A Slide Heater for Clearing Minute Insect Specimens

1952 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-63
Author(s):  
A. R. Graham

The use of potassium hydroxide solutions for clearing minute insect specimens, or portions of large ones, is a well-known and widely used procedure. Extreme care, however, is necessary to provide rapidly the exact degree of transparency in the subject. To provide for these requirements an economical heater was designed to warm a micro-culture slide bearing a few drops of clearing solution. The specimen is immersed in the cold solution on the slide, and the slide is then placed on the heater. The requisite amount of current is supplied to the heating element and clearing of the specimen to the exact degree desired can be obtained in a short time while the process is observed through a binocular dissecting microscope.

1874 ◽  
Vol 164 ◽  
pp. 83-103 ◽  

At a very early period of the investigation on the action of electricity upon oxygen, which formed the subject of my previous memoir, the idea occurred to me that although but a small and limited proportion of the total oxygen passed through the induction-tube was converted into ozone (which proportion could not be exceeded by any modification I had been able to effect in the conditions of the experiment), it might be practicable to replace that portion of the oxygen which was unaffected by the action of electricity by an indifferent gas, and thus effect the total conversion of oxygen into ozone, or even the actual isolation of the ozone by the subsequent removal of the gas by which it was diluted. Thus, for example, by the passage of 100 cub. centims. of oxygen through the induction-tube, a gas can readily be obtained of which the iodinetitre is 5 cub. centims. This corresponds, according to my previous experiments, to an absorption by hyposulphite of soda of 10 cub. centims. of a gas containing in that space the matter of 15 cub. centims. of oxygen. If, therefore, we were to mix 15 cub. centims. of oxygen with 85 cub. centims. of an indifferent gas which should be unaffected by the action of the electricity, and pass the mixed gases through the induction-tube (assuming the same proportion of ozone to be still formed as in the case of the passage through the tube of pure oxygen), the total amount of oxygen in the gas would be con­verted into ozone, and be removed in that form by passing the gas though a solution of hyposulphite of soda. With the view of testing this idea by a critical experiment, I passed such a mixture of carbonic-acid gas and oxygen through the induction-tube. The formation of ozone was at once apparent, and was rendered evident by the action of the gas issuing from the induction-tube upon a neutral solution of iodide of potassium. But on examining the composition of the gas I soon discovered that the proportion of oxygen in it had actually increased, owing to the decomposition in the induction-tube of the carbonic-acid gas into oxygen and carbonic oxide. I did not publish this experiment; but the apparatus by which it was effected long stood upon my laboratory table, and, together with the results, has repeatedly been explained by me to other chemists. Since that time, as appears from the pages of the 'Comptes Rendus,’ this decomposition of carbonic-acid gas under the influence of electricity has been cited as a novel discovery. So far as the bare fact of the decomposition of carbonic-acid gas, under the influence of electricity, in the induction-tube into oxygen and carbonic oxide is concerned, the results of this experiment might, even at the time it was made by me, have reasonably been anticipated, not only from the circumstance that carbonic-acid gas is, as is well known, decomposed by the passage of the electric spark, but also that Plücker had already observed (although I was unaware of the observation) that when the electric discharge was passed through rarefied carbonic-acid gas, the spectrum of the gas after a short time changed into the spectrum of carbonic oxide, and from this circumstance had inferred the decomposition of the gas. But the observations of this eminent investigator were made under very different circumstances to mine; and he was not cognizant of the forma­tion of ozone, which was the critical point of my experiment, and a result which could not have been ascertained by his method of observation. The experiment having failed in its immediate object was for a time laid aside by me. Subsequently, however, I reverted to it under a somewhat modified form. It occurred to me, instead of mixing oxygen with carbonic acid, to endeavour to generate in the very atmosphere of the carbonic acid itself, by the electric decomposition of the gas, the requisite amount of oxygen. I passed, therefore, pure and dry carbonic acid through the induction-tube, and examined the gases resulting from its decomposition, estimating the ozone by the titre of the gas, and also the oxygen and carbonic oxide formed. This examination at once convinced me of the importance of the experiment in reference to the problem of the isolation of ozone, and became the foundation of the following research, which has gradually been extended in more than one direction.


1886 ◽  
Vol 3 (9) ◽  
pp. 406-408
Author(s):  
S. A. Adamson

Only a short time since there was discovered in the Lower Coalmeasures at Idle, a magnificent specimen of Megalichthys Hibberti; and now, at Clayton, near Bradford, has been found one of the grandest examples yet seen of a fossil Sigillaria tree. It was in the Fall Top Quarry, at Clayton, worked by Messrs. Murgatroyd and Sons, that this remarkable fossil was discovered, and these gentlemen deserve the highest praise from all geologists for the skill and extreme care with which they have bared the fossil, and also for their kindness in allowing it to be inspected. This quarry is not far from the edge of a bold escarpment overlooking the Thornton Valley, and the well-known Elland Flagstone is worked here for landings, flags, etc. Between the Better-Bed-Coal and the Flagstone there is a great thickness of sandstones, shales, etc., of various characters, and it was in these measures that the fossil tree was discovered about 12 feet below the surface. The sandstones just referred to are of little commercial value, many being irregularly bedded, and others very perishable in their nature; the better kinds are used for rough walling, the remainder being merely rubbish to fill up other excavations. The marketable flagstone is at a considerable depth in this quarry, and blasting operations have to be carried on to remove rapidly the overlying strata. After one of these explosions, Messrs. Murgatroyd observed part of a large fossil tree exposed, and, profiting by their knowledge of geology (which, by the work of the Yorkshire Geological Society and also of the Leeds Geological Association, is rapidly spreading throughout the entire county), they immediately suspended further operations, and, instead, gave orders to their workmen to carefully bare the remainder of the roots.


Author(s):  
Anna BOROWIAK

Given the fact that we live in the era where the pace of life is constantly speeding up, it is no surprise that ‘the economy of language’ - meaning the efficient usage of language in order to achieve the maximum effect for the minimum effort has become so important in everyday life. Using abbreviated forms of different kinds is supposed to help us to economize continuously insufficient amount of time. Their overuse, however, can hamper effective communication and bring the adverse effect from what the speaker’s intention was – namely to communicate the message clearly and unambiguously and receive a response to it in a short time. Incomprehension or misunderstanding of the message leads, in fact, to unnecessarily prolonging the conversation since it requires asking additional questions in order to explain what is unclear to the listener. Reduced forms used mainly in spoken Korean can largely be divided into lexical and grammatical ones. Lexical shortenings of different kinds such as acronyms, blends, clippings etc. although rarely and rather briefly discussed by Korean linguists and basically excluded from the debate on word-formation issues definitely deserve much more attention taking into account their extensive usage. As for grammatical abbreviations, despite its frequent occurrence, the subject is not that often taken up and discussed either. The aim of this article is to present some characteristic properties of grammatical abbreviations used mainly in spoken Korean. The reduced forms in question will be divided into three categories namely - particles, endings and grammatical constructions and discussed separately. This article however focuses only on those abbreviated forms, which means leaving the subject of particle or word ellipsis beyond its scope.


1862 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 455-472
Keyword(s):  

Gentlemen, The peculiar circumstances under which the Council thought fit to propose me for re-election as President at the last Anniversary are, I apprehend, sufficiently known to make it unnecessary for me to trouble you with any observations on the subject. There was then reason to believe that in a short time I should be in that state which would enable me to resume all the duties of my office. Unfortunately those expectations were not realized; and you will, I am sure, easily conceive how deep was the disappointment to myself, that I should have been prevented, during the whole of the last session, from being present at our Meetings.


2020 ◽  
pp. 92-104
Author(s):  
Gershon Kurizki ◽  
Goren Gordon

Henry scores a surprise win over Eve thanks to his quantum rocket that is powered by a quantum-chargeable battery. This gadget is subject to the time–energy uncertainty relation that may result in the battery having more energy than expected. This occurs if an energy measurement within a short time “collapses” the battery randomly to the highest energy state. Intriguingly, time is not a quantum observable. This raises the question that was hotly debated by Bohr and Einstein: how can time be uncertain and affect the energy uncertainty? The more general question is: what is the meaning of time, energy and their uncertainty in physics and in human experience? Attempts to define time have been the subject of philosophical controversy throughout millennia. The appendix to this chapter introduces the Schrödinger equation that governs the dynamics of quantum systems and their time–energy uncertainty.


2015 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 331-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Anthony

J. Rodney Quayle was an outstanding microbial biochemist whose early training in pure chemistry was coupled with rigorous enzymology and experience in the relatively new techniques of using radioactive 14 C compounds in the study of metabolic pathways. These he used to investigate and elucidate the pathways of carbon assimilation during microbial growth on compounds with a single carbon atom such as methane and methanol. When he started, little was known about these organisms (methylotrophs), which, largely as a result of his own work and the work inspired by him, have formed the subject of regular international symposia over a period of more than 40 years. After a short time working in Melvin Calvin’s laboratory in California and a very fruitful period in Hans Krebs’s Unit for Research in Cell Metabolism in the University of Oxford he moved for the next 20 years to the University of Sheffield, after which he became a highly successful and popular Vice-Chancellor at the University of Bath. His rigorous approach to his subject, his generosity and inspiration made him a much revered and much loved father figure to generations of microbial biochemists.


1880 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 474-495
Author(s):  
Claude Reignier Conder
Keyword(s):  

The subject on which I have the honour of addressing you this evening is one far more complicated and difficult than that of the paper which I read to the Royal Society of Edinburgh some short time since. We have to deal, not with the surface of a country and the position of places of which the ancient names are still extant, but with a ruined city, buried to a depth of from 30 to 50 feet in rubbish on which modern buildings having been erected, and with a topography in which, there is scarcely a single important point which has not been controverted by one or more well-known writers.


1985 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Pierre Protzen

Inca construction techniques have long been the subject of wild speculation. Investigations of ancient quarry sites and of numerous cut-stone walls reveal that the amazing Inca constructions were built with very simple means. Stones were selected out of rock falls or just broken out of a rock face with pry-bars. If the blocks needed to be parted, big hammerstones were used to split them. To dress the stones smaller hammerstones were used to pound them until they had the desired shape. The fitting of one stone to another was done by cutting the already laid stones to receive the next ones in a trial-and-error fashion. Experiments show that with this process stones can be mined, cut, dressed, and fit with little effort and in a short time.


2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 31-39
Author(s):  
Robert Tittler

Interest in few areas of English history has developed as fast in the last decade as in the pre-industrial urban setting. Where there were few serious academics at work and little instruction at the undergraduate level, we now have an entire — and very impressive — Open University course on the field, and the genre of urban case studies seems to have replaced the shire as favoured ground for English doctoral theses in history. Much of the recent work on pre-industrial urban problems continues to probe questions raised a decade or more ago. These studies, which deal with political factionalism, constitutional development, town-crown relations and similar problems, must not be dismissed as obsolete; the enormous diversity of the subject itself necessitates a great number of case studies before generalizations may be obtained. Equally important and perhaps more innovative in method are those studies of fresher conceptualization, typically more interdisciplinary in approach and more inclined towards quantitative methodology. These rely heavily on the work of the anthropologist, the demographer and geographer and have in a short time greatly expanded the bounds of the historian of the pre-industrial town and city.


1958 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 247-250
Author(s):  
Harold Karbal

Last year as the culminating activity of the Math Club we decided to hold a math exposition. Actually the spark had come from the Science Fair held in Detroit a short time ago. The club members needed some way to show what they had learned and done. The Math Club was composed of children with high mental ability, decided competence in arithmetic as evidenced on the Iowa tests, and proven interest in the subject, since they needed to be recommended by their teachers. The club members had studied in their weekly meetings number systems with base two and five and were currently learning to usc the slide rule.


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