﻿186 
  Harper: 
  Inheritance 
  in 
  corn 
  

  

  i 
  

  

  Description 
  of 
  plates 
  3-S 
  

  

  ^ 
  I 
  

  

  Photographs 
  and 
  reproductions 
  life 
  size. 
  Cards 
  attached 
  to 
  the 
  ends 
  of 
  the 
  ears 
  

   for 
  pedigrees, 
  data 
  as 
  to 
  pollination, 
  etc. 
  

  

  Plate 
  3 
  

  

  Fig. 
  164 
  a. 
  Kernels 
  nearly 
  all 
  fully 
  wrinkled 
  and 
  typical 
  for 
  sugar 
  corn. 
  

   Fig. 
  164 
  b. 
  Kernels 
  showing 
  many 
  degrees 
  of 
  wrinkling 
  but 
  many 
  of 
  them 
  

   tending 
  toward 
  translucency 
  even 
  when 
  not 
  fully 
  wrinkled. 
  

  

  Plate 
  4 
  

  

  Fig. 
  164 
  c. 
  Kernels 
  showing 
  many 
  degrees 
  of 
  wrinkling. 
  The 
  ear 
  shows 
  more 
  

   opaque 
  whiteness 
  than 
  164 
  b. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  I64 
  d. 
  The 
  ear 
  though 
  short 
  has 
  more 
  of 
  the 
  appearance 
  of 
  the 
  dent 
  parent. 
  

   Many 
  kernels 
  however 
  are 
  fully 
  wrinkled 
  and 
  translucent. 
  

  

  Plate 
  5 
  

  

  Fig. 
  164 
  e. 
  The 
  kernels 
  are 
  coarser 
  and 
  with 
  much 
  opaque 
  white. 
  Many 
  of 
  

   them 
  quite 
  of 
  the 
  dent 
  type. 
  Others 
  are 
  quite 
  fully 
  wrinkled. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  164/. 
  The 
  ear 
  was 
  partly 
  shelled 
  by 
  birds. 
  It 
  shows 
  plump 
  fiint-like 
  

   kernels, 
  dimpled 
  dent 
  kernels, 
  and 
  fully 
  wrinkled 
  translucent 
  sugary 
  type 
  kernels, 
  

   as 
  well 
  as 
  intermediates. 
  

  

  