NEW MOTHS

1882 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 169-176
Author(s):  
A. R. Grote
Keyword(s):  

Copablepharon Longipenne, n. s.Eyes naked; tibiæ spinose. Fore wings clear light buff yellow with an outer line merely a succession of minute dots, at usual place of s. t. line. Hind wings fuscons with pale fringes. Head and thorax yellow; pectus and palpi whitish. Beneath the whitish wings are clouded with pale fuscous. A little slighter than Absidum (= Aedophron grandis of Strecker). Montana Coll. B. Neumoegen, Esq.Copablepharon Subflavidens, n. s.Eyes naked; tibiæ armed; fore tibiæ with a very slight claw in addition. Primaries pure light yellow, immaculate. Hind wings pure white, immaculate. Abdomen white; white beneath. Montana, Coll. B. Neumoegen, Esq. Size of the other species. C. Album is also in the collection before me.

1900 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 169-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geo. D. Hulst

Tetralopha formosella, n. sp.Expands 18 mm. Head nearly pure white; thorax white with black scales intermixed; fore wings pure white, sometimes intermixed with black, and with black spot on costa to basal line; basal line black, with three long black teeth on outer side; middle field whitish, costa towards base black; along inner margin and reaching half way across wing, dull brick red, broken by median cross scale ridge, which is of intermingled black and white; outer line white, edged on both sides with blackish; outer field grayish, mixed with black, much darker along costa to apex; hind wings fuscous, much darker along outer edge; beneath fuscous on all wings, an outer lighter cross line showing on all wings.


1878 ◽  
Vol 26 (179-184) ◽  
pp. 353-356

While writing the paper which the Council of the Royal Society has recently done me the honour of accepting for the Philosophical Transactions, the abstract of a lecture delivered by Dr. Burdon Sanderson to the association of Medical Officers of Health was placed in my hands. The teem in which the author’s name is justly held will certainly give eight and currency to the views enunciated in this lecture. Speaking: ferments Dr. Sanderson says :—“ In defining the nature of fermentition we are in a dilemma, out of which there is no escape except by compromise. A. ferment is not an organism, because it has no structure. It is not a chemical body, because when it acts upon other bodies it maintains its own molecular integrity. On the whole, it resembles an organism such more than it resembles a chemical body, for its characteristic behaviour is such as, if it had a structure, would prove it to be living. Ten years ago the opponents of spontaneous generation were called Pansperusts, because it was supposed that in the so-called generation equivoca, in very case in which Bacteria appeared to spring out of nothing, the result as referable to the influence of unseen but actually existing germs. The assearches of the last few years have carried us beyond this stage. . . . the outer line of defence, represented by the aphoristic expression omne ivum ex ovo , has been for some time abandoned. The ground which the orthodox biologist holds now, as against the heterodox, is not that every bacterium must have been born of another Bacterium, but that every Bacterium must have been born of something which emanated from another bacterium, that something not being assumed to be endowed with structure in the morphological or anatomical sense, but only in the molecular chemical sense. It is admitted by all, even by Professor Tyndall, that, far as structure is concerned, the germinal or life-producing matter out which Bacteria originate exhibits no characters which, can be appreciated by the microscope; and other researches have proved that the Seminal matter is capable of resisting destructive influences, particularly those of high temperature, which are absolutely fatal to the Bacteria themselves. Germs have given place to things which are ultramicr scopical—to molecular aggregates—of which all we can say is, what we have already said about the ferments, that they occupy the border between living and non-living things.” As directed against “ germs ” the argument that the “ germinal matter is capable of resisting destructive influences which are fatal to the themselves, will, I think, be found on consideration to lack validity Nobody is better acquainted than Dr. Sanderson with the two forms under which the contagium of splenic fever appears. He knows that the one fugitive and readily destroyed, the other persistent and destroyed will difficulty. Now the recent researches of Koch, which have been verified by Cohn, prove conclusively that the difference here referred to is bast upon the fact that the fugitive contagium is the developed organism Bacillus anthracis, while the persistent contagium is the spore of tin organism. Dallinger’s excellent observations also establish a difference between the death-temperatures of monad germs and of adult monads while I need not do more than refer to the forthcoming Part of till Philosophical Transactions for illustrations of the extraordinary differences of the same nature which my recent researches have brought to light.


1875 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 221-226
Author(s):  
A. R. Grote
Keyword(s):  

♂ . A small frail form with ciliate antennae no ocelli, and long, dependent palpi, their second joint thickly squamous. Fore wings grayish white, with their inner line black, fine, angulated. Outer line denticulate, followed by a pure white shade. A pure white shade in the place of the subterminal. Hind wings dusty white. Beneath the fore wings are pale fuscous, immaculate; hind wings whitish with a discal dot. Expanse 16 m.m. Canada, Mr. Saunders. This species differs decidely from the N. Am. species described by prof. Zeller; I do not find descriptions of N. Am. species in any other author.


Author(s):  
L. J. Spencer

The mining village of New Brancepeth, in the parish of Brandon and Byshottles, is situated in the Durham coalfield at a distance of four miles to the west of the city of Durham. One of the faults which intersect the sandstones, shales, and coal-seams (the Harvey, Busty, and Brockwell seams) of the Coal Measures at this place has, at its eastern end, an east to west direction with a downthrow of 120 feet and a hade of 20° to the south. Along this portion of its course the fault is of the nature of a fissure-vein, with a width varying from a few inches to 16 feet. The material filling the vein consists mainly of barytes. In places, especially where the walls of the vein are of sandstone, the pure white, massive barytes extends throughout from one sharply-defined cheek to the other.


i-Perception ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 204166952092904
Author(s):  
Stuart Anstis ◽  
Grace Hong ◽  
Alan Ho

A test cross that flickers between light yellow and dark blue at 5 to 8Hz looks apparently yellow on a dark gray surround and apparently blue on a light gray surround ( flicker augmented contrast). The achromatic surround cannot be inducing the perceived colors. Instead, the visual system selects the more salient apparent color with the higher Michelson contrast. The same is true for dichoptic vision. When one eye views a steady, light yellow cross and the other eye views a congruent steady dark blue cross, the binocular combination of colors looks apparently yellow on a dark gray surround and apparently blue on a light gray surround. Thus, when competing stimuli are distributed over time (flicker) or space (dichoptic vision), the visual system overweights the stimulus with the higher contrast. To see objects clearly, we accept the best view of any object and downplay inferior alternatives.


Zootaxa ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 1071 (1) ◽  
pp. 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOSÉ H. LEAL ◽  
M. G. HARASEWYCH

A new deep-sea species of Volutidae in the genus Tractolira is named from material collected by the United States Antarctic Program in and around the Ross Sea, eastern Antarctica, and from one locality in the Subantarctic region. Tractolira delli new species is most similar to T. sparta Dall, 1896, from which it differs in having a relatively wider shell, less prominent spiral sculpture, with narrower threads, and by the absence of strong axial ribs at least on the first three teleoconch whorls. The other Antarctic congener, Tractolira germonae, has a thicker, dark-brown periostracum (instead of a thin, light-yellow one), a proportionally smaller inductura, and lacks surface sculpture.


1988 ◽  
Vol 62 (03) ◽  
pp. 411-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin W. Stearn

Stromatoporoids are the principal framebuilding organisms in the patch reef that is part of the reservoir of the Normandville field. The reef is 10 m thick and 1.5 km2in area and demonstrates that stromatoporoids retained their ability to build reefal edifices into Famennian time despite the biotic crisis at the close of Frasnian time. The fauna is dominated by labechiids but includes three non-labechiid species. The most abundant species isStylostroma sinense(Dong) butLabechia palliseriStearn is also common. Both these species are highly variable and are described in terms of multiple phases that occur in a single skeleton. The other species described areClathrostromacf.C. jukkenseYavorsky,Gerronostromasp. (a columnar species), andStromatoporasp. The fauna belongs in Famennian/Strunian assemblage 2 as defined by Stearn et al. (1988).


1967 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 207-244
Author(s):  
R. P. Kraft

(Ed. note:Encouraged by the success of the more informal approach in Christy's presentation, we tried an even more extreme experiment in this session, I-D. In essence, Kraft held the floor continuously all morning, and for the hour and a half afternoon session, serving as a combined Summary-Introductory speaker and a marathon-moderator of a running discussion on the line spectrum of cepheids. There was almost continuous interruption of his presentation; and most points raised from the floor were followed through in detail, no matter how digressive to the main presentation. This approach turned out to be much too extreme. It is wearing on the speaker, and the other members of the symposium feel more like an audience and less like participants in a dissective discussion. Because Kraft presented a compendious collection of empirical information, and, based on it, an exceedingly novel series of suggestions on the cepheid problem, these defects were probably aggravated by the first and alleviated by the second. I am much indebted to Kraft for working with me on a preliminary editing, to try to delete the side-excursions and to retain coherence about the main points. As usual, however, all responsibility for defects in final editing is wholly my own.)


1967 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 177-206
Author(s):  
J. B. Oke ◽  
C. A. Whitney

Pecker:The topic to be considered today is the continuous spectrum of certain stars, whose variability we attribute to a pulsation of some part of their structure. Obviously, this continuous spectrum provides a test of the pulsation theory to the extent that the continuum is completely and accurately observed and that we can analyse it to infer the structure of the star producing it. The continuum is one of the two possible spectral observations; the other is the line spectrum. It is obvious that from studies of the continuum alone, we obtain no direct information on the velocity fields in the star. We obtain information only on the thermodynamic structure of the photospheric layers of these stars–the photospheric layers being defined as those from which the observed continuum directly arises. So the problems arising in a study of the continuum are of two general kinds: completeness of observation, and adequacy of diagnostic interpretation. I will make a few comments on these, then turn the meeting over to Oke and Whitney.


1966 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 337
Author(s):  
W. Iwanowska

A new 24-inch/36-inch//3 Schmidt telescope, made by C. Zeiss, Jena, has been installed since 30 August 1962, at the N. Copernicus University Observatory in Toruń. It is equipped with two objective prisms, used separately, one of crown the other of flint glass, each of 5° refracting angle, giving dispersions of 560Å/mm and 250Å/ mm respectively.


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