68 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITER A TURE. 



Gilpin, a local name for the coal-fish, 



viii., 154 



Gilt-head, a name of one of the sea- 

 breams, i., 94, 427 

 Gilt-head, red, a name given to the 



common sea-bream, viii., 66 

 Girvan, its participation in the herring 



fishery, xi., 132 

 Glands, salivary, their absence in fish, 



vi., 270 

 Glasgow, difference between the cost of 



carriage of meat and of fish sent to 



London, iv., 122 

 Glass buoys for nets, &c., xiii., 6, 87, 



127 

 Glassock, glashan, glassin, glasan, 



glossin, glossan, local names for the 



coal-fish, viii., 154 



Globe-fish, anatomical details, i., 181 

 Gloucester, U.S., a fishing port, v., 5 ; 



important commercial fisheries there, 



v., 20 

 Glover, Surgeon (1676), description of 



a merman seen by him in America, 



in., 207 



Glue, quantity produced in Massachu- 

 setts in 1880 from fish skins, v., 9 ; 



made by the Japanese from skins 



and intestines of fish, v., 201 

 Gnats, the larvae of these and other 



insects to be given as food for young 



fishes, ii., 53 



Goa. See Portuguese settlements. 

 Goalundo, remark by Mr. Buckland, 



member of the Revenue Board in 



Calcutta, respecting the fisheries there, 



ii., 497 

 Gobies, or Gobiidce, anatomical details 



of the family, i., 124-126 ; ii., 472 

 Gobioid fish, herrings captured in Corn- 

 wall, found to be gorged with the 



young of this rare Scandinavian 



species, vi., 282, 284 

 Godavery, period of spawning of the 



" Hilsa " fish in this river, ii., 476 

 Gods as fishes and fishermen. See 



Divinities. 

 Goeze, facts respecting certain parasites 



in fish observed by him, vi., 257 

 Gold carp, introduced from China, i., 



169 ; a singular monstrosity of this 



fish sometimes imported and exhibited 

 in aquaria, i., 204 ; singular instance, 

 recorded by Carbonnier, of duties 

 discharged by the male, ii., 20 ; should 

 be in separate ponds from other carp, 

 ii., 75 ; elongation of the dorsal fin, 

 ii., 136 



Gold coast, general description of the 

 colony, and manners and customs of 

 the population, v., 434-472 ; table 

 of value of fish imported, and total 

 imports, 1878-1881, v., 436 ; canoes 

 the only fishing vessels, v., 437 ; salt 

 imported, 1878-1881, v., 461 ; con- 

 densed report on its fishing indus- 

 tries, xiii., 365-370 



Gold-fish, incarnation of Vishnu under 

 this form, iii., 19 ; prominence of 

 this fish in fairy-lore, iii., 56 ; its 

 artificial hatching in the United States 

 by Rudolph Hessels in 1879, v., 15 



Gold schlei. See Golden tench. 



Golden Barbel Angling Society, iii., 

 176 



Golden haddock, name given in Arran 

 to the "John Dory," viii., 104 



Golden Horn, origin of this designa- 

 tion for an arm of the sea at Constan- 

 tinople, vii., 247 



Golden Orfe, a continental variety of 

 the carp, i., 202 



Golden tench, i., 169 ; vi., 51, 59 



Gooch, William D., report on the 

 Electric lighting of the Exhibition, 

 xiii., 179-242 



Goode, Professor Browne, paper read 

 by him, at Conferences, on "the 

 fishing industries of the United 

 States," v., 1-73 ; remarks by him 

 at Conferences, iv., 230, 427-430; 

 vi., 60, 61, 138, 173, 221, 264, 293, 

 319; vii., 275 ; paper read by him 

 on the fishing industry of the United 

 States, v., 3-73 ; his remarks on 

 Mr. Joncas' paper respecting the 

 fisheries of Canada, v. 158 ; his pam- 

 phlet on the fisheries of the United 

 States, xiii., 64-79, "4, 134, 1 35-139, 

 141, 143-154, 159 ; condensed report 

 by him on the fisheries of thatcountry, 

 xiii., 405-410. 



