70 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



ner of baiting and laying out the 

 line, iv., 65 ; higher price of fish thus 

 captured, iv., 65 



Great Marlow Thames Angling Asso- 

 ciation, particulars respecting it, iii., 

 1 20 



Great Northern Railway, rates for car- 

 riage offish, iv., 375, 376 



Great Northern Sea Cow, the, its recent 

 extinction, ii., 187 



Great Western Railway, rates for car- 

 riage of fish, iv., 375 



Greave Stream (Lancashire), its pollu- 

 tion by manufactures, iv., 257 



Grebes, ii., 176 



Greece, establishments for fish culture, 

 ii., 7; sponge fisheries, iv. 422; its 

 fisheries, xiii., 32 ; the sardine fish- 

 ery, xiii., 32 ; the tunny fishery, 

 xiii., 32; "boutargue," xiii., 33; 

 ingenious device for capturing mul- 

 let, xiii., 33 ; enclosure of fish in 

 lagoons by the shore, xiii., 33 ; nets 

 in use all hand-made, xiii., 34 ; long 

 lines, xiii., 34 ; use of bell buoys for 

 these lines, xiii. , 34 ; the sponge 

 fishery, xiii., 34 ; condensed report 

 on the fishing industries of this 

 country, xiii., 447-449. 



Greek fishermen in the United States, 



V., 21 



Greek myths, &c., iii., n, 18, 19, 22- 

 25, 27, 45> So, 52, 70 



Greeks (ancient), their knowledge of 

 the seine-net, i., 287 



Green-ben or green-bane, a name given 

 in Scotland to the gar-pike, viii., 

 236 



Green-bone, or green-back, a name 

 given to the gar-pike, viii., 236 



Green-cod, a local name for the coal- 

 fish, viii., 154 



Green, H. J. prize essay on " the Her- 

 ring Fisheries," xi., 171-180 



Greenland, cod-fish found along its 

 coasts, v., 1 20 ; treaty between 

 England and Norway for the regula- 

 tion of its fisheries, vii., 170; the 

 " kajak " used for seal fishing, xiii., 

 5, 8l ; primitive character of imple- 

 ments used in the fisheries, xiii., 81 ; 



amount of fish, &c., captured annu- 

 ally, xiii., 81 



Greenland Company, grant of mono- 

 poly of the trade with Greenland 

 and its adjacent fisheries, ix., 184 



Greenland seal fishery, Act to pre- 

 vent the destruction of young seals, 

 i., 248 



Greenland shark, rarely taken in British 

 waters, i., 189 



Green, Mr. S., early fish culturist, v., 



13 



Greenland, or right whale, opinions 

 concerning the spouting of water 

 from their blow-holes, ii., 259 



Greenling or green-fish, a local name 

 for the pollack, viii., 158 



Green mackerel, remark by Mr. Kenneth 

 Cornish in reference to the poisonous 

 effect of eating these fish, vii., 30, 31 



Greenock, a seat of the herring fishery 

 in the early part of the nineteenth 

 century, xi., 108 



Greenore herring fisheries, statistics in 

 1882, vii., 76; railway connection 

 with the west of Ireland, vii., 85 



Green-pollack, a local name for the coal- 

 fish, viii., 154 



Greenport (America), a seat of the men- 

 haden fishery, v., 19 



Green's transportation box, description 

 and measurement, ii., 49 



Green Turtle, the. See Turtles. 



Greenwich fish dinner, curious fact re- 

 specting it, vii., 13 



Gregarious fish, remark by Dr. Francis 

 Day, as to opinions respecting effects 

 of over fishing, iv., 108 ; their food, 

 vi., 280, 288 



Grego, Mr. Joseph, his private collec- 

 tion of old English piscatorial works, 

 i-, 537 



Grenville, abundance of oysters, v., 101; 

 establishment of a permanent reserve 

 by the French Government between 

 Cancale and this place, v., 101 



Grey-back, a name given at Port rush 

 (co. Antrim) to the dab, viii., 213 



Grey-fleuk, a name given in the Moray 

 Firth to the dab, viii., 213 



Grey mullet, anatomical details, i., 142 ; 



