CHAPTER II. 



KILLING. 



12. IN the majority of cases, the first stop in the prepara- 

 tion of an organ or organism consists in exposing it as 

 rapidly and as completely as possible to the action of one of 

 the Fixing Agents that are discussed in (he next chapter. 

 The organ or organism is thus taken in the normal living 

 state ; the fixing agent serves to bring about at the same 

 time, and with sufficient rapidity, both the death of the 

 organism and that of its histological elements. 



But this method is by no means applicable to all cases. 

 There are many animals, especially such as are of a soft con- 

 sistence, and deprived of any rigid skeleton, but possessing 

 a considerable faculty of contractility, which if thus treated 

 contract violently, and die in a state of contraction that 

 renders them unfit for study. In these cases special methods 

 of killing must be resorted to. Speaking generally, there 

 are two ways of dealing with these difficult cases. You msiy 

 kill the nnimal so suddenly that it has not time to contract : 

 or you may paralyse it by narcotics before killing it. 



Sudden Killiiuj. 



13. Heat. Tho application of Heat affords a means of 

 killing suddenly. By it the tissues are more or less fixed ;it 

 the snuie time that somatic death is brought about. 



Tlie difliculty consists in hitting off the right temperature, 

 which is of course different for different objects. I think 

 tlmt 80 to 90 C. will generally be amply sufficient, and that 

 very frequently it will not bo necessary to go beyond 60 C. 

 An exposure to heat for a few seconds will gone nil ly suffice. 



Sin;ill nl.jrrN (Prot<>/<>;i. H yd roids, Bryo/oa) may 1>< 1 brought into :i 



