ZOOLOGY AND BOTANY, MICROSCOPY, ETC. 



321 



pages, a certain number of these whole pages would be assigned to 

 animal, vegetable, and mineral objects respectively. In this case a 

 botanist, for instance, would probably reserve more pages for plants than 

 for all the rest, and at first he might devote a column, or even a whole 

 page, to such a group as starches, and a like portion of Se to seeds, one 



SA. — Animal. 



Saw-fish, tooth sec 



Scaly epithelium 



Scale insect j 



Seal os (see Wings) 



,, Mosquito 



„ Lepisma 



„ Podura j 



„ Cahbage Butterfly .. 

 „ Tinea 



„ Sole, and in situ 



Trout 



„ Flounder, and in situ 



„ Gold-fish .. 



Eel 



„ Sturgeon, sec 



„ Dog Shark 



Starfish (young) 



„ Madreporic body ' . . 

 „ Pedicellaria 



,, Spine, sees < 



Sarcina 



Sarcoptes 



Scalp, sees 



„ Negro 



Statoblasts of Cristatella 



Sarcoma, Giant-cell 

 „ Spindle-cell 



„ Cystic 



„ Osteo- 



„ Round-cell 



Snails 



Melanotic 

 ; Palates " . 



■•{ 



No. 



233 



272 

 2440-3 

 2364 



273 

 2066 

 2797 

 2090 

 2106 

 2699 



665-6 

 1596 

 1597-8 

 1599 

 1863 

 2096 

 2098 



2005 

 2006 

 2007 

 2527-9 



2030-7 



1495 



1925-6 



2025-6 



2131 



2508 



573 



1496 

 1731 

 1792 

 2804 

 2987 

 2820 

 1073- 



Vegetable. 



Scales (see Hairs) 

 „ of Fern 



" Star Polishing Powder" . . 



Starch, Corn 



„ Potato, and in situ 

 „ Canna, pure and com- 

 mercial 



Wheat 



„ Rice, pure and adul- 

 terated 



„ Arrowroot, and in situ 



Sanguinaria, sec 



" Star Fungus " 



Salicine < 



Santonine 



Stamens (see Flowers) 



„ Lobelia 



„ Salvia 



„ Tradescantia .. 



,, Vaccinium 



„ Deutzia 



„ (Petaloid) j 



„ Willow (to ovaries) . . 



Scalariform Vessels j 



" Santa Monica " deposit 



Mineral. 



Satin Spar 



Sand, Oolitic 



„ Auriferous 



„ Sonorous 



Stalactite i 



Slag from Iron Furnace . . 

 „ Copper Furnace . . 



No. 



207 



2526 



8S6 



887-8 



955-6 

 980 



1125-6 

 1699 



710 



730 

 1536 



855 

 1029 



1367 

 1368 

 1710 

 1839 

 1982 

 2880 

 2173 

 2740-4 



2930 



2885 

 2891 



589 



987 



2820 



2907 



2821 

 1983 

 2256 

 2741 



column of the seed page being given to whole seeds, and another to 

 sections, &c. Subsequently, if too much space proved to have been 

 reserved anywhere, the lower portion of the vacant parts would be filled 

 with other things. By such expedients a rough but most useful working 

 classification of the pages and their contents can be maintained until 

 the book is nearly full. The accompanying sample page of Sa entries of 



