1302 OYSTERS, AND ALL ABOUT THEM. 



Europe, 198, 205, 211, 272, 641, 645, 665 ; Natural oysters in, not 



plentiful, 352. 



Evelyn's Memoirs, cited 284. 

 Evolutionism, meaning of the term, 195. 

 Exmouth, 171, 181. 



Roads, 146. 



Exuviae, (last skin, shell or covering of animals) 197. 

 Eyton, T. C., History of the Oyster, cited 55, 58, 101, 102, 103, 104, 



I45> 155- 



Faber, G. S., The Fisheries of the Adriatic, cited 51. 



Falmouth, 118, 166, 272. 



Family Herald, 85. 



Faraday, 28. 



Faramond, MM. Surette, and Gaston de, 581. 



Faroe Isles, 172, 182. 



Fairer, T. H., Esq., 257, 452, 538, 610. 



Fascines, 248, 249, 483, 484, 495, 532, 669, 670; a large number carried 

 away by the sea, 563 ; damaged by mussels, 533 ; frequent changing 

 of, at Vivier-sur-Mer, 533 ; covered by barnacles, 533 ; fascis a 

 bundle, bundles of small sticks of wood bound together. 



Fascine, 20,000 young oysters on a, 484. 



Faversham, 56, 12 1, 244, 259, 346, 358, 360, 453. 



Fauna, 197, a collective word signifying all the mammalia peculiar to a 

 region or country. 



Febore, M., 515-518. 



Fecundation, Artificial, of the oyster, and hatching season for, 627; a 

 productive operation, 630 ; application and Advantages of the 

 ostracultural industiy, 628 : advantages of M. Bouchotte's hatch- 

 ing system shown, from river pisciculture, 629 ; of fish, the 

 laws of, determined and fixed, by M. Coste, 629 ; three harvests of 

 spat in the season, 629 ; no want of spots fitted for hatching, 629 ; 

 two conditions necessary, 629. 



