8b5f07f640339ee41f161c0e198790a
'2011-11-17T23:40:35-05:00'
describe
'10622' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYM' 'sip-files00256thm.jpg'
22e949513f9a6c800f8dd5b84c1d62b1
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYN' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
5b0967fb473764a3c110858a1ab0c394
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describe
'148418' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYO' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
451dd10e7bcc73a9dd6ba50cd8c71420
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describe
'45213' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYP' 'sip-files00257.pro'
98413ec2ddca6f4ffc104ea326dcd378
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describe
'45775' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYQ' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
be997eb246c72f0bc4bab38c61d1242b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYR' 'sip-files00257.tif'
4e954c656fef9afad8467cc433cd3f42
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYS' 'sip-files00257.txt'
0204b93411a63ff06b2d2a9498ecd21a
fd7a0f087ade29289295060c35ca8200dca510f9
'2011-11-17T23:36:51-05:00'
describe
'10946' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYT' 'sip-files00257thm.jpg'
bab1d40c56a4215226d185da9c88103d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYU' 'sip-files00258.jp2'
917c132035723f55d50f5a28e3b5d59a
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describe
'147437' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYV' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
c7ef75af14a6b23bcad9d504ff9259fe
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'2011-11-17T23:36:53-05:00'
describe
'44933' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYW' 'sip-files00258.pro'
ab23498259a29f1b0b639c5dc9691e1e
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describe
'45410' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYX' 'sip-files00258.QC.jpg'
fa03939794dc3a14955b9f21df4c9a5d
f64990bf8abfebc8b7d6adf98b36ea1ca27c6a3c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYY' 'sip-files00258.tif'
528f755c2aaa4b4ea9cba3db7f75b28d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGYZ' 'sip-files00258.txt'
ad29c8cd74987f24ea6b3dc452fcf888
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZA' 'sip-files00258thm.jpg'
9899e9e9e9bd1d8fb8f056b9d3aa8007
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZB' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
6e831c30ed4c6b5848b77a45790ef3b5
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describe
'149128' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZC' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
a357541df5f540266c00940a1b787fe5
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describe
'45880' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZD' 'sip-files00259.pro'
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describe
'45782' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZE' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZF' 'sip-files00259.tif'
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describe
'1800' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZG' 'sip-files00259.txt'
f45f403cf98a3a872ad379cb3d0c2169
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZH' 'sip-files00259thm.jpg'
d2b9aef86b99b2779b7fb9a8295d81ee
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZI' 'sip-files00260.jp2'
4dd3868b700a05e9e39adf842613a892
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describe
'142296' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZJ' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
bd53adb1d6d8b965a06904f15091163a
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZK' 'sip-files00260.pro'
950c9bc25c972141ba89585e6127be6f
53b83eff622630b315a546f5bb4980acdf50a754
'2011-11-17T23:35:47-05:00'
describe
'44315' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZL' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
23c7b8612cfaf0c19b8f428690b82ecc
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZM' 'sip-files00260.tif'
e753dd16fd1fc76c0e46751291efdd84
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZN' 'sip-files00260.txt'
9ce0650030ceb79e59f9b38ec6fcb2a2
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describe
'10293' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZO' 'sip-files00260thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZP' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
163add8cd1cf12dd5a6f3046f52b3497
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describe
'48217' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZQ' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
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describe
'6081' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZR' 'sip-files00261.pro'
6c58521ab0f87dc0187a7ca3112d59bd
bafe42a885f892c4e531c542a7d4145bef7a99d3
'2011-11-17T23:46:36-05:00'
describe
'12419' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZS' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
354e4c774517d95c6bdd2b0328f19bac
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZT' 'sip-files00261.tif'
abb977664dee6474e5af2597cf2547d9
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describe
'552' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZU' 'sip-files00261.txt'
ea6d3ef83f3eac0adf88ac7369d7ea53
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describe
Invalid character
'3189' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZV' 'sip-files00261thm.jpg'
2460564aab93c0052fc975a6192383d5
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZW' 'sip-files00262.jp2'
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describe
'146177' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZX' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
ce0191176b15c8a4cce72daecc3e410e
f1331efb17baacda6eff53ef900997dd7996d3a0
'2011-11-17T23:43:04-05:00'
describe
'44238' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZY' 'sip-files00262.pro'
df8c30a3c12ad0ce4c2ac38f56b7f56e
0b385371a04da8ff9139e6c8ab97248c73033ac1
describe
'45086' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABGZZ' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
787dcbacc50351ac56f6a11f433e4cc8
42a6bb06dbc0382364c1ffe465c9fb53b559999f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAA' 'sip-files00262.tif'
12cf7edd2cfbc010ae810d1e0191a41e
df1ae0f278c7967250b03577531294e4c01859b1
describe
'1754' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAB' 'sip-files00262.txt'
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8bc5963c3357f95f659866882a5aa6196ab31f69
describe
'10182' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAC' 'sip-files00262thm.jpg'
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c3c5fac72fdb3d1ff534b25c8f6d571fcd9d912f
describe
'346697' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAD' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
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eb3e9778d99b8b2c31b3b7ff2fbdebd4ad41e6aa
describe
'144961' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAE' 'sip-files00263.jpg'
6fdc4278e9fe25ed905f962f4a3e354d
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describe
'45374' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAF' 'sip-files00263.pro'
0ed8aecb6a12c84018f4bb88a70a4138
756c18d012aede16cfcde5105e4223653c720df8
'2011-11-17T23:46:39-05:00'
describe
'45512' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAG' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAH' 'sip-files00263.tif'
f1e39675799c40178e0783fb18638e78
14ddfc430d605eb8665f2880bbd00a47019677fe
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAI' 'sip-files00263.txt'
b96d67bfc7cbe0cae46bf8305da971a8
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describe
'10394' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAJ' 'sip-files00263thm.jpg'
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08312229b04de114bc120af5b5e26f5a9a8fab8f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAK' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
c6c6f64046bb5036cf56cd97768fbb32
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describe
'149515' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAL' 'sip-files00264.jpg'
af8ea1dbbad40947a740057ad8fe09eb
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describe
'46384' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAM' 'sip-files00264.pro'
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describe
'45840' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAN' 'sip-files00264.QC.jpg'
5dc83516ad64164800763f8d702fb1eb
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAO' 'sip-files00264.tif'
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describe
'1823' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAP' 'sip-files00264.txt'
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describe
'10473' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAQ' 'sip-files00264thm.jpg'
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describe
'346726' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAR' 'sip-files00265.jp2'
a812168fbe8fe49117fd7de3f49f9910
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describe
'149555' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAS' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
3eee93e2aed2a1d707ba0d5f9a8eb946
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describe
'45379' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAT' 'sip-files00265.pro'
c3d06d217a0aaebf07bbe45ab8467b67
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describe
'46132' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAU' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
3d18a9e4ff5d356875d911e832c18a1b
55776e04234684dcb41cad6dc1b113345fa9d46e
'2011-11-17T23:44:39-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAV' 'sip-files00265.tif'
b2527e68bf098d51a7d5efc8b6ab66e5
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'2011-11-17T23:45:04-05:00'
describe
'1802' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAW' 'sip-files00265.txt'
6d9e104f2231acb9efbeb59e8e618f50
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describe
'10784' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAX' 'sip-files00265thm.jpg'
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describe
'346900' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAY' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
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describe
'145186' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHAZ' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
effab5c50f2d759c09892dddfbe8e76d
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describe
'44280' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBA' 'sip-files00266.pro'
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describe
'45311' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBB' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
bae2ad4a54853dba179a0472a0f12aa6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBC' 'sip-files00266.tif'
7c01d1c18d1d7e8d94a3e7d0cc6f921d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBD' 'sip-files00266.txt'
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describe
'10250' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBE' 'sip-files00266thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBF' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
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describe
'140352' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBG' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
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describe
'42084' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBH' 'sip-files00267.pro'
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describe
'42858' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBI' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBJ' 'sip-files00267.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBK' 'sip-files00267.txt'
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describe
'10256' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBL' 'sip-files00267thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBM' 'sip-files00268.jp2'
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describe
'141608' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBN' 'sip-files00268.jpg'
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describe
'42338' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBO' 'sip-files00268.pro'
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describe
'44199' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBP' 'sip-files00268.QC.jpg'
e4385712076d3fd5fd5d56b767c8a04d
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'2011-11-17T23:42:32-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBQ' 'sip-files00268.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBR' 'sip-files00268.txt'
d2d90ef5591526eb7e69085b0884c1f2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBS' 'sip-files00268thm.jpg'
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describe
'346732' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBT' 'sip-files00269.jp2'
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describe
'142961' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBU' 'sip-files00269.jpg'
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describe
'44130' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBV' 'sip-files00269.pro'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBW' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBX' 'sip-files00269.tif'
189023e71e61a48815a98d1b9e0fa1c0
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'2011-11-17T23:44:53-05:00'
describe
'1745' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBY' 'sip-files00269.txt'
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describe
'10247' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHBZ' 'sip-files00269thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCA' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
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describe
'141504' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCB' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
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describe
'44620' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCC' 'sip-files00270.pro'
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describe
'44703' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCD' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCE' 'sip-files00270.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCF' 'sip-files00270.txt'
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describe
'10348' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCG' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCH' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
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describe
'140253' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCI' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
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describe
'42631' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCJ' 'sip-files00271.pro'
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describe
'43538' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCK' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCL' 'sip-files00271.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCM' 'sip-files00271.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:49-05:00'
describe
'10069' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCN' 'sip-files00271thm.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:22-05:00'
describe
'346930' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCO' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
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describe
'137875' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCP' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCQ' 'sip-files00272.pro'
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describe
'43008' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCR' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCS' 'sip-files00272.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCT' 'sip-files00272.txt'
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describe
'10106' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCU' 'sip-files00272thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCV' 'sip-files00273.jp2'
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describe
'107303' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCW' 'sip-files00273.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCX' 'sip-files00273.pro'
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describe
'33225' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCY' 'sip-files00273.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHCZ' 'sip-files00273.tif'
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describe
'1247' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDA' 'sip-files00273.txt'
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describe
'8573' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDB' 'sip-files00273thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDC' 'sip-files00274.jp2'
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describe
'133047' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDD' 'sip-files00274.jpg'
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describe
'29463' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDE' 'sip-files00274.pro'
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describe
'38700' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDF' 'sip-files00274.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDG' 'sip-files00274.tif'
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describe
'1235' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDH' 'sip-files00274.txt'
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describe
'9820' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDI' 'sip-files00274thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDJ' 'sip-files00275.jp2'
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describe
'136351' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDK' 'sip-files00275.jpg'
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describe
'41749' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDL' 'sip-files00275.pro'
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describe
'43181' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDM' 'sip-files00275.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDN' 'sip-files00275.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDO' 'sip-files00275.txt'
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describe
'10361' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDP' 'sip-files00275thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDQ' 'sip-files00276.jp2'
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describe
'131946' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDR' 'sip-files00276.jpg'
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describe
'39974' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDS' 'sip-files00276.pro'
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describe
'41962' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDT' 'sip-files00276.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDU' 'sip-files00276.tif'
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describe
'1599' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDV' 'sip-files00276.txt'
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describe
'10350' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDW' 'sip-files00276thm.jpg'
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describe
'346750' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDX' 'sip-files00277.jp2'
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describe
'144091' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDY' 'sip-files00277.jpg'
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describe
'43429' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHDZ' 'sip-files00277.pro'
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describe
'45668' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEA' 'sip-files00277.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEB' 'sip-files00277.tif'
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describe
'1717' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEC' 'sip-files00277.txt'
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describe
'10763' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHED' 'sip-files00277thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEE' 'sip-files00278.jp2'
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describe
'139791' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEF' 'sip-files00278.jpg'
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describe
'43057' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEG' 'sip-files00278.pro'
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describe
'43745' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEH' 'sip-files00278.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEI' 'sip-files00278.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEJ' 'sip-files00278.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:26-05:00'
describe
'10149' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEK' 'sip-files00278thm.jpg'
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describe
'346684' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEL' 'sip-files00279.jp2'
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describe
'144839' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEM' 'sip-files00279.jpg'
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describe
'45302' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEN' 'sip-files00279.pro'
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describe
'44775' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEO' 'sip-files00279.QC.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEP' 'sip-files00279.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEQ' 'sip-files00279.txt'
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describe
'10369' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHER' 'sip-files00279thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHES' 'sip-files00280.jp2'
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describe
'146761' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHET' 'sip-files00280.jpg'
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describe
'44744' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEU' 'sip-files00280.pro'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEV' 'sip-files00280.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEW' 'sip-files00280.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEX' 'sip-files00280.txt'
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describe
'10909' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEY' 'sip-files00280thm.jpg'
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describe
'346682' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHEZ' 'sip-files00281.jp2'
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describe
'146709' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFA' 'sip-files00281.jpg'
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describe
'44714' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFB' 'sip-files00281.pro'
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describe
'44890' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFC' 'sip-files00281.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFD' 'sip-files00281.tif'
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describe
'1845' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFE' 'sip-files00281.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFF' 'sip-files00281thm.jpg'
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describe
'347044' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFG' 'sip-files00282.jp2'
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describe
'140395' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFH' 'sip-files00282.jpg'
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describe
'43407' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFI' 'sip-files00282.pro'
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describe
'44073' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFJ' 'sip-files00282.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFK' 'sip-files00282.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFL' 'sip-files00282.txt'
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describe
'10132' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFM' 'sip-files00282thm.jpg'
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describe
'346757' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFN' 'sip-files00283.jp2'
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describe
'141089' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFO' 'sip-files00283.jpg'
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describe
'44274' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFP' 'sip-files00283.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:46:35-05:00'
describe
'44176' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFQ' 'sip-files00283.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFR' 'sip-files00283.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFS' 'sip-files00283.txt'
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describe
'10579' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFT' 'sip-files00283thm.jpg'
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describe
'346997' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFU' 'sip-files00284.jp2'
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'2011-11-17T23:36:05-05:00'
describe
'144212' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFV' 'sip-files00284.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:41:25-05:00'
describe
'44052' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFW' 'sip-files00284.pro'
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describe
'44910' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFX' 'sip-files00284.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFY' 'sip-files00284.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHFZ' 'sip-files00284.txt'
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describe
'10257' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGA' 'sip-files00284thm.jpg'
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describe
'346754' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGB' 'sip-files00285.jp2'
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describe
'140653' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGC' 'sip-files00285.jpg'
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describe
'43067' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGD' 'sip-files00285.pro'
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describe
'44004' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGE' 'sip-files00285.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGF' 'sip-files00285.tif'
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describe
'1705' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGG' 'sip-files00285.txt'
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describe
'10712' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGH' 'sip-files00285thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGI' 'sip-files00286.jp2'
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describe
'145655' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGJ' 'sip-files00286.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGK' 'sip-files00286.pro'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGL' 'sip-files00286.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGM' 'sip-files00286.tif'
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describe
'1740' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGN' 'sip-files00286.txt'
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describe
'10461' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGO' 'sip-files00286thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGP' 'sip-files00287.jp2'
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describe
'145434' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGQ' 'sip-files00287.jpg'
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describe
'44697' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGR' 'sip-files00287.pro'
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describe
'46119' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGS' 'sip-files00287.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGT' 'sip-files00287.tif'
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'2011-11-17T23:47:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGU' 'sip-files00287.txt'
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describe
'10889' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGV' 'sip-files00287thm.jpg'
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describe
'346955' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGW' 'sip-files00288.jp2'
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describe
'153431' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGX' 'sip-files00288.jpg'
71ace8bcfc0761f186926d004e1c4356
2828cafca8cab7b5f32b906debd5c93198e453e2
describe
'47276' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGY' 'sip-files00288.pro'
7724bdb34a7c683f30a28035fa79da7a
21e2074157009296a431b6dd331702120a34047c
'2011-11-17T23:36:13-05:00'
describe
'47300' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHGZ' 'sip-files00288.QC.jpg'
9b7e5a3b78a83f6dfe378d7d8bf57335
d75adc6ff27a775e1bc31a21416ff1a1f7b0f2e8
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHA' 'sip-files00288.tif'
43e8e989d5285317c05e1191b0d0ee77
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describe
'1847' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHB' 'sip-files00288.txt'
4ad9753a22c63952ef8bdfc52d26eb04
f1a8d8a6f383d05b287afa9efc497779ea1cbe0b
describe
'10823' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHC' 'sip-files00288thm.jpg'
59319d61764d93e4a36bcd54dfbcc7cc
136d776e579c4a12af4df2030d963e5dfaa4fead
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHD' 'sip-files00289.jp2'
6d4e5e46e30415046fd57972b108ccc9
9941908b6d61340b910e74da2231dc02687edf78
describe
'138758' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHE' 'sip-files00289.jpg'
4308a1f56ba05ccaec2f9d0fca165387
df900d218b23510d8ff7b4d097c25688abee6414
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHF' 'sip-files00289.pro'
7f6892bd20323e24d6caf7b898ca23d1
815cf8ff28fd5f9f3c947a44ccff68d972ef7242
describe
'43123' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHG' 'sip-files00289.QC.jpg'
3eb778314a4839ba71b253ae6ae83107
cb1efd195785caa686a7b4543bd05c90bc162131
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHH' 'sip-files00289.tif'
cc4d3046692361a5ecc7ee5b044a9fbc
e0607c858b86f879364ea66f2950b1fd9c76ec9f
describe
'1726' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHI' 'sip-files00289.txt'
ab9e13b1c6e70c203194bfcc58f1756b
24b1ee24a3e1ca3a2bfb14287b74536ffaf195ee
'2011-11-17T23:43:43-05:00'
describe
'10478' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHJ' 'sip-files00289thm.jpg'
07004e274761436f8f5e82504f3a0c1e
6fd98f42b951e125c98f377ab4ec732334d11c67
describe
'346978' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHK' 'sip-files00290.jp2'
d2544a38e21584b30a891f8b86efde72
1e1fc2e32a8f3f87e274a966cd521bc07bf9b9da
describe
'142411' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHL' 'sip-files00290.jpg'
43d2cac84338e48e95ed75c7ea3ed1cd
e07cf1a356e9f26930109a31390cdba40fc7c0fb
describe
'44132' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHM' 'sip-files00290.pro'
3ef8b43ae249d26c5bc981d0e11a0dda
b68fc64eaa86766c7eeb4c58b0e724933e9b528f
'2011-11-17T23:45:34-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHN' 'sip-files00290.QC.jpg'
a50b75a55c49d3a2113dd030242afec8
cb3f010bebb43290ba682151c5429dfc38651fc2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHO' 'sip-files00290.tif'
cf128429fd6ec339132a208f09b7c213
ca029a8eabf1b48869d7c1c844b90022204055fd
describe
'1734' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHP' 'sip-files00290.txt'
e22f42c1e2c931536ecc63e85ac0dc7d
6f2a3cbd21fedcaa2eb60d2506436be1f069e5a2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHQ' 'sip-files00290thm.jpg'
f379b9d8e55bcbb23cb8ba5b90199a9b
8c51c5dc39e34a9b4218f2e657b2a497299fcbdd
describe
'346801' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHR' 'sip-files00291.jp2'
365158d729b80ed8bb9dc9c02b371b20
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHS' 'sip-files00291.jpg'
795d2b729346e3153a76e04b13675631
a222d40383aea42073cce301f0b844fc3c840b7b
describe
'43861' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHT' 'sip-files00291.pro'
74ac33084e9f38faf069cdde80e1091b
7eafb812931255b4ce096cfdf6495b5875f72789
describe
'44235' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHU' 'sip-files00291.QC.jpg'
7464c07d2930e25b8fb78b64664a6b2d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHV' 'sip-files00291.tif'
7af7132aebd66a0f5451190c123c3443
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHW' 'sip-files00291.txt'
cc32fa11ff9086b2714b484996e8ab2d
3cbeeb425579e9a5f3007ba5e71c95ef5100597e
describe
'10534' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHX' 'sip-files00291thm.jpg'
e12daf938406cb8017de09f3f653b181
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHY' 'sip-files00292.jp2'
2712938c8999dad510dc866c794fc4c6
1d6cf3b58f442572481764bc7243fb5310b8f205
'2011-11-17T23:38:57-05:00'
describe
'99532' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHHZ' 'sip-files00292.jpg'
a4f16019321fa95cd48ff7c9ad1ba386
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describe
'28131' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIA' 'sip-files00292.pro'
4f89205b8794cf36ff570e349c9d7e9f
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describe
'31045' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIB' 'sip-files00292.QC.jpg'
85b6d63169022ed71bc84ebf2f3db0b1
f85f80cae7b9627ab3eb826a97470537d3b24f0a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIC' 'sip-files00292.tif'
79967f2d973adfa01c25a68e46c2e552
02223aff37bbc6c14237961071825ac57069d6b8
describe
'1128' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHID' 'sip-files00292.txt'
bc5f2080ab7b4a7b187997758da8f8c0
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describe
'7870' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIE' 'sip-files00292thm.jpg'
d9f99eebcdc2167705fb3ad1dbeb28a6
62e09fce73991e7e5b2124c7155b97a8d0c24376
'2011-11-17T23:45:45-05:00'
describe
'346718' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIF' 'sip-files00293.jp2'
ba22a9215a79b6d0fad519891dcfe3cd
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describe
'122353' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIG' 'sip-files00293.jpg'
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describe
'26617' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIH' 'sip-files00293.pro'
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describe
'36760' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHII' 'sip-files00293.QC.jpg'
8fa3fc2f61f5ceb1863102ae8ff6a949
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIJ' 'sip-files00293.tif'
e394ebd4a38bb3740bc489d7f2db81ac
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describe
'1118' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIK' 'sip-files00293.txt'
43f4145a6fffb43e14be49cf9bfd4e80
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describe
'9312' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIL' 'sip-files00293thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIM' 'sip-files00294.jp2'
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describe
'143227' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIN' 'sip-files00294.jpg'
f2ef8b2b0500dc6c56abf32c4058f1b9
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describe
'43738' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIO' 'sip-files00294.pro'
c7967b03243e7bdbaae6eef315e41e26
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describe
'43906' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIP' 'sip-files00294.QC.jpg'
b18645bc42696ff1129edcf29780a95d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIQ' 'sip-files00294.tif'
0d9e1cd56961ec0bcbf1f106b4955e82
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIR' 'sip-files00294.txt'
b42207be07008b656ef7cb1d2de411eb
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describe
'10282' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIS' 'sip-files00294thm.jpg'
a34af4a44b2b96d7500272fcbcdb19eb
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describe
'346724' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIT' 'sip-files00295.jp2'
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describe
'124705' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIU' 'sip-files00295.jpg'
209587ae05c2824f8265ce7ac3716a86
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'2011-11-17T23:43:12-05:00'
describe
'38485' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIV' 'sip-files00295.pro'
f184f84edbb08b8f0f272c46bca92174
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describe
'38254' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIW' 'sip-files00295.QC.jpg'
66f9de4319ef880ae66fa11fe38731f2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIX' 'sip-files00295.tif'
ac934acb745eec351177358182eb832c
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describe
'1558' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIY' 'sip-files00295.txt'
7651ee02fe797630d0be5dfce029fcad
9f40b47cbbfc107dd45f1279895288f6c3baa624
describe
'9791' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHIZ' 'sip-files00295thm.jpg'
bc9c1816554b28a352c1ea5e652e5540
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describe
'346994' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJA' 'sip-files00296.jp2'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJB' 'sip-files00296.jpg'
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describe
'44420' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJC' 'sip-files00296.pro'
3edd480519945f72541d962f9db3adfb
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describe
'44957' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJD' 'sip-files00296.QC.jpg'
a8dd322709a93a1cca2e4b506a8f1057
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJE' 'sip-files00296.tif'
a4634db3fd9376022dac43a155a34115
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJF' 'sip-files00296.txt'
541d38e191651bc11fedda0a5a1cb8ff
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describe
'10388' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJG' 'sip-files00296thm.jpg'
d1b23e22e655f0ab26029840a798e49d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJH' 'sip-files00297.jp2'
4a90762e71e96367c6a2f2b9d9709f07
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describe
'136577' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJI' 'sip-files00297.jpg'
c4cb19b2d4b3f836d8d6c34a51bf30fd
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describe
'3420' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJJ' 'sip-files00297.pro'
31200e09e995bef1e998fa77fd032049
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describe
'32154' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJK' 'sip-files00297.QC.jpg'
0ed2ad617527724f61099bcaa06009ed
be02f868262e105039f7790c245f5a32f1bf9b02
'2011-11-17T23:44:44-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJL' 'sip-files00297.tif'
37a384b229bbec693dfe483cd733afe2
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describe
'402' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJM' 'sip-files00297.txt'
2f15109031cae3612afd53605a2ec851
73264fc6b3092099198fea3505631bd56b6d9237
describe
Invalid character
'7537' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJN' 'sip-files00297thm.jpg'
2e141333b63047afa51309713a274964
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describe
'346752' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJO' 'sip-files00299.jp2'
3ef9b7e7130ea9cb7abb0c99c4b03bd9
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describe
'148178' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJP' 'sip-files00299.jpg'
52d2a5fda41eb9287bbc6765ec39ae92
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'2011-11-17T23:45:26-05:00'
describe
'45463' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJQ' 'sip-files00299.pro'
f10a850a06af8d588c86b930b2c83a81
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describe
'46385' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJR' 'sip-files00299.QC.jpg'
e31aa8df53288cc16c8ec6e09c82ce61
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJS' 'sip-files00299.tif'
c5f4ab3957a550a8a2bdc80c586851c6
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describe
'1827' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJT' 'sip-files00299.txt'
7bd71de6c0d2209613ec0a6dc1542103
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describe
'10482' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJU' 'sip-files00299thm.jpg'
e5d82f6be2a4a67af0b2541cda7f57b6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJV' 'sip-files00300.jp2'
91a534e2814bdde9b78c68b94526eec3
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describe
'149949' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJW' 'sip-files00300.jpg'
f9f8b3dd4d1782c52e7586c456244a2b
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describe
'47422' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJX' 'sip-files00300.pro'
944104d9606b2b419c7628ae8af42d6c
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describe
'46658' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJY' 'sip-files00300.QC.jpg'
63b09d0a3bb013f95dc7e5f96f2b43fd
3d4c87102a0c92afaa6fd982e2e81c7bbaa12489
'2011-11-17T23:43:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHJZ' 'sip-files00300.tif'
fbc0b5b9a20fdd197aac72a42e3b895b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKA' 'sip-files00300.txt'
20addf39613bb9e165c091ead77e81d8
00c36d647cb3d2ddee0218c614322a3f0149ac04
describe
'10907' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKB' 'sip-files00300thm.jpg'
fcd9e2009252e2de44261071e4a9aec8
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describe
'346772' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKC' 'sip-files00301.jp2'
5d6cdd914481869c0db1eee4012d7719
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describe
'142235' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKD' 'sip-files00301.jpg'
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describe
'44655' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKE' 'sip-files00301.pro'
5c3ca0d2e9a21ee6ab28561cda502bff
1e91f95ebf7aee9ffe7a04088ac885ed79d50249
describe
'44577' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKF' 'sip-files00301.QC.jpg'
1940e1eec508548ed4fe8ca42bc2833f
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKG' 'sip-files00301.tif'
3177f4a37a742fa799afb564798e32a6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKH' 'sip-files00301.txt'
9e0d2b66733bed02c6f500ec095682ae
2fdef729062133b800c10c2c757b2fce320b5f81
describe
'10517' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKI' 'sip-files00301thm.jpg'
472de14d91a5d48ae4b8909b88a332f6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKJ' 'sip-files00302.jp2'
13bca6fcd2da98c3e97e28ea1ca09634
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describe
'141344' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKK' 'sip-files00302.jpg'
0caa47af52aba63ba1495eeb3f0b9c46
9fd404733058b81eb94ab4efdda7cab256cc04a7
describe
'43231' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKL' 'sip-files00302.pro'
4fe5957ee152a2aa803d21c9b0a42b25
bd564a72c1708143ad4105ca909d447145bfe19c
describe
'44203' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKM' 'sip-files00302.QC.jpg'
1b7aeb58251ddc8ea9485f99cb7fb1e8
4bd507cf0709f85bd9076d516be82c3321b62983
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKN' 'sip-files00302.tif'
56e55a4c21f44ed0d2fce7cbbbcc58a2
ed737e411779a5f7cc3460e41daae43c8dae7985
describe
'1723' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKO' 'sip-files00302.txt'
67852448382aefe21f93f90e1d203cc8
7694f3b2abead5a3964bd5755580aa26a3033f85
describe
'10851' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKP' 'sip-files00302thm.jpg'
609d2606dfe553309c39aac0bc59a8ad
1f14b11d89d9a9c76d6675a68f250e0269a583de
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKQ' 'sip-files00303.jp2'
5a1e9ced61b2a79622bfab25a836a1b4
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describe
'136538' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKR' 'sip-files00303.jpg'
c98c4db318ab7ed774215aeb6e59cb1e
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describe
'42108' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKS' 'sip-files00303.pro'
69c1782b7e237464d425496f2282a63b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKT' 'sip-files00303.QC.jpg'
65c928b7620c4f723e82378c985682c1
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKU' 'sip-files00303.tif'
dd31881783e9f048f9efafc70a1be48a
ef7dd463266e831f9fea7b8e5f14dfcb95e2bb0f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKV' 'sip-files00303.txt'
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describe
'9923' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKW' 'sip-files00303thm.jpg'
f916ad66d3c0e2d68ca7e5ac0c4b5e59
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKX' 'sip-files00304.jp2'
b2e4564b69af6024b673d78dd57e835b
1c699b9b225bb148d70a65a113e66d93e3ce41da
describe
'148766' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKY' 'sip-files00304.jpg'
f55e581d5fa94f820322867b2931b33d
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describe
'45398' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHKZ' 'sip-files00304.pro'
06112309cece196300f70b329eec6ea8
0e91a5878b0c8a6edf6f3ca4e0bb225c4a11b25f
describe
'45830' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLA' 'sip-files00304.QC.jpg'
85c4448d22cb712a3924e772e5cbeeb8
ddfab234256899c0afdea204e05a22b393278df5
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLB' 'sip-files00304.tif'
f03ec4dca7e5eba99c6f7a492c8c3cdd
0000fd96900af2d7dd5d35249308455decd39c3c
'2011-11-17T23:44:26-05:00'
describe
'1784' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLC' 'sip-files00304.txt'
6782a7d7ca719ea703d6e79e2d8eb7cb
cdef6bd7954c6921f0ab617ef8b2497adb9fc5ee
describe
'10096' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLD' 'sip-files00304thm.jpg'
85cdde0e324a325065246571c21847d1
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describe
'346716' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLE' 'sip-files00305.jp2'
c8488a36a47b467ea4d89bd014cfe30e
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describe
'136680' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLF' 'sip-files00305.jpg'
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describe
'41627' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLG' 'sip-files00305.pro'
1845c3c253bd8301e3c431ace4263d74
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describe
'42554' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLH' 'sip-files00305.QC.jpg'
fcdc90201e6c69585f602f1c1b337b9f
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLI' 'sip-files00305.tif'
a5f13dcd1e0eab0268a95bfbe9da2681
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describe
'1672' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLJ' 'sip-files00305.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLK' 'sip-files00305thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLL' 'sip-files00306.jp2'
e0f9a5c98687fdc081a4df5eebad5b35
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describe
'143475' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLM' 'sip-files00306.jpg'
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describe
'44761' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLN' 'sip-files00306.pro'
ee8d17c7f080e2741a6cdf8296631fc1
f842dc961ec0afe415306fa767eabfb3e130c9cb
describe
'45534' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLO' 'sip-files00306.QC.jpg'
37dda9e6a25a88d59ab251c6e56c6bcb
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLP' 'sip-files00306.tif'
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describe
'1777' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLQ' 'sip-files00306.txt'
4497b20d3d3b34e929570bc7e7937a45
bb16d8141399ce6ac8ebf3a34ca3782100a2ac89
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLR' 'sip-files00306thm.jpg'
a9209d278709f64f17f8df9a082b3760
dff3378e6c213a3911ab32be0c73e373e3ed6f67
'2011-11-17T23:39:41-05:00'
describe
'346701' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLS' 'sip-files00307.jp2'
9f1d638e755e8568ed994e5fa2fc041b
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describe
'133312' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLT' 'sip-files00307.jpg'
1de571e38894819c9cf7f95d3053d62f
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describe
'42054' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLU' 'sip-files00307.pro'
86ebf4b4d3517b119040abd69613486c
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describe
'41670' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLV' 'sip-files00307.QC.jpg'
db61ea2e3a22322ed29d358e201d59d6
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLW' 'sip-files00307.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLX' 'sip-files00307.txt'
45974734f1ba4311d7136629a88b9c93
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describe
'10413' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLY' 'sip-files00307thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHLZ' 'sip-files00308.jp2'
e6931b4962ec71fdc79dbb51d10d4b32
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describe
'130532' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMA' 'sip-files00308.jpg'
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describe
'40311' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMB' 'sip-files00308.pro'
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describe
'40775' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMC' 'sip-files00308.QC.jpg'
b7997054d32491640e1e7ae530103032
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMD' 'sip-files00308.tif'
8cb0f588e66323977467bcea24d63ef8
a09c385430c06f86a9e07ac183a32d12b75c9fcf
'2011-11-17T23:44:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHME' 'sip-files00308.txt'
8cc7d4c550f014c3efcef78039e5889e
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describe
'9694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMF' 'sip-files00308thm.jpg'
a88922b653bdf61333cfd6e73b5583ef
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describe
'346768' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMG' 'sip-files00309.jp2'
4e5116c859b32e305471cd86805c751e
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'2011-11-17T23:37:24-05:00'
describe
'150078' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMH' 'sip-files00309.jpg'
b31d3f7de5a2f0713690b011ccc6fa9a
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describe
'46984' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMI' 'sip-files00309.pro'
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describe
'46204' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMJ' 'sip-files00309.QC.jpg'
3659d617ff2369ace4df939b6c493ca1
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMK' 'sip-files00309.tif'
ba2402df7ec4984fa5e50f897fb55a7f
06f09eea0583e611ce80cb5d83dd20295ccc8871
'2011-11-17T23:46:27-05:00'
describe
'1850' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHML' 'sip-files00309.txt'
349bb9d8fb913ac91c37dcccf78fa283
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describe
'10383' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMM' 'sip-files00309thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMN' 'sip-files00310.jp2'
25d9eae832faa7ab50bdc470a4645a2f
feb8c143742eee2ca0cf2485092c2b0113133023
'2011-11-17T23:46:37-05:00'
describe
'136911' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMO' 'sip-files00310.jpg'
dc53767b65181c65b26b0cdbd9d42a21
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describe
'42502' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMP' 'sip-files00310.pro'
b9f80c4124478a949c2f9ea3202a09e3
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describe
'43108' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMQ' 'sip-files00310.QC.jpg'
ee80bd3d032728169627ea3c1e2d060f
ca153732c1adcaddd822067ce722164f1e2a3bae
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMR' 'sip-files00310.tif'
82d17dd1b18dbaeb210fc32e330262f5
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describe
'1681' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMS' 'sip-files00310.txt'
dbec31b20f98ab69de3b48843d1a8086
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMT' 'sip-files00310thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMU' 'sip-files00311.jp2'
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describe
'137940' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMV' 'sip-files00311.jpg'
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describe
'42581' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMW' 'sip-files00311.pro'
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describe
'43033' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMX' 'sip-files00311.QC.jpg'
0dc7fbe1aa36e1b4ec673fd55a65ed90
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMY' 'sip-files00311.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHMZ' 'sip-files00311.txt'
2405985d6b969bcd4dc203ec076c9e61
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describe
'10316' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNA' 'sip-files00311thm.jpg'
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describe
'347050' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNB' 'sip-files00312.jp2'
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describe
'132991' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNC' 'sip-files00312.jpg'
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describe
'40192' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHND' 'sip-files00312.pro'
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describe
'41985' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNE' 'sip-files00312.QC.jpg'
9d80c40d29eec9f829fc627a8f95c92f
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNF' 'sip-files00312.tif'
c0a0b5cb4ae41a85128971a9fcf18dea
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describe
'1602' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNG' 'sip-files00312.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNH' 'sip-files00312thm.jpg'
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describe
'346717' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNI' 'sip-files00313.jp2'
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describe
'131842' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNJ' 'sip-files00313.jpg'
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describe
'30730' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNK' 'sip-files00313.pro'
c4b3e1ac43c0bc469febdbd02131b9b1
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describe
'39565' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNL' 'sip-files00313.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNM' 'sip-files00313.tif'
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describe
'1263' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNN' 'sip-files00313.txt'
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describe
'9702' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNO' 'sip-files00313thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNP' 'sip-files00314.jp2'
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describe
'136998' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNQ' 'sip-files00314.jpg'
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describe
'41878' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNR' 'sip-files00314.pro'
abe9a8350fc4245e1612ef20b9ff952f
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describe
'42683' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNS' 'sip-files00314.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNT' 'sip-files00314.tif'
80f8b9f83a52181fc03ff6c19e4545aa
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNU' 'sip-files00314.txt'
2dd1b4bf48ffb4a96beb8a70032ecf92
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describe
'10516' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNV' 'sip-files00314thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNW' 'sip-files00315.jp2'
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describe
'138503' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNX' 'sip-files00315.jpg'
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describe
'42620' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNY' 'sip-files00315.pro'
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ffb3f251a4847a9b1adbfb1cfb79df501ddc74d2
describe
'43293' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHNZ' 'sip-files00315.QC.jpg'
c74dd4c33d99c05ea02075d7c8be95ee
4f97a89d29ee218767576f4853ecd0ff70dfe56e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOA' 'sip-files00315.tif'
22642c6e6c6fe4230109d7c33a62f0f4
6b4e74f78fac86da93a7f8c2bc85af1de88da80a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOB' 'sip-files00315.txt'
203a8ab9b1a7e4bda8fd1cd65583aee5
9994b09ebed6b1af84428c45ba44176f6ba33b88
describe
'10644' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOC' 'sip-files00315thm.jpg'
f194819331d0d280b4bba6db81ee2086
ce0b7d3e3d14a53a54c9c1d8a23f26539842312a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOD' 'sip-files00316.jp2'
4094e61381e7a84131dd91f5ce69df10
1fb71e1260b4308d4c0b6cf431c0338db341bdd8
describe
'142452' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOE' 'sip-files00316.jpg'
f88cd2d71d9b76c23fa9c443883aca04
5215abe736e47cc8bc41089d622875d717f5a874
describe
'44865' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOF' 'sip-files00316.pro'
29ca44dbc0c3fe2761d429efb375c45b
e3e52b546cc2f6095a1e31fb22f08798d5621f9e
describe
'44067' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOG' 'sip-files00316.QC.jpg'
e73516b065d61f3e31c6d3cab9acef29
218fe4fae82aecd692910a385c01e991d3d1d4f9
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOH' 'sip-files00316.tif'
363c0c296a8cdac1e03f092602dbc0b5
797ad1ce471ea4fb1439d2d94475b3a290e460f9
describe
'1770' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOI' 'sip-files00316.txt'
796cb8b60a8dca24598af92c89be9c9d
c08be85dd58ed6e5b999a08351ce15d45d59a812
describe
'10304' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOJ' 'sip-files00316thm.jpg'
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describe
'346627' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOK' 'sip-files00317.jp2'
db390a37a71accc26a0fda67bc60512b
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describe
'140382' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOL' 'sip-files00317.jpg'
6ca096e9c572d6f6cc3c9e1c7f3ae063
3fae79fffa94fd87295cd09eab06db575b0a0cb1
describe
'43870' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOM' 'sip-files00317.pro'
dd2bad486cedfe0e306af71715a69860
c5f8de2045043498431b1c6f75c5a8de8a8e9bde
describe
'42957' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHON' 'sip-files00317.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOO' 'sip-files00317.tif'
286c76c6444d053cfcfe40a8092d02c8
0288be40107ba24606f6cc77b89cb7e3cd8a26dc
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOP' 'sip-files00317.txt'
33bb051a9db0b1bbc64cf1b6a020ea3e
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describe
'10058' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOQ' 'sip-files00317thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOR' 'sip-files00318.jp2'
cbb2d4362b31ccc5f5638a6c6d3f11e4
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describe
'141399' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOS' 'sip-files00318.jpg'
aac36b427a5ca8f45f69de35618fc0ee
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describe
'44140' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOT' 'sip-files00318.pro'
fff6e038e2931095804ba9ef436e0a99
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describe
'44565' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOU' 'sip-files00318.QC.jpg'
b2cfe1986f976680247da69b9a9e79ca
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOV' 'sip-files00318.tif'
53a2d837248ea2a7c769d27c40cfcfe4
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOW' 'sip-files00318.txt'
b1dae74daee2cd45d7cc59264ca70993
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describe
'10199' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOX' 'sip-files00318thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOY' 'sip-files00319.jp2'
cd444db8a850350528af028b74d42503
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describe
'144796' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHOZ' 'sip-files00319.jpg'
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describe
'44437' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPA' 'sip-files00319.pro'
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describe
'45468' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPB' 'sip-files00319.QC.jpg'
7cdd7aae76ffe693a1fbf0a1451dcd0e
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPC' 'sip-files00319.tif'
ca528c803de9468ffff493e61c008f1f
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPD' 'sip-files00319.txt'
08415f6c039ee1d35f5ed507ea7fea85
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPE' 'sip-files00319thm.jpg'
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describe
'346965' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPF' 'sip-files00320.jp2'
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describe
'146701' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPG' 'sip-files00320.jpg'
8f3b8a65b211d1c352932bf7d019f0f9
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPH' 'sip-files00320.pro'
c780cce228dbdc3e457857677e23e7d1
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describe
'45005' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPI' 'sip-files00320.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPJ' 'sip-files00320.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPK' 'sip-files00320.txt'
f0be0f68eddc2cda8216423b602b1ba6
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describe
'10292' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPL' 'sip-files00320thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPM' 'sip-files00321.jp2'
bf71147db55a4cf1f0c3041f0604ec4b
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describe
'142660' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPN' 'sip-files00321.jpg'
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describe
'44225' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPO' 'sip-files00321.pro'
d07859e0916ee2382f78ec918fa58dda
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describe
'44080' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPP' 'sip-files00321.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPQ' 'sip-files00321.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPR' 'sip-files00321.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPS' 'sip-files00321thm.jpg'
b9720e0d6628a6beab684547d65158a5
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPT' 'sip-files00322.jp2'
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describe
'144886' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPU' 'sip-files00322.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPV' 'sip-files00322.pro'
4fe413581b30f5159980dfaffe7be3ee
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describe
'44432' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPW' 'sip-files00322.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPX' 'sip-files00322.tif'
7524a0d8f0600fbe2b40850156adff89
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPY' 'sip-files00322.txt'
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describe
'10428' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHPZ' 'sip-files00322thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQA' 'sip-files00323.jp2'
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describe
'143815' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQB' 'sip-files00323.jpg'
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describe
'45497' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQC' 'sip-files00323.pro'
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describe
'44074' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQD' 'sip-files00323.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQE' 'sip-files00323.tif'
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describe
'1835' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQF' 'sip-files00323.txt'
780d53b3731ecef5b54e7c750cb2505e
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'2011-11-17T23:45:37-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQG' 'sip-files00323thm.jpg'
ec8aa2f1a51530f1bad97d968a7ad240
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQH' 'sip-files00324.jp2'
21e6ddc298ddcbe4ca231851d610a25c
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describe
'144508' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQI' 'sip-files00324.jpg'
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describe
'45105' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQJ' 'sip-files00324.pro'
9614a1f839eb14d79b7b9c958d293def
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'2011-11-17T23:42:38-05:00'
describe
'44835' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQK' 'sip-files00324.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQL' 'sip-files00324.tif'
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describe
'1768' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQM' 'sip-files00324.txt'
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describe
'10485' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQN' 'sip-files00324thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQO' 'sip-files00325.jp2'
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describe
'142605' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQP' 'sip-files00325.jpg'
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describe
'46058' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQQ' 'sip-files00325.pro'
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describe
'45152' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQR' 'sip-files00325.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQS' 'sip-files00325.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQT' 'sip-files00325.txt'
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describe
'10595' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQU' 'sip-files00325thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQV' 'sip-files00326.jp2'
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describe
'145309' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQW' 'sip-files00326.jpg'
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describe
'45868' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQX' 'sip-files00326.pro'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQY' 'sip-files00326.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHQZ' 'sip-files00326.tif'
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describe
'1824' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRA' 'sip-files00326.txt'
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describe
'10704' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRB' 'sip-files00326thm.jpg'
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describe
'347036' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRC' 'sip-files00327.jp2'
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describe
'121116' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRD' 'sip-files00327.jpg'
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describe
'37332' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRE' 'sip-files00327.pro'
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describe
'37832' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRF' 'sip-files00327.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRG' 'sip-files00327.tif'
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describe
'1488' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRH' 'sip-files00327.txt'
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describe
'9063' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRI' 'sip-files00327thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRJ' 'sip-files00328.jp2'
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describe
'135041' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRK' 'sip-files00328.jpg'
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describe
'30994' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRL' 'sip-files00328.pro'
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describe
'40518' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRM' 'sip-files00328.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRN' 'sip-files00328.tif'
aeae007a81560ae085023b6911fdfb08
88c05e86d2c1071ee1f776b6a519f74dc467230b
'2011-11-17T23:40:50-05:00'
describe
'1288' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRO' 'sip-files00328.txt'
aec3808fdd6530e775964f8332c622f4
41551d30aa7488abc65006d715e9b48c261f12bf
describe
'9795' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRP' 'sip-files00328thm.jpg'
15463dee3fb40fa30912327c82a9a759
ee2037c9fbc3ef915b07586318dcfd9c38248d15
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRQ' 'sip-files00329.jp2'
2a9711f572157b5848832215ef1e741c
1397fb47d31f9f6bcc8461c7b76901d89845d44d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRR' 'sip-files00329.jpg'
b3b0bf219eda7c3903486c608ae473fa
8eee5e32b8a4705296e5df23d8cd62b6c7bca6e1
describe
'44742' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRS' 'sip-files00329.pro'
c960b7c890980334a57f5fb1b5c4cd38
2054c5f488c0fac6ca65c1da214d63dfd662a590
'2011-11-17T23:45:55-05:00'
describe
'44318' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRT' 'sip-files00329.QC.jpg'
a255b7fc1148bdac65a0c962929f7d9a
846d947ef9b81d676e9f444cf6163835909f941d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRU' 'sip-files00329.tif'
21394dcf46fa195dc2b6efa1ea0827cc
d799fe9787cdce6934307869a7cc86709d74470f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRV' 'sip-files00329.txt'
f375baf3b8efb3517ae822ea323a4501
d262846eb21bb6d5476c04d3cbfc84cadc50718f
describe
'10567' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRW' 'sip-files00329thm.jpg'
35d998c4fabaa5def1ff3df9271a435c
a657c85185309c7116952385f2750478f995cd43
describe
'346926' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRX' 'sip-files00330.jp2'
dc2ed44b3aaf7805da69520737cb1302
804fea1eb340a4e9e62bf336c8c9a79700b83b09
describe
'144096' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRY' 'sip-files00330.jpg'
9b4fae5ea90b9981ae03548103b9aad9
6b63eda7118d980bde414839f0210e11ac06f5ad
describe
'45178' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHRZ' 'sip-files00330.pro'
e0c3ec1c9ed27f3393c6ae53767b4be9
a33bf737ede42a25e111b47711cf33c0becca48d
describe
'44715' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSA' 'sip-files00330.QC.jpg'
2690762312f1cb95c2332228e2eee6f0
a4d1c6212936c6925763ceefa31643b9db41a913
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSB' 'sip-files00330.tif'
a7c1cca06ab46d26ab58c7711788d12e
5957a189745d0b4bed61e709f935555949e48632
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSC' 'sip-files00330.txt'
e91144f0467df3020ae4461f897dc589
de12cb03e166a9344ac4ee6f3f2d80d3f3373111
describe
'10521' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSD' 'sip-files00330thm.jpg'
357e51290c0a66472cbcbcbeda2cbfd6
9e821553eaaceb47d1f5a4bf130122b7df775fc7
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSE' 'sip-files00331.jp2'
9d5ecae77f2b4959f26c2ddfd0465729
913b9581ee468360d8bdbe55c8ac9918f226558d
describe
'137285' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSF' 'sip-files00331.jpg'
f7bde05d8dd826330fcb124cd098bc0f
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describe
'42962' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSG' 'sip-files00331.pro'
885abf7cdc0386d9f45a558646752d3a
9f49df8e3d95f6ae54a6fe0068fb09287be8a1d7
describe
'43182' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSH' 'sip-files00331.QC.jpg'
c1ac011ba478a39466aab409b893c46b
f9c298be2d1de59b9d78bfb15423ecab6d50a9b2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSI' 'sip-files00331.tif'
790d321af1e340fd7d192a0eb7f4f5a2
d0bccf3e216b159d0a83c36aa7fb36fe6f2c7067
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSJ' 'sip-files00331.txt'
0453ef073321655376653096d44a95d1
bad71405e7e64c4c65edec7050d47f2c3ac9056f
describe
'10495' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSK' 'sip-files00331thm.jpg'
245c01f56f957a85a3f9e74cf370486a
082eb14d0abcc2e46b374dc3e1635ce66c1c897b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSL' 'sip-files00332.jp2'
e3bf801aac1b7d8d6bdce37287504b53
48c99cdfcb726a89154dcbbd8ff1aabf5d5732f8
describe
'143693' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSM' 'sip-files00332.jpg'
2cb0fa4caee9ae2fb4d2e27b49f65683
432c225abcf2fa39a47b6c541cadaf29ed2a51c6
describe
'44293' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSN' 'sip-files00332.pro'
392edc874a44e9c5f4f15531305c755f
d839ed3d2860fa7aa2f8cfed57e4dea07a08d79b
describe
'44964' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSO' 'sip-files00332.QC.jpg'
19bfe4cb2b9641d66364e29f953f2ab9
47a6582f18f2625e3f38151d02d2684438676821
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSP' 'sip-files00332.tif'
3d603606757906d05b96727d3080f2be
701d7f067794767d3c1ce05d4b8ddcca73f01e89
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSQ' 'sip-files00332.txt'
8f4e0a4d551022633cde0cc2a1ada672
459b6715b4211c3889657d84f2caf8c6d0826bfb
describe
'10576' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSR' 'sip-files00332thm.jpg'
1ffe7284d7f54ae3eb1d096160cb9b47
768259ee2be0be0ab96b5a0b27a09ff9d6576894
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSS' 'sip-files00333.jp2'
24c4ab36dd2ebd65acc211f117b3db95
3cddcecdf54267935671335de87210e043a51bd0
describe
'139717' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHST' 'sip-files00333.jpg'
775727d040505743e2b476f2705c64ac
8746b7f1393aecf04264c07ad5e0a9d4c822ac5b
'2011-11-17T23:44:48-05:00'
describe
'43252' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSU' 'sip-files00333.pro'
789d32f6fa903daf9c0e0a48ddc27fd6
e8944b25470b75113b3be92e0c3f070e3ac6df08
describe
'43220' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSV' 'sip-files00333.QC.jpg'
fa5254416fa9ee5b14c6b1575eeaf1d9
a4c507846f67fcf85a82563ec63e32f2071b4a36
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSW' 'sip-files00333.tif'
8df9fafd35c5efb1408b1fe1fb664e27
9532441f6edff006325da4fc2a5059a0f4d43c9c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSX' 'sip-files00333.txt'
9a564225c698b234a566a06df703967b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSY' 'sip-files00333thm.jpg'
faf354a1e7c59520d084abcc493f1e2b
a3eb59207307bd033f8b383c33b459e63fe45c37
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHSZ' 'sip-files00334.jp2'
2bb62f3233f377c73ff4045b325db6c8
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describe
'137858' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTA' 'sip-files00334.jpg'
583f285351fceb01544381e541fbd29f
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describe
'42142' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTB' 'sip-files00334.pro'
845edd62473f69252f5148dd5c4a7a93
6ef9c8f0a6113e47a74a1a5f885fcd6b85988bff
describe
'43338' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTC' 'sip-files00334.QC.jpg'
6bc44e7f68cc304168b36320f54a1185
bb0b4dbf524908df8c80c6b96926b57f984eaa50
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTD' 'sip-files00334.tif'
7430c0b0d1e55244c9263f130b5f1843
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTE' 'sip-files00334.txt'
dcd87aed8522ca8c840077f45c42eedd
c605ecae3f72d5f8ad843cd1bbc5fa8003d0c12f
describe
'10515' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTF' 'sip-files00334thm.jpg'
64c73c981620a94c3268e85bdca1812d
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTG' 'sip-files00335.jp2'
71552eefe7b4b482ed4b3653e953942d
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describe
'130773' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTH' 'sip-files00335.jpg'
6cc116e88f3a0c680723f0fd63cd00e6
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describe
'40438' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTI' 'sip-files00335.pro'
6299640d78d6577bda9d60fdffc1050e
3b68c58cf34fa42221155dac327f2320a2c1b857
describe
'40618' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTJ' 'sip-files00335.QC.jpg'
d16933fa5f7b5d381f4e3982fdbdde24
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTK' 'sip-files00335.tif'
a9c07386cbf9d4fc1b1303a562267149
b0ea54f3d542c5c233e0724fcb1b7ccc2b056094
describe
'1610' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTL' 'sip-files00335.txt'
f7a64b2cf67dd8e89aad9a13e18b2b2b
73a7ecdc8b63bc6cc04b402934a79cef9fe2ffad
describe
'9913' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTM' 'sip-files00335thm.jpg'
48d5a2e28ff506e7e34cd96caec6a001
64a7ebe45920f82b106176d4299aff93bd09b30d
'2011-11-17T23:39:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTN' 'sip-files00336.jp2'
c9d6d16eacc85016d75cbf4aa9be4387
201c97daf9ab8b68fc5c8fb94b0a6474fab0747a
describe
'133818' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTO' 'sip-files00336.jpg'
7a6b5f588d9cf97ddd5de35843260a9b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTP' 'sip-files00336.pro'
520c59c0a8a184c94bc91c547b512937
52113d513401951242a96d9465f20f0418b8791b
describe
'41357' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTQ' 'sip-files00336.QC.jpg'
4754adf7f9117b65b8f6a7c8e0efe153
a8de0c9f8c0f96dbed1300c5a4a944e87a1b2e2f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTR' 'sip-files00336.tif'
d32836c2138b6b402803bc06e358d27b
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describe
'1633' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTS' 'sip-files00336.txt'
febd35089e09e7c0f4286927a3e4671b
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describe
'10162' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTT' 'sip-files00336thm.jpg'
f7224d76b7d0c92cd648f6cb1df0616b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTU' 'sip-files00337.jp2'
881fe2487cee5f53c80556af0a9cdbcd
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describe
'120222' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTV' 'sip-files00337.jpg'
efda9351bb680ce64013d0aca66aa836
037bcde07af5daa01bec63b6a1445a5496f53777
describe
'37828' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTW' 'sip-files00337.pro'
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describe
'38329' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTX' 'sip-files00337.QC.jpg'
b20116bdc1ba963076dd35713d5b0a79
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTY' 'sip-files00337.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHTZ' 'sip-files00337.txt'
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describe
'10093' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUA' 'sip-files00337thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUB' 'sip-files00338.jp2'
98e76dc1ddccbd6d794739ea8245da0e
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describe
'149069' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUC' 'sip-files00338.jpg'
6aa9c466355e7769d44f9a0b1a6fcc4f
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describe
'46533' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUD' 'sip-files00338.pro'
920703da255fa1f1fae7436d367a4547
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describe
'45170' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUE' 'sip-files00338.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUF' 'sip-files00338.tif'
222e608c05733c2c25a4b7f10a100556
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describe
'1820' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUG' 'sip-files00338.txt'
ab1845bba6a4edf0a21019bd6fa09263
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describe
'10649' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUH' 'sip-files00338thm.jpg'
bbfeb6c8be527a7b7199fb78bf1d8790
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUI' 'sip-files00339.jp2'
6d085027dedb359e3bb5d5e5e3347b24
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describe
'139421' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUJ' 'sip-files00339.jpg'
6f52dd3ddb018bdeba45f24182f6fa2d
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describe
'43510' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUK' 'sip-files00339.pro'
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describe
'43026' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUL' 'sip-files00339.QC.jpg'
529a821272ef3ce1a0f76e6c7b7f055b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUM' 'sip-files00339.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUN' 'sip-files00339.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUO' 'sip-files00339thm.jpg'
fe32e4fc94852855135634d6df431404
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describe
'346963' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUP' 'sip-files00340.jp2'
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describe
'150340' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUQ' 'sip-files00340.jpg'
aa47ce97208fb5fa16fe741d43640288
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describe
'46417' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUR' 'sip-files00340.pro'
31042dc2fc26d0598456f166d597053e
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describe
'46677' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUS' 'sip-files00340.QC.jpg'
fc2151f30fb423f283cf12264750ec3c
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUT' 'sip-files00340.tif'
ac5eacd8f152c35d1a06745528b9ab5b
63a362c4ab14c9ed2e7ddc2c199ef08233f83973
'2011-11-17T23:47:06-05:00'
describe
'1829' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUU' 'sip-files00340.txt'
ff066c434d2983b7cf693acefdde55cf
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describe
'10244' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUV' 'sip-files00340thm.jpg'
41202da9e0c3436a9a8533872e75e3fa
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describe
'346780' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUW' 'sip-files00341.jp2'
abb477c40f66e87128bc6d4be0bc7cd9
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describe
'143123' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUX' 'sip-files00341.jpg'
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describe
'44657' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUY' 'sip-files00341.pro'
1221dd5265737ed766bc1089d8794a81
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describe
'43947' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHUZ' 'sip-files00341.QC.jpg'
8aeec3e6fc6cee1553625c757128aa59
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVA' 'sip-files00341.tif'
8ffcc8a567464901de476c1075589c3a
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVB' 'sip-files00341.txt'
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describe
'10274' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVC' 'sip-files00341thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVD' 'sip-files00342.jp2'
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describe
'139556' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVE' 'sip-files00342.jpg'
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describe
'42744' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVF' 'sip-files00342.pro'
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describe
'43016' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVG' 'sip-files00342.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVH' 'sip-files00342.tif'
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describe
'1706' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVI' 'sip-files00342.txt'
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describe
'10451' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVJ' 'sip-files00342thm.jpg'
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describe
'346722' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVK' 'sip-files00343.jp2'
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describe
'145467' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVL' 'sip-files00343.jpg'
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describe
'44725' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVM' 'sip-files00343.pro'
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describe
'44745' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVN' 'sip-files00343.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVO' 'sip-files00343.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVP' 'sip-files00343.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVQ' 'sip-files00343thm.jpg'
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describe
'346999' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVR' 'sip-files00344.jp2'
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describe
'146682' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVS' 'sip-files00344.jpg'
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describe
'44747' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVT' 'sip-files00344.pro'
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describe
'45058' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVU' 'sip-files00344.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVV' 'sip-files00344.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVW' 'sip-files00344.txt'
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describe
'10523' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVX' 'sip-files00344thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVY' 'sip-files00345.jp2'
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describe
'72665' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHVZ' 'sip-files00345.jpg'
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'2011-11-17T23:44:27-05:00'
describe
'18911' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWA' 'sip-files00345.pro'
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describe
'21307' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWB' 'sip-files00345.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWC' 'sip-files00345.tif'
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describe
'778' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWD' 'sip-files00345.txt'
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describe
'5264' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWE' 'sip-files00345thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWF' 'sip-files00346.jp2'
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describe
'139083' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWG' 'sip-files00346.jpg'
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describe
'32468' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWH' 'sip-files00346.pro'
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describe
'41656' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWI' 'sip-files00346.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWJ' 'sip-files00346.tif'
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describe
'1327' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWK' 'sip-files00346.txt'
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describe
'9821' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWL' 'sip-files00346thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWM' 'sip-files00347.jp2'
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describe
'144483' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWN' 'sip-files00347.jpg'
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describe
'43620' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWO' 'sip-files00347.pro'
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describe
'45294' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWP' 'sip-files00347.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWQ' 'sip-files00347.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWR' 'sip-files00347.txt'
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describe
'10930' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWS' 'sip-files00347thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWT' 'sip-files00348.jp2'
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describe
'147376' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWU' 'sip-files00348.jpg'
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describe
'44700' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWV' 'sip-files00348.pro'
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describe
'46236' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWW' 'sip-files00348.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWX' 'sip-files00348.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWY' 'sip-files00348.txt'
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describe
'10899' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHWZ' 'sip-files00348thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXA' 'sip-files00349.jp2'
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describe
'149393' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXB' 'sip-files00349.jpg'
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describe
'45790' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXC' 'sip-files00349.pro'
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describe
'46424' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXD' 'sip-files00349.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXE' 'sip-files00349.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXF' 'sip-files00349.txt'
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describe
'10577' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXG' 'sip-files00349thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXH' 'sip-files00350.jp2'
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describe
'146984' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXI' 'sip-files00350.jpg'
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describe
'44034' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXJ' 'sip-files00350.pro'
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'2011-11-17T23:37:37-05:00'
describe
'45571' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXK' 'sip-files00350.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXL' 'sip-files00350.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXM' 'sip-files00350.txt'
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describe
'10973' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXN' 'sip-files00350thm.jpg'
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describe
'346694' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXO' 'sip-files00351.jp2'
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describe
'132782' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXP' 'sip-files00351.jpg'
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describe
'40938' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXQ' 'sip-files00351.pro'
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describe
'41954' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXR' 'sip-files00351.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXS' 'sip-files00351.tif'
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describe
'1676' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXT' 'sip-files00351.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:34:43-05:00'
describe
'9982' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXU' 'sip-files00351thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXV' 'sip-files00352.jp2'
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describe
'138122' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXW' 'sip-files00352.jpg'
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describe
'42987' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXX' 'sip-files00352.pro'
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describe
'42703' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXY' 'sip-files00352.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHXZ' 'sip-files00352.tif'
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describe
'1698' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYA' 'sip-files00352.txt'
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describe
'9899' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYB' 'sip-files00352thm.jpg'
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describe
'346988' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYC' 'sip-files00354.jp2'
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describe
'90928' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYD' 'sip-files00354.jpg'
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describe
'2307' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYE' 'sip-files00354.pro'
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describe
'21263' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYF' 'sip-files00354.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYG' 'sip-files00354.tif'
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describe
'149' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYH' 'sip-files00354.txt'
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'2011-11-17T23:40:36-05:00'
describe
'4942' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYI' 'sip-files00354thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYJ' 'sip-files00355.jp2'
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describe
'144549' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYK' 'sip-files00355.jpg'
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describe
'43555' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYL' 'sip-files00355.pro'
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describe
'43675' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYM' 'sip-files00355.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYN' 'sip-files00355.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYO' 'sip-files00355.txt'
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describe
'10385' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYP' 'sip-files00355thm.jpg'
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c4df3e46031d502aeedb78267b4031f8a2f874de
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYQ' 'sip-files00356.jp2'
5ef0eca57e2de57fa9bc88f948f27e66
0f6f1ccfa27efcd08e1244c4c02a6de330870df8
describe
'147558' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYR' 'sip-files00356.jpg'
9bdfb6efbd8e8935e5652bbba0b4f596
5a79a98b3a1d76afd18d93a78880a1db21f9fb86
describe
'45012' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYS' 'sip-files00356.pro'
c8cda4e71894cc3d53ef095c1944fe35
b893e3cf3e759fa0b67545e167fd72f8ad8e3361
describe
'44945' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYT' 'sip-files00356.QC.jpg'
a55e3df7b5a7493f76e147a943e2fd3f
d3b3dc53599cbbf5c0d3259a0ceccba2ee38f5cd
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYU' 'sip-files00356.tif'
5b78c63d87f0ded381f4447bd9db39f4
cdc5822e41fd94f6829c0388f529a8488cb9822b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYV' 'sip-files00356.txt'
7384373c1aec236320415f1019aac265
f81c239a6cd3163bca1d1be8187e9956a893ed5b
describe
'10601' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYW' 'sip-files00356thm.jpg'
f542484107aecbdeb6b9ab6c656fa202
9cff7f0b085e32c6e1dd1bfd0f03cfb761af4388
'2011-11-17T23:45:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYX' 'sip-files00357.jp2'
1b22e8dce1f583001ae15e42eca7e5c8
1b4ba45524f221318abea4e837bb533af0ead505
describe
'148116' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYY' 'sip-files00357.jpg'
8e30b955d1a82060ecf24cb457e88076
e2e93892aabdfa5a5def3a100691045e0fb1323a
'2011-11-17T23:37:19-05:00'
describe
'46503' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHYZ' 'sip-files00357.pro'
f1d225a4bda346d3e82862fbd9950446
8f54c5c30665693a5d52b12eed32405d8cc8bc77
describe
'45940' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZA' 'sip-files00357.QC.jpg'
b944afab4a4fa6726cbc2cebfebf31db
6a53cf965e237482edb8579537ebbb5702d28976
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZB' 'sip-files00357.tif'
a956754cd73b020542a3e5ba9d8b6263
cd859b9a8c8438e1dc82be1f02c2834f02bec37b
describe
'1887' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZC' 'sip-files00357.txt'
d0a4877805e57ebc85d79a7fe928e010
a8e972fdadc1d0d8ce6c6ed3dee091c9b36f3f5b
describe
'10425' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZD' 'sip-files00357thm.jpg'
273123402ce956aff6e565731400b5b3
ced4bba9ccd2b9f1abf9e9d3bc471e0b3d514392
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZE' 'sip-files00358.jp2'
f9af9739b51a8ad7ba8c63f8046a1cab
11a1c11f7a6dedbf94a537fbf95f04c0e0e467b8
describe
'152108' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZF' 'sip-files00358.jpg'
e7967111ef9b1da11fc58d1ecf0a82f7
729008e00cb7043da67817c838e9f8d2c3807d16
describe
'47123' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZG' 'sip-files00358.pro'
ec1b240e04fc43be55053e803f0dcea3
81a36ff4c603adfabd635d7045af2c1b61616282
describe
'47049' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZH' 'sip-files00358.QC.jpg'
9a95afe066320d8486932f2f20d279a3
0e3ce73832b8ba138c4730b08c8c37de348d06a2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZI' 'sip-files00358.tif'
9c14546f937d4b9dc711d8efb40cded3
741709184b092904140352d4e815425203ba655d
describe
'1843' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZJ' 'sip-files00358.txt'
00b6fe545bb4a37579706edcbb7c79c5
47022ddd25c7d71e5dbd8208e176ca50bb0cf62a
describe
'10785' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZK' 'sip-files00358thm.jpg'
6242870b5551b340136dbe30846a6470
889c274082855b20fd01ea07f0842e9b9cd0e368
describe
'346688' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZL' 'sip-files00359.jp2'
5e41b98c02d585dcfbe9a8a404521d15
af2e8b5b3131b1d6361c771718ea4fd05bdd8700
describe
'76994' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZM' 'sip-files00359.jpg'
230c1d6c099e175b213f4af0e78e18e7
c94defeebadbfaa9c2605a2c34d0bfa58b538965
describe
'5727' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZN' 'sip-files00359.pro'
21ee8ca2723157ca581b6d0477efb1c0
f764bdacdda66b74040b6c7917ad29b75a0774dd
describe
'18449' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZO' 'sip-files00359.QC.jpg'
4cccac6a244b871447124c1c22b37e58
0242dba24d95830e0413e23552af45c0bf2c0309
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZP' 'sip-files00359.tif'
ac2e951245ecc68f9a03d79e5c80c78c
6f6fea91be5a2a9280e6d86d2a16e177a65d92b9
'2011-11-17T23:46:00-05:00'
describe
'344' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZQ' 'sip-files00359.txt'
57f0daea1ff1b710dc5e111858518b6d
946ccf6a88b02844aef34045a13c97b1d97ddd1a
describe
Invalid character
'4358' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZR' 'sip-files00359thm.jpg'
e118baa050b2b464c52cfaade7d3f4c5
c047d5292a3d5de7c6c6fc804a2586e0a746dc9b
describe
'346962' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZS' 'sip-files00360.jp2'
a409937390223f200fbf3efdc44ad3c2
80e867ff4566f5805437aac70826b04a0162cc74
describe
'147520' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZT' 'sip-files00360.jpg'
64ef0571d567d20c6b3d0d623a05ba66
3e2baf2d230f1fb0a321ab947e6976418b2eb640
describe
'45060' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZU' 'sip-files00360.pro'
c600f3d050ba4456d56d219f56bdf6eb
0825f39f630c4245998554e3724c637a8326bdc4
describe
'45054' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZV' 'sip-files00360.QC.jpg'
376ba667861360eb3be1299fa441a2da
468fac95eee2dc8a8d481552f633bc7d72a925d2
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZW' 'sip-files00360.tif'
5e691d5c9de932f38cec7c798167d3e9
1933d70c7c28d34a664cfc5d7acf3d810f9d5766
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZX' 'sip-files00360.txt'
c287b9e07fd9b1c6fccfd8e9bd684adb
df16b0fb4a4d2a3245902025822ffe7be0e987cd
describe
'10626' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZY' 'sip-files00360thm.jpg'
fa9d6ac8aa97fd7dc60adbc24b609975
20c7399f2f98f65d27fd65fc31a3db695588643e
describe
'346939' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABHZZ' 'sip-files00361.jp2'
481de23b8521e0f45608421e14ebc52f
ca9aab1881a292a5866161f29bc8eaf44e18fc48
describe
'149951' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAA' 'sip-files00361.jpg'
9009544657b8795194910a7c581c946b
d98fe8ad7bf6b3a7559b6c0c876fab48237ac749
describe
'46286' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAB' 'sip-files00361.pro'
ccf372782e439f40c57ba241c843b30a
1db2426c23393a9e17897aa6a369c3d614c50947
describe
'46509' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAC' 'sip-files00361.QC.jpg'
a094ecabbb2538a365fd224f8d9172dd
83e716f99656da76e779ce3d6020f2f6517d7b54
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAD' 'sip-files00361.tif'
a24f5fcd91fb6c3b937803f955c66fc9
aae61834bd124d145fcc526666a1c49a5ed3cdbd
'2011-11-17T23:37:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAE' 'sip-files00361.txt'
ec07c048df7a47e1b3fcbf14282b175c
0d3f6bb968824997adc13bf543a0ed19a53b740f
'2011-11-17T23:36:19-05:00'
describe
'10903' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAF' 'sip-files00361thm.jpg'
b84d02c5a6faad642efe7c0fe95c201d
b97322232fe1b030ef28f598a3b9faf8f4825278
describe
'347020' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAG' 'sip-files00362.jp2'
25ed4e15488cc0c7236a503bac83ec91
9657dd447cf95766fe84fb75d5719d43a4d36fc5
describe
'147250' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAH' 'sip-files00362.jpg'
ab9682126fc13b9e70ced1fa7aca92de
76ce8b7127a9c22d301aa2c354c11c29a2ec97f4
describe
'44028' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAI' 'sip-files00362.pro'
767eadffe859bf275f2adca3f5ce4e13
6072b994e723a89f8c5326be45a2623af79253d4
describe
'45493' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAJ' 'sip-files00362.QC.jpg'
aa05648aa50038947f4debab47c07a58
ea6968a4247810be4f3d6c1552acc248f2155f0d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAK' 'sip-files00362.tif'
4fb981a7f9b4eb511e5f42b94a08ad2e
b2a09bd13f534ca777245451f3227124ac07fef0
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAL' 'sip-files00362.txt'
7a711579311f33a02101bacf9b76dfcf
86a02e61242f0c2c6019eefd5b246d7524780181
describe
'10756' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAM' 'sip-files00362thm.jpg'
ae6c2f5c7b823b457a5413a7fefda3b0
4970046eccb68bfdf17e22cf15a4c82fc6e8d188
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAN' 'sip-files00363.jp2'
07476628d056f0fc55793c869daffafb
3cf63be36ae1bef4c7ade62ec20f4b6725796813
describe
'146673' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAO' 'sip-files00363.jpg'
bc08fafc4deb1143652bd09052394efe
15061c2ff70bce97f091f7e641cff6dcfcf32700
describe
'45055' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAP' 'sip-files00363.pro'
ac8f168ac163eb6d76deb95c1cc18f03
7dbeed98e924dac6f2614e9d345419fcda07e355
describe
'45341' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAQ' 'sip-files00363.QC.jpg'
17c5ff15c2b7fc81ee6f512bbd3c00dd
4ac368d9dc0520d34ef4074e2241659911b84dab
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAR' 'sip-files00363.tif'
e9fdb8e3eb708984388bcbabcba3fa3c
e47d84262bd4fd8ffca62e4828a41f251e642e69
describe
'1786' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAS' 'sip-files00363.txt'
3d72d36601538b14e2c0d72bd8e2e7f5
0a892e3a0143000b71d422cf07101091bad3aeda
describe
'10520' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAT' 'sip-files00363thm.jpg'
4c0911226fb74939dc2f58f131ce3662
d85ddcc184da39a57e963931ce17f8b73f6d81ed
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAU' 'sip-files00364.jp2'
5eb7a6608a0b48973c36c5138858d159
e20cc4b16870cee6ff2c15d08fbc53d5ed24a9b7
describe
'147137' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAV' 'sip-files00364.jpg'
ace3fa0d2ef98d4e4a254a0288bc4f3b
d51e0a5de955527fd9f45127e25f644729206701
describe
'44331' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAW' 'sip-files00364.pro'
0b380306324e39738952e3594e602e36
f3563cbbba85f9855af8b3b40dcbb6b98839273b
describe
'46277' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAX' 'sip-files00364.QC.jpg'
a8f00d5c25e6ed4eda1eecb5b7b16ed0
93f26aa38eaea886dc432a9f96e0face77008935
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAY' 'sip-files00364.tif'
86761854862b140f8faf86033055560b
a9160b21d7cff7a74b53cbbc1b3765ef98c64c56
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIAZ' 'sip-files00364.txt'
3b67b0ee53c673309a98436a5e800a54
3e6f8502ffdce314a25ad2687729f77824690c3a
describe
'10998' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBA' 'sip-files00364thm.jpg'
1c776717c6a12e6e6925221db9ad9a88
95fe02158781901055364555900239b3a486c3f3
describe
'346657' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBB' 'sip-files00365.jp2'
ead149c4060ecdc21c268be10fef4f38
fa61a768f7f8313da275d86a1497a41d8091ede9
describe
'147243' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBC' 'sip-files00365.jpg'
8725c1291dfe6293e6d30fb37bb00011
71ee05f70833c78fc10a96c99aca908ed4d6a588
describe
'45120' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBD' 'sip-files00365.pro'
c36e79e972c51cb53d3a35664364eedd
e649d8e04b96b1db4152e764c9565f832671f198
describe
'45834' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBE' 'sip-files00365.QC.jpg'
d2ac4c9f6a0003c0d8af5b0694a3cd77
2515c98ce1d13acd599aed885325fc795344b554
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBF' 'sip-files00365.tif'
64f05a250918f708882dea7242caf92f
5b3c4fed3d7928e3b7e652103816912d47aac78e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBG' 'sip-files00365.txt'
39f490326b733741e1690eef8f782546
6e34d8e4529f80a4dada883e7f5aea8b67784296
describe
'10835' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBH' 'sip-files00365thm.jpg'
c4b2fca7f4f1e0acf171c2ce382332f5
1b39eff6e3ee947ed42b67aa5089181db9f0fd5b
describe
'346931' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBI' 'sip-files00366.jp2'
190bdcd5cae57b001bca051641cc98da
f57481fbd3082446cbfdde82593f3371e631a8c3
describe
'151200' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBJ' 'sip-files00366.jpg'
5b5be63d420e22cb8bebf60e3d121d77
cee0ecf15ad7b74bbe9a35af7d56b57b1a271d2d
describe
'46223' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBK' 'sip-files00366.pro'
865f16454db23f3ca670922af721d45d
7bf1e7910247b7128e7d45466af76084d405825b
'2011-11-17T23:46:30-05:00'
describe
'47465' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBL' 'sip-files00366.QC.jpg'
73cc8caddac0198f25da09bd1823f251
e527de2ba399673dc58cc8d791ef8b60706ff173
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBM' 'sip-files00366.tif'
cfca2ca4d902556b3a283db40613e152
2189c3a0de83e55e74092ec3becc8171d2d8645e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBN' 'sip-files00366.txt'
57102d765e80896467e406adccaf5dc1
415044db287482e4cb96061abf1a4a793eabbde8
describe
'10932' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBO' 'sip-files00366thm.jpg'
33f4a8642f8ef180c7c598182d6c0d49
203c0424e25fd6187a70ee3a7d3779ff8438ab5c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBP' 'sip-files00367.jp2'
6674b17548e873ca51cc9816af4a85b1
2aa7e609e33e0da730ade45ddb269583ad4500f4
describe
'107917' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBQ' 'sip-files00367.jpg'
fafdc8b6661e1f32fff84fb28248c7c5
8c0cbb758bc11430386e3f0d432f0d9447c722f4
describe
'9650' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBR' 'sip-files00367.pro'
85b1713d1edda95ed9321a1fc789ad07
ab63988592ec032563ea124a0d56724d43bff919
describe
'29579' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBS' 'sip-files00367.QC.jpg'
1ccbc203e4015ef775ebabf893a1d044
055094481fe5cfb91cd866aeeb64c2b7750b90c9
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBT' 'sip-files00367.tif'
6560ea3ed72e52db5aa225103861732c
2faafa435428049f152c97b5ba68f5f74e76e9ca
describe
'505' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBU' 'sip-files00367.txt'
4ca16723bc9d9ef49c792d9630f3259f
eaa522c01626eb294fb0181e3b7c15fd38d5286f
describe
'7362' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBV' 'sip-files00367thm.jpg'
c0d1ad964631602bb4dbfe2bb37bda6d
e61110d1a293559750668d9f7de6bc59556c8d6a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBW' 'sip-files00368.jp2'
cd629a4d07f8d6ad1199679b1b7f4b5e
487b63435dd6458d8df41bd8d733f85dd1df4b36
describe
'36441' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBX' 'sip-files00368.jpg'
ebacb2656820b2572e2505793bcb5bdf
bb32c4b784069dba38bc3067290e78c6b1d45872
describe
'6846' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBY' 'sip-files00368.pro'
3c8bae43fb3bf798b58a2aac2d6acc23
c6a22fa1a2e3c28f5d80a9f89205e06bb08904d7
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIBZ' 'sip-files00368.QC.jpg'
f8665edf410ea602863ccefb09b56740
669b22b2aec58a236e702b63c924f7e76d6b4288
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICA' 'sip-files00368.tif'
a87309f33b1955d773a04716f9dc3005
9996ef1cf2a6eb0bc434c979745cbb108db30277
describe
'326' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICB' 'sip-files00368.txt'
a23084a91da88b7b3238eca0953b5ecb
45b82d92401a921a386db47c84983f44630799ac
describe
'2914' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICC' 'sip-files00368thm.jpg'
a3f2368ebefead487b99899c548d4538
fcb9cedf2907013624484bcfda28b21a8ba61d96
describe
'346671' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICD' 'sip-files00369.jp2'
0194d259b59a0614e1ea19e7dcb24781
29f27483927fcc3c761ef28e3ed5674018545e15
describe
'140193' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICE' 'sip-files00369.jpg'
6c3bb6bb17735f5753e6c7ed123cca74
561b1a7929d1edb8f5fad0aef33cab5a4205b0ae
describe
'31863' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICF' 'sip-files00369.pro'
43d6c0257581377b7b2acbbbe49be494
be4608c9c1ce58266e2e79619b6bc337aa75a8cd
describe
'41114' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICG' 'sip-files00369.QC.jpg'
6af26655846fe7da8b3806375274c1e7
b8441d2fd122c038e002366555f5c5f6abaee37e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICH' 'sip-files00369.tif'
c57a4bfc8732e5fc16035140e82515a1
f65a5b808bfa8852ad6d3e8241f25524d9376f47
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICI' 'sip-files00369.txt'
e3dffdaa47fe4d79942c08added098d3
7206d81913cb010526b4b02dd0a743954b64f9bf
describe
'9746' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICJ' 'sip-files00369thm.jpg'
ae940b93a52733ca2aa050861d08f050
c9677dd415dfd68ee39916614835190bc6fe156a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICK' 'sip-files00370.jp2'
20e8bd361e3f75a669cb3a6a31b0a016
77664f51dafce168118a574dcaac7cf3d73351ba
describe
'154213' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICL' 'sip-files00370.jpg'
b9dbc233173e725746bcd9f5f8e79b30
f6ef174c33b32996b6cc3c3edb0fc75f3f8e3a8c
describe
'47236' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICM' 'sip-files00370.pro'
b38f547391afb585307e14320795df45
7cc9e93aa68e2916642ca258460b65daabfb371b
describe
'47996' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICN' 'sip-files00370.QC.jpg'
3f32099cdf8a379c6ccfe423e227628e
8e9fb071aa109ef30b30e994e5eba9b66bbafc5c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICO' 'sip-files00370.tif'
cc1818cb25d6f00cfd92b5c361b363a6
025e69fb812d186b34a24cc40b7ba982d94809d1
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICP' 'sip-files00370.txt'
524ec3ef591cdc4de3ec1bd45e985886
6dfa11a95ffa39df5368aa45ec66e9d407cad885
describe
'10714' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICQ' 'sip-files00370thm.jpg'
5cb7b1d0c8c1954121f39794ce25caad
f8f2112b9acbd77c3deb13572872dd58622690ff
describe
'346767' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICR' 'sip-files00371.jp2'
3e6cd07f1e9dcb8d1181ca80f007f90f
6fa1eca424551f95c560c59688cea4e75ae769f3
describe
'143907' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICS' 'sip-files00371.jpg'
027a83ba8d38655cd9e0f0ef5689e1a3
c76a65a9476ca124328f9704b3014be6a8cb9846
describe
'43727' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICT' 'sip-files00371.pro'
02811c4eada8dc9a54ce9f80aad1ec54
eab016f06385d0021842e84e3388bf4417577895
describe
'43921' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICU' 'sip-files00371.QC.jpg'
2f7fc8194277accee38631dc6e1cd392
12f170e0c948bfed5cddf3e829b4b2c21dfad774
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICV' 'sip-files00371.tif'
4b497439945daf9a701cff34e25b9cfb
42d81b9e19c1d6a0b02c857f1f6602a769c9a412
describe
'1730' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICW' 'sip-files00371.txt'
f919d3f071c5726906547f14392c77c8
87e8a53464a72ada78a89854cc3ef0e2ef975935
describe
'10921' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICX' 'sip-files00371thm.jpg'
a1f0d83039884f87557ca845fe8e6855
a535e47a491171311d92fe1f822ad115c0ace322
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICY' 'sip-files00372.jp2'
ed47d0f01d30c4fb6db1b4daf334f2e9
5029c152f507a860116391df38d441a618e0d2ee
describe
'146418' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABICZ' 'sip-files00372.jpg'
9a806afea20ffd9fc76f37d046b98dfb
218f8e21b64b8a23882f14d72f9055918e85c63b
describe
'44810' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDA' 'sip-files00372.pro'
fed3993d0987148d46a6e9817585dbf6
ef39e7f256f0c07780b14e79fa2e1bad6881fd08
describe
'45525' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDB' 'sip-files00372.QC.jpg'
9c5195a0b7a73ab6a37414fa204392eb
a61d1846d03532cbaeebbc00f0b553f331468021
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDC' 'sip-files00372.tif'
3eda7ae35423e6594816a47166943aa8
51757f0e188e5f450784deaf6803b04055cef927
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDD' 'sip-files00372.txt'
7c6151f86cdbca5fa8fece6b4f6a7e44
3f5351a4a3d6a4bac719b2023d277e39c04063f2
describe
'10465' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDE' 'sip-files00372thm.jpg'
552c9e62b4b9c2b277ad46ec89679297
0b5ec4f099e34732cc67722af5d696e9fe440bdf
'2011-11-17T23:38:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDF' 'sip-files00373.jp2'
8d8cee8d873c13f7bb60771666122cf8
e43f47efc0fb4fbe7fdbe2b0d144bd2e026dec1f
describe
'145558' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDG' 'sip-files00373.jpg'
8168f558dabe4d413ee0df915d26e257
7042c54117685183515ecbeb1507668044f21b07
describe
'45847' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDH' 'sip-files00373.pro'
163d57bf4466cc74603b03980b97314c
843fc67e7de4021b138c6980a2d814e9897a1b3e
describe
'44727' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDI' 'sip-files00373.QC.jpg'
1be9b59b738fd78ae48f5c0a72daf6ae
66033cb217cde3d626768c40354993e9583c3f62
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDJ' 'sip-files00373.tif'
2e76a7894d8f060963e0a9f07e2d8211
62dd48d419ac81836795b88e1e965f1889e8bd21
describe
'1832' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDK' 'sip-files00373.txt'
53c6c7f005f8fd9449c0c0574e5d1dbc
b6728bcfefb02258727c088a7de91fdda058bcee
describe
'10560' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDL' 'sip-files00373thm.jpg'
6fa8af71e1626bc1050a1dc4609d4682
091241d838086b3241d84745d5c29e6e142d0143
describe
'346983' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDM' 'sip-files00374.jp2'
35e9e2a9e87ff17b49c909c44a41e2fe
cd393a1c5585791fcb0e45c58cf792ddfd1398ff
describe
'150932' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDN' 'sip-files00374.jpg'
2d20f7c201ad192c834d56d8adc86a0c
5d24a56a58c13ed7533c8c39edaaa57ffc4138fa
describe
'45464' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDO' 'sip-files00374.pro'
39b786ab42205ccdb88348db53dcbf36
f76970529f1870f746166389030f2ecce9722b9d
describe
'46617' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDP' 'sip-files00374.QC.jpg'
48f19428952c26725df83b5641c2dd7e
797a9652b795ca6936a8d452218c609913d5112f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDQ' 'sip-files00374.tif'
567fd29be7e4582e05b5ad0335a2379b
22f676d664be0d3640430ba5bb70ba8119943c3e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDR' 'sip-files00374.txt'
0ab04396d089d94388dd3a5ffff137d3
e7f45187a3c90c161418c1ed5d2e67aba440c9a1
describe
'11089' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDS' 'sip-files00374thm.jpg'
88456c0632cc4226cba3e373fb1e3ca4
6e153d8b2d132d5a40046e1f8e36639a991ddb97
describe
'346696' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDT' 'sip-files00375.jp2'
b1938c1c9356045fcaa7e956d9ab158e
e52b5bc7e2e23d7ef1e1e1c4f936dc79b68de1ac
describe
'144025' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDU' 'sip-files00375.jpg'
2a3e72db5b868cbc56e4981770065240
37fa6e34ecce9065301da5fa413fca0f0fe27009
describe
'42855' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDV' 'sip-files00375.pro'
c3693d0b1a14cee3f366acb83f751fef
bf5fd8d1bcf7e9bdcefc2c865e37956a26c03f55
describe
'45068' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDW' 'sip-files00375.QC.jpg'
8e5528878dfeab613267c438f2a19d5e
117c4e05816233e5e8822605e662c949181cf45e
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDX' 'sip-files00375.tif'
20eb30fab92161aec3a82baaec7a0319
f0b77bb1b6225e2ca5883129091c5db4ffaee0cc
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDY' 'sip-files00375.txt'
6bc17e8bc25f29e79b1394fc202030f9
62990de93d1856a46ce51accd2f1f9eec1085a00
describe
'10419' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIDZ' 'sip-files00375thm.jpg'
4a476431440d5888bbe756bcb243a066
3ae692826e788e26c9d98b69b97e00060c2abc0a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEA' 'sip-files00376.jp2'
786b689cd84dfb6641894e5d3f3f4914
a9b77070c325bb7e8bcb162e43eda0869dee55c3
describe
'141432' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEB' 'sip-files00376.jpg'
c1c32c7a0119bcfd0640f868e290130d
2cad8e1a7e99dd1649eb73dac5556cfcaf6d7983
describe
'43498' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEC' 'sip-files00376.pro'
81da8f3c2afcf63deb11f589c64154a3
ccc6202162dd240fe56ce166b22224a268598796
describe
'44615' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIED' 'sip-files00376.QC.jpg'
db2e04416f37c70827416b81e46ed0af
cad9ad437e8b554a1f0564527e64d0d7dc76ebf6
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEE' 'sip-files00376.tif'
2f51e4a404a286c04b456325262deb0e
3c75ff8cfd62aa147897acbb9f4c0c8e60552fa8
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEF' 'sip-files00376.txt'
125858d47678a701e0ab2dde755d6233
f5061b3de8e36ca6d61ab3aeb6d0f29a5b649ec1
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEG' 'sip-files00376thm.jpg'
8b5007dc5c03013f5ac059503b7dd8ab
61b47be793ff3461c3e2e1d514cf0506a0ee7c80
describe
'346961' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEH' 'sip-files00377.jp2'
514bd5bd9c8619ae9fa374ec2a8cc010
f168be638bac4066edad99ef3e17cfc8343456e0
'2011-11-17T23:45:15-05:00'
describe
'142366' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEI' 'sip-files00377.jpg'
0ec4eb4ef8e6f0f35faf72e2b63c92d1
95249af9aeed3e78169fade48252c7bc8537d3b0
describe
'44400' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEJ' 'sip-files00377.pro'
aa1bac1f763e0ef2f7069dcaa17b5c3f
0ce234b4f15d3fec81896dad446ee0e3c525b593
describe
'44340' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEK' 'sip-files00377.QC.jpg'
bc8192f251ff626c6cf7db704fe70a1b
1fdc69d7724b57e05efcb30ae2406c9ce2b237e7
'2011-11-17T23:45:36-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEL' 'sip-files00377.tif'
3bb6af6b275d2fed0dde1e229a664290
68be1fad40fd668ffb4597966a57d4b85ef1e09b
describe
'1747' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEM' 'sip-files00377.txt'
df7d61a7e6e3efeb8ba2d946f122735f
c78499b4930db3a3d4e6d06617f1c2c0f33da2a1
describe
'10561' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEN' 'sip-files00377thm.jpg'
67ab6caf64b03915cf9aa1ef4f5af5cd
d980a880da141912d383ffebf3e2d4172288b8b8
describe
'346940' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEO' 'sip-files00378.jp2'
323e809c6c776cf268679e0e2c90c7b9
34bfe74918b1eafef49cc5c6bdc6e83fec3c6ee0
describe
'150171' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEP' 'sip-files00378.jpg'
77ccf80ccbf4d8978a1b7de12829a6f5
8457feb56bc30398e76d6fe2f9b6d04b546528e2
describe
'45073' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEQ' 'sip-files00378.pro'
fed6cf78edabe20324fa5198dd11203e
4befd2adad207e41fc125b0bf622feb173eb54a9
describe
'47555' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIER' 'sip-files00378.QC.jpg'
46c6a5d159a288d8a7c9c9a104a5d8ff
1be62804dda06ec1a7e16b789bd04b0f1c2002b1
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIES' 'sip-files00378.tif'
307e031ce5f503589426cef953d11d84
94817207c005ac46ed707a425cb47de15d37bc93
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIET' 'sip-files00378.txt'
2877ba9cdbeac0dffe351f76afa4aa4d
86ad96dfbb169d24b4577bb6e92ccc88e8367b26
describe
'10830' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEU' 'sip-files00378thm.jpg'
794f0e9030cd4b914ee27bc2e8e47776
afad593c7da5c17d91da63eaae3f92392861731a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEV' 'sip-files00379.jp2'
6fd890f6df6a4958ad6818481f7def12
5fe718c438221668155a841368966253fecc7f80
describe
'147856' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEW' 'sip-files00379.jpg'
02e287cd76e0f0b2325e3e4590928b0a
c3266150a0fed2e20347ee096062842b066c9622
describe
'45099' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEX' 'sip-files00379.pro'
ec65910b5e84d86a2407e2110c4a8021
9a7b3ac4b25de2f7ea2a8b0c06f024bb5c572460
describe
'46569' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEY' 'sip-files00379.QC.jpg'
0efc97baf185a197c6b3ec7350fe4407
fb6cfc22936e3a681c71c730c40e5cfa44488867
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIEZ' 'sip-files00379.tif'
5ec551d5b07ffa75c7e39f2eae0561e5
84d6297c09077add38189a6394a4c94776c83884
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFA' 'sip-files00379.txt'
9528442486a4cf6b49c660c19e1b0a16
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describe
'10593' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFB' 'sip-files00379thm.jpg'
31b159f93eaa2991f8eff1be00268978
cd0d1f2dcefc228adc41ebf1b9c8bb970c668bcf
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFC' 'sip-files00380.jp2'
fb7227598e9ad8116b72205f557e2b07
9bee66fcba81ad057f39b8c689c1635c90f61650
describe
'127838' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFD' 'sip-files00380.jpg'
71f99c3832a5c367880bbd976a666c61
9333d43cf11d9426815d933d0b68cc6e5751a8cb
describe
'38536' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFE' 'sip-files00380.pro'
5964172f3f4fdf2d95edcc80b7811c9b
c8da7708bbbe8e38c6b7829093ca3559465e0f3e
describe
'40026' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFF' 'sip-files00380.QC.jpg'
eb49f0a7f182532ba2c7b001a108c1b1
64ff3db9e42d6cc690a606bcdca13132aa19c82f
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFG' 'sip-files00380.tif'
00521a3048c3e55abb3704610ec3fb67
62c685d317adcd92562b94ef2dd534d0a764a821
describe
'1554' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFH' 'sip-files00380.txt'
74b32aabbbe22ff19c538eea51155a1d
19bb02e4e95850930c420ac823c10d91eb1cafe1
describe
'10006' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFI' 'sip-files00380thm.jpg'
5fb7d4234c853e68c8d1d49b86bddd31
67cddd2567d1db281bad4a12a040d45c1f774ae1
describe
'346789' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFJ' 'sip-files00381.jp2'
1e66a724d9312db4118f4d01ced4461a
5e05a8a688f6ff12095c96a70cb9712c8320ac7a
describe
'133429' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFK' 'sip-files00381.jpg'
87bc59db1e15388189a395ecc983a2a6
5ad0f52d4f9cfecd3add04cefaabc670a299dc5d
'2011-11-17T23:46:28-05:00'
describe
'41048' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFL' 'sip-files00381.pro'
867832512f81a994266fc18499a30ff2
2bea189d51c6b8e8bb9399d9c853cfe1070ad73e
describe
'42087' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFM' 'sip-files00381.QC.jpg'
0968962ab66b4cf3b5e4f37d3263e8a6
502f3bab3dd421f60f5425b3f0147eb6c707113d
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFN' 'sip-files00381.tif'
40e12f1624397faf9716fd63a599e201
d2dfdc5aacde6c35af86d2b94ac4095f12a17f55
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFO' 'sip-files00381.txt'
e7044c881243d68b8b72fc692c2717c4
818c261ccc6ea21c2328b8130b2c6c46a8d6babd
describe
'10065' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFP' 'sip-files00381thm.jpg'
45e201fd035a78e810f8dc927e7c1d9c
222e39e35005f11713b45c046263b9f6cd9e5962
describe
'346916' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFQ' 'sip-files00382.jp2'
f69a808e4834efc3d0328357d3f899ef
8b582c4ea846ec207a7074371442728c39434025
describe
'151232' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFR' 'sip-files00382.jpg'
d71df9a1c9cf2e362c4303cfa6fabce9
0130c69e0f82daa78c6e1d1d6d8aa98d830d7410
describe
'46020' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFS' 'sip-files00382.pro'
a721811462051594185bc914274b8819
feddb81fe768ef5976e9cc47cadf82099787871a
describe
'45826' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFT' 'sip-files00382.QC.jpg'
4d5eaefbbe77ad012c9ce15b619b714e
4d38208d6ea7edf38038bf07833ce7e9f21fcfd8
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFU' 'sip-files00382.tif'
fd4d7f508e50ffcb3678c051dde9971d
760155ebe99ed838178328c098f3b6fd7ecb9d69
describe
'1818' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFV' 'sip-files00382.txt'
4d3c43938eca48c397361da9281f44a7
15dad186a5112b24ae4fea6363996c2ee77cbc93
describe
'10697' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFW' 'sip-files00382thm.jpg'
8e466de4d1d32263a518040d67c2e8ae
bece213920d900ff2cf36161d1f28a5fe131d37e
describe
'346759' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFX' 'sip-files00383.jp2'
3bd34a5f107ef6e29b3e1f63a2dbd30a
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describe
'145624' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFY' 'sip-files00383.jpg'
f29dd72067fa521f09046ab65f77d901
68494301f68329a2eb60d293b03d68806870951c
describe
'44524' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIFZ' 'sip-files00383.pro'
822bf9e3e752c76cb92cc856aea9930e
334d12b7138ce9db520b49ff41bba52c8c7a3ce1
describe
'44430' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGA' 'sip-files00383.QC.jpg'
b087deeb2739093216020d17fcbf4fab
7f34df115e710539c3f173ae5fffbd8009461c9b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGB' 'sip-files00383.tif'
7d2a342585590543cb36e9692ce1c2be
53e20eab31f418ee11099489ef00c006daf95a31
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGC' 'sip-files00383.txt'
971fc34b411bb3ab1a59bb3d1b8b0fd3
358729399a4fecb94d43a434e6fe21b70c94810e
describe
'10255' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGD' 'sip-files00383thm.jpg'
51d62162450ea74d0c4381f6c259f44d
a40537dd82371aee36b6d9090b67af7dc4c30db5
describe
'346932' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGE' 'sip-files00384.jp2'
7cb28f74b015e0abc56a498f891ae702
8799b1ee3b178fe38383ead1edda49150ab1d558
describe
'143053' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGF' 'sip-files00384.jpg'
2c0c06ebaae06b9c164f51e767ef7188
e4d31f24a2503f0761a816e0547fbfa22738790b
describe
'44511' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGG' 'sip-files00384.pro'
31201cda1cbb9159139ddefb8dbd7e24
8fac154f173f2d12793a9d50322ccb0352255294
describe
'43730' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGH' 'sip-files00384.QC.jpg'
e6de71d560a1cd95f6daf0f8f8546822
9f04b8703fa20c7cbfb16f1f852e154e0a73f30c
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGI' 'sip-files00384.tif'
8598ec735a51fbf910b5ba836e3da09d
951964e837505509b84cc5a146c5f5609c67320b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGJ' 'sip-files00384.txt'
ff30ee6493334170fb7981bb98b27614
cdc95580bf72bf6f7aec2daaaa6a6be47974e9df
describe
'10119' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGK' 'sip-files00384thm.jpg'
602276424b7faccdbdfabc28a3cfdbb2
bb84a47ae86a1b6fed8b6b8c83ff5c8f4551df06
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGL' 'sip-files00385.jp2'
c4fa0a0be73286851257f15f57862dbb
facd931cde5159e3b78c62a0c903dd6ccdba7964
'2011-11-17T23:36:14-05:00'
describe
'145056' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGM' 'sip-files00385.jpg'
c70c75860af385a32c6d858983175ec2
2435a3aaaf6c0a6cfe4757ba0e8cdfbca67d2d3d
describe
'44869' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGN' 'sip-files00385.pro'
e85b3e693d6b76a1906171b8477dd169
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describe
'44866' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGO' 'sip-files00385.QC.jpg'
5fa8d0739c71c8793cca68937d0b4796
3afa5be4f216f620bee2ac0b4a4e7b74a5248610
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGP' 'sip-files00385.tif'
51e75a642b0977f4048e0c938c859855
9e8eb5dfe77f3c7f864bcf7dd48dbb13f75604f4
describe
'1774' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGQ' 'sip-files00385.txt'
e3aa8a2597f1ee56b7b6f138a0b4382a
1d2bb218a3cb248683c53c360b0175464562f975
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGR' 'sip-files00385thm.jpg'
8c2101d7a9b797aa4218930dec0fc663
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGS' 'sip-files00386.jp2'
6e963eefb3410762bf425632914ea3b1
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describe
'55608' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGT' 'sip-files00386.jpg'
867edfed03bdfc219a603c8b005a6330
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describe
'13685' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGU' 'sip-files00386.pro'
c2442435f437b6df4cef1592f68fe7dd
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describe
'16636' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGV' 'sip-files00386.QC.jpg'
c413fe1eb824a52a93993d4030b783f0
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGW' 'sip-files00386.tif'
c885d8473a07280295a41d143d13bd3a
1eba6df6aa0ed54dc3c4308348db5558db114917
describe
'576' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGX' 'sip-files00386.txt'
5bac2cc5ec37fe3deb52ddeeb102ceb7
83c53bf346d01f910ca5998427783732ecaa6843
describe
Invalid character
'4396' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGY' 'sip-files00386thm.jpg'
24c242ddf8a4ce2d1912a85d226e2de4
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIGZ' 'sip-files00387.jp2'
ec6b917716bc9505bbc5892a372f7eb1
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describe
'142084' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHA' 'sip-files00387.jpg'
b67f2fbdcd740351d42015dfda974102
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describe
'32165' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHB' 'sip-files00387.pro'
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describe
'42506' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHC' 'sip-files00387.QC.jpg'
7a33a62adc585a17c2e9b42671484f5e
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHD' 'sip-files00387.tif'
89bfbf1fa4834aa4de9a5a6ea33c05cf
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describe
'1321' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHE' 'sip-files00387.txt'
aae7827a66406c4acba4231991ff7588
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describe
'9684' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHF' 'sip-files00387thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHG' 'sip-files00388.jp2'
a5d659bb9e99d43c6f88b8eb4aa56a8d
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describe
'144463' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHH' 'sip-files00388.jpg'
8624c22f5987885f43801efd6ddc0efc
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describe
'44992' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHI' 'sip-files00388.pro'
82ecbe4c9a199045014bf83b0bbf162f
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describe
'44629' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHJ' 'sip-files00388.QC.jpg'
dd30a8094375b291e5c1535d19d0ac68
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHK' 'sip-files00388.tif'
fc53de87a4e5634e5190acdcf1da2a43
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHL' 'sip-files00388.txt'
44ccb26d6dc70157b88e2eab4c0065ff
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHM' 'sip-files00388thm.jpg'
eb1a2a3f47bf44a026035a29e5b151d6
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describe
'346693' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHN' 'sip-files00389.jp2'
553af8e09e35679ce5f2d0511e1ebc17
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describe
'146052' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHO' 'sip-files00389.jpg'
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describe
'45236' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHP' 'sip-files00389.pro'
587f3a5a5ab682ea83b5ba708188c368
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describe
'45595' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHQ' 'sip-files00389.QC.jpg'
a1419c3af8631c67ba61d6225b8e3517
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHR' 'sip-files00389.tif'
6746bf50caddd442a9acfdcd154ee8ae
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHS' 'sip-files00389.txt'
ce58cf16f2d3c50b8cbfe6f4c7be7f6e
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describe
'10611' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHT' 'sip-files00389thm.jpg'
cf302a5234c2ab182c0e6caca71f7b25
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHU' 'sip-files00390.jp2'
a72f6a0e752e0d63381865f69b1ba404
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describe
'149206' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHV' 'sip-files00390.jpg'
384d330e704b3aac264bf3dc133b98d4
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describe
'46305' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHW' 'sip-files00390.pro'
b2241bcf25b3bd5b28267c67e519602b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHX' 'sip-files00390.QC.jpg'
be81e3fb70295728548143b7688c7e4c
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHY' 'sip-files00390.tif'
6e36c1d09c26c6da66b625a946bbc4c5
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIHZ' 'sip-files00390.txt'
38cec45e6af54aa90b9a3fa3c168bf36
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIA' 'sip-files00390thm.jpg'
2092ea90c8737c8c6094ff7bf23aa4c1
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describe
'346802' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIB' 'sip-files00391.jp2'
3e6faa1a20fce02a6bd8677eef292830
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describe
'100334' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIC' 'sip-files00391.jpg'
3907d7abc7c8bea0f5cb54b8c0205544
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describe
'8558' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIID' 'sip-files00391.pro'
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describe
'25191' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIE' 'sip-files00391.QC.jpg'
1fc857918af926c2774b6eb92564a5b2
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIF' 'sip-files00391.tif'
6038a52171cad533e371387fe71b5f78
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describe
'733' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIG' 'sip-files00391.txt'
59357e20ea5092006d9dedeaccb2b923
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describe
'6498' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIH' 'sip-files00391thm.jpg'
61b3127bfa43d9fe25fc5d863b29f853
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIII' 'sip-files00392.jp2'
89ce9d02def8f18a37a10e5d72159e73
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describe
'146089' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIJ' 'sip-files00392.jpg'
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describe
'44233' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIK' 'sip-files00392.pro'
944881b535d9908e76bfd348ea9779a0
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describe
'45745' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIL' 'sip-files00392.QC.jpg'
6fc5b3594ab7a40edc39dfff8094fcc8
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIM' 'sip-files00392.tif'
fda521dcb58679399008ee3d5bfe1dd9
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIN' 'sip-files00392.txt'
495858a0e22c71509e3b63fdc57672f9
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describe
'10618' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIO' 'sip-files00392thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIP' 'sip-files00393.jp2'
dc247419e7165f0c5f8266e76f51bf48
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describe
'146483' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIQ' 'sip-files00393.jpg'
e1f4de7011ec04daf26593cb7f74b762
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIR' 'sip-files00393.pro'
caf99eb298b315e3b5ebe2bf9e205f93
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describe
'45578' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIS' 'sip-files00393.QC.jpg'
8cbceffec6993ec437b22c90129bca39
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIT' 'sip-files00393.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIU' 'sip-files00393.txt'
00fab7582f4f92cd08436c464b7bfa68
04460d7e19fbb072fab0f5b942e82932c2f04d46
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIV' 'sip-files00393thm.jpg'
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describe
'346969' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIW' 'sip-files00394.jp2'
f36f6e49846660636bd0a1c85e34b468
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describe
'152962' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIX' 'sip-files00394.jpg'
e0df9c6cfdbdc11ac949112be7718ffe
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describe
'47114' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIY' 'sip-files00394.pro'
cc99bc320ca6f62c07ca4d4c84bf619c
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describe
'46901' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIIZ' 'sip-files00394.QC.jpg'
390ffe737e6ee2275c28f646513a21c9
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJA' 'sip-files00394.tif'
84a54d84bc6b3a4db56123693544d93e
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describe
'1848' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJB' 'sip-files00394.txt'
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describe
'10541' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJC' 'sip-files00394thm.jpg'
79a742fe56da9bc49bbe1722ce7582cf
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJD' 'sip-files00395.jp2'
2e4d147995fd2fa01b4702b11b25b201
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describe
'146050' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJE' 'sip-files00395.jpg'
b55cfb74242597eeb4ad523ce416e6c0
6bd09dc874b373bbf546856d9aad4b4e4e0a255b
'2011-11-17T23:46:21-05:00'
describe
'45546' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJF' 'sip-files00395.pro'
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describe
'44643' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJG' 'sip-files00395.QC.jpg'
f89ee21b4c0770bae3c2efb0a748a131
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'2011-11-17T23:36:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJH' 'sip-files00395.tif'
f9392dfa55eec7db4070a780c0d8f5d4
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJI' 'sip-files00395.txt'
60bfc5025902966721c2d536999c2f53
ab8ee4b7b00b42e86f988c2664e51cbf890b8a8a
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJJ' 'sip-files00395thm.jpg'
380aa9c387991bff941cbfc5470642ea
e7fa25f958fd49163d78d748df369d36220eeb5b
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJK' 'sip-files00396.jp2'
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describe
'151433' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJL' 'sip-files00396.jpg'
b189e0615d2eddbccfcab5c0cb814199
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describe
'46273' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJM' 'sip-files00396.pro'
f6738c37ea336399261a3124769340ec
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describe
'46749' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJN' 'sip-files00396.QC.jpg'
6158c94295a96c42592196a0a6f83000
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJO' 'sip-files00396.tif'
381c4c08734635862f7509015c8850a3
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describe
'1836' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJP' 'sip-files00396.txt'
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describe
'10764' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJQ' 'sip-files00396thm.jpg'
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describe
'346639' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJR' 'sip-files00397.jp2'
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describe
'148102' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJS' 'sip-files00397.jpg'
a5818eda2df9742666cf9b30ca98ec1b
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describe
'45809' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJT' 'sip-files00397.pro'
ab5aa707de7aeed68c4c9a270d78548f
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describe
'45628' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJU' 'sip-files00397.QC.jpg'
2afedab8c7326b3d34c0f1e7e0a4f23b
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJV' 'sip-files00397.tif'
ae11d4ce377f90e193ee121919770baa
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJW' 'sip-files00397.txt'
da46e09234034a2f0ab09db6d18ee260
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describe
'10399' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJX' 'sip-files00397thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJY' 'sip-files00398.jp2'
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describe
'145501' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIJZ' 'sip-files00398.jpg'
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describe
'45566' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKA' 'sip-files00398.pro'
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describe
'44780' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKB' 'sip-files00398.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKC' 'sip-files00398.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKD' 'sip-files00398.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKE' 'sip-files00398thm.jpg'
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describe
'346755' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKF' 'sip-files00399.jp2'
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describe
'144245' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKG' 'sip-files00399.jpg'
f605759ce4ada867563f0c29306c7b84
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describe
'44689' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKH' 'sip-files00399.pro'
1550b348ad43d93c8c07a5328192cf89
fd1b284727af5ff0b71dc968bc4d0943f0769595
'2011-11-17T23:44:30-05:00'
describe
'44258' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKI' 'sip-files00399.QC.jpg'
0b7264ac80112ae9f893f6984519daed
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKJ' 'sip-files00399.tif'
f4d150d3e68cc29eda30a05b21a31852
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKK' 'sip-files00399.txt'
827b8e3a13380aabe575da08bae13e2d
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describe
'10286' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKL' 'sip-files00399thm.jpg'
12ccec49d9ae2f69c715ed8e108f76a8
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'2011-11-17T23:46:09-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKM' 'sip-files00400.jp2'
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describe
'146188' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKN' 'sip-files00400.jpg'
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f9106dff15f4849e4c3299eadcfe641f11d6e4fa
describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKO' 'sip-files00400.pro'
ab1a64d5c1f1a499bacd6f7d1daeaa82
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describe
'45446' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKP' 'sip-files00400.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKQ' 'sip-files00400.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKR' 'sip-files00400.txt'
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describe
'10553' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKS' 'sip-files00400thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKT' 'sip-files00401.jp2'
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describe
'146299' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKU' 'sip-files00401.jpg'
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describe
'45832' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKV' 'sip-files00401.pro'
cfa567fed1b3094bd528bd7313279c72
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describe
'44478' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKW' 'sip-files00401.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKX' 'sip-files00401.tif'
f189b57f1060e3e4d0ec7b5a3f863891
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKY' 'sip-files00401.txt'
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describe
'10666' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIKZ' 'sip-files00401thm.jpg'
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describe
'346989' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILA' 'sip-files00402.jp2'
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describe
'144060' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILB' 'sip-files00402.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILC' 'sip-files00402.pro'
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describe
'44017' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILD' 'sip-files00402.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILE' 'sip-files00402.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILF' 'sip-files00402.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILG' 'sip-files00402thm.jpg'
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describe
'346720' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILH' 'sip-files00403.jp2'
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describe
'145041' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILI' 'sip-files00403.jpg'
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describe
'45579' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILJ' 'sip-files00403.pro'
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describe
'44701' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILK' 'sip-files00403.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILL' 'sip-files00403.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILM' 'sip-files00403.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILN' 'sip-files00403thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILO' 'sip-files00404.jp2'
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describe
'140462' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILP' 'sip-files00404.jpg'
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describe
'43139' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILQ' 'sip-files00404.pro'
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describe
'43594' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILR' 'sip-files00404.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILS' 'sip-files00404.tif'
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describe
'1695' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILT' 'sip-files00404.txt'
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describe
'10298' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILU' 'sip-files00404thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILV' 'sip-files00405.jp2'
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describe
'132762' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILW' 'sip-files00405.jpg'
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describe
'31642' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILX' 'sip-files00405.pro'
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describe
'39039' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILY' 'sip-files00405.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABILZ' 'sip-files00405.tif'
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describe
'1343' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMA' 'sip-files00405.txt'
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describe
'9282' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMB' 'sip-files00405thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMC' 'sip-files00406.jp2'
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describe
'145233' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMD' 'sip-files00406.jpg'
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describe
'45803' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIME' 'sip-files00406.pro'
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describe
'45376' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMF' 'sip-files00406.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMG' 'sip-files00406.tif'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMH' 'sip-files00406.txt'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMI' 'sip-files00406thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMJ' 'sip-files00407.jp2'
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describe
'147383' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMK' 'sip-files00407.jpg'
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describe
'45870' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIML' 'sip-files00407.pro'
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describe
'46222' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMM' 'sip-files00407.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMN' 'sip-files00407.tif'
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describe
'1806' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMO' 'sip-files00407.txt'
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describe
'10720' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMP' 'sip-files00407thm.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMQ' 'sip-files00408.jp2'
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describe
'142140' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMR' 'sip-files00408.jpg'
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describe
'44514' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMS' 'sip-files00408.pro'
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describe
'44617' 'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMT' 'sip-files00408.QC.jpg'
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describe
'info:fdaE20081001_AAAACTfileF20081003_AABIMU' 'sip-files00408.tif'
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describe
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PEARSON TRIES THE ICE,


TRUE TO THE OLD FLAG

A TALE OF THE

AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE,

BY

GA HENDTY

Author of “The Lion of the North,” “ With Clive in India,” “Through the Fray,”
“Tn Freedom's Cause,” ‘The Dragon and the Raven,” “Facing Death,” &e.

WITH EIGHT FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS BY GORDON BROWNE,
AND SIX MAPS.



GLASGOW :
BLACKIE & SON, Limrtep.

TORONTO:

WILLIAM BRIGGS, 29-33 Ricumonp St. Wust.
Taz COPP, CLARK COMPANY, Limrrep, 9 Front Sr. Wzsr.
ENTERED according to Act of the Parliament of Canada, in the year one
thousand eight hundred and ninety-six, by BLackin & Son, Limited, at the
Department of Agriculture.
PREFACE

My prEAR Laps,

You have probably been accustomed to regard tho
war between England and her Colonies in America as one in
which we were not only beaten but to some extent humiliated.
Owing to the war having been an unsuccessful one for our
arms, British writers have avoided the subject, and it has been
left for American historians to describe. These, writing for
their own countrymen, and drawing for their facts upon
gazettes, letters, and other documents emanating from one side
only, have naturally, and no doubt insensibly, given a very
strong colour to their own views of the events, and English
writers have been too much inclined to accept their account
implicitly. There is, however, another and very different side
to the story, and this I have endeavoured to show you. The
whole of the facts and details connected with the war can be
relied upon as accurate. ‘They are drawn from the valuable
account of the struggle written by Major Stedman, who served
under Howe, Clinton, and Cornwallis, and from other authentic
contemporary sources. You will see that although unsuccess-
ful—and success was, under the circumstances, a sheer impossi-
bility-—the British troops fought with a bravery which was

never exceeded. and that their victories in actual conflict
vi PREFACE.

vastly outnumbered their defeats. Indeed it may be doubted
whether in any war in which this country has been engaged
have our soldiers exhibited the qualities of endurance and

courage in a higher degree.

Yours very sincerely,

G. A. HEN'T'Y.
Chap.

IT.
Til.
IV.

VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.

XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.

XVI.
XVII.
XVIII.
XIX,
XX.
XXI.

CONTENTS.

. A Frontier Fary, .

An Inpran Rain,
THE RED-SKIN ATTACK,

Tus Ficut at LEXINGTON,

. BUNKER’s HILL,

ScovTine,

In tHE FoREST, . Sie
QUEBEC, . .

Tur SuRPRISE OF TRENTON,

. A TREACHEROUS PLANTER, .

Tur Carturk or PHILADELPHIA, .
Tue Sertier’s Hur,
SARATOGA,

REscueEn, .

. THe Isnanp ReErucE,

THE GREAT SToRM,

Tue Scovt’s Srory, .

Tue Simck or SAVANNAH, .

In an AMERICAN Prison, .
Tur War in South Carona. .

Tue END oF THE STRUGGLE,. .. .

rage

25
42
60
76
95

. 114
. 182
. 152
. 172
. 200
. 218
. 237
. 258
-2tt
» 295
. 810

328

. 849
. 867
. 885
ILLUSTRATIONS.

Page
PEARSON TRIES THF ICE, . . 2 »« + + © « ~ Avontispiece, 322

‘‘THAT WAS A PRETTY GOOD SHOT,” . . . . . .. « « 988

84

Tue Seconp ADVANCE AT Bunker’s Ht,
Joun CoFFIN AND BAIRNSFEATHER IN THE Barrery,. . . . 186
A TrEAcHEROUS FRIEND CAUGHT, . . . . . + - 6 « « 181
Tur Derenog or tap Hur, . . 1. 2 1 we ew ee te 226
“Tuy INDIAN DARTED OFF ACROSS THE ICE,” . . . . . ~ 280

«(Tue HIGHLANDERS MAINTAINED A DESPERATE RESISTANCE,” . 834

MAPS.
Puan or tHE Action at Bunxer’s Hinzt, . . .. .. . 88
Skxercu or Gen. Purrennam’s Posirton anp British ADVANCE, 147
Puan oF Burcoyne’s Posrrion AT SARATOGA, . . . 2 « © 245
PLAN oF THE SIEGE OF SAVANNAH, . . . «© © © « « + 309
PLAN oF THE BATTLE FOUGHT NEAR CAMDEN, . . . . . .« 847

PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF GUILDFORD,. 2 «6 « © 2» « » « 8/1




TRUE TO THE OLD FLAG:

A TALE OF THE AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.

CHAPTER I.

A FRONTIER FARM.

“Concord, March 1, 1774.
Wi yy Dear Cousin,—I am leaving next week with
ip my husband for England, where we intend to
pass some time visiting his friends. John and
I have determined to accept the invitation
you gave us last summer for Harold to come and spend
a few months with you. His father thinks that a great
future will ere many years open in the West, and that
it is therefore well the boy should learn something of
frontier life; for myself, I would rather that he stayed
quietly at home, for he is at present over fond of adven-
ture; but as my husband is meditating selling his estate
here and moving west, it is perhaps better for him.”
“Massachusetts is in a ferment, as indeed are all the Eas-
tern states, and the people talk openly of armed resistance
against the government. My husband being of English
birth, and having served in the king’s army, cannot brook


10 THE BEGINNING OF TROUBLE.

what he calls the rebellious talk which is common among
his neighbours, and is already on bad terms with many
around us. I myself am, as it were, a neutral; as an Ame-
rican woman, it seems to me that the colonists have been
dealt with somewhat hardly by the English parliament,and
that the measures of the latter have been high-handed and
arbitrary; upon the other hand, I naturally incline toward
my husband’s views. He maintains that as the king’s army
has driven out the French and gives protection to the
colony, it is only fair that the colonists should contribute to
its expenses. The English ask for no contributions towards
the expenses of their own country, but demand that at
least the expenses of the protection of the colony shall
not be charged upon the heavily-taxed people at home.
As to the law that the colony shall trade only with the
mother country, my husband says that this is the rule in
the colonies of Spain, France, Portugal, and the Nether-
lands, and that the people here, who can obtain what land
they choose, and till it without rent, should not grumble
at paying this small tax to the mother country. How-
ever it be, I fear that troubles will come; and this place
being the head and focus of the party hostile to England,
my husband, feeling himself out of accord with all his
neighbours, saving a few loyal gentlemen like himself,
is thinking much and seriously of selling our estate here
and of moving away into the new countries of the West,
where he will be free from all the disputation and con-
tentious talk which occupies men’s time here.

“Indeed, Cousin, times have sadly changed since you
were staying with us five years ago. Then our life was a
peaceful and quiet one; now there is nothing but wrang-
ling and strife. The dissenting clergy are, as my husband
REASONS FOR MOVING WEST. 11

says was the case in England before the great civil
war, the fomenters of this discontent. There are many
busybodies who pass their time in stirring up the people
by violent harangues and seditious writing; therefore
everyone takes one side or the other, and there is neither
peace nor comfort in life.

“ Accustomed as I have always been {0 living in ease and
affluence, I dread somewhat the thought of a life on the
Indian frontier. One has heard so many dreadful stories
of Indian fights and massacres, that I tremble a little at the
prospect; but I do not mention this to Jobn, for as other
women are, like yourself, brave enough to support these
dangers, I would not appear a coward in hiseyes. You will
see, Cousin, that as this prospect is before us, it is well that
Harold should learn the ways of a frontier life. Moreover,
John does not like the thoughtof leaving him here while we
are in England, for, as he says, the boy. might learn to be-
come a rebel in his absence; therefore, my dear cousin, we
have resolved to send him to you. An opportunity offers
in the fact that a gentleman of our acquaintance is, with
his family, going this week west with the intention of
settling there; and he will, he tells us, go first to Detroit,
whence he will be able to send Harold forward to your
farm. The boy himself is delighted at the thought,
and promises to return an accomplished backwoodsman.
John joins me in kind love to yourself and your husband,
and believe me to remain your affectionate cousin,

“MARY WILSON.”

Four months after the date of the above letter a lad
some fifteen years old was walking with a man of middle
age, on the shores of Lake Huron. Behind them was
12 A BACKWOODS CLEARING.

a large clearing of about a hundred acres in extent; a
comfortable house, with buildings for cattle, stood at a
distance of some three hundred yards from the lake;
broad fields of yellow corn waved brightly in the sun;
and from the edge of the clearing came the sound of
a woodman’s axe, showing that the proprietor was still
enlarging the limits of his farm. Surrounding the house,
at a distance of twenty yards, was a strong stockade
some seven feet in height, formed of young trees pointed
at the upper end, squared and fixed firmly in the ground.
The house itself, although far more spacious and comfort-
able than the majority of backwood farmhouses, was
built in the usual fashion, of solid logs, and was evidently
designed to resist attack.

William Welch had settled ten years before on this
spot, which was then far removed from the nearest habi-
tation. It would have been a very imprudent act, under
ordinary circumstances, to have established himself in so
lonely a position, so far removed from the possibility of
assistance in case of attack. He settled there, however,
just after Pontiac, who was at the head of an alliance of
all the Indian tribes of those parts, had, after the long
and desperate siege of Fort Pitt, made peace with us upon
finding that his-friends the French had given up all
thought of further resistance to the English, and had
entirely abandoned the country. Mr. Welch thought,
therefore, that a permanent peace was likely to reign
on the frontier, and that he might safely establish him-
self in the charming location he had pitched upon, far
removed from the confines of civilization.

The spot was a natural clearing of some forty acres in
extent, sloping down to the water’s edge, and a more
A SETTLER’S TROUBLES, 13

charming site could hardly have been chosen. Mr. Welch
had brought with him three farm-labourers from the
East, and as time went on he extended the clearing by
cutting down the forest giants which bordered it.

In spite, however, of the beauty of the position, the
fertility of the soil, the abundance of his crops, and the
advantages afforded by the lake, both from its plentiful
supply of fish and as a highway by which he could
convey his produce to market, he had more than once
regretted his choice of the location. It was true that
there had been no Indian wars on a large scale; but
the Indians had several times broken out in sudden in-
cursions; three times he had been attacked, but fortu-
nately only by small parties which he had been enabled
to beat off; once, when a more serious danger threatened
him, he had been obliged to embark with his wife and
child and his more valuable chattels in the great scow in
which he carried his produce to market, and had to take
refuge in the settlements, to find on his return his build-
ings destroyed and his farm wasted. At that time he
had serious thoughts of abandoning his location alto-
gether; but the settlements were extending rapidly to-
wards him, and, with a prospect of having neighbours
before long, and the natural reluctance to give up a place
upon which he had expended so much toil, he decided to
hold on, hoping that more quiet times would prevail, until
other settlers would take up land around him.

The house had been rebuilt more strongly than before.
He now employed four men, and had been unmolested
since his return to his farm, three years before the date
of this story. Already two or three locations had been
taken up on the shores of the lake beyond him; a village
14 BAD NEWS.

had grown up thirty-five miles away, and several settlers
had established themselves between that place and his
home.

“So you are going out fishing this morning, Harold?”
Mr. Welch said. “I hope you will bring back a good
supply, for the larder is low. I was looking at you yes-
terday, and I see that you are becoming a first-rate hand
at the management of a canoe.”

“So I ought to be,” the boy said, “ considering that for
nearly three months I have done nothing but shoot and
fish.”

“You have a sharp eye, Harold, and will make a first-
rate backwoodsman one of these days. You can shoot
nearly as well as I can now. It is lucky that I had a
good stock of powder and lead on hand; firing away
by the hour together as you do consumes a large amount
of ammunition. See, there is a canoe on the lake; it is
coming this way too. There is but one man in it; he is
a white by his clothes.”

For a minute or two they stood watching the boat,
and then seeing that its course was directed towards
the shore, they walked down to the edge of the lake to
meet it.

“Ah! Pearson, is that you?” Mr. Welch asked. “I
thought I knew your long sweeping stroke at a distance.
You have been hunting, I see; that is a fine stag you
have got there. What is the news?”

“About as bad as can be, Master Welch,” the hunter
said. “The Irroquois have dug up the tomahawk again,
and are out on the war-path. They have massacred
John Brent and his family. I heard a talk of it amongst
some hunters I met ten days since in the woods. They
AN INDIAN OUTBREAK. 15

said that the Irroquois were restless, and that their chief,
War Eagle, one of the most troublesome varmint on the
whole frontier, had been stirring them up to war. He
told them, I heard, that the Pale-faces were pushing
farther and farther into the Injun woods, and that, un-
less they drove them back, the Red-skin hunting-grounds
would be gone. I hoped that nothing would come of it,
but I might have known better. When the Red-skins
begin to stir there is sure to be mischief before they are
quiet again.”

The colour had somewhat left Mr. Welch’s cheeks as
the hunter spoke.

“This is bad news indeed, Pearson,” he said gravely.
“Are you sure about the attack on the Brents?”

“Sartin sure,” the hunter said. “I met their herd; he
had been down to Johnson’s to fetch a barrel of pork.
Just when he got back he heard the Injun yells, and
saw smoke rising in the clearing, so he dropped the barrel
and made tracks. I met him at Johnson’s, where he had
just arrived. Johnson was packing up with all haste,
and was going to leave; and so I said I would take my
canoe and come down the lake, giving you all warning
on the way. I stopped at Burns’ and Hooper’s. Burns
said he should clear out at once, but Hooper talked about
seeing it through. He has got no wife to be skeary
about, and reckoned that with his two hands he could
defend his log-hut. I told him I reckoned he would get
his har raised if the Injuns came that way; but in course
that’s his business.”

“What do you advise, Pearson? I do not like aban-
doning this farm again to the mercy of the Red-skins,”

“It would be a pity, Master Welch, that’s as true as
16 A DIFFICULT DECISION.

gospel; it’s the likeliest clearing within fifty miles round,
and you've fixed the place up as snug and comfortable as
if it were a farm in the old provinces. In course the ques-
tion is, what this War Eagle intends to do. His section
of the tribe is pretty considerable strong, and although
at present I ain’t heard that any others have joined, these
Injuns are like barrels of gunpowder: when the spark is
once struck there is no saying how far the explosion may
spread. When one band of them sees as how another is
taking scalps, and getting plunder and honour, they all
want to be at the same work. I reckon War Eagle has
got some two hundred braves who will follow him; but
when the news spreads that he has begun his work, all
the Irroquois, to say nothing of the Shawnees, Delawares,
and other varmint, may dig up the hatchet. The question
is, what War Hagle’s intentions are? He may make a
clean sweep down, attacking all the outlying farms, and
waiting till he is joined by a lot more of the red reptiles
before attacking the settlements. Then, on the other
hand, he may think himself strong enough to strike a
blow at Gloucester and some other border villages at
once. In that case he might leave the outlying farms
alone, as the news of the burning of these would reach
the settlements and put them on their guard, and he
knows in course that if he succeeds there he can eat you
all up at his leisure.”

“The attack upon Brent’s place looks as if he meant
to make a clean sweep down,” Mr. Welch said.

“Well,” the hunter continued thoughtfully, “I don’t know
as I sees it in that light. Brent’s place was a long way
from any other. He might have wished to give his band

a taste of blood, and so raise their spirits, and he might
: (245)
THE HUNTER’S ARGUMENTS. 17

reasonably conclude that nout would be known about
it for days, perhaps weeks to come. Then, again, the
attack might have been made by some straggling party
without orders. It’s a dubious question. You have got
four hands here, I think, and yourself; I have seen your
wife shoot pretty straight with a rifle, so she can count
as one; and as this young ’un here has a good idea too
with his shooting-iron, that makes six guns; your place
is a strong one, and you could beat off any straggling
party. My idea is, that War Eagle, who knows pretty
well that the place would make a stout fight, won’t waste
his time by making a regular attack upon it. You might
hold out for twenty-four hours; the clearing is open, and
there ain’t no shelter to be had. He would be safe to
lose a sight of men, and this would be a bad beginning,
and would discourage his warriors greatly. No, I reckon
War Eagle will leave you alone for the present. Maybe
he will send a scout to see whether you are prepared; it’s
as likely as not that one is spying at us somewhere
among the trees now. I should lose no time in driving
in the animals and getting well in shelter; when they
see you are prepared they will leave you alone, at least
for the present; afterwards there’s no saying, that will
depend on how they gets on at the settlements. If they
succeed there and get lots of booty and plenty of scalps,
they may march back without touching you; they will
be in a hurry to get to their villages and have their feasts
and dancings. If they are beaten off at the settlements,
I reckon they will pay you a visit for sure; they won’t
go back without scalps. They will be savage like, and
won't mind losing some men for the sake of having

something to brag about when they get back. And now,
(245) B
18 CALLING IN THE HANDS.

Master Welch, I must be going on, for I want to take
the news down to the settlements before War Eagle gets
there, and he may be ahead of me now for aught I know.
I don’t give you no advice as to what you had best do;
you can judge the circumstances as well as I can. When
I have been to the settlements and put them on their
guard, maybe I shall be coming back again, and in that
case you know Jack Pearson's rifle is at your disposal.
You may as well tote this stag up to the house; you
won’t be doing much hunting just for the present, and
the meat may come in handy.”

The stag was landed, and a minute later the canoe shot
away from shore under the steady stroke of the hunter's
powerful arms. Mr. Welch at once threw the stag over
his shoulders, and, accompanied by Harold, strode away
towards the house. On reaching it he threw down the
stag at the door, seized a rope which hung against the
wall, and the sounds of a large bell rung in quick sharp
strokes summoned the hands’from the fields. The sound
of the woodman’s axe ceased at once, and the shouts of
the men as they drove the cattle towards the house rose
on the still air.

“What is the matter, William?” Mrs. Welch asked as
she ran from the house.

“J have bad news, my dear; the Indians are out again,
and I fear we have trouble before us. We must hope
that they will not come in this direction, but must be
prepared for the worst. Wait till I see all the hands
and beasts in the stockade, and then we can talk the
matter over quietly.”

In a few minutes the hands arrived, driving before
them the horses and cattle.
PREPARATIONS FOR DEFENCE, 19

“What is it, boss?” they asked; “that was the alarm-
bell sure enough?”

“The Indians are out again,” Mr. Welch said, “and in
force. They have massacred the Brents, and are making
towards the settlements. They may come this way or
they may not; at anyrate we must be prepared for them.
Get the beasts into the sheds, and then do you all take
scythes and set to work to cut down that patch of corn,
which is high enough to give them shelter; there’s
nothing else which will cover them within a hundred
yards of the house. Of course you will take your rifles
with you and keep a sharp look-out; but they will have
heard the bell if they are in the neighbourhood, and will
guess that we are on the alert, so they are not likely to
attempt a surprise. Shut one of the gates and leave the
other ajar, with the bar handy to put up in case you
have to make a run for it. Harold will go up to the
look-out while you are at work.”

Having seen that all was attended to, Mr. Welch went
into the house, where his wife was going about her work
as usual, pale, but quiet and resolute.

“Now, Jane,” he said, “sit down and I will tell you
exactly how matters stand, as far as Pearson, who brought
the news, has told me. Then you shall decide as to the
course we had better take.”

After he had told her all that Pearson had said, and
the reasons for and against expecting an early attack, he
went on, “Now, it remains for you, my dear, to decide
whether we shall stay and defend the place till the last
against any attack that may be made, or whether we
shall at once embark in the scow, and make our way
down to the settlements.”
20 THE FINAL DECISION.

“What do you think, William?” his wife asked.

“I scarcely know myself,” he answered; “but if I had
quite my own way, I should send you and Nelly down to
the settlements in the scow, and fight it out here with the
hands.”

“You certainly will not have your own way in that,”
his wife said. “If you go, of course I go; if you stay, I
stay. I would a thousand times rather go through a
siege here and risk the worst, than go down to Gloucester
and have the frightful anxiety of not knowing what was
happening here. Besides, it is very possible, as you say,
that the Indians may attack the settlement itself; many
of the people there have had no experience in Indian war,
and the Red-skins are likely to be far more successful in
their surprise there than they would be here. If we go,
we should have to leave our house, our barns, our stacks,
and our animals to the mercy of the savages. Your
capital is pretty nearly all embarked here now, and the
loss of all this would be ruin to us. At anyrate,
William, I am ready to stay here, and to risk what may
come, if you are. A life on the frontier is necessarily a
life of danger; and if we are to abandon everything, and
to have to commence life afresh every time the Indians
go on the war-path, we had better give it up at o once and
return to Massachusetts.”

“Very well, my dear,” her husband said gravely. “You
are a true frontierman’s wife; you have chosen as I
should have done. It is a choice of evils; but God has
blessed and protected us since we came out into the
wilderness; we will trust and confide in him now. At
anyrate,” he went on more cheerfully, “there is no fear
of the enemy starving us out. We got in our store of
ON THE ALERT. 21

provisions only a fortnight since, and have enough of
everything for a three months’ siege. There is no fear of
our well failing us; and as for ammunition, we have abun-
dance; seeing how Harold was using powder and ball, I
had an extra supply when the stores came in the other
day; there is plenty of corn in the barn for the animals
for months, and I will have the corn which the men are
cutting brought in as a supply of food for the cows.
It will be useful for another purpose too; we will keep a
heap of it soaked with water, and will cover the shingles
with it in case of attack. It will effectually quench
their fire-arrows.”

The day passed off without the slightest alarm, and by
nightfall the patch of corn was cleared away, and an
uninterrupted view of the ground for the distance of a
hundred yards from the house was afforded. When night
fell, two out of the four dogs belonging to the farm were
fastened out in the open, at a distance of from seventy to
eighty yards of the house, the others being retained
within the stockade. The garrison was divided into three
watches, two men being on the alert at a time, relieving
each other every three hours. Mr. Welch took Harold as
his companion on the watch. The boy was greatly
excited at the prospect of a struggle. He had often
read of the desperate fights between the frontier settlers
and the Indians, and had longed to take share in the ad-
venturous work ; he could scarcely believe that the time
had come, and that he was really a sharer in what might
be a desperate struggle.

The first watch was set at nine, and at twelve Mr.
Welch and Harold came on duty; the men they relieved
reported that all was silent in the woods, and that they
22 INDIAN SCOUTS.

had heard no suspicious cries of any kind. When the
men had retired to their room Mr. Welch told Harold
that he should take a turn round the stockade and visit
the dogs. Harold was to keep watch at the gate, to close
it after he went out, to put up the bar, and to stand beside
it ready to open it instantly if called upon.

Then the farmer stepped out into the darkness, and,
treading noiselessly, at once disappeared from Harold's
sight, The latter closed the gate, replaced the heavy bar,
and stood with one hand on this and the other holding his
rifle, listening intently. Once he thought he heard a low
growling from one of the dogs, but this presently ceased,
and all was quiet again. ‘The gate was a solid one,
formed of strong timbers placed at a few inches apart,
and bolted to horizontal bars.

Presently he felt the gate upon which his hand rested
quiver as if pressure was applied from without. His
first impulse was to say “Is that you?” but Mr. Welch had
told him that he would give a low whistle as he ap-
proached the gate; he therefore stood quiet with his
whole attention absorbed in listening. Without making
the least stir he peered through the bars, and made out ~
two dark figures behind them. After once or twice
shaking the gate, one took his place against it and the
other sprang upon his shoulders.

Harold looked up and saw a man’s head appear against
the sky. Dim as was the light, he could see that it was
no European head-gear, a long feather or two projecting
from it. In an instant he levelled his rifle and fired.
There was a heavy fall, and then all was silent. Harold
again peered through the bars. The second figure had
disappeared, and a black mass lay at the foot of the gate.
THE WATCH-DOG SLAIN. 23

In an instant the men came running from the house,
rifles in hand. “What is it?” they exclaimed. “Where
is Mr. Welch?”

“He went out to scout round the house, leaving me at
the gate,” Harold said. “Two men, I think Indians,
came up; one was getting over the gate when I shot him.
I think he is lying outside—the other has disappeared.”

“We must get the master in,” one of the men said; “he
is probably keeping away, not knowing what has hap-
pened. Mr, Welch,” he shouted, “it is all safe here, so far
as we know; we are all on the look-out to cover you as
you come up.”

Immediately a whistle was heard close to the gate;
this was cautiously.opened a few inches, and was closed
and barred directly Mr. Welch entered.

Harold told him what had happened.

«I thought it was something of the sort. I heard Wolf
growl, and felt sure that it was not at me. I threw myself
down and crept up to him, and found him shot through
the heart with an Indian arrow. I was crawling back to
the house when I heard Harold’s shot. Then I waited to
see if it was followed by the war-whoop, which the Red-
skins would have raised at once on finding that they-were
discovered, had they been about to attack in force. Seeing
that all was quiet, I conjectured that it was probably an
attempt on the part of a spy to discover if we were upon
the alert. Then I heard your call and at once came on.
I do not expect any attack to-night now, as these fellows
must have been alone; but we will all keep watch till the
morning. You have done very well, Harold, and have
shown yourself a keen watchman. It is fortunate that
you had the presence of mind neither to stir nor to call
24 THE DEAD INDIAN.

out when you first heard them, for, had you done so, you
would probably have got an arrow between your ribs, as
poor Wolf has done.”

When it was daylight and the gate was opened, the
body of an Indian was seen lying without; a small mark
on his forehead showed where Harold’s bullet had entered,
death being instantaneous. His war-paint and the em-
broidery of his leggings showed him at once to be an
Irroquois. Beside him lay his bow, with an arrow which
- had evidently been fitted to the string for instant work.
Harold shuddered when he saw it, and congratulated
himself on having stood perfectly quiet. A grave was
dug a short distance away, the Indian was buried, and
the household proceeded about their work. —

The day, as was usual in households in America, was
begun with prayer, an¢ the supplications of Mr. Welch for
the protection of God over the household were warm
and earnest. The men proceeded to feed the animals; -
these were then turned out of the inclosure, one of the
party being always on watch in the little tower which
had been erected for that purpose some ten or twelve feet
above the roof of the house. From this spot a view was
obtainable right over the clearing to the forest which
surrounded it on three sides. The other hands proceeded
to cut down more of the corn, so as to extend the level
space around the house.










CHAPTER II.

AN INDIAN RAID.

-\|HAT day and the next passed quietly. The first
>) night the man who was on watch up to midnight
eomarked to Mr. Welch when he relieved him,
that it seemed to him that there were noises in

Se

the air.

“What sort of noises, Jackson; calls of night- birds ot
animals? for if so the Indians are probably around us.”

“No,” the man said; “all is still round here, but I seem
to feel the noise rather than hear it. I should say that
it was firing very many miles off.”

“The night is perfectly still, and the sound of a gun
would be heard a long way.”

“T cannot say that I have heard a gun; it is rather a
tremble in the air than a sound.”

When the man they had relieved had gone down, and
all was still again, Mr. Welch and Harold ‘stood listening
intently.

“ Jackson was right,” the farmer said, “there is some-
thing in the air. I can feel it rather than hear it. It is
a sort of murmur no louder than a whisper. Do you
hear it, Harold?”

“Tseem to hear something,” Harold said. “It might be
26 RETURN OF THE HUNTER.

the sound of the sea a very long way off, just as one can
hear it many miles from the coast, on a still night at
home. What do you think it is?”

“If it is not fancy,’ Mr. Welch replied, “and I do not
think that we should all be ee it is an attack
upon Gloucester.”

“ But Gloucester is 35 miles away,” Harold answered.

“Tt is,’ Mr. Welch replied; “but on so still a night as
this sounds can be heard from an immense distance. If
it is not this, I cannot say what it is.”

Upon the following night, just as Mr. Welch’s watch
was at an end, a low whistle was heard near the gate.
“Who is there?” Mr. Welch at once challenged.

“Jack Pearson, and the sooner you open the gate the
better; there is no saying where these red devils may be
lying round.”

Harold and the farmer instantly ran down and opened
the gate.

“JT should advise you to stop down here,” the hunter
said, as they replaced the bars; “if you did not hear me,
you certainly would not hear the Red-skins, and they
would all be over the palisade before you had time to
fire a shot. I am glad to see you safe, for I was badly

scared lest I should find nothing but a heap of ashes here.”
' The next two men now turned out, and Mr. Welch led
his visitor into the house and struck a light. “Hallo!
Pearson, you must have been in a skirmish,” he said,
seeing that the hunter’s head was bound up with a blood-
stained bandage.

“Jt was all that,” Pearson said, “and wuss. I went
down to Gloucester and told ’em what I had heard; but
the darned fools tuk it as quiet as if all King George's




RASH CONFIDENCE. 27

troops with fixed bayonets had been camped round ’em.
The council got together and palavered for an hour, and
concluded that there was no chance, whatever, of the
Trroquois venturing to attack such a powerful place as
Gloucester. I told them that the Red-skins would go
over their stockade at a squirrel’s jump; and that as War
Eagle alone had at least 150 braves, while there warn’t
more than fifty able-bodied men in Gloucester and all
the farms around it, things would go bad with ’em if
they did not mind. But, bless yer, they knew more than
I did about it; most of them had moved from the East,
and had never seen an Injun in his war-paint. Glou-
cester had never been attacked since it was founded nigh
ten years ago, and they did not see no reason why it
should be attacked now. There was a few old frontiers-
men like myself among them, who did their best to stir
them up; but it was no manner of good. When the
council was over we put our heads together, and just
went through the township a talking to the women, and
we had not much difficulty in getting up such a scare
among ’em, that before nightfall every one of ’em in the
farms around made their husbands move into the stockade
of the village.

“When the night passed off quietly, most of the men
were just as savage with us as if it had been a false
alarm altogether. I pinted out that it was not because
War Eagle had left them alone that night that he was
bound to do so the next night, or any night after. But
in spite of the women they would have started out to
their farms the fust thing in the morning, if a man
had not come in with the news that Carter’s farm had
been burned, and the whole of the people killed and
28 AN ATTACK ON A SETTLEMENT,

scalped. As Carter’s farm lay only about 15 miles off,
this gave them a scare, and they were as ready now to
believe in the Injuns as I had tried to make them the
night before. Then they asked us old hands to take the
‘lead, and promised to do what we told them; but’ when
it came to it their promises were not worth the breath
they had spent upon them. There were eight or ten
houses outside the stockade, and in course we wanted
these pulled down; but they would not hear of it. How-
ever, we got them to work to strengthen the stockades,
to make loopholes in the houses near them, to put up
barricades from house to house, and to prepare generally
for a fight. We divided into three watches.

“Well, just as I expected, about eleven o'clock at night
the Injuns attacked. Our watch might just as well have
been asleep for any good they did, for it was not till the
Red-skins had crept up to the stockade all round, and
opened fire between the timbers on them, that they knew
that they were near. I do them justice to say that they
fought stiff enough then, and for four hours they held the
line of houses; every Red-skin who climbed the stockade
fell dead inside it.. Four fires had been lighted directly
they attacked to enable us to keep them from scaling the
stockade; but they showed us too to the enemy, of course.

“The Red-skins took possession of the houses which we
had wanted to pull down, and precious hot they made
it for us) Then they shot such showers of burning
arrows into the village that half of the houses were soon
alight. We tried to get our men to sally out and to hold
the line of stockade, when we might have beaten them
off if all the village had been burned down; but it were no
manner of good; each man wanted to stick to his wife and




DESTRUCTION OF THE VILLAGE. 29

family till the last. As the flames went up every man who
showed himself was shot down; and when at last more
than half our number had gone under, the Red-skins
brought up fagots, piled them against the stockade out-
side, and then the hull tribe came bounding over. Our
rifles were emptied, for we could not get the men to hold
their fire, but some of us chaps as knew what was coming
gave the Red-skins a volley as they poured in.

“T don’t knowmuch as happened after that. Jack Robins
and Bill Shuter, who were old pals of mine, and me, made
up our minds what to do, and we made a rush for a small
gate that there was in the stockade, just opposite where
the Injuns came in. We got through safe enough, but
they had left men all round. Jack Robins he was shot
dead. Bill and I kept straight on; we had a grapple
with some of the Red-skins; two or three on them went
down, and Bill and I got through and had a race for it
till we got fairly into the forest. Bill had a ball in the
shoulder, and I had a clip across the head with a toma-
hawk. We had a council, and Bill went off to: warn
some of the other settlements, and I concluded to take
to the water and paddle back to you, not knowing
whether I should find that the Red-skins had been before
me. I thought at anyrate that I might stop your going
down to Gloucester, and that if there was a fight you
would be none the worse for an extra rifle.”

Mr. Welch told the hunter of the visit of the two
Indian spies two nights before.

“Wall,” the hunter said, “I reckon for the present you
are not likely to be disturbed. The Injuns have taken
a pile of booty and something like two hundred scalps,
counting the women and children, and they moved off
30 AWAITING ATTACK.

at daybreak this morning in the direction of Totten-
ham, which I reckon they will attack to-night. How-
somever, Bill has gone on there to warn them, and after
the sack of Gloucester the people of Tottenham won't be
caught napping, and there are two or three old frontiers-
men who have settled down there, and War Eagle will
get a hot reception if he tries it. “As far as his band
is concerned you are safe for some days; the only fear
is that some others of the tribe, hurrying up at hearing
of his success, may take this place as they go past. And
now, I guess that I will take a few hours’ sleep; I have
not closed an eye for the last two nights.”

A week passed quietly. Pearson, after remaining two
days, again went down the lake to gather news, and
returned a day later with the intelligence that almost all
the settlements had been deserted by their inhabitants;
the Indians were out in great strength, and had attacked
the settlers at many points along the frontier, commit-
ting frightful devastations.

Still another week passed, and Mr. Welch began to
hope that his little clearing had been overlooked and
forgotten by the Indians. The hands now went about
their work as usual, but always carried arms with them,
while one was constantly stationed on the watch-tower.
Harold resumed his fishing, never, however, going out
of sight of the house. Sometimes he took with him
little Nelly Welch, it being considered that she was as
safe in the canoe as she was in the house, especially as
the boat was always in sight, and the way up from the
landing to the house was under cover of the rifles of the
defenders; so that, even in case of an attack, they would
probably be able to make their way back.


THE HIDDEN FOE. 31

One afternoon they had been out together for two or
three hours; everything looked as quiet and peaceable as
usual; the hands were in the fields near the house, a few
of the cows were grazing close to the gate. Harold had
been successful in his fishing, and had obtained as many
fish as he could carry. He stepped out from the canoe,
helped Nelly to land, slung his rifle across his back, and
picked up the fish, which were strung on a withy passed
through their gills.

He had made but a few steps when a yell arose so loud
and terrible that for a moment his heart seemed to stop
beating. Then from the corn-fields leaped up a hundred
dark figures; then came the sharp crack of rifles, and two
of the hands dashed down at full speed towards the house.
‘One had fallen. The fourth man was in the watch-
tower. The surprise had been complete. The Indians
had made their way like snakes through the long corn,
whose waving had been unperceived by the sentinel, who
was dozing at his post, half-asleep in the heat of the sun.
Harold saw in a moment that it was too late for him to
regain the house; the Red-skins were already nearer to
it than he was.

“Now, Nelly! into the boat again; quick!” he said.
“We must keep out of the way till ’tis all over.”

Nelly was about twelve years old, and her life in the
_ woods had given her a courage and quickness beyond her
years. Without wasting a moment on cries or lamenta-
tions she sprang back into the canoe. Harold took his place

- beside her, and the light craft darted rapidly out into the

| lake. Not until he was some three or four hundred yards
| from the shore did Harold pause to look round. Then,when
he felt he was out of gunshot distance, he ceased paddling.


32 THE CANOE ON THE LAKE.

The fight was raging now around the house; from
loopholes and turret the white puffs of smoke darted
angrily out. The fire had not been ineffectual, for several
dark forms could be seen lying round the stockade; and
the bulk of the Indians, foiled in their attempt to carry the
place at a rush, had taken shelter in the corn, and kept
up a scattering fire round the house, broken only on the
side facing the lake, where there was no growing crop to
afford them shelter.

“They are all right now,” Harold said cheerfully.
“Do not be anxious, Nelly; they will beat them off.
Pearson is a host in himself. I expect he must have been
lying down when the attack was made. I know he was
scouting round the house all night. If he had been on
the watch, those fellows would never have succeeded in
creeping up so close unobserved.”

“I wish we were inside,” Nelly said, speaking for the
first time. “If I were only with them I should not mind.”

“T am sure I wish we were,” Harold agreed. “It is
too hard being useless out here when such a splendid
fight is going on. Ah! they have their eyes on us!”
he exclaimed as a puff of smoke burst out from some
bushes near the shore, and a ball came skipping along
on the surface of the water, sinking, however, before it
reached it.

“Those Indian muskets are no good,” Harold said con-
temptuously, “and the trade powder the Indians get is
very poor stuff; but I think that they are well within
range of my rifle.”

The weapon which Harold carried was an English rifle
of very perfect make and finish which his father had
given him on parting.






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“THAT WAS A PRETTY GOOD sHoT.”


A LURKING FOE. 33

“Now,” he said, “do you paddle the canoe a few strokes
nearer the shore, Nelly. We shall still be beyond the
range of that fellow. He will fire again, and I shall see
exactly where he is lying.”

Nelly, who was efficient in the management of a canoe,
took the paddle, and, dipping it in the water, the boat
moved slowly towards the shore. Harold sat with his
rifle across his knees, looking intently over the bows
of the boat towards the bush from which the shot had
come.

“That’s near enough, Nelly,” he said. The girl stopped
paddling; and the hidden foe, seeing that they did not
mean to come nearer the shore, again fired.

Harold’s rifle was in an instant against his shoulder;
he sat immovable for a moment, and then fired.

Instantly a dark figure sprang from the bush, stag-
gered a few steps up the slope, and then fell headlong.

“That was a pretty good shot,” Harold said. “Your
father told me when I saw a stag’s horns above a bush,
to fire about two feet behind them and eighteen inches
lower. I fired a foot below the flash, and I expect I hit
him through the body. I had the sight at 300 yards,
and fired a little above it. Now, Nelly, paddle out again.
See!” he said, “there is a shawl waving from the top of
the tower. Put your hat on the paddle and wave it.”

“What are you thinking of doing, Harold?” the girl
asked presently.

“That is just what I have been asking myself for the
last ten minutes,” Harold replied. “It is quite clear that
as long as the siege is kept up we cannot get back again,
and there is no saying how long it may last. The first

thing is, What chance is there of their pursuing us?
(245 ) oe
34 AN UNSUCCESSFUL ATTEMPT.

Are there any other canoes on the lake within a short
distance?”

“They have one at Braithwaite’s,” the girl said, “four
miles off; but look, there is Pearson’s canoe lying by the
shore.”

“So there is,” Harold exclaimed. “I never thought of
that. I expect the Indians have not noticed it. The
bank is rather high where it is lying. They are sure to
find it sooner or later. I think, Nelly, the best plan
would be to paddle back again so as to be within the
range of my rifle while still beyond the reach of theirs;
I think I can keep them from using the boat until it is
dark.”

“But after it is dark, Harold ?”

_ “Well, then, we must paddle out into the lake so as to

“be well out of sight; when it gets quite dark we can

paddle in again, and sleep safely anywhere a mile or two
from the house.”

An hour passed without change. Then Nelly said,
“There is a movement in the bushes near the canoe.”

Presently an arm was extended, and proceeded to haul
‘the canoe towards the shore by its head rope. As it touched
the bank an Indian rose from the bushes and was about to
step in, while a number of flashes of smoke burst out along
the shore and the bullets skipped over the water towards.
the canoe, one of them striking it with sufficient force to
penetrate the thin bark a few inches above the water's
edge. Harold had not moved; but as the savage stepped
into the canoe he fired, and the Indian fell heavily into
the water, upsetting the canoe as he did so.

A yell of rage broke from his comrades.

“T don’t think they will try that game again as long
OUT ON THE LAKE. 35

as it is daylight,” Harold said. “Paddle a little farther
out again, Nelly. If that bullet had hit you it would
have given you a nasty blow, though I don’t think it
would have penetrated; still we may as well avoid acci-
dents.”

After another hour passed the fire round the house
ceased,

“Do you think the Indians have gone away?” Nelly
asked.

“J am afraid there is no chance of that,” Harold said,
“T expect they are going to wait till night and then try
again. They are not fond of losing men, and Pearson and
your father are not likely to miss anything that comes
within their range as long as daylight lasts.”

“ But after dark, Harold 2”

“Oh they will try all sorts of tricks; but Pearson is up’ *
to them all. Don’t you worry about them, dear.”

The hours passed slowly away until at last the sun
sank and the darkness came on rapidly. So long as he
could see the canoe, which just floated above the water's
edge, Harold maintained his position; then taking one
paddle, while Nelly handled the other,he sent the boat
flying away from the shore out into the lake.

For a quarter of an hour they paddled straight out.
By this time the outline of the shore could be but dimly
perceived. Harold doubted whether it would be possible
to see the boat from shore; but in order to throw the
Indians off the scent, should this be the case, he turned
the boat’s head to the south and paddled swiftly until it
was perfectly dark.

“I expect they saw us turn south,” he said to Nelly.
“The Red-skins have wonderful eyes; so if they pursue
o

36 LANDING.

at all, they will do it in that direction. At anyrate no
human being, unless he borrowed the eyes of an owl,
could see us now; so we will turn and paddle the other
way.”

For two hours they rowed in this direction. “We can
go into shore now,” Harold said at last. “We must be
seven or eight miles beyond the house.”

The distance to the shore was longer than they ex-
pected, for they had only the light of the stars to guide
them, and neither had any experience in night travelling.
They had therefore made much further out into the lake
than they had intended. At length, however, the dark
line of trees rose in front of them, and in a few minutes
the canoe lay alongside the bank, and its late occupants
were stretched on a soft layer of moss and fallen leaves.

“What are we going to do to-morrow about eating ?”
Nelly asked.

“There are four or five good-sized fish in the bottom
of the canoe,” Harold replied. “Fortunately we caught
more than I could carry, and I intended to make a
second trip from the house for these. I am afraid we
shall not be able to cook them, for the Indians can see
smoke any distance. If the worse comes to the worst we
must eat them raw, but we are sure to find some berries
in the wood to-morrow. Now, dear, you had better go to
sleep as fast as you can; but first let us kneel down and
pray God to protect us and your father and mother.”

The boy and girl knelt in the darkness and said
their simple prayers. Then they lay down, and Harold
was pleased to hear in a few minutes the steady breath-
ing which told him that his cousin was asleep. It was a
long time before he followed her example. During the
AN ANXIOUS VIGIL 37

day he had kept up a brave front and had endeavoured
to make the best of their position; but now that he was
alone he felt the full weight of the responsibility of guid- .
ing his companion through the extreme danger which
threatened them both. He felt sure that the Indians
would prolong the siege for some time, as they would be
sure that no reinforcements could possibly arrive in aid
of the garrison. Moreover, he by no means felt so sure,
as he had pretended to his companion, of the power of the
defenders of the house to maintain a successful resistance
to so large a number of their savage foes. In the day-
light he felt certain they could beat them off, but dark-
ness neutralizes the effect both of superior arms and
better marksmanship. It was nearly midnight before
he lay down with the determination to sleep, but scarcely
had he done so when he was aroused by an outburst
of distant firing. Although six or seven miles from
the scene of the encounter the sound of each discharge
came distinct to the ear along the smooth surface of the
lake; and he could even hear, mingled with the musketry
fire, the faint yells of the Indians. For hours, as it seemed
to him, he sat listening to the distant contest, and then
he, unconsciously to himself, dozed off to sleep, and awoke
with a start, to find Nelly sitting up beside him and the
sun streaming down through the boughs, i
He started to his feet. “Bless me,” he exclaimed, “I
did not know that I had been to sleep. It seems but an
instant ago that I was listening—” and here he checked
himself—“that is, that I was wide awake, and here we are
in broad daylight.” “
Harold’s first care was to examine the position of -
the canoe, and he found that fortunately it had touched
38 A FOREST BREAKFAST.

the shore at a spot where the boughs of the trees over-
head drooped into the water beyond it, so that it could
not be seen by anyone passing along the lake. This was
the more fortunate, as he saw some three miles away a
canoe with three figures on board. For a long distance
on either side the boughs of the trees drooped into the
water, with only an opening here and there such as that
through which the boat had passed the night before.

“We must be moving, Nelly; here are the marks where
we scrambled up the banks last night. If the Indians
take it into their heads to search the shore both ways, as
likely enough they may do, they will be sure to see them.
In the first place let us gather a stock of berries, and then
we will get into the boat again, and paddle along under
this arcade of boughs till we get to some place where we
can land without leaving marks of our feet. If the
Indians find the place where we landed here they will sup-
pose that we went off again before daylight.” :

For some time they rambled in the wood, and succeeded
in gathering a store of berries and wild fruit. Upon
these Nelly made her breakfast, but Harold’s appetite
was sufficiently ravenous to enable him to fall to upon
the fish, which, he declared, were not so bad after all.
Then they took their places in the canoe again, and
paddled on for nearly a mile.

“See, Harold!” Nelly exclaimed, as she got a glimpse
through the boughs into the lake, “there is another canoe;
they must have got the Braithwaite boat; we passed their
place coming here, you know. I wonder what has
happened there.”

“What do you think is best to do, Nelly?” Harold asked.
“Your opinion is just as good as mine about it: shall we
A FRIENDLY STREAM. 39

leave our canoe behind, land, and take to the woods; or
shall we stop quietly in the canoe in shelter here; or shall
we take to the lake and trust to our speed to get away,
in which case, you know, if they should come up I could
pick them off with my gun before they got within reach?”

“T don’t think that would do,” the girl said, shaking

‘her head. “You shoot very well, but it is not an easy
thing to hit a moving object if you are not accustomed to
it, and they paddle so fast that if you miss them once
they would be close alongside—at anyrate we should be
within reach of their guns—before you could load again.
They would be sure to catch us, for although we might
paddle nearly as fast for a time, they would certainly tire
us out. Then as to waiting here in the canoe, if they
come along on foot looking for us, we should be in their
power. It is dreadful to think of taking to the woods
with Indians all about, but I really think that would be
our safest plan.”

“I think so too, Nelly, if we can manage to do it with-
out leaving a track. We must not go much farther, for
the trees are getting thinner ahead, and we should be
seen by the canoes.”

Fifty yards farther Harold stopped paddling. “Here
is just the place, Nelly.”

At this point a little stream of three or four feet wide
emerged into the lake; Harold directed the boat’s head to-
wards it. The water in the stream was but a few inches
deep.

“Now, Nelly,” he said, “we must step out into the
water and walk up it as far as we can go—it will puzzle
even the sharpest Red-skin to find our track then.”

_ They stepped into the water, Harold taking the head-
40 HIDING THEIR TRACKS.

rope of the canoe and towing the light boat—which,
when empty, did not draw more than two inches of
water—behind him. He directed Nelly to be most care-
ful, as she walked, not to touch any of the bushes, which
at times nearly met across the stream.

“A broken twig or withered leaf would be quite enough
to tell the Indians that we came along this way,” he said:
“Where the bushes are thick you must manage to crawl
under them; never mind about getting wet, you will soon
dry again.”

Slowly and cautiously they made their way up the
stream for nearly a mile; it had for some distance been
narrowing rapidly, being only fed by little rills from the
surrounding swamp land. Harold had so far looked in
vain for some spot where they could land without leaving
marks of their feet. Presently they came to a place
where a great tree had fallen across the stream.

“This will do, Nelly,” Harold said. “Now, above all
things, you must be careful not to break off any of the
moss or bark; you had better take your shoes off, then I
will lift you on to the trunk, and you can walk along it
without leaving a mark.”

It was hard work for Nelly to take off her drenched
boots, but she managed at last. Harold lifted her on to
the trunk, and said, “Walk along as far as you can, and

‘get down as lightly as possible on to a firm piece of
ground; it rises rapidly here, and is, I expect, a dry soil
where the upper end of the tree lies.”

“How are you going to get out, Harold?”

“I can swing myself up by that projecting root.”

Before proceeding to do so, Harold raised one end of
the canoe and placed it on the trunk of the tree; then
IN THE WOODS. 41

having previously taken off his shoes, he swung himself
on to the trunk; hauling up the light bark canoe, and
taking especial pains that it did not grate upon the trunk,
he placed it on his head, and followed Nelly along the tree.
He found, as he had expected, that the ground upon which
the upper end lay was firm and dry. He stepped down
with great care, and’ was pleased to see as he walked for-
ward that not the slightest trace of a footmark was left.

“Be careful, Nelly,” he exclaimed, when he joined her,
“not to tread on a stick or disturb a fallen leaf with your
feet, and, above all, to avoid breaking the smallest twig
as you pass. Choose the most open ground, as that is the
hardest.” :

In about a hundred yards they came upon a large
clump of bushes. “Now, Nelly, raise those lower boughs
as gently and as carefully as you can. I will push the
canoe under. I don’t think the sharpest Indian will be
able to take up our track now.”

Very carefully the canoe was stowed away, and when
the boughs were allowed to fall in their natural: position
it was completely hidden from sight to every passer-by.
Harold took up the fish, Nelly had filled her apron with
the berries, and carrying their shoes—for they agreed that
it would be safer not to put them on—they started on
their journey through the deep forest.






CHAPTER IIL

THE RED-SKIN ATTACK.

WYER. WELCH was with the men two or three hun-
dred yards away from the house when the In-
dians suddenly sprang out and opened fire. One
of the men fell beside him; the farmer stooped
to lift him, but saw that he was shot through the head.
Then he ran with full speed towards the house, shouting
to the hands to make straight for the gate, disregarding
the cattle. Several of these, however, alarmed at the
sudden outburst of fire and the yells of the Indians, made,
of their own accord for the stables, as their master rushed
up at full speed. The Indians were but fifty or sixty
yards behind when Mr. Welch reached his gate. They
had all emptied their pieces, and after the first volley no
shots had been fired save one by the watchman on the
look-out. Then came the crack of Pearson’s rifle, just as
Mr. Welch shut the gate and laid the bar in its place.
Several spare guns had been placed in the upper chambers,
and three reports rang out together, for Mrs. Welch had
run upstairs at the first alarm to take her part in the
defence.

In another minute the whole party, now six in all,
were gathered in the upper room,



~ THE PARENTS ANXIETY. 43

“Where are Nelly and Harold?” Mr. Welch exclaimed.

“I saw the canoe close to the shore just before the
Indians opened fire,” the watchman answered.

“You must. have been asleep,” Pearson said savagely.
“Where were your eyes to let them Red-skins crawl up
through the corn without seeing them? With such a crowd
of them, the corn must have been waving as if it were
blowing a gale. You ought to have a bullet in yer ugly
carkidge, instead of its being in ye’r mate’s out there.”

While this conversation was going on, no one had been
idle; each took up his station at a loophole, and several
shots were fired whenever the movement of a blade of
corn showed the lurking-place of an Indian.

The instant the gate had been closed War Eagle had
called his men back to shelter, for he saw that all chance
of a surprise was now over, and it was contrary to all
Red-skin strategy to remain for one moment unnecessarily
exposed to the rifles of the whites. The farmer and his
wife had rushed at once up into the look-out as the
Indians drew off, and to their joy saw the canoe darting
away from shore.

“They are safe for the present, thank God!” Mr. Welch
said. “It is providential indeed that they had not come
a little farther from the shore when the Red-skins broke
out. Nothing could have saved them had they fairly
started for the house.”

“What will they do, William?” asked his wife anxiously.

“T cannot tell you, my dear; I do not know what I
should do myself under the circumstances. However, the
boy has got a cool head on his shoulders, and you need
not be anxious for the present. Now, let us join the
others; our first duty is to take our share in the defence
44 A BAD LOOK-OUT.

of the house. The young ones are in the hands of God.
We can do nothing for them.”

“Well?” Pearson asked, looking round from his loop-
hole as the farmer and his wife descended into the room,
which was a low garret extending over the whole of the
house. “Do you see the canoe?”

“Yes, it has got safely away,” William Welch said;
“but what that lad will do now is more than I can say.”

Pearson placed his rifle against the wall. “Now keep
your eyes skinned,” he said to the three farm hands; “one
of yer’s done mischief enough this morning already, and
you will get your hair raised as sure as you are born
unless you look out sharp. Now,” he went on, turning
to the Welches, “let us go down and talk this matter over,
The Injuns may keep on firing, but I don’t think they
will show in the open again as long as it is light enough
for us to draw bead upon them. Yes.” he went on, as he
looked through a loophole in the lower story, over the
lake, “there they are, just out of range.”

“What do you think they will do?” Mrs. Welch asked.

- The hunter was silent for a minute.

“Tt ain’t a easy thing to say what they ought to do,
much less what they will do; it ain’t a good look-out
any way, and I don’t know what I should do myself.
The whole of the woods on this side of the lake are full
of the darned red critters; there are a hundred eyes on
that canoe now, and go where they will they will be
watched.”

“But why should they not cross the lake and land on
the other side?” Mr. Welch said.

“Tf you and I were in that canoe,” the hunter answered,
“that’s about what we should do; but, not to say that it
WELL NIGH HOPELESS. 45

is a long row for them, they two young uns would never
get across; the Injuns would have them before they had
been gone an hour. There is my canoe lying under the
bushes, she would earry four, and would go three feet to
their two.”

“T had forgotten about that,’ William Welch said, and
then added after a pause: “the Indians may not find it.”

“You need not hope that,” the hunter answered; “ they
have found it long before this. I don’t want to put you
out of heart; but I tell ye’, ye will see them on the water
before many minutes have passed.”

“Then they are lost,” Mrs. Welch said, sinking down
in her chair and bursting into tears.

“They air in God’s hands, mam,” the hunter said, “and
it is no use trying to deceive you.”

“Would it be of any use,” William Welch asked, after
a pause, “for me to offer the Red-skins that my wife and
I will go out ‘and put ourselves in their hands, if they
will let the canoe go off without pursuit.”

“Not it,” the hunter replied decidedly; “you would be
throwing away your own lives without saving theirs, not
to mention, although that does not matter a straw, the
lives of the rest of us here. It will be as much as we
ean do, when they attack us in earnest, to hold this place
with six guns, and with only four the chance would be
worth nothing. But that is neither here nor there. But
you would not save the young ones if you gave up. You
cannot trust the word of an Indian on the war-path, and |
if they went so far as not to kill them, they would carry
them off; and after all I ain’t sure as death ain’t better for
them than to be brought up as Indians. There,” he said,
stopping suddenly as a report of a musket sounded at
46 THE ATTEMPT FOILED.

some little distance off, “the Injuns are trying their range
against them; let us go up to the look-out.”

The little tower had a thick parapet of logs some three
feet high, and crouching behind this they watched the
canoe.

“He is coming nearer in shore, and the girl has got
the paddle,” Pearson muttered. “What's he doing now?”
—A puff of smoke was seen to rise near the border of
the lake, then came the sharp crack of Harold’s rifle.
They saw an Indian spring from the bushes and fall dead.

“Well done, young un,” Pearson exclaimed; “1 told
yer he had got his head screwed on the right way. He
is keeping just out of range of their guns, and that piece
of his can carry twice as far as theirs; I reckon he has
thought of the canoe and means to keep them from using
it. I begins to think, Mr. Welch, that there is a chance
for them yet; now let’s talk a little to these red devils
in the corn.”

For some little time Pearson and William Welch turned
their attention to the Indians, while the mother sat with
her eyes fixed upon the canoe.

“He is coming closer again,” she exclaimed presently.

“He is watching the canoe, sure enough,” Pearson said.
Then came the volley along the bushes on the shore, and
they saw an Indian rise to his feet. “That's just where
she lies,” Pearson exclaimed; “he is getting into it. There!
well done, young un.”

The sudden disappearance of the Indian, and the
vengeful yell of the hidden foe, told of the failure of
the attempt. “I think they are safe now till nightfall,
the Indians won’t care about putting themselves within
range of that ’ere rifle again.”
THE GARRISON OF THE FARM. 47

Gradually the fire of the Indians ceased, and the de-
fenders were able to leave the loopholes. Two of the
men went down and fastened up the cattle, which were
still standing loose in the yard inside the stockade; the
other set to to prepare a meal, for Mrs. Welch could not
take her eyes off the canoe.

The afternoon seemed of interminable length. Nota
shot was fired; the men, after taking their dinner, were
occupied in bringing some great tubs on to the upper
storey, and filling them to the brim with water from the
well.

This storey projected two feet beyond the one below it,
having been so built in order that, in case of attack, the
defenders might be able to fire down upon any foe who
might cross the stockade and attack the house itself; the
floor boards over the projecting portion were all removable.
The men also brought a quantity of the newly-cut corn
to the top of the house, first drenching it with water.

The sun sank, and as dusk was coming on the anxious
watchers saw the canoe paddle out far into the lake.

“An old frontiersman could not do better,’ Pearson
exclaimed; “he has kept them out of the canoe as long
as daylight lasted; now he has determined to paddle
away, and is making down the lake,’ he went on pre-
sently; “it is a pity he turned so soon, as they can see
the course he is taking.”

They watched until it was completely dark, but before
the light quite faded they saw another canoe put out
from shore and start in the direction taken by the fugi-
tives.

“Will they catch them, do you think?” Mrs, Welch’
asked.
48 AWAITING THE ATTACK.

“No, ma'am,” Pearson said confidently; “the boy has
got sense enough to have changed his course after it gets
dark, though whether he will make for shore or go out
towards the other side is more than I can say. You see
they will know that the Injuns are all along this side of
the lake, but then on the other hand they will be anxious
about us, and will want to keep close at hand; besides,
the lad knows nothing of the other side; there may be
Injuns there for ought he knows, and besides, it’s a skearey
thing for a young un to take to the forest, especially
with a gal in his charge. There ain’t no saying what he
will do, And now we have got to look after ourselves,
don’t let us think about them at present; the best thing
we can do for them, as well as for ourselves, is to hold
this here place; if they live they will come back to it
sooner or later, and it will be better for them to find it
standing, and you here to welcome them, than to get
back to a heap of ruins and some dead bodies.” __

“When will the Red-skins attack, do you think?” the
farmer asked.

“We may expect them any time now,” the hunter
answered; “the Injuns’ time of attack is generally just
before dawn, but they know well enough they ain’t likely
to catch us asleep any time, and as they know exactly what
they have got to do they will gain nothing by waiting.
I wish we had a moon; if we had, we might keep them
out of the stockade; but there, it is just as well as ’tis
dark after all, for if the moon was up the young uns
would have no chance of getting away.”

The garrison now all took their places at the loopholes,
having first carried the wet fodder to the roof and spread
it over the shingles. There was nothing to do now but
THE NIGHT ATTACK, 49

to wait. The night was so dark that they could not see
the outline of the stockade. Presently a little spark shot
through the air, followed by a score of others. Mr. Welch
had taken his post on the tower, and he saw the arrows
whizzing through the air, many of them falling on the
roof. The dry grass dipped in the resin, which was
tied round their heads, was instantly extinguished as the
arrows fell upon the wet corn, and a yell arose from the
Indians.

The farmer descended and told the others of the failure
of the Indians’ first attempt.

“That ’ere dodge is a first-rate un,” Pearson said; “we
are safe from fire, and that’s the only thing we have got -
to be afeard on; you will see them up here in a few
minutes.”

Everything was perfectly quiet; once or twice the
’ watchers thought that they could hear faint sounds, but
could not distinguish their direction. After half an
hour’s anxious waiting a terrific yell was heard from
below, and at the doors and windows of the lower rooms
came the crashing blows of tomahawks.

The boards had already been removed from the flooring
above, and the defenders opened a steady fire into the
dark mass, that they could faintly make out clustered
round the windows and doors. At Pearson’s suggestion
the bullets had been removed from the guns, and heavy
charges of buck-shot had been substituted for them, and
yells of pain and surprise rose as they fired. A few shots
were fired up from below, but a second discharge from
the spare guns completed the effect from the first volley.
The dark mass broke up, and in a few seconds all was as

quiet as before.
(245) D
50 TRYING FIRE.

Two hours passed and then slight sounds were heard.

“They have got the gate opened, I expect,” Pearson
said; “fire occasionally at that; if we don’t hit them, the
flashes may show us what they are doing.”

It was as he had expected; the first discharge was
followed by a cry, and by the momentary light they saw
a number of dark figures pouring in through the gate.
Seeing that concealment was no longer possible, the
Indians opened a heavy fire round the house; then came
a crashing sound near the door.

“Just as I thought,” Pearson said; “they are going to
try to burn us out.”

For some time the noise continued as bundle after
bundle of dried wood was thrown down by the door.
The garrison were silent, for, as Pearson said, they could
see nothing, and a stray bullet might enter at the loop-
holes if they placed themselves there, and the flashes of
the guns would serve as marks for the Indians.

Presently two or three faint lights were seen approach-
ing.

“Now,” Pearson said, “pick them off as they come up.
You and I will take the first man, Welch; you fire just
to the right of the light, I will fire to the left; he may
be carrying the brand in either hand.” They fired together,
and the brand was seen to drop to the ground. The
same thing happened as the other two sparks of light
approached; then it was again quiet. Now a score of
little lights flashed through the air.

“They are going to light the pile with their flaming
arrows,” Pearson said; “War Eagle is a good leader.”

Three or four of the arrows fel! on the pile of dry
wood. A moment later the flames crept up, and the
EXTINGUISHED. 51

smoke of burning wood rolled up into the room above,
A yell of triumph burst from the Indians, but this
changed into one of wrath as those above emptied the
contents of one of the great tubs of water on to the pile
_ of wood below them; the flames were instantly extin-
guished.

_ “What will they do next?” Mrs. Welch asked.

“Tt is like enough,” Pearson replied, “that they will
give the job up altogether; they have got plenty of
plunder and scalps at the settlements, and their attacking
us here in such force looks as if the hull of them were
on their way back to their villages. If they could have
tuk our scalps easy they would have done it; but War
Eagle ain’t likely to risk losing a lot of men, when he
ain’t sartin of winning after all. He has done good work
as it is, and has quite enough to boast about when he
gits back. If he were to lose a heap of his braves here,
it would spoil the success of his expedition. No, I think
as he will give it up now.”

“ He will be all the more anxious to catch the children,”
Mrs. Welch said despondently.

“It cannot be denied, ma’am, as he will do his best that
way,” Pearson answered; “it all depends, though, on the
boy. I wish I was with ten in that canoe. Howsomever,
I can’t help thinking as he will sarcumvent them some-
how.”

The night passed without any further attack; by turns
half the garrison watched while the other lay down, but
there was little sleep taken by any. With the first gleam
of daylight Mrs. Welch and her husband were on the
look-out. ~

“There’s two canoes out on the lake,” Pearson said;
52 A QUIET DAY.

“they are paddling quietly; which is which I can't
say.”

As the light became brighter, Pearson pronounced posi-
tively that there were three men in one canoe and four
in the other. “I think they are all Injuns,” he said;
“they must have got another canoe somewhere along the
lake; wall, they have not caught the young uns yet.”

“The boats are closing up to each other,’ Mrs. Welch
said.

“They are going to have a talk, I reckon. Yes; one
of them is turning and going down the lake, while the
other is going up. I would give a heap to know where
the young uns have got to.”

The day passed quietly. An occasional shot towards
the house showed that the Indians remained in the
vicinity, and indeed dark forms could be seen moving
about in the distant parts of the clearing.

“Will it be possible,” the farmer asked Pearson when
night again fell, “to go out and see if we can discover
any traces of them ?”

“Worse than no use,” Pearson said positively; “we
should just lose our har without doing no good what-
ever. If the Injuns in these woods—and I reckon alto-
gether there’s a good many hundred of them—can’t find
them, ye may swear that we can’t. That's just what
they’re hoping, that we shall be fools enough to put
ourselves outside the stockade. They will lie close round
all night, and a weasel would not creep through them.
Ef I thought there was jest a shadow of chance of find-
‘ing them young uns I would risk it, but there is no
chance—not a bit of it.”

A vigilant watch was again kept up all night, but all
INDIAN WAYS. 53

was still and quiet. The next morning the Indians were
still round them.

“Don’t yer fret, ma’m!” Pearson said as he saw how
pale and wan Mrs. Welch looked in the morning light;
“you may bet your last shilling that they have not caught
them.”

“Why are you so sure?” Mrs. Welch asked; “they may
be dead by this time.”

“Not they, ma’am; I am as sartin as they are living and
free as I am that I am standing here. I know these
Injuns’ ways. Ef they had caught them they would jest
have brought them here and would have fixed up two
posts, jest out of rifle range, and would have tied them
there, and then would have offered you the choice of giving
up this place and your scalps or of secing them tortured
and burnt under your eyes. That's their way. No,
they ain’t caught them alive, nor they ain’t caught them
dead neither; for ef they had they would have brought
their scalps to have shown yer. No, they have got away,
though it beats me to say how. I have only got one fear,
and that is that they might come back before the Injuns
have gone. Now I tell ye what we had better do—we
had better keep up a dropping fire all night, and all day
to-morrow, and so on until the Red-skins have gone. Ef
the young uns come back across the lake at night and all
is quiet they will think the Injuns have taken themselves
off, but if they hear firing still going on they will know
well enough that they are still around the house.”

William Welch at once agreed to this plan, and every
quarter of an hour or so all through the night a few shots
were fired.

The next morning no Indians could be seen, and there
54 CLEAR OF INDIANS.

was a cessation of the dropping shots which had before
been kept up at the house.

“They may be in hiding,” Pearson said in the afternoon,
“trying to tempt us out; but I am more inclined to think
as how they have gone. I don’t see a blade of that corn
move; I have had my eyes fixed on it for the last two
hours. It are possible, of course, that they are there;
but I reckon not. I expect they have been waiting ever
since they gave up the attack, in hopes that the young
uns would come back; but now as they see that we are
keeping up a fire to tell them as how they are still round
us, they have given it up and gone. When it gets dark
to-night I will go out and scout round.”

At ten o'clock at night Pearson dropped lightly from
the stockade on the side opposite to the gate, as he knew
that if the Indians were there this would be the point
that they would be watching; then crawling upon his
stomach, he made his way slowly down to the lake;
entering the water and stooping low, he waded along by
the edge of the bushes for a distance of a mile; then he
left the water and struck into the forest. Every few
minutes he could hear the discharges of the rifles at the
house, but, as before, no answering shots were heard.
Treading very cautiously, he made a wide detour and
then came down again on the clearing at the end farthest
from the lake, where the Indians had been last seen
moving about. All was still. Keeping among the trees
and moving with great caution, he made his way for a
considerable distance along the edge of the clearing; then
he dropped on his hands and knees and entered the corn-
field, and for two hours he crawled about, quartering the
ground like a dog in search of game. Everywhere he
THE HUNTER’S REPORT. 55

found lines where the Indians had crawled along to the
edge nearest to the house, but nowhere did he discover a
’ sign of life. Then, still taking great care, he moved down
towards the house and made a circuit of it at a short
distance outside the stockade; then he rose to his feet.

“Yer may stop shooting,” he shouted; “the pesky rascals
are gone.” Then he walked openly up to the gate; it
was opened at once by William Welch.

“Are you sure they have gone?” he asked.

“Sure as gospel,” he answered; “and they have been
gone four-and-twenty hours at least.”

“How do you know that ?”

“Hasy enough. I found several of their cooking-places
in the woods; the brands were out, and even under the
ashes the ground was cold; so they must have been out
for a long time. I could have walked straight on to the
house then, but I thought it safer to make quite sure by
searching everywhere; for they might have moved deeper
into the forest, and left a few men on guard here in case
the young uns should come back. But it ain’t so; they
have gone, and there ain’t a living soul anywhere nigh
the clearing. The young uns can come back now, if they
will, safely enough.”

Before doing anything else the farmer assembled the
party together in the living-room, and there solemnly
offered up thanks to God for their deliverance from dan-
ger, and implored his protection for the absent ones.
When this was over he said to his wife:

“Now, Jane, you had better lie down and get a few
hours’ sleep. It is already two o'clock, and there is no
chance whatever of their returning to-night, but I shall
go down to the lake and wait till morning. Place candles”
56 A GLAD SOUND.

in two of the upper windows. Should they be out on the
lake they will see them and know that the Indians have
not taken the house.”

Morning came without any signs of the absent ones.
At daybreak Pearson went out to scout in the woods, and
returned late in the afternoon with the news that the
Indians had all departed, and that for a distance of ten
miles at least the woods were entirely free.

When it became dark the farmer again went down to
the lake and watched until two, when Pearson took his
place. Mr. Welch was turning to go back to the house
- when Pearson placed his hand on his shoulder.

“Listen!” he said, and for a minute the men stood im-
movable.

“What was it?” the farmer asked.

“T thought I heard the stroke of a paddle,” Pearson
said; “it might have been the jump of a fish. There!
there it is again!” He lay down and put his ear close
to the water. “There is a canoe in the lake to the north-
ward; I can hear the strokes of the paddle plainly.”

Mr. Welch could hear nothing. Some minutes passed,
then Pearson exclaimed:

“There! I saw a break in the water over there! There
it is!” he said, straining his eyes in the darkness; “that’s
a canoe, sure enough, although they have ceased paddling.
It is not a mile away.”

Then he arose to his feet and shouted “Halloo!” at the
top of his voice. An answering shout faintly came back
across the water. He again hailed loudly, and this time
the answer came in a female voice.

“It's them, sure enough; I can swear to Nelly’s
voice.”
THE RETURN OF THE FUGITIVES. 57

William Welch uncovered his head, and, putting his
hand before his face, returned fervent thanks to God for
the recovery of his child.) Then he dashed off at full
speed toward the house. Before he reached it, however,
he met his wife running down to meet him, the shouts
having informed her that something was seen. Hand-
in-hand they ran down to the water’s edge. The canoe
was now swiftly approaching. The mother screamed:

“Nelly, is that you?”

“Mamma! mamma!” came back in the girl’s clear
tones.

With a low cry of gladness Mrs. Welch fell senseless to
the ground. The strain which she had for four days
endured had been terrible, and even the assurances of
Pearson had failed to awaken any strong feeling of hope
in her heart. She had kept up bravely, and had gone
about her work in the house with a pale, set face, but
the unexpected relief was too much for her.

Two minutes later the bow of the canoe grated on the
shore, and Nelly leaped into her father’s arms.

“Where is mamma?” she exclaimed.

“She is here, my dear; but she has fainted. The joy
of your return has been too much for her.”

Nelly knelt beside her mother and raised her head, and
the farmer grasped Harold’s hand.

“My brave boy,” he said, “I have to thank you for
saving my child’s life. God bless you!”

He dipped his hat in the lake and sprinkled water in
his wife’s face; she soon recovered, and a few minutes
afterwards the happy party walked up to the house,
Mrs. Welch being assisted by her husband and Pearson.
' The two young ones were soon seated at a table raven-
58 HAROLD’S STORY.

ously devouring food, and when their hunger was satis-
fied they related the story of their adventures, the whole
of the garrison being gathered round to listen. After
relating what had taken place up to the time of their
hiding the canoe, Harold went on:

“We walked about a quarter of a mile until we came
to a large clump of underwood; we crept in there, taking
great pains not to break a twig or disturb a leaf. The
ground was fortunately very dry, and I could not see
that our footprints had left the smallest marks. There
we have lain hid ever since. We had the fish and the
berries, and fortunately the fruit was ripe and juicy, and
quenched our thirst well enough, and we could sometimes
hear the firing by day and always at night. On the day
we took refuge we heard the voices of the Indians down
towards the lake quite plainly, but we have heard nothing
of them since. Last night we heard the firing up to the
middle of the night, and then it suddenly stopped. To-
day I crept out and went down to the lake to listen, but
it seemed that everything was still. Nelly was in a
terrible way, and was afraid that the house had been ©
taken by the Indians, but I told her that could not
be, for that there would certainly have been a tremendous
lot of firing at last, whereas it stopped after a few shots,
just as it had been going on so long. Our provisions
were all done, and Nelly was getting very bad for want
of water. I of course got a drink at the lake this
morning. So we agreed that if everything was still
again to-night we would go back to the place where
we had hidden the canoe, launch it, and paddle here.
Everything was quiet, so we came along as we had ar-
ranged. When I saw the lights in the windows I made
PEARSON’S VERDICT. 59

sure all was right; still it was a great relief when |
heard the shout from the shore. I knew, of course, that
it wasn’t a Red-skin’s shout. Besides, Indians would
have kept quiet till we came alongside.”

Very hearty were the commendations bestowed on the
boy for his courage and thoughtfulness.

“You behaved like an old frontiersman,” Pearson said.
“T could not have done better myself. You only made
one blunder from the time you set out from shore.”

“What was that?” Harold asked.

“You were wrong to pick the berries. The Red-skins, of
course, would find where you had landed, they would
see the marks where you lay down, and would know
that you had paddled away again. Had it not been for |
their seeing the tracks you made in picking the berries
they might have supposed you had started before day-
break, and had gone out of sight across the lake; but those
marks would have shown them that you did not take
to your canoe until long after the sun was up, and,
therefore, that you could not have made across the lake
without their seeing you, but must either have landed or
be in your canoe under shelter of the ttees somewhere
along of the shore. It is a marvel to me that they did
‘not find your traces, however careful you were to conceal
them. But that’s the only error you made, and I tell
you, young un, that you have a right to be proud of
having outwitted a hull tribe of Red-skins.”




CHAPTER IV.

THE FIGHT AT LEXINGTON.

his cousin. The Indians had made several
attacks upon settlements at other points of
the frontier, but they had not repeated their
incursion in the neighbourhood of the lake. The farming
operations had gone on regularly, but the men always
worked with their rifles ready to their hand. Pearson
had predicted that the Indians were not likely to return
to that neighbourhood. Mr. Welch’s farm was the only
one along the lake that had escaped, and the loss the
Indians had sustained in attacking it had been so heavy
that they were not likely to make an expedition in
that quarter, where the chances of booty were so small
and the certainty of a desperate resistance so great.

Other matters occurred which rendered the renewal
of the attack improbable. The news was brought by a
wandering hunter that a quarrel had arisen between
the Shawnees and the Iroquois, and that the latter
had recalled their braves from the frontier to defend
their own villages in case of hostilities breaking out
between them and the rival tribe.

There was no occasion for Harold to wait for news

a

his remained for four months longer with

ele
BACK IN CONCORD. 61

from home, for his father had before starting definitely
fixed the day for his return, and when that time ap-
proached Harold started on his eastward journey, in
order to be at home about the date of their arrival.
Pearson took him in his canoe to the end of the lake,
and accompanied him to the settlement, whence he was
able to obtain a conveyance to Detroit. Here he took
a passage ina trading boat, and made his way by water
to Montreal, thence down through Lake Champlain and
the Hudson River to New York, and thence to Boston.

The journey had occupied him longer than he expected,
and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson were already in their home
at Concord when he arrived. The meeting was a joyful
one. His parents had upon their return home found letters
from Mr. Welch and his wife, describing the events which
had happened at the farm, and speaking in the highest
terms of the courage and coolness in danger which Harold
had displayed, and giving him full credit for the saving
of their daughter's life.

Upon the day after Harold’s return, two gentlemen
called upon Captain Wilson, and asked him to sign the
agreement which a number of colonists had entered into,
to resist the Mother Country to the last. This Captain
Wilson positively refused to do.

“T am an Englishman,” he said, “and my sympathies
are wholly with my country. I do not say that the
whole of the demands of England are justifiable; I think
that Parliament has been deccived as to the spirit existing
here. But I consider that it has done nothing whatever to
justify the attitude of the colonists. The soldiers of
England have fought for you against French and Indians,
and are still stationed here to protect you. The colonists
62 THE CAUSES OF DISPUTE.

pay nothing for their land; they pay nothing towards
the expenses of the government of the mother country;
and it appears to me to be perfectly just that people here,
free as they are from all the burdens that bear so heavily
on those at home, should at least bear the expense of the
army stationed here. I grant that it would have been
far better had the colonists taxed themselves to pay the
extra amount, instead of the mother country taxing
them; but this they would not do. Some of the colonists
paid their quotum, others refused to do so, and this being
the case, it appears to me that England is perfectly
Justified in laying on a tax. Nothing could have been
fairer than the tax that she proposed. The stamp-tax
would in no way have affected the poorer classes in the
colonies. It would have been borne only by the rich,
and by those engaged in such business transactions as
required stamped documents. I regard the present re-
bellion as the work of a clique of ambitious men, who have
stirred up the people by incendiary addresses and writing.
There are, of course, among them a large number of the
men—among them, gentlemen, I place you—who conscien-
tiously believe that they are justified in doing nothing
whatever for the land which gave them or their ancestors
birth, who would enjoy all the great natural wealth of
this vast country without contributing towards the ex-
pense of the troops to whom it is due that you enjoy
peace and tranquillity. Such, gentlemen, are not my
sentiments. You consider it a gross hardship that the
colonists are compelled to trade only with the mother
country. I grant that it would be more profitable and
better for us had we an open trade with the whole
world; but in this England only acts as do all other
ee ———

A LOYAL GENTLEMAN. 63

countries towards their colonies. France, Spain, Portugal,
and the Netherlands all monopolize the trade of their
colonies; all, far more than does England, regard their
colonies as sources of revenue. I repeat, I do not think
that the course that England has pursued towards us
has been always wise; but I am sure that nothing that
she has done justifies the spirit of disaffection and rebellion
which is ripe throughout these colonies.”

“The time will come, sir,” one of the gentlemen said,
“when you will have reason to regret the line which you
have now taken.”

“No, sir,” Captain Wilson said haughtily. “The time
may come when the line that I have taken may cost me
my fortune, and even my life, but it will never cause
me one moment’s regret that I have chosen the part of
a loyal English gentleman.”

When the deputation had departed, Harold, who had
been a wondering listener to the conversation, asked his
father to explain to him the exact position in which
matters stood.

It was indeed a serious one. The success of England
in her struggle with France for the supremacy of North
America had cost her a great deal of money. At home
the burdens of the people were extremely heavy. The
expense of the army and navy was great, and the min-
istry, in striving to lighten the burdens of the people,
turned their eyes to the colonies. .They saw in America
a population of over 2,000,000 people, subjects of the
king, like themselves, living free from rent and taxes on
their own land, and paying nothing whatever to the
expenses of the country. They were, it is true, forced to
trade with England, but this obligation was set wholly at
64 THE STAMP-TAX.

nought. The custom-house officials had no force at their disposal
which would have enabled them to check these operations,
and the law enforcing a trade with England was virtu-
ally a dead letter.

Their first step was to strengthen the naval force on
the American coast, and by additional vigilance to put
some sort of check on the wholesale smuggling which
prevailed. This step caused extreme discontent among
the trading classes of America, and these set to work
vigorously to stir up a strong feeling of disaffection
against England. ‘The revenue officers were prevented
sometimes by force from carrying out their duties.

After great consideration the English government
came to the conclusion that a revenue sufficient to pay a
considerable proportion of the cost of the army in America
might be raised by means of a stamp-tax imposed upon all
legal documents, receipts, agreements, and licenses—a, tax,
in fact, resembling that on stamps now in use in England.
The colonists were furious at the imposition of this tax.
A Congress, composed of deputies from each State, met,
and it was unanimously resolved that the stamp-tax
should not be paid. Meetings were everywhere held, at
which the strongest and most treasonable language was
uttered, and such violent threats were used against the
persons employed as stamp-collectors that these, in fear
of their lives, resigned their posts.

The stamp-tax remained uncollected, and was treated
by the colonists as if it were not in existence.

The whole of the States now began to prepare for war.
The Congress was made permanent; the militia drilled,
and prepared for fighting, and everywhere the position
THE BREACH WIDENS. 65

grew more and more strained. Massachusetts was the
head-quarters of disaffection, and here a total break with
the mother country was openly spoken of. At times
the more moderate spirits attempted to bring about a
reconciliation between the two parties. Petitions were
sent to the Houses of Parliament, and even at this time,
had any spirit of wisdom prevailed in England, the final
consequences might have been prevented. Unfortunately,
the majority in parliament were unable to recognize that
the colonists had any rights upon their side. Taxation
was so heavy at home that men felt indignant that they
should be called upon to pay for the keeping up of the
army in America, to which the untaxed colonists, with
their free farms and houses, would contribute nothing.
The plea of the colonists that they were taxed by a
chamber in which they were unrepresented, was answered
by the statement that such was also the case with Man-
chester, Leeds, and many other large towns which were
unrepresented in parliament.

In England neither the spirit nor the strength of the
colonists was understood. Men could not bring them-
selves to believe that these would fight rather than
submit, still less that if they did fight it would be suc-
cessfully. They ignored the fact that the population of
the States was one-fourth as large as that of England;
that by far the greater proportion of that population were
men trained, either in border warfare or in the chase, to
the use of the rifle; that the enormous extent of country
offered almost insuperable obstacles to the most able army
composed of regular troops, and that the vast forests
and thinly populated country were all in favour of a

population fighting as guerrillas against trained troops.
(245) E
66 WAR IMMINENT.

- Had they perceived these things the Enelish people would
have hesitated before embarking upon such a struggle,
even if convinced, as assuredly the great majority were
convinced, of the fairness of their demands. It is true
that even had England at this point abandoned altogether
her determination to raise taxes in America, the result
would probably have been the same. The spirit of dis-
affection in the colony had gone so far, that a retreat
would have been considered as a confession of weakness,
and a separation of the colonists from the mother country
would have happened ere many years had elapsed. As
it was, parliament agreed to let the stamp-tax drop, and
in its place established some import duties on goods
entering the American ports.

The colonists, however, were determined that they
would submit to no taxation whatever. The English
government, in its desire for peace, abandoned all the
duties, with the exception of that on tea; but even this
concession was not sufficient to satisfy the colonists.
These entered into a bond to use no English goods. A
riot took place at Boston, and the revenue officers were
forced to withdraw from their posts. Troops were de-
spatched from England, and the House of Commons
declared Massachusetts to be in a state of rebellion.

It must not be supposed that the colonists were by
any means unanimous in their resistance to England.
There were throughout the country a large number of
gentlemen, like Captain Wilson, wholly opposed to the
general feeling. New York refused to send members to
the Congress, and in many other provinces the adhesion
given to the disaffected movement was but lukewarm.
It was in the New England provinces that the spirit of re-
THE EXPEDITION TO CONCORD. 67

bellion was hottest. These states had been peopled for the
most part by Puritans; men who had left England vol-
untarily, exiling themselves rather than submit to the
laws and religion of the country, and among them, as
among a portion of the Irish population of America at
the present time, the feeling of hatred against the gov-
ernment of England was, in a way, hereditary.

So far but few acts of violence had taken place; nothing
could be more virulent than the language of the news-
papers of both parties against their opponents, but be-
yond a few isolated tumults the peace had not been
broken. It was the lull before the storm. The great
majority of the New England colonists were bent upon
obtaining nothing short of absolute independence; the
loyalists and the English were as determined to put
down any revolt by force.

The Congress drilled, armed, and organized; the Eng-
lish brought over fresh troops and prepared for the
struggle. It was December when Harold returned home
to his parents, and for the next three months the lull
before the storm continued.

The disaffected of Massachusetts had collected a large
quantity of military stores at Concord. These General
Gage, who commanded the troops at Boston, determined
to seize and destroy, seeing that they could be collected
only for use against the government; and on the night of
the 19th of April the grenadier and light infantry com-
panies of the various regiments, 800 strong, under com-
mand of Lieut.-Col. Smith, of the 10th Regiment, and
Major Pitcairne of the marines, embarked in boats, and
were conveyed up Charles River as far as a place called
Phipp’s Farm. There they landed at midnight, having
68 POMPEY’S REPORT.

a day’s provisions in their haversacks, and started on their
march to Concord, twenty miles distant from Boston.

The design, however, had been discovered by some of
the revolutionary party in the town, and two of their
number were despatched on horseback to rouse the whole
country on the way to Concord, where the news arrived
at two o’clock in the morning.

Captain Wilson and his household were startled from
sleep by the sudden ringing of the alarm-bells, and a negro
servant, Pompey, who had been for many years in their
service, was sent down into the town, which lay a quarter
of a mile from the house, to find out what was the news.
He returned in half an hour.

“Me tink all de people gone mad, massa; dey swarm-
ing out of der houses and filling de streets, all with guns
on dem shoulders; all de while shouting and _halloing,
‘Down with de English! Down with de Red-coats! dey
sha’n’t have our guns; dey sha’n’t take de cannon and de
powder.’ Der were ole massa, Bill Emerson, the preacher,
with his gun in his hands, shouting to de people to stand
firm, and to fight till de last; dey all shout, ‘We will’
Dey bery desperate; me fear great fight come on.”

“What are you going to do, father?” Harold asked.

“Nothing, my boy; if, as it is only too likely, this is
the beginning of a civil war, I have determined to offer my
services to the government. Great numbers of loyalists
have sent in their names, offering to serve if necessary,
and from my knowledge of drill I shall, of course, be
useful. To-day I can take no active part in the fight,
but I shall take my horse and ride forward to meet the
troops, and warn the commanding officer that resistance
will be attempted here.”
LEXINGTON. 69

“ May I go with you, father?”

“Yes, if you like, my boy.”

“Pompey, saddle two horses at once. You are not
afraid of being left alone, Mary?” he said, turning to his
wife; “there is no chance of any disturbance here. Our
house lies beyond the town, and whatever takes place
will be in Concord. When the troops have captured the
guns and stores they will return.”

Mrs. Wilson said she was not frightened, and had no
fear whatever of being left alone. ‘The horses were soon
brought round, and Captain Wilson and his son mounted
and rode off at full speed. They made a detour to avoid
the town, and then, gaining the highroad, went forward
at full speed. .The alarm had evidently been given all
along the line; at every village the bells were ringing,
the people were assembling in the streets, all carrying
arms, while numbers were flocking in from the farm-
houses around. Once or twice Captain Wilson was
stopped and asked where he was going.

“T am going to tell the commander of the British force,
now marching hither, that if he advances there will be
bloodshed; that it will be the beginning of civil war. If
he has orders to come at all hazards, my words will not
stop him; if it is left to his discretion, possibly he may
pause before he brings on so dire a calamity.”

It was just dawn when Captain Wilson and Harold
rode into Lexington, where the militia, 130 strong, had
assembled. Their guns were loaded and they were ready
to defend the place, which numbered about 700 inhabi-
tants.

Just as Captain Wilson rode in a messenger ran up
with the news that the head of the British column was

i
70 THE FIRST SHOT.

close at hand. Some of the militia had dispersed to lie
down until the English arrived. John Parker, who
commanded them, ordered the drums to beat and the
alarm-guns to be fired, and his men drew up in two ranks
across the road. ;

“Tt is too late now, Harold,” Captain Wilson said; “let
us get out of the line of fire.”

The British, hearing the drums and the alarm-guns,
loaded, and the advance company came on at the double.
Major Pitcairne was at their head, and shouted to the
militia to lay down their arms.

It is a matter of dispute, and will always remain one,
as to who fired the first shot. The Americans assert that
it was the English; the English say that as they advanced
several shots were fired at them from behind a stone wall
and from some of the adjoining houses, which wounded
one man, and hit Major Pitcairne’s horse in two places.

The militia disregarded Major Pitcairne’s orders to lay
down their arms. The English fired; several of the
militia were killed, and nine wounded, and the rest dis-
persed. There was no further fighting, and the English
marched on unopposed to Concord.

As they approached the town the militia retreated
from it. The English took possession of a bridge behind
the place, and held this while the troops were engaged
in destroying the ammunition and gun-carriages. Most
of the guns had been removed, and only two 24-pounders
were taken. In destroying the stores by fire the court-
house took flames. At the sight of this fire the militia
and armed countrymen advanced down the hill towards
the bridge. The English tried to pull up the planks, but
the Americans ran forward rapidly. The English guard
THE ATTACK ON THE COLUMN. 71

fired; the colonists returned the fire. Some of the English
were killed and wounded, and the party fell back into the
town. Half an hour later Colonel Smith, having per-
formed the duty that he was sent to do, resumed the
homeward march with the whole of his troops.

Then the militiamen of Concord, with those from
many villages around, and every man in the district
capable of bearing arms, fell upon the retiring English.

The road led through several defiles, and every tree,
every rock, every depression of ground, was taken advan-
tage of by the Americans. Scarcely a man was to be seen,
but their deadly fire rained thick upon the tired troops.
This they vainly attempted to return, but they could do
nothing against an invisible foe, every man of whom pos-
sessed a skill with his rifle far beyond that of the British
soldier. Very many fell, and the retreat was fast becoming
a rout, when, near Lexington, the column met a strong
reinforcement which had been sent out from Boston. This
was commanded by Lord Perey, who formed his detach-
ment into square, in which Colonel Smith’s party, now so
utterly exhausted that they were obliged to lie down for
some time, took refuge. When they were rested, the
whole force moved forward again towards Boston, har-
assed the whole way by the Americans, who, from behind
stone walls and other places of shelter, kept up an
incessant fire upon both flanks, as well as in the front
and rear, against which the troops could do nothing. At
last the retreating column safely arrived at Boston, spent
and worn out with fatigue. Their loss was 65 men killed,
136 wounded, 49 missing.

Such was the beginning of the War of Independence.
Many American writers have declared that, previous to
72 WHO WAS TO BLAME?

that battle, there was no desire for independence on the part
of the colonists; but this is emphatically contradicted by
the language used at the meetings and in the newspapers
which have come down to us. The leaders may not have
wished to go so far, may not have intended to gain more
than an entire immunity from taxation, and an absolute
power for the colonists to manage their own affairs. But
experience has shown that when the spark of revolution
is once lighted, when resistance to the law has once com-
menced, things are carried to a point far beyond that
dreamed of by the first leaders.

Those who commenced the French Revolution were
moderate men, who desired only that some slight check
should be placed on the arbitrary power of the king, that
the people should be relieved in some slight degree from
the horrible tyranny of the nobles, from the misery and
wretchedness in which they lived. These just demands
increased step by step until they culminated in the reign
of terror and the most horrible scenes of bloodshed and
massacre of modern times.

Men like Washington, and Franklin, and Adams may
have desired only that the colonists should be free from
imperial taxation, but the popular voice went far beyond
this. Three years earlier wise counsels in the British
Parliament might have averted a catastrophe, and delayed
for many years the separation of the colonies from their
mother country. At the time the march began from
Boston to Concord the American colonists stood virtually
in armed rebellion. The militia throughout New Eng-
land were ready for fight. Arms, ammunition, and mili-
tary stores were collected in Rhode Island and New
Hampshire. The cannon and military stores belonging
THE DIE IS CAST. 73

to the crown had been carried off by the people, 40
cannon being seized in Rhode Island alone. Such being
the case, it is nonsense to speak of the fray at Lexington
as the cause of the revolutionary war. It was but the
spark in the powder. The magazine was ready and
primed, the explosion was inevitable, and the fight at
Lexington was the accidental incident which set fire
to it.

The efforts of American writers, however, to conceal the
real facts of the case, to minimize the rebellious language,
the violent acts of the colonists, and to make England re-
sponsible for the war because a body of troops were sent
to seize cannon and military stores intended to be used
against them, are so absurd, as well as so untrue, that it is
astonishing how wide a credence such statements have
received.

From an eminence at some distance from the line of
retreat Captain Wilson and his son watched sorrowfully
the attack upon the British troops. When at last the
combatants disappeared from sight through one of the
defiles Captain Wilson turned his horse’s head home-
wards.

“The die is cast,” he said to his wife as she met him at
the door. “The war has begun, and I fear it can have
but one termination. The colonists can place forces in
the field twenty times as numerous as any army that
England can spare. They are inferior in drill and in
discipline; but these things, which are of such vast con-
sequence in a European battlefield, matter but little in
such a country as this. Skill with the rifle and know-
ledge of forest warfare are far more important. In |
these points the colonists are as superior to the English
74 CAPTAIN WILSON’S DETERMINATION.

soldiers as they are in point of numbers. Neverthe-
less, my dear, my duty is plain. I am an Englishman,
and have borne His Majesty’s commission, and I must
fight for the king. Harold has spoken to me as we rode
home together, and he wishes to fight by my side. I
have pointed out to him that as he was born here he can
without dishonour remain neutral in the struggle. He,
however, insists that, as a loyal subject of the king, he is
entitled to fight for him. He saw to-day many lads not
older than himself in the rebel ranks, and he has pleaded
strongly for permission to go with me. To this I have
agreed. Which would you prefer, Mary ?—to stay
quietly here, where I imagine you would not be molested
on account of the part I take, or will you move into
Boston and stop with your relations there until the
struggle has ended one way or the other.”

As Mrs. Wilson had frequently talked over with her
husband the course that he would take in the event of
civil war actually breaking out, the news that he would
at once offer his services to the British authorities did
not come as a shock upon her. Even the question of
Harold accompanying his father had been talked over;
and although her heart bled at the thought of husband
and son being both engaged in such a struggle, she agreed
to aequiesce in any decision that Harold might arrive at.
He was now nearly sixteen, and in the colonies a lad of
this age is, in point of independence and self-reliance,
older than an English boy. Harold, too, had already
shown that he possessed discretion and coolness as well
as courage; and although now, that the moment had
come, Mrs. Wilson wept passionately at the thought of
their leaving her, she abstained from saying any word to
ARRIVAL AT BOSTON. 75

dissuade them from the course they had determined
upon. When she recovered from her fit of crying she
said that she would accompany them at once to Boston,
as in the first place their duties might for some time lie
in that city, and that in any case she would obtain far
more speedy news there of what was going on through-
out the country than she would at Concord. She would,
too, be living among her friends, and would meet with
many of the same convictions and opinions as her hus-
band’s, whereas in Concord the whole population would
be hostile.

Captain Wilson said that there was no time to be lost,
as the whole town was in a tumult. He therefore advised
her to pack up such necessary articles as could be carried
in the valises on the horses’ backs.

Pompey and the other servants were to pack up the
most valuable effects, and to forward them to a relation
of Mrs. Wilson’s, who lived about three miles from
Boston. There they would be in safety, and could be
brought into the town if necessary. Pompey and two
other old servants were to remain in charge of the house
and its contents. Jake, an active young negro some
twenty-three or twenty-four years old, who was much
attached to Harold, whose personal attendant and com-
panion he had always been, was to accompany them on
horseback, as was Judy, Mrs. Wilson’s negro maid.

As evening fell the five horses were brought round, and
the party started by a long and circuitous route, by
which, after riding for nearly forty miles, they reached
Boston at two o’clock next morning.






CHAPTER V.

BUNKER’S HILL

a HE excitement caused by the news of the fight at
=) Concord was intense, and as it spread through
pi the colonies the men everywhere rushed to arms.
The fray at Lexington was represented as a
wanton outrage, and the facts wholly ignored that the
colonists concerned in it were drawn up in arms to oppose
the passage of the king’s troops, who were marching on
their legitimate duty of seizing arms and ammunition col-
lected for the purpose of warring against the king. The
colonial orators and newspaper writers affirmed then, as
they have affirmed since, that up to the day of Lexington
no one had a thought of firing a shot against the govern-
ment. A more barefaced misstatement was never made.
Men do not carry off cannon by scores and accumulate
everywhere great stores of warlike ammunition without a
thought of fighting. The colonists commenced the war by
assembling in arms to oppose the progress of British troops
obeying the orders of the government. It matters not a
whit on which side the first shot was fired. American
troops have many times since that event fired upon
rioters in the streets, under circumstances no stronger
than those which brought on the fight at Lexington.


EXCITEMENT IN BOSTON. 77

From all parts of New England the militia and volun-
teers poured in, and in three days after the fight 20,000
armed men were encamped between the rivers Mystic and
Roxburgh, thus besieging Boston. They at once set to
work throwing up formidable earthworks; the English
troops remaining within their intrenchments across the
neck of land joining Boston with the mainland.

The streets of Boston were crowded with an excited
populace when Captain Wilson and his party rode into it
at two in the morning. No one thought of going to bed,
and all were excited to the last degree at the news of the
battle. All sorts of reports prevailed. On the colonial
side it was affirmed that the British in their retreat had
shot down the women and children; while the soldiers
affirmed that the colonists had scalped many of their
number who fell in the fight. The latter statement was
officially made by Lord Perey in his report of the engage-
ment.

Captain Wilson rode direct to the house of his wife’s
friends. They were still up, and were delighted to see Mary
Wilson, for such exaggerated reports had been received of
the fight that they were alarmed for her safety. They
belonged to the moderate party, who saw that there were
faults on both sides, and regretted bitterly both the obsti-
nacy of the English parliament in attempting to coerce
the colonists, and the determination of the latter to oppose
by force of arms the legitimate rights of the mother
country. .

Until the morning the events of the preceding day
were talked over; a few hours’ repose were then taken,
after which Captain Wilson went to the headquarters of
General Gage and offered his services. Although Boston
78 SPREAD OF THE INSURRECTION.

was the headquarters of the disaffected party, no less
than 200 men came forward as volunteers in the king’s
service; and Captain Wilson was at once appointed to
the command of a company of 50 men. He had, before
leaving the army, taken part in several expeditions
against the Indians, and his knowledge of forest warfare
rendered him a valuable acquisition. Boston was but
poorly provisioned; and as upon the day when the news of
Lexington reached New York two vessels laden with flour
for the use of the troops at Boston were seized by the
colonists, and many other supplies cut off, the danger of
the place being starved out was considerable. General
Gage therefore offered no opposition to the exit from the
city of those who wished to avoid the horror of a siege,
and a considerable portion of the population made their
way through to the rebel lines. Every day brought news
of fresh risings throughout the country; the governors ot
the various provinces were powerless; small garrisons of
English troops were disarmed and made prisoners; and
the fortress of Ticonderoga, held only by fifty men, was
captured by the Americans without resistance. In one
month after the first shot was fired the whole of the
American colonies were in rebellion.

The news was received in England with astonishment
and sorrow. Great concessions had been made by parlia-
liament, but the news had reached America too late to .
avoid hostilities. Public opinion was divided; many
were in favour of granting at once all that the colonists
demanded, and many officers of rank and position resigned
their commissions rather than fight against the Ameri-
cans, ‘The division, indeed, was almost as general and
complete as it had been in the time of our own civil war.
FEELING IN ENGLAND, — 79

In London the feeling in favour of the colonists was
strong, but in the country generally the determination to
repress the rising was in the ascendant. The colonists
had with great shrewdness despatched a fast-sailing ship
to Europe upon the day following the battle of Lexing-
ton, giving their account of the affair and representing it
as a massacre of defenceless colonists by British troops;
and the story thus told excited a sympathy which would
not, perhaps, have been extended to them had the real
facts of the case been known. Representatives from all the
colonists met at Philadelphia to organize the national re-
sistance; but as yet, although many of the bolder spirits
spoke of altogether throwing off alleciance to England, no
resolution was proposed to that e‘fect.

For the first six weeks after his arrival at Boston
Captain Wilson was engaged in drilling his company.
Harold was, of course, attached to it, and entered with
ardour upon his duties. Captain Wilson did not attempt to
form his men into a band of regular soldiers; accuracy of
movement and regularity of drill would be of little avail
in the warfare in which they were likely to be engaged.
Accuracy in shooting, quickness in taking cover, and
steadiness in carrying out any-general orders were the
principal objects to be attained. Most of the men had
already taken part in frontier warfare; the majority of
them were gentlemen—Englishmen who, like their cap-
tain, had come out from home and purchased small estates
in the country. The discipline, therefore, was not strict,
and off duty all were on terms of equality.

Towards the end of May and beginning of June con-
siderable reinforcements arrived from England; and, as
a step preparatory to offensive measures, General Gage,
80 BUNKER’S HILL.

on the 12th of June, issued a proclamation offering in
His Majesty’s name a free pardon to all who should forth-
with lay down their arms, John Hancock and General
Adams only excepted, and threatening with punishment
all who should delay to avail themselves of the offer.
This proclamation had no effect whatever.

Near the peninsula of Boston, on the north, and sepa-
rated from it by the Charles river, which is navigable and
about the breadth of the Thames at London Bridge, is
another neck of land called the “ Peninsula of Charles-
town.” On the north bank, opposite Boston, lies the town
of Charlestown, behind which in the centre of the penin-
sula rises an eminence called “Bunker’s Hill.” Bunker’s
Hill is sufficiently high to overlook any part of Boston,
and near enough to be within cannon-shot. This hill was
unoccupied by either party; and about this time the
Americans, hearing that General Gage had come to a
determination to fortify it, resolved to defeat his resolu-
tion by being the first to occupy it.

About 9 in the evening of the 16th of June a detach-
ment from the colonial army, 1000 strong, under the
command of Colonel Prescott, moved along the Charles-
town road and took up a position on a shoulder of
Bunkers Hill, which was known as “Breed’s Hill,” just
above the town of Charlestown. They reached this
position at midnight. Each man carried a pick and
shovel, and all night they worked vigorously in intrench-
ing the position. Not a word was spoken, and the watch
on board the men-of-war in the harbour were ignorant of
what was going on so near at hand. At daybreak the alarm
was given, and the Lively opened a cannonade upon the
redoubt. A battery of guns was placed on “ Copp’s Hill,”
THE AMERICAN POSITION. 81

behind Boston, distant 1200 yards from the works, and
this also opened fire. The Americans continued their
work, throwing up fresh intrenchments, and singularly
only one man was killed by the fire from the ships and
redoubt, A breastwork was carried down the hill to the
flat ground, which, intersected by fences, stretched away
to the Mystic. By 9 o’clock they had completed their
intrenchments.

Prescott sent off for reinforcements; but there was
little harmony among the colonial troops. Disputes be-
tween the contingents of the various provinces: were
common; there was no head of sufficient authority to
enforce his orders upon the whole; and a long delay took
place before the reinforcements were sent forward.

In the meantime the English had been preparing to
attack the position. The 5th, 38th, 43d, and 52d Regi-
ments, with ten companies of the grenadiers and ten of
the light infantry, with a proportion of field-artillery,
embarked in boats, and, crossing the harbour, landed on
the outward side of the peninsula near the Mystic, with
a view of outflanking the American position and surround-
ing them. The force was under the command of Major-
General Howe, under whom was Brigadier-General Pigott.

Upon seeing the strength of the American position,
General Howe halted and sent back for further rein-
foreements. The Americans improved the time thus
given them by forming a breast-work in front of an
old ditch. Here there was a post and a rail-fence. They
ran up another by the side of this and filled the space
between the two with the new-mown hay, which, cut
only the day before, lay thickly over the meadows.

Two battalions were sent across to reinforce Howe,
(245 ) F
82 THE BRITISH ADVANCE.

while large reinforcements, with six guns, arrived to the
assistance of Prescott. The English had now a force
consisting, according to different authorities, of between
2000 and 2500 men. The colonial force is also variously
estimated, and had the advantage both in position and
in the protection of their intrenchments, while the British
had to march across open ground. As individual shots
the colonists were immensely superior, but the British
had the advantages given by drill and discipline.

The English lines advanced in good order, steadily
and slowly, the artillery covering them by their fire. -
Presently the troops opened fire, but the distance was too
great and they did but little execution. Encumbered
with their knapsacks they ascended the steep hill towards
the redoubt with difficulty, covered as it was by grass
reaching to their knees. The colonists did not fire a shot
until the English line had reached a point about 150
yards from the intrenchments. Then Prescott gave the
order, and from the redoubt and the long line of intrench-
ments flanking it flashed a line of fire. Each man had
taken a steady aim with his rifle resting on the earth-
work before him, and so deadly was the fire that nearly
the whole front line of the British fell. For ten minutes
the rest stood with dogged courage firing at the hidden
foe; but these, sheltered while they loaded, and only
exposing themselves momentarily while they raised their
heads above the parapets to fire, did such deadly execu-
tion that the remnant of the British fell back to the foot
of the hill.

While this force, which was under the command of
General Pigott, had been engaged, another division under
Howe himself moved against the rail-fence. The combat
PLAN OF THE ACTION. 83



OF THE
ACTION AT BUNKERS HILL,
on the 17"of June 1775.
Between HIS MAFESTY'S TROOPS,
Under the Command of Major Gen. Howe,
AND THE AMERICAN FORCES.
Scale of Yards
0 100 200 300 400 500
ee apes
tema......Royalists
Americans






84 A HEAVY REPULSE.

was a repetition of that which had taken place on the
hill. Here the Americans reserved their fire until the
enemy were close; then, with their muskets resting on
the rails, they poured in a deadly fire; and after in vain
trying to stand their ground, the troops fell back to the
shore.

Captain Wilson was standing with Harold on Copp’s
Hill watching the engagement.

“What beautiful order they go in!” Harold said, look-
ing admiringly at the long lines of red-coated soldiers.

“It is very pretty,” Captain Wilson said sadly, “ and
may do in regular warfare; but I tell you, Harold, that
sort of thing won’t do here. There is scarce a man
carrying a gun behind those intrenchments who cannot
with certainty hit a bull’s-eye at 150 yards. It is simply
murder, taking the men up in regular order against such
a foe sheltered by earthworks.”

At this moment the long line of fire darted out from
the American intrenchments.

“Look there!” Captain Wilson cried in a pained voice;
“the front line is nearly swept away! do you see them
lying almost in an unbroken line on the hillside? I tell
you, Harold, it is hopeless to look for success if we fight
in this way. The bravest men in the world could not
stand such a fire as that.”

“What will be done now?” Harold asked as the men
stood huddled upon the shore.

“They will try again,” Captain Wilson said. “ Look at
the officers running about among them and getting them
into order.”

In a quarter of an hour the British again advanced both
towards the redoubt and the grass fence. As before the




THE SECOND ADVANCE AT BUNKER'S HILL.
THE POSITION STORMED. 85

Americans withheld their fire, and this time until the
troops were far closer than before, and the result was even
more disastrous. Some of the grenadier and light infantry
companies who led lost three-fourths, others nine-tenths,
of their men. Again the British troops recoiled from that
terrible fire. General Howe and his officers exerted them-
selves to the utmost to restore order when the troops
again reached the shore, and the men gallantly replied to
their exhortations. Almost impossible as the task ap-
peared, they prepared to undertake it for the third time.
This time a small force only were directed to move against
the grass fence, while the main body, under Howe, were
to attack the redoubt on the hill.

Knapsacks were taken off and thrown down, and each
man nerved himself to conquer or die. The ships in the
harbour prepared the way by opening a heavy cannonade.
General Clinton, who was watching the battle from
Copp’s Hill, ran down to the shore, rowed across the
harbour, and put himself at the head of two battalions.
Then with loud cheers the troops again sprang up the
ascent. The American ammunition was running short,
many of the men not having more than three or four
rounds left, and this time they held their fire until the
British troops were within twenty yards. These had not
fired a shot, the order being that there was to be no
pause, but that the redoubt was to be carried with the
bayonet. For a moment they wavered when the deadly
volley was poured in upon them. ‘Then with a cheer
they rushed at the intrenchments. All those who first
mounted were shot down by the defenders, but the troops
would not be denied, and pouring over the earthworks
leaped down upon the enemy.
86 HEAVY LOSSES.

For a few minutes there was a hand-to-hand fight, the
Americans using the butt-ends of their muskets, the Eng-
lish their bayonets. The soldiers were exhausted with
the climb up the hill and their exertions under a blazing
sun, and the great majority of the defenders of the re-
doubt were therefore enabled to retreat unharmed, as,
fresh and active, they were able to outrun their tired
opponents, and as the balls served out for the English
field-pieces were too large, the artillery were unable to
come into action.

The colonists at the rail-fence maintained their posi-
tion against the small force sent against them till the
main body at the redoubt had made their escape. The
British were unable to continue the pursuit beyond the
isthmus.

In the whole history of the British army there is no
record of a more gallant feat than the capture of Bun-
ker’s Hill; and few troops in the world would, after
two bloody repulses, have moved up the third time to
assail such a position, defended by men so trained to the
use of the rifle. A thousand and fifty-four men, or nearly
half their number, were killed and wounded, among whom
were eighty-three officers. In few battles ever fought
was the proportion of casualties to the number engaged
so great. The Americans fought bravely, but the extra-
ordinary praise bestowed upon them for their valour
appears misplaced. Their position was one of great
strength, and the absence of drill was of no consequence
whatever in such an engagement. They were perfectly
sheltered from their enemy’s fire while engaged in calmly
shooting him down, and their loss up to the moment
when the British rushed among them was altogether
THE LESSON OF THE BATTLES. 87

insignificant. Their casualties took place after the posi-
tion was stormed and on their retreat along the peninsula,
and amounted in all to 145 killed and captured and 304
wounded. It may be said that both sides fought well,
but from the circumstances under which they fought the
highest credit is due to the victors.

The battle, however, though won by the English, was a
moral triumph for the Americans, and the British pavrlia-
ment should at once have given up the contest. It was
from the first absolutely certain that the Americans, with
their immense superiority in numbers, could, if they were
only willing to fight, hold their vast country against the
British troops, fighting with a base thousands of miles
away. The battle of Bunker’s Hill showed that they
were so willing, that they could fight sternly and bravely:
and this point once established, it was little short of mad-
ness for the English government to continue the contest.
They had not even the excuse of desiring to wipe out the
dishonour of a defeat. Their soldiers had won a brilliant
victory, and had fought with a determination and valour
never exceeded, and England could have afforded to say,
“We will fight no more; if you, the inhabitants of a vast
continent, are determined to go alone, are ready to give
your lives rather than remain in connection with us, go
and prosper; we acknowledge we cannot subdue a nation
in arms.”

From the height of Copp’s Hill it could be seen that
the British had suffered terribly. Captain Wilson was
full of enthusiasm when he saw the success of the last
gallant charge of the English soldiers, but he said to
Harold:

“Tt is a disastrous victory. A few such battles as
88 DEFECTIVE GENERALSHIP.

these and the English army in America would cease
to exist.”

But although they were aware that the losses were
heavy they were not prepared for the truth. The long
grass had hidden from view many of those who fell, and
when it was known that nearly half of those engaged
were killed or wounded the feeling among the English
was akin to consternation.

The generalship of the British was wholly unworthy of
the valour of the troops. There would have been no diffi-
culty in placing some of the vessels of light draught so
far up the Mystic as to outflank the intrenchments held
by the colonists; indeed the British troops might have been
landed farther up the Mystic, in which case the Americans
must have retreated instantly to avoid capture. Lastly,
the troops, although fighting within a mile of their
quarters, were encumbered with three days’ provisions,
and their knapsacks, constituting, with their muskets
and ammunition, a load of 125 lbs. This was indeed
heavily handicapping men who had, under a blazing sun,
to climb a steep hill, with grass reaching to their knees,
and intersected by walls and fences.

American writers describe the defenders of the position
as inferior in numbers to the assailants; but it is due to
the English to say that their estimate of the number of
the defenders of the intrenchments differs very widely
from this. General Gage estimated them as being fully
three times as numerous as the British troops. It is pro-
bable that the truth lies between the two accounts.

Captain Wilson returned with Harold greatly dis-
pirited to his house.

“The look-out is dreadfully bad,” he said to his wife,
A BAD LOOK-OUT. 89

after describing the events of the day. “So far as I can
see there are but two alternatives—either peace, or a
long and destructive war, with failure at its end It
is even more hopeless trying to conquer a vast country
like this, defended by irregulars, than if we had a trained
and disciplined army to deal with. In that case two or
three signal victories might bring the war to a conclusion;
but, fighting with the irregulars, a victory means nothing
beyond so many of the enemy killed. There are scarcely
any cannon to take, no stores or magazines to capture.
When the enemy is beaten he disperses, moves off, and in
a couple of days gathers again in a fresh position. The
work has no end. There are no fortresses to take, no
strategical positions to occupy, no great roads to cut.
The enemy can march anywhere, attack and disperse as
he chooses, scatter, and reform when you have passed by.
It is like fighting the wind.”

“Well, John, since it seems so hopeless, cannot you give
it up? is it too late?”

“Altogether too late, Mary; and if I were free to-
morrow I would volunteer my services again next day.
It is not any the less my duty to fight in my country’s
cause because I believe the cause to be a losing one. You
must see that yourself, dear. If England had been sure
to win without my aid I might have stood aloof. It is
because everyone’s help is needed that such services as I
can render are due to her. A country would be in a bad
way, indeed, whose sons were only ready to fight when
their success was a certainty.”

The Congress determined now to detach Canada from
the English side, and prepared a force for the invasion of
that state, where the British had but a few regular troops.
90 MONTREAL THREATENED.

Captain Wilson was one morning summoned to head-
quarters. On his return he called together four or five of
the men best acquainted with the country. These had
been in their early days hunters or border scouts, and
knew every foot of the forest and lakes.

“T have just seen the general,” Captain Wilson said.
“A royalist brought in news last night that the rebels are
raising a force intended to act against Montreal. They
reckon upon being joined by a considerable portion of the
Canadians, among whom there is, unfortunately, a good
deal of discontent. We have but two regiments in the
whole colony. One of these is at Quebec. The rebels,
therefore, will get the advantage of surprise, and may
raise the colony before we are in a condition to resist.
General Howe asked me to take my company through
the woods straight to Montreal. We should be landed a
few miles up the coast at night. I suppose some of you
know the country well earn to be able to guide us.’

Several of the men expressed their ability to act as
guides.

“T have fought the Indians through them woods over
and over again,” said one of them, a sinewy, weather-
beaten man of some sixty years old, who was known as
Peter Lambton. He had for many years been a scout
attached to the army, and was one of the most experienced
hunters on the frontier. He was a tall angular man,
except that he stooped slightly, the result of a habit of
walking with the head bent forward in the attitude of
listening. The years which had passed over him had had
no effect upon his figure. He walked with a long noise-
less tread, like that of an Indian, and was one of the
men attached to his company, in whom, wisely, Cap-
PETER LAMBTON. 91

tain Wilson had made no attempt to instil the very
rudiments of drill. It was, the captain thought, well
that the younger men should have such a knowledge of
drill as would enable them to perform simple manceuvres,
but the old hunters would fight in their own way, a way
infinitely better adapted for forest warfare than any that
he could teach them. Peter and some of his companions
were in receipt of small pensions, which had been be-
stowed upon them for their services with the troops. Men
of this kind were not likely to take any lively interest in
the squabbles as to questions of taxation; but when they
found that it was coming to fighting they again offered
their services to government, as a matter of course. Some
were attached to the regular troops as scouts, while others
were divided among the newly-raised companies of loy-
alists.

’ Peter Lambton had for the last four years been settled
at Concord. He had, during the war with the French,
served as a scout with the regiment to which Captain
Wilson belonged, and had saved that officer's life when
with a portion of his company he was surrounded and cut
oft by hostile Indians. A strong feeling of friendship had
sprung up between them, and when, four years before,
there had been a lull in the English fighting on the
frontier, Peter had retired on his pension and the savings
which he had made during his many years’ work as a
hunter, and had located himself in a cottage on Captain
Wilson’s estate. It was the many tales told him by the
hunter of his experiences in Indian warfare that had
fired Harold with a desire for the life of a frontier hunter,
and had given him such a knowledge of forest life as
had enabled him to throw off the Indians from his trail.
92 A FAVOURABLE OCCURRENCE.

On Harold’s return the old hunter had listened with
extreme interest to the story of his adventures, and had
taken great pride in the manner in which he had utilized
his teachings. Peter made his appearance in the city
three days after the arrival of Captain Wilson there.

“T look upon this here affair as a favourable occurrence
for Harold,” he said to Captain Wilson. “The boy has
lots of spirits, but if it had not been for this he might
have grown up a regular town greenhorn, fit for nothing
but to walk about in a long coat, and to talk pleasant to
women; but this will just be the making of him. With
your permission, Cap., I shall take him under my charge
and teach him to use his eyes and his ears, and I reckon
he will turn out as good an Indian fighter as you will
see on the frontier.”

“ But it is not Indians that we are going to fight, Peter,”
Captain Wilson said; “I heartily wish it was.”

“Tt will be the same thing,” Peter said; “not here, in
course; there will be battles between the regulars and
the colonists, regular battles like that at Quebec, where
both parties was fools enough to march about in the open
and get shot down by hundreds. I don’t call that fight-
ing; that’s just killing, and there ain’t no more sense in it
than in two herd of buffalo charging each other on the
prairie. But there will be plenty of real fighting; expe-
ditions in the woods and Indian skirmishes, for you will
be sure that the Indians will join in, some on one side
and some on the other; it ain’t in their nature to sit still
in their villages while powder is being burnt. A few
months of this work will make a man of him, and he
might have a worse teacher than Peter Lambton. You
just hand him over to my care, Cap., and I will teach
PETER LAMBTON ON EDUCATION. 93

him all I know of the ways of the woods, and I tell yer
there ain’t no better kind of edication for a young fellow.
He larns to use the senses God has given him, to keep
his head when another man would lose his presence of
mind, to have the eye of a hawk and the ear of a hound,
to get so that he scarcely knows what it is to be tired
or hungry, to be able to live while other men would
starve, to read the signs of the woods like a printed book,
and to be in every way a man and not a tailor’s figure.”

“There is a great deal in what you say, old friend,”
Captain Wilson answered, “and such a training cannot
but do a man good. I wish with all my heart that it
had been entirely with red foes that the fighting was to
be done; however, that cannot be helped, and as he is to
fight he could not be in better hands than yours. So
long as we remain here I shall teach him what drill I can
with the rest of the company; but when we leave this
town and the work really begins, I shall put him in your
charge to learn the duties of a scout.”

The young negro, Jake, had also enlisted, for through-
out the war the negroes fought on both sides, according
to the polities of their masters. There were only two
other negroes in the company, and Captain Wilson had
some hesitation in enlisting them, but they made good
soldiers. In the case of Jake, Captain Wilson knew
that he was influenced in his wish to join solely by his
affection for Harold, and the lad’s father felt that in the
moment of danger the negro would be ready to lay down
his life for him.

There was great satisfaction in the band when they
received news that they were at last about to take the
field. The long inaction had been most wearisome to
94 A PITIFUL PARTING.

them, and they knew that any fighting that would take
place round Boston would be done by the regular troops.
Food too was very scarce in town, and they were heartily
weary of the regular drill and discipline. They were
then in high spirits as they embarked on board the
Thetis sloop of war and sailed from Boston harbour.

It was a pitiful parting between Mrs. Wilson and her
husband and son. It had been arranged that she should
sail for England in a ship that was leaving on the fol-
lowing week, and should there stay with her husband’s
family, from whom she had a warm invitation to make
their home her own until the war was over.

The Thetis ran out to sea. As soon as night fell her
bow was turned to land again, and about midnight the
anchor was let fall near the shore some twenty miles
north of Boston. The landing was quickly effected, and
with three days’ provisions in their knapsacks the little
party started on their march. One of the scouts had
come from that neighbourhood and led them by paths
avoiding all villages and farms. At daybreak they
bivouacked in a wood, and at nightfall resumed the
march. By the next morning they had left the settle-
ments behind and entered a belt of swamp and forest
extending west to the St. Lawrence.


CHAPTER VI.
SCOUTING.

PARTY of six men were seated around a fire in

the forest which covered the slopes of the
northern shore of Lake Champlain. The spot
had been chosen because a great tree had fallen,
bringing down several others in its course, and opening
a vista through which a view could be obtained of the
surface of the lake. The party consisted of Peter Lambton,
Harold, Jake, Ephraim Potter, another old frontiersman,
and two Indians.

The company under Captain Wilson had made its way
safely to the St. Lawrence, after undergoing considerable
hardships in the forest. They had been obliged to de-
pend entirely on what game they could shoot, and such
fish as they could catch in the rivers whose course they
followed. They had, however, reached Montreal without
loss, and there they found that General Carleton had in
all about 500 regulars, and about 200 volunteers who
had recently been engaged.

It was clear that if the people of Canada were as hos-
tile to the connection with England as were those of
the other colonies, the little force at the disposal of the
English general could do nothing to defend the colony


96 FEELING IN CANADA.

against the strong force which the Americans were col-
lecting for its invasion. Fortunately this was not the case.
Although the Canadians were of French descent, and the
province had been wrested by arms from France, they
for the most part preferred being under English rule
to joining the insurgent colonies. They had been in no
way oppressed by England; their property had been
respected, and above all things no attempt had ever been
made to interfere with their religion. In the New Eng-
land provinces the hard puritan spirit of the early fathers
had never ceased to prevail. Those who had fled from
England to obtain freedom of worship had been intolerant
persecutors of all religion different from their own. The
consequence was that the priests of Canada were wholly
opposed to any idea of union with the insurgent colonists.
Their influence over the people was great, and although
these still objected to the English rule, and would have
readily taken up arms against it under other circumstances,
they had too little sympathy with the New Englanders
to join in their movement, which, if successful, would
have placed Canada under the rule of the United States
instead of that of England.

The upper classes of Canadians were almost to a man
loyal to the English connection. They had been well
treated, and enjoyed indeed a greater state of indepen-
dence than had been the case under French rule. More-
over, they were for the most part descended from old
French families, and their sympathies were entirely op-
posed to popular insurrection. Thus, when Captain Wilson
and his party reached Montreal, they found that, in spite
of the paucity of English troops under the command of
General Carleton, the position was not so bad as had been
INDIAN WARFARE. 97

feared by General Gage. It was possible, and indeed
probable, that Upper Canada might fall into the hands
of the Americans, and that even Quebec itself might be
captured; but unless the people joined the Americans, the
success of the latter would be but temporary. With the
spring the navigation of the river would be open, and rein-
forcements would arrive from England. The invaders
would then be at a disadvantage. Separated from home
by a wide tract of forest-covered country, they would have
the greatest difficulty in transporting artillery, ammuni-
tion, and stores, and fighting as an army in invasion they
would be placed in a very different position to that occu-
pied by the colonists fighting on their own ground. It
was probable, however, that for a time the tide of inva-
sion would succeed.

The Indians of the Five Nations, as those dwelling
near the British frontier at this point were called, had
offered their services to the general, and volunteered to
cross the frontier to recapture Ticonderoga and Cowpoint,
which had been seized by the Americans, and to carry
the war into the colonies. General Carleton, however,
an exceedingly humane and kind-hearted man, shrank
from the horrors that such a warfare would entail upon
the colonists. He accepted the services of the Indians as
far as the absolute defence of Canada from invasion, but
refused to allow them to cross the frontier.

On the arrival of Captain Wilson with his little force
he was ordered to march at once to the fort of St. John’s,
which was held by a party of regular troops.

On arriving at that place the two scouts had been sent
down towards Lake Champlain, to watch the proceedings

of the enemy. Harold had obtained leave from his
(245 ) G
98 PETER’S ADVICE.

father to accompaiy the scouts, and Jake had been per-
mitted to form one of the party. Peter Lambton had
grumbled a little at this last addition to the number; he
knew Jake’s affection for his young master, and the great
strength of the negro would have rendered him useful
in a hand-to-hand fight, but he was altogether unaccus-
tomed to forest work, and his habit of bursting into fits
of laughter on the smallest provocation, as is the manner
of his race, enraged the scout to the last degree; indeed,
he had not left the fort above an hour when he turned
savagely on the negro.

“Took-ee here,” he said, “if that’s the way yer agoing
on, the sooner yer turns yer face and tramps back to the
fort the better; when you were at Concord it did no harm
to make as much noise as a jackass braying whenever you
opened that mouth of yours, but it won't do in the forests;
it would cost us our har, and you your wool, ef yer were
to make that noise with the enemy anywhere within
fifteen miles of yer. I ain’t agoing, if I knows it, to risk
my sculp on such a venture as this, still less Tain’t agoing
to see this young chap’s life thrown away. His father
hez put him in my charge, and I ain’t agoing to see him
sacrificed in no such way. So ye’ve got to make up yer
mind; yer have got to keep that mouth of yours shut
tight, or yer ‘ave got to tramp back to the fort.”

Jake gave many promises of silence, and although at
first he often raised his voice to a point far exceedin:
that considered by the hunters sate in the woods, he was
each time checked by such a savage growl on the part ot
Peter, or by a punch in the ribs from Harold, that he
quickly fell into the ways of the others, and never spoke
above a loud whisper.
NEW ALLIES. 99

At a short distance from the fort they were joined by
the two Indians, who were also out on a scouting expedi-
tion on their own account. They had previously been
well known both to Peter and Ephraim. They were
warriors of the Seneca tribe, one of the Five Nations.

They had now been for two days on the north shore
of Lake Champlain. They were sitting round a fire
eating a portion of a deer which had been shot by Harold
that morning. So far they had seen nothing of the enemy.
They knew that three thousand men, under Schuyler
and Montgomery, had marched to the other end of the
lake. The colonists had been sending proclamations across
the frontier to the inhabitants, saying that they were
coming as friends to free them from the yoke of England,
and calling upon them to arise and strike for freedom.
They were also in negotiation with some of the chiefs of
the Five Nations, and with other Indian tribes, to induce
them to join with them.

“TI propose,” Peter said, when the meal was finished
and he had lighted his pipe, “to go down the lake and see
what they are doing. Deer- Tail here tells me that he
knows where there is a canoe; he, Harold, and me will go
and reconnoitre a bit; the other three had best wait here
till we comes back with news. In course, chief,” he con-
tinued to the other Indian, after explaining to him in his
own language what he intended to do, “you will be guided
by circumstances,—you can see a long way down the
lake, and ef anything should lead you to think that we
are in trouble, you can take such steps as may seem best
to you. It’s mighty little I should think of the crowd
of colonists; but ef, as you say, a number of the warriors
of the Five Nations, indignant at the rejection of their
100 AN EXPEDITION.

offers by the English general, have gone down and joined
the colonists, it will be a different affair altogether.

The “Elk,” as the second Seneca chief was called,
nodded his assent. In a few words Peter told Harold
what had been arranged. Jake looked downcast when
he heard that he was not to accompany his master, but
as he saw the latter had, since leaving the fort, obeyed
without questioning every suggestion of the scout, he
offered no remonstrance.

A quarter of an hour later Peter rose, Deer-Tail
followed his example, and Harold at once took up his
rifle and fell in in their steps. There was but little
talk in the woods, and the matter having been settled it
did not enter the mind either of Peter or of the Indian
to say a word of adieu to their comrades. Harold im-
itated their example, but gave a nod and a smile to Jake
as he started.

Half an hour’s tramp took them to the shore of the
lake. Here they halted for a minute, while the Indians
closely examined the locality. With the wonderful power
of making their way straight through the forest to the
required spot, which seems to be almost an instinct
among Indians, Deer-Tail had struck the lake within
two hundred yards of the point which he aimed at. He
led the way along the shore until he came to a spot where
a great maple had fallen into the lake; here he turned
into the forest again, and in fifty yards came to a clump
of bushes; these he pushed aside and pointed to a canoe
which was lying hidden among them. Peter joined him,
the two lifted the boat out, placed it on their shoulders,
and carried it to the lake. There were three paddles in it.
Peter motioned Harold to take his place in the stern and
THE ENEMY SEEN. 101

steer, while he and the Indian knelt forward and put
their paddles in the water.

“Keep her along on the right shore of the lake, about
fifty yards from the trees; there is no fear of anyone
being lurking about near this end.”

The canoe was light and well made, and darted quickly
over the water under the strokes of the three paddlers.
It was late in the afternoon when they started, and before
they had gone many miles darkness had fallen. The
canoe was run in close to shore, where she lay in the
shadow of the trees until morning. Just as the sun rose,
the Red-skin and Peter simultaneously dipped their
paddles in the water and sent the canoe under the arches
of the trees; they had at the same instant caught sight
of four canoes making their way along the lake.

“Thems Injuns,” Peter whispered. “They are scouting
to see if the lake’s free. If the general could have got a
couple of gun-boats up the Sorrel the enemy could never
have crossed the lake, and it would have given them a
month’s work to take their guns round it. It’s lucky we
were well under the trees, or we should have been seen.”

“What had wé best do, Deer-Tail ?”

For two or three minutes the scouts conversed together
in the Indian tongue.

“The Seneca agrees with me,” Peter said. “It is like
enough there are Injuns scouting along both shores; we
must lay up here till nightfall; ef we are seen they
would signal by smoke, and we should have them canoes
back again in no time. By their coming I expect the
expedition is starting, but it won’t do to go back without
being sure of it.” : :

The canoe was paddled to a spot where the bushes
102 RED-SKIN SCOUTS.

grew thickly by the bank. It was pushed among these,
and the three, after eating some cooked deer’s flesh which
they had brought with them, prepared to pass the day.

“The Seneca and I will keep watch by turns,” the
scout said. “We will wake you if we want ye.”

Harold was by this time sufficiently accustomed to the
ways of the woods to obey orders at once without offering
to take his turn at watching, as his inclination led him
to do, and he was soon sound asleep. It was late in the
afternoon when he was awoke by the scout touching
him.

“There are some critters coming along the bank,” he
said in a whisper. “They ain’t likely to see us, but ‘tis
best to be ready.” Harold sat up in the canoe, rifle in
hand, and listening intently heard a slight sound such as
would be produced by the snapping of a twig. Presently
he heard upon the other side of the bushes, about a few
yards distant, a few low words in an Indian tongue. He
looked at his companions. They were sitting immovable,
each with his rifle directed towards the sound, and Harold
thought it would fare badly with any of the passers if
they happened to take a fancy to peer through the bushes.
The Indians had, however, no reason for supposing that
there were any enemies upon the lake, and they conse-
quently passed on without examining more closely the
thicket by the shore. Not until it was perfectly dark did
Peter give the sign for the continuance of the journey.
This time, instead of skirting the lake, the canoe was
steered out toward its centre. For some time they
paddled, and then several lights were seen from ahead.

“T thought so,” the scout said; “they have crossed to
the Isle La Motte, and they are making as many fires as
ALONE ON WATCH. 103

if they war having a sort of picnic at home. We must
wait till they burns out, for we darn’t go near the place
with the water lit up for two or three hundred yards
round. It won’t be long, for I reckon it must be past
eleven o'clock now.”

The fires were soon seen to burn down. The paddles
were dipped in the water, and the canoe approached the
island.

“T would give something,” Peter said, “to know whether
there are any Red-skins there; ef there are, our chance
of landing without being seen ain’t worth talking of; ef
they are not, we micht land a hull fleet; at anyrate we
must risk it. Now, Harold, the chief and me will land
and find out how many men there are here, and, ef we
can, how long they are likely to stop. You keep the
canoe about ten yards from shore, in the shadow of
the trees, and be ready to move close the instant you hear
my call. I shall just give the croak of a frog. The
instant we get in, you paddle off without a word. Ef ye
hears any shouts, and judges as how we have been seen,
ye must just act upon the best of yer judgment.”

The boat glided noiselessly up to the shore, all was still
there, the encampment being at the other side of the
island. The two scouts, red and white, stepped noise-
lessly on to the land. Harold backed the canoe a few
paces with a quick stroke upon the paddle, and seeing
close to him a spot where a long branch of a tree dipped
into the water, he guided the canoe among the foliage,
and there sat without movement, listening almost breath-
lessly.

Ere many minutes had elapsed he heard footsteps
coming along the shore. They stopped when near him.
104 A CONFAB.

Three or four minutes passed without the slightest sound,
and then a voice said, in tones which the speaker had
evidently tried to lower, but which were distinctly audible
in the canoe:

“T tell yer, Red-skin, it seems to me as how you have
brought us here on a fool’s errand. I don’t see no signs of
a canoe, and it ain’t likely that the British would be along
the lake here, seeing as how there is a score of canoes
with your people in them, scouting ahead.”

“T heard canoe,” another voice said, “ first at other end
of the island, and then coming along here.”

“And ef yer did,” the first speaker said, “likely enough
it was one of the canoes of your people.”

“No,” the Indian answered; “if canoe come back with
news, would have come straight to fires.”

“Well, it ain't here, anyway,” the first speaker said,
“and I don’t believe yer ever heard a canoe at all. It is
enough to make a man swear, to be called up just as we
were making ourselves comfortable for the night, on
account of an Indian’s fancies; I wonder at the general’s
listening to them. However, we have got our orders to
go round the island and see ef there is any canoe on either
shore; so we had better be moving, else we shall not get to
sleep before morning.”

Harold held his breath as the group passed opposite to
him. Fortunately, the trunk of the tree grew from the
very edge of the water, and there were several bushes
growing round it, so that at this point the men had to
make a slight detour inland. Harold felt thankful in-
deed that he had taken the precaution of laying his
canoe among the thick foliage, for although the night
was dark it would have been instantly seen had it been
IN THE HOSTILE CAMP. 105

lying on the surface of the lake. Even as it was, a
close inspection might have detected it, but the eyes of
the party were fixed on the shore, as it was there, if at
all, that they expected to find an empty canoe lying.

Harold was uneasy at the discovery that there were
still some Red-skins on the island. It was possible, of
eourse, that the one he had heard might be alone as a scout,
but it was more likely that others of the tribe were also
there.

After landing, Peter and the Seneca made their way
across the island to the side facing the American shore.
Creeping cautiously along, they found a large number
of flat-bottomed boats, in which the Americans had crossed
from the mainland, and which were, Peter thought, capable
of carrying two thousand men. They now made their way
towards the spot where the forces were encamped. The
fires had burnéd low, but round a few of them men were
still sitting and talking. Motioning to the Seneca to
remain quict, Peter sauntered cautiously out on to the
clearing where the camp was formed. He had little fear
of detection, for he wore no uniform, and his hunter’s
dress afforded no index to the party to which he was
attached.

A great portion of the Americans were still in their
ordinary attire, it having been impossible to furnish uni-
forms for so great a number of men as had been suddenly
called to arms throughout the colonies.

From the arbours of boughs which had been erected in
all directions, he judged that the force had been already
some days upon the island. Large numbers of men,
however, were sleeping in the open air; and picking his
way cautiously among them, he threw himself down at a
106 THE ENEMY’S PLANS.

short distance from one of the fires, by which three or four
men were sitting.

For some time they talked of camp matters, the short-
ness of food, and want of provisions.

“It is bad here,” one said presently; “it will be worse
when we move forward. Schuyler will be here to-morrow
with the rest of the army, and we are to move down t+,
Isle-aux-Noix, at the end of the lake, and I suppose we
shall land at once and march against St. John’s. There
are only a couple of hundred Britishers there, and we
shall make short work of them.”

“The sooner the better, I say,” another speaker re-
marked, “I am ready enough to fight, but I hate all
this waiting about. I want to get back to my farm
again.”

“You are in a hurry, you are,” the other said. “You
don’t suppose we are going to take Canada in a week’s
time, do you? Even if the Canadians join us, and by
what I hear that ain’t so sartin after all, we shall have to
march down to Quebec, and that’s no child’s play. I
know the country there. It is now the 4th of September,
another month and the winter will be upon us, and a
Canadian winter is no joke, I can tell you.”

“The more reason for not wasting any more time,” the
other one grumbled. “If Montgomery had his way we
should go at them quickly enough; but Schuyler is always
delaying; he has kept us waiting now since 17th of last
month; we might have been half-way to Quebec by this
time.”

“Yes,” the other said, “if the Britishers had run away
as we came; but we have got St. John’s and Fort Chamblée
to deal with, and they may hold out some time. How-
MONTGOMERY. 107

ever, the sooner we begin the job the sooner it will be
over, and I am heartily glad that we move to-morrow.”

Peter had now obtained the information he required,
and rising to his feet again, with a grumbling remark as
to the hardness of the ground, he sauntered away towards
the spot where he had left the Indian. Just as he did so
a tall figure came out from an arbour close by. A fire
was burning just in front, and Peter saw that he was a
tall and handsome man of about forty years of age. He
guessed at once that he was in the presence of the
colonial leader.

“You are, like myself,” the new-comer said, “unable to
sleep, I suppose?”

Yes, general,” Peter answered; “T found I could not
get off, and so I thought I would stretch my legs in the
wood a bit. They are lying so tarnal thick down there,
by the fires, one can’t move without treading on them.”

“Which regiment do you belong to?”

“The Connecticut,” Peter replied, for he knew by report
that a regiment from this province formed part of the
expedition.

“As good men as any I have,” the general said cordially.
“Their only fault is that they are in too great a hurry to
attack the enemy.”

“I agree with the rest, general,” Peter said; “it’s dull
work wasting our time here when we are wanted at
home. I enlisted for six months, and the sooner the
time’s up the better, say I.”

“You have heard nothing moving?” the general asked.
“One of the Chippewas told me that he heard a canoe out
in the lake. Ah! here he is.”

At that moment five or six men, headed by an Indian,
108 DETECTED.

issued from the wood close by. It was too late for Peter
to try to withdraw, but he stepped aside a pace or two as
the party approached.

“Well! have you found anything?” the general asked.

“No find,” the Chippewa said shortly.

“I don’t believe as there ever was a canoe there,” the
man who followed him said; “it was just a fancy of the
Indian’s.”

“No fancy,” the Indian asserted angrily. “Canoe there.
No find.”

“It might have been one of our own canoes,” Mont-
gomery said in a conciliatory tone. “The Indians are
seldom mistaken. However, if no one has landed it matters
not either way.”

“Only as we have had a tramp for nothing,” the colonist
said. “However, there is time for a sleep yet. Hallo!”
he exclaimed, as his eye fell on Peter Lambton; “ what,
Peter! why, how did you get here? Why, I thought as
how—General,” he exclaimed, sharply turning to Mont-
gomery; “this man lives close to me at Concord; he is a
royalist, he is, and went into Boston and joined the corps
they got up there.”

“Seize him,” Montgomery shouted; but it was too late.

As the man had turned to speak to the general Peter
darted into the wood. The Chippewa, without waiting
to hear the statement of the colonist, at once divined the
state of things, and uttering his war-whoop, dashed after
the fugitive. Two or three of the colonists instantly
followed, and a moment later three or four Indians who
had been lying on the ground leaped up and darted like
phantoms into the wood.

The general no sooner grasped the facts, than he shouted
ESCAPED FROM THE ISLAND. 109

an order for pursuit, and a number of the men most
accustomed to frontier work at once followed the first
party of pursuers. Others would have done the same,
but Montgomery shouted that no more should go as they
would only be in the others’ way, and there could not
be more than two or three spies on the island.

After the Chippewa’s first war-cry there was silence
for the space of a minute in the forest. Then came a
wild scream, mingled with another Indian yell; a moment
later the leading pursuers came upon the body of the
Chippewa. His skull had been cleft with a tomahawk,
and the scalp was gone.

As they were clustered round the body two or three of
the Indians ran up; they raised the Indian wail as they
saw their comrade, and with the rest took up pursuit.

Peter and the Seneca were now, however, far among
the trees, and as their pursuers had nothing to guide
them, they reached the spot where they had left the canoe,
unmolested.

On the signal being given, Harold instantly paddled
to the shore. Not a word was spoken until the canoe
was well out in the lake. Occasional shots were heard
on shore as the pursuers fired at objects which they
thought were men. Presently a loud Indian ery rose
from the shore.

“They see us,” Peter said. “However, we are out of
shot, and can take it easy.” The Red-skin said a few
words. “You are right, chief.”

“The chief says,’ he explained to Harold, “that as
there are Red-skins on the island, they have probably
some canoes. The moon is just getting up beyond that
hill, and it will be light enough to see us half across the
110 PURSUED.

lake. It would not matter if the water was free; but what
with Injuns prowling along the shores and out on the
lake, we shall have to use our wits to save our har.”

“Look!” he exclaimed two or three minutes later, as
two columns of bright flame at a short distance from
them shot up at the end of the island.

“They are Injun signals. As far as they can be seen
Injuns will know that there are enemies on the lake.
Now, paddle your hardest, Harold; and do you, chief,
keep your eyes and your ears open for sights and sounds.”

Under the steady strokes of the three paddles the bark
canoe sped rapidly over the water. When the moon was
fairly above the edge of the hill they halted for a moment
and looked back. The two columns of fire still blazed
brightly on the island, which was now three miles astern,
and two dark spots could be seen on the water about
half-way between them and it.

“You can paddle, my lads,” Peter Lambton said to the
distant foes, “but you will never catch us. I would not
heed you, if it were not for the other varmint ahead.”
He stood up in the canoe and looked anxiously over the
lake.

“It is all clear as far as I can see at present,” he said.

“Can’t we land, Peter, and make our way back on
foot?”

“Bless you,” Peter said, “there ain’t a native along the
shore there but has got his eye on this canoe. We might
as well take her straight back to the island as try to land.
Better; for we should get a few hours before they tried
and shot us there, while the Injuns would not give us a
minute; no, we must just keep to the water; and now
paddle on again, but take it quietly. It is no odds to let
INTERCEPTED. 111

those varmints behind gain on us a little. You need not
think about them. When the danger comes we shall want
every ounce of our strength.”

For half an hour they paddled steadily on. The pur-
suing canoes were now less than a mile behind them.

“I would give a good deal,” muttered the scout, “for a
few black clouds over the moon; we would make for
shore then, and risk it; it will be getting daylight before
long. Ah!” he exclaimed, pausing suddenly, as the chief
stopped rowing, “a canoe on each side is rowing out
to cut us off.”

Harold was now paddling forward, while the scout had
the place at the stern; the former was surprised to feel
the canoe shooting off from its former course at right
angles towards the shore; then, curving still more round,
they began to paddle back along the lake.

The canoes which had been pursuing them were
nearly abreast of each other. They had embarked from
opposite sides of the island, but they had been gradually
drawing together, although still some distance apart, when
Peter turned his canoe. Seeing his manceuvre, both turned
to head him off, but by so doing they occupied an entirely
different position in relation to each other, one canoe
being nearly half a mile nearer to them than the other.

“Take it easy,” Peter said; “these varmint will cut us
off, and we have got to fight, but we can cripple the one
nearest to us before the other comes up.”

The boats were now darting over the water in a line
which promised to bring the leading canoe almost in
collision with that of Peter. When within two hundred
yards of each other Peter ceased rowing.

“Now,” he said, “Harold, see if you can pick one of
112 CRIPPLING A FOE.

those fellows off. It’s no easy matter, travelling at the
pace they are. You fire first.”

Harold took a steady aim and fired.

A yell of derision told that he had missed. The Indians
stopped paddling. There was a flash, and a ball struck
the canoe. At the same moment Peter fired.

“There is one down!” he exclaimed. The Seneca fired,
but without result; and the three unwounded Indians in
the canoe—for it had contained four men—replied with
a volley.

Harold felt a burning sensation, as if a hot iron passed
across his arm. —

“Hit, boy?” Peter asked anxiously, as he gave a short
exclamation.

“ Nothing to speak of,” Harold replied.

“The varmint are lying by waiting for the other canoe.
Paddle straight at them.”

The Indians at once turned the boat and paddled to
meet their companions, who were fast approaching.

“Now,” Peter exclaimed, “we have got ’em in a line—a
steady aim this time.” The three rifles spoke out, one of
the Indians fell into the boat, and the paddle of another
was struck from his grasp.

“Now,” the scout shouted, “paddle away; we have
got them all fairly behind us.”

Day broke just as they were again abreast of the island;
one canoe was following closely, two others were a mile
and a half behind, while the one with which they had
been engaged had made for the shore.

“What do you mean to do?” Harold asked Peter.

“T mean to run as close as I can round the end of the
island, and then make for the place where they must
WELL AHEAD. 113

have embarked on the mainland. They may have seen
the signal fires there, but will not know what has been
going on. So now row your best. We must leave the
others as far behind as possible.”

For the first time since they started the three paddlers
exerted themselves to the utmost. They had little fear
that there were any more canoes on the island, for had
there been they would have joined in the chase. It was
only necessary to keep so far from the end of the island
as would take them out of reach of fire. Several shots
were discharged as they passed, but these fell short as
the canoe shot along at its highest rate of speed, every
stroke taking it farther from its nearest pursuer.

At the end of an hour's paddling this canoe was a mile
and a half behind; its rowers had apparently somewhat
abated their speed in order to allow the other two boats
to draw up to them; for the result of the encounter be-
tween their comrades and the fugitives had not been of a
nature to encourage them to undertake a single-handed
contest with them.

(245) a




CHAPTER VIL
IN THE FOREST.

-M| EE, Peter!” Harold exclaimed; “there is a whole
fleet of boats ahead.”

“T gees ’em,” Peter said; “and have seed ’em
for the last quarter of an hour. It is Schuyler
with the rest of what they calls their army. Steer a little
out of the course; we must pass close by them; they
won’t suspect nothing wrong, and will suppose we are
inerely carrying a message.”

In half an hour they were abreast of the flotilla, con-
sisting of flat boats laden with troops. With them were
two or three Indian canoes. Peter steered so as to pass
at a distance of a hundred and fifty yards. They rowed
less strongly now, but still vigorously. There was a shout
from the boat.

“All well on the island?”

“All well,” Peter shouted back, waving his hand, and
without further word the canoe passed on.

“There! do you hear that?” Peter exclaimed. “They
are firing shots from the canoes to call their attention.
The chances are they won't hear them; for the rattle of
their oars, and the talking, and the row they are making
are enough to drown the sound of a cannon. Now put


ON SHORE, 115

it on again as hard as you can. Another hour will take
us to the landing-place.”

They could see when the flotilla came up to the pursuing
boats that the canoes which accompanied it turned their
heads and joined in the pursuit; but they were now near
three miles ahead, and there was no chance whatever of
their being overtaken. They slackened their speed slightly
as they approached the land, and rowed up to the land-
ing-place without any signs of extraordinary haste.

A few men were loitering about. “What is the news
from the island?” one asked as they landed.

“All well there,” Peter said.

“Did you see anything of Schuyler?”

“Yes, we met him about half-way across.”

“What have you come for?”

“General Montgomery says that no spare flints have
been sent over for the firelocks.”

“Tl swear that some went,” one of the men exclaimed,
“for I packed a sack of them myself in one of the boats.”

“T suppose they have been mislaid,” Peter said. “Per-
haps some of the stores have got heaped over them. Ef
you are quite sartin, we have had our journey for nothing.”

“As sartin as life,” the man replied. “I'll swear to the
sackful of flints; and tarnation heavy they was too.”

“Well, then, I need not trouble about it farther,” Peter
said. “We will take a rest, and paddle back in an hour
or two. Was there any marks on the sack, so as I may
tell the general how to look for it?”

“Marks!” the man repeated; “why it had Fuiinrs
written on it in big black letters six inches long. It
must turn upanyhow. They will find it when they come
to shift the stores.”
116 IN THE FOREST.

Then, accompanied by his two companions, Peter
strolled quietly through the little village. Stopping at a
small store, he purchased some flour “and tea; then he
followed the road inland, and was soon out of sight of the
village; he stopped for a moment and then shook his
head.

“It’s no use trying to hide our trail here,” he said;
“the road’s an inch thick in dust; and, do what we will,
they will be able to see where we turn off. It is our legs
as we have got to trust to fora bit. We've got a good
half-hour’s start of the canoes; they were a long three
miles behind when we struck the shore.”

Leaving the road, he led the way with a long swinging
stride across the cultivated land. Twenty minutes’ walk
took them into the forest, which extended from the shore
of the lake many miles inland.

“Take off your boots, Harold,” he said as he entered
the wood; “those heels will leave marks that a Red-skin
could pick up at a run; now tread, as near as you can, in
the exact spot where the Seneca has trodden before you
He will follow in my track, and you may be sure that ]
shall choose the hardest bits of ground I can come across.
There, the varmint are on shore!”

As he spoke an angry yell rose from the distant village.
Ata long steady pace, which taxed to the utmost Harold's
powers as a walker, they kept their way through the
woods, not pursuing a straight course, but turning, wind-
ing, and zigzagging every “few minutes. Harold could
not but feel impatient at what seemed to him such a loss
of time, especially when a yell from the edge of the wood
told that the Indians had traced them Gate far—showed,
too, that they were far nearer than before. But, as Peter
A HALT. 117

afterwards explained to him, all this turning and winding
made it necessary for the Indians to follow every step, as
they would an animal, to guess the direction they had ©
taken. The weather had been dry and the ground was
hard; therefore the most experienced trapper would be
obliged to proceed very slowly on the trail, and would
frequently be for a time at fault; whereas, had they con-
tinued in a straight line, the Indians could have followed
at a run, contenting themselves with seeing the trail
here and there. They came across two or three little
streams running down toward the lake; these they fol-
lowed, in some cases up, in others down, for a consider-
able distance, leaving the bed where the bushes grew
thick, and hid the marks of their feet as they stepped
out from the water. Harold would gladly have gone at
a run, but Peter never quickened his pace; he knew that
the Indians could not pick up the trail at a rate faster
than that at which they were going, and that great delay
would be caused at each of the little streams, as it would
be uncertain whether they had passed up or down.

As the time passed the Indian yells, which had, when
they first entered the wood, sounded so alarmingly near,
died away, and a perfect stillness reigned in the forest.
It was late in the afternoon, however, before Peter halted.

“We can rest now,” he said; “it will be hours before
the critters can be here. Now let us have some tea.”

He began to look for some dried sticks. Harold offered
to assist.

“You sit down,” the scout said; “a nice sort of fire we
should get with sticks of your picking up! Why, we
should have a smoke that would bring all the Injuns in
the woods on to us. No, the sticks as the Seneca and
118 A HUNTER’S MEAL.

me will pick up won’t give as much smoke as you can put
in a tea-cup; but I would not risk even that if we was
nigh the lake, for it might be seen by any Red-skins out
in a canoe. But we are miles back from the lake, and
there ain't no other open space where they could get a
view over the tree-tops.”

Harold watched the Indian and the scout collecting
dry leaves and sticks, and took particular notice, for
future use, of the kinds which they selected. A light
was struck with a flint and steel, and soon a bright blaze
sprang up, without, so far as Harold could see, the slightest
smoke being given off. Then the hunter produced some
food from his wallet, and a tin pot. He had at the
last spring they passed filled a skin which hung on his
shoulder with water, and this was soon boiling over the
fire. A handful of tea was thrown in, and the pot
removed. Some flour, mixed with water, was placed on
a small iron plate, which was put on the red-hot ashes.
A few cakes were baked, and with these, the cold venison
and the tea, an ample meal was made.

After nearly an hour’s halt they again proceeded on
their way. A consultation had taken place between Peter
and the Seneca as to the best course to be pursued.
They could, without much difficulty or risk, have con-
tinued the way through the woods beyond the lake, but
it was important that they should reach the other side
by the evening of the following day, to give warning of
the intended attack by the Americans. There were,
they knew, other Red-skins in the woods besides those on
their trail, and the nearer they approached the shore the
greater the danger. They had, however, determined that
they would, at all hazards, endeavour to obtain another
BACK AT THE LAKE, 119

canoe and cross the lake. Until nightfall they continued
their course, and then, knowing that their trail could
no longer be followed, they made down to the lake.
They were many miles distant from it, and Harold was
completely worn out when at last he saw a gleam of
water through the trees. He was not yet to rest. Enter-
ing the lake they began wading through it, at a few feet
from the edge.

After an hour’s walking thus, they entered the bushes,
which thickly covered the shore, made their way through
these until they came to a spot sufficiently open for them
to lie down; and Harold, wrapping himself in the blanket
which he carried over his shoulder, was sound asleep in
less than a minute. When he woke the sun was shining
brightly.

“Get up, youngster, we are in luck,” the scout said;
“here’s a canoe with two of the varmint making towards
the shore. By the way they are going they will land
not far off.”

The scout led the way, crawling on his hands and
knees to the water's edge, to where the Seneca was
sitting watching the canoe through a cover of green
leaves. The course that the boat was taking would lead
it to a point some three hundred yards from where they
were sitting.

“We shall have no difficulty in managing them,”
Harold said, and grasped his rifle eagerly.

“Not too fast,” Peter said; “the chances are that the
varmint have friends on shore; like enough they have
been out fishing.”

The shore formed a slight sweep at this point, and the
bushes in which they were hidden occupied the point
120 AN INDIAN CANOE.

at one extremity. In the centre of the little bay there
was a spot clear from bushes; to this the canoe was
directed. As it approached the shore two other Indians
appeared at the water’s edge. One of them asked a
question, and in reply a paddler held up a large bunch
of fish.

“Just as I thought; like enough there are a dozen of
them there,” said Peter.

On reaching the shore the men sprang out, taking their
fish with them. The canoe was fastened by its head-rope
to the bushes, and the Indians moved a short distance
inland.

“There is their smoke,” Peter said, indicating a point
some thirty feet from the lake, but so slight was it, that,
even when it was pointed out to him, Harold could hardly
make out the light mist rising from among the bushes.
Presently he looked round for the Seneca, but the Indian
had disappeared.

“He has gone scouting,’ Peter said in answer to
Harold’s question; “if there are only four of them it
would be an easy job, but I expect there is more of the
red varmint there.”

In ten minutes the Seneca returned as noiselessly as
he had gone; he opened his hand and all the fingers twice;
the third time he showed only three fingers.

“Thirteen,” Peter said; “too many of them even for a
sudden onslaught.”

The Indian said a few words to Peter; the latter nodded,
and Deer-Tail again quietly stole away.

“He is going to steal the boat,” Peter said; “it is a
risky job, for where it lies it can be seen by them as they
sit. Now you and me must be ready with our shooting-
STEALING A BOAT. 121

irons to cover him if need be. Ef he is found out before
he gets the boat, he will take to the woods and lead them
away from us; but ef he is fairly in the boat, then we
must do our best for him. If the wust comes to the
wust, I reckon we can hold these bushes agin ’em for
some time; but in the end, I don’t disguise from ye, young-
ster, they will beat us.”

Harold now sat intently watching the canoe. It
seemed an age to him before he saw a hand emerge from
the bushes and take hold of the head-rope.

The motion given to the canoe was so slight as to be
almost imperceptible; it seemed as if it was only drifting
gently before the slight breeze which was creeping over
the surface of the lake. Half its length had disappeared
from the open space, when an Indian appeared by the
edge of the water. He looked at the canoe, looked over
the lake, and withdrew again. The hand had disappeared
in the bushes on his approach. The movement of the
canoe, slight as it was, had caught his eye; but, satisfied
that it was caused only by the wind, he had returned
to his fire again. The hand appeared again through
the bushes, and the canoe was drawn along until hidden
from the sight of those sitting by the fire. Again the
watchful Indian appeared, but the boat was lying quietly
by the bushes at the full length of its head-rope. He
stooped down to see that this was securely fastened,
and again retired. Harold held his breath, expecting
that every moment the presence of the Seneca would be
discovered. Scarcely had the Indian disappeared than
the Seneca crawled out from the bushes. With a sweep
of his knife he cut the rope of the canoe, and noiselessly
entered it, and as he did so gave a shove with his foot,
122 SAFELY AFLOAT.

which sent it dancing along the shore towards the spot
where Harold and his companion were hidden. Then
he seized the paddle, and in half a dozen strokes brought
it within reach of them. Harold and Peter stepped
into it; as they did so there was a sudden shout. The
Indian had again strolled down to look at the canoe,
whose movements, slight as they had been, had appeared
suspicious to him. He now, to his astonishment, saw it
at the point with two white men and an Indian on board.
He had left his gun behind him, and, uttering his war-
ery, bounded back for it.

“Round the point, quick!” Peter exclaimed; “ they will
riddle us in the open.”

Two strokes took the canoe round the projecting point
of bushes, and she then darted along the shore, driven
by the greatest efforts of which the three paddlers were
capable. Had the shore been open the Indians would
have gained upon them; but they were unable to force
their way through the thick bushes at anything like the
rate at which the canoe was flying over the water. The
first start was upwards of a hundred yards, and this was
increased by fifty before the Indians, arriving at the
point, opened fire. This distance is beyond anything like
an accurate range with Indian guns. Several bullets
struck the water round the canoe.

“Now, steer out,” Peter said, as the firing suddenly
ceased; “they are making a detour among the bushes,
and will come down ahead of us if we keep near the
shore.”

Two or three more shots were fired, but without effect,
and the canoe soon left the shore far behind.

“Now,” Peter said, “I think we are safe. It is not
THE FLOTILLA AGAIN. 123

likely they have another canoe anywhere near on this
side, as most of them would have gone with the expedi-
tion. Ef the firing has been heard it will not attract
much attention, being on this side, and I see nothing in
the way of a boat out in the lake. Still, these Red-skins’
eyes can see most any distance. Now, chief,” he went
on to the Indian in his native language, “the young ’un
and I will lie down at the bottom of the boat; do you
paddle quietly and easily, as ef you were fishing. The
canoe with a single Indian in it will excite no suspicion,
and even if you see other canoes, you had better keep on
in that way, unless you see that any of them are inten-
ding to overhaul you.”

The chief nodded assent. Peter and Harold stretched
themselves at full length in the canoe, and the Indian
paddled quietly and steadily on. For an hour not a word
was spoken in the canoe. Harold several times dozed
off to sleep. At last the Seneca spoke:

“Many boats out on water—American army.”

Harold was about to raise his head to look out when
Peter exclaimed: “Lie close, Harold; if a head were
shown now it would be wuss than ef we had sat up all
the time. We know there are Injun canoes with the flats,
and they may be watching us now. We may be a long
way off, but there is no saying how far a Red-skin’s eyes
can carry. Can you see where they are going to, chief?”
he asked the Seneca. “Are they heading for Isle-aux-
Noix, as we heard them say they were going to do?”

The Seneca nodded, “ Going to island.”

“Then,” Peter said, “the sooner we are across the lake
the better.” The Seneca again spoke, and, after a con-
sultation with Peter, laid in his paddle.
124 A FRESH CHASE

“What is he doing now?” Harold asked.

“Our course lies pretty near the same way as theirs,”

Peter said; “the island is but a short distance from the
shore, near the mouth of the Sorrel; so where we are
going would take us right across their line. We fooled
them yesterday, but are not likely to do it again to-day.
So the chief has stopped paddling, and makes as if he
were fishing. I doubt whether it will succeed, for he
would hardly be fishing so far out. However, we shall
soon see. It is better so than to turn and paddle in any
other direction, as that would be sure to excite their sus-
picions.”
. The fleet of boats had already passed the spot where
the canoe would have crossed had she been going directly
across the lake when she was first seen, and was there-
fore now ahead of it. The great flotilla kept on as if the
canoe with its single occupant in its rear had not excited
suspicion. The Seneca, however, knew that sharp eyes
must be upon him. The manner in which the canoe had
baffled pursuit the day before must have inflicted a severe
blow upon the pride of the Indians; and although, having
driven them off the lake, they could have no reason for
suspecting that their foes could have obtained a fresh
canoe, the Seneca knew that their vigilance would not
sleep for a moment. Therefore, although bending over
‘the side of the canoe as if watching his lines, his eyes
were never off the boats.

“There are canoes making for the shore both ways,”
he said at last. “It is time that my white brother should
take the paddle.”

Peter and Harold at once sat up in the boat and looked
round the lake, which at this point was about ten miles
A RACE . 125

wide, The canoe was four from the eastern side, the
flotilla was a mile farther up the lake, and the same dis-
tance nearer to the western shore. Four or five canoes
were detaching themselves from the flotilla, apparently
rowing direct for the shore. It would have been easy
for the canoe to have regained the eastern side long
before she could have been cut off, but here they might
find the Chippewas. The Indians whose boat they had
taken would assuredly follow along the shores of the lake
in hopes that something might occur to drive them back.
Besides, had they landed there, they would be unable to
carry in time the news of the approaching attack upon
St. John’s. For the same reason it was important to land
up the lake near the Canadian end.

Peter rapidly took in the situation; he saw that it was
possible, and only just possible, to reach the shore at a
point opposite to that at which they now were before the
hostile canoes could cut them off from it. If they headed
them there they would be obliged to run down to the
other end of the lake before efiecting a landing; while
he could not calculate on being able to beat all the canoes,
most of which carried four paddlers, who would strain
every nerve to retrieve their failure of the previous day.

Not a word was spoken as the boat darted through the
water. Harold, unaccustomed to judge distances, could
form no idea whether the distant canoes would or would
not intercept them. At present both seemed to him to be
running towards the shore on nearly parallel courses, and
the shorter distance that the Indians would have to row
~seemed to place them far ahead. The courses, however, were
not parallel, as the Indians were gradually turning their
canoes to intercept the course of that which they were pur-

. -
126 ROWING FOR LIFE.

suing. As the minutes went by, and the boats converged
more and more towards the same point, Harold saw how
close the race would be. After twenty minutes’ hard pad-
dling the boats were within a quarter of a mile of each
other, and the courses which they were respectively taking
seemed likely to bring them together at about a quarter
of a mile from the shore. There were three Indian
canoes, and these kept well together. So close did the
race appear that Harold expected every moment to see
Peter sweep the head of the canoe round and make a
stern chase of it by running down on the lake. This,
however, Peter had no intention of doing. The canoes, he
saw, travelled as fast as his own, and could each spare a
man to fire occasionally, while he and his companions
would all be obliged to continue paddling. Better accus-
tomed to judge distances than Harold, he was sure, at
the speed at which they were going he would be able to
pass somewhat ahead of his foes.

“Row all you know, Harold,” he said. “Now, chief,
send her along.”

Harold had been rowing to the utmost of his strength,
but he felt by the way the canoe quivered at every
stroke, that his companions were only now putting out
their extreme strength. The boat seemed to fly through
the water, and he began to think for the first time
that the canoe would pass ahead of their pursuers. The
latter were clearly also conscious of the fact, for they
now turned their boats’ heads more towards the shore,
so that the spot where the lines would meet would be
close to the shore itself. The canoes were now within
two hundred yards of each other; the Indians were
nearer to the shore; but the oblique line that they were
A CRITICAL MOMENT. 127

following would give them about an equal distance to
row to the point for which both were making. Harold
could not see that there was the slightest difference in the
rate at which they were travelling. It seemed to him
that the four canoes would all arrive precisely at the
same moment at the land, which was now some five or
six hundred yards distant.

Another two minutes’ paddling, and when the canoes
were but seventy or eighty yards apart, Peter, with a
sweep with his paddle, turned the boat’s head nearly half
round, and made obliquely for the shore, so throwing his
pursuers almost astern of him. The shore was but three
hundred yards distant, they were but fifty ahead of their
pursuers. The latter gave a loud yell at seeing the change
in the position in the chase. They had, of course, foreseen
the possibility of such a movement, but had been powerless
to prevent it. They were, however, prepared, for on the
instant one man in each canoe dropped his paddle, and,
standing up, fired. It is, however, a difficult thing to
take aim when standing in a canoe dancing under the
‘ vigorous strokes of three paddlers. 1t was the more
difficult since the canoes were at the moment sweeping
round to follow the movement of the chase. The three
balls whistled closely round the canoe, but no one was
hit.

The loss of three paddlers for even so short a time
checked the pace of the- canoes. The Indians saw that
they could not hope to overtake their foes, whose canoe
was now but a few lengths from shore. They dropped
their paddles, and each man seized his rifle. Another
moment, and the nine pieces would have poured their fire
into the canoe about fifty yards ahead of them, when
128 FRIENDS!

from the bushes on the shore three puffs of smoke shot
out, and three of the Indians fell, one of them upsetting
his boat in his fall. A yell of surprise and dismay broke
from them, the guns were thrown down, the paddles
grasped again, and the heads of the canoes turned from the
shore. The Indians in the overturned boat did not wait
to right it, but scrambled into the other canoes, and both
were soon paddling at the top of their speed from the
shore, not, however, without further damage, for the guns
in the bushes again spoke out, and Peter and the Seneca
added their fire, the instant they leaped from the boat to
shore, and another of the Indians was seen to fall. Harold
was too breathless when he reached the bank to be able
to fire. He raised his gun, but his hands trembled with
the exertion that he had undergone, and the beating of
his heart and his short panting breath rendered it impos-
sible for him to take a steady aim. A minute later Jake
burst his way through the bushes.

“Ah! Massa Harold,” he exclaimed; “bress the Lord dat
we was here; what a fright you hab giben me, to be sure
we hab been watching you for a long time. Ephraim
and de Red-skin dey say dey saw little spot far out on
lake, behind all dose boats; den dey say other boats set
off in chase. For a long time Jake see nothing about
dat, but at last he see dem; den we hurry along de
shore, so as to get near de place to where de boats row;
ebery moment me tink dat dey catch you up. Ephraim
say, no, berry close thing; but he tink you come along
first, but dat we must shoot when dey come close. We
stand watch for some time, den Ephraim say dat you
no able to get to dat point. You hab to turn along
de shore, so we change our place and run along, and sure
BACK AT ST. JOHN’S. 129

nough de boat’s head turns, and you come along in front
of us; den we all shoot, and the Red-skins dey tumble
over.”

“Well, Jake, it is fortunate indeed that you were on the
spot; for they could scarcely have missed all of us; besides,
even if we had got to shore safely they would have
followed us, and the odds against us would have been
heavy.”

“That ar war a close shave, Peter,” Ephraim said, “an
all-fired close shave I call it.”

“Tt war, E