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EH88202575    Note:    1839--1882   Charles Darwin's Address Book.   Text   Image
Valentine Wood (1798-1880), geologist. See Wood to Darwin 5 June 1846. Correspondence vol. 3. Wild Esq Clerk of Peace Maidstone.— Henry Atkinson Wildes (b.1792), solicitor. A clerk of the peace, in England and Wales, recorded the quarter sessions and advised Justices of the Peace. Not otherwise found in any Darwin document. See Charles Darwin: Justice of the peace. The complete records (1857-1882). (2021). PDF Wetherell N.T. Esq. Highgate Nathaniel Thomas Wetherell (1800-1875), surgeon and geologist
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
, fig. 16,) has described Pollicipes ornatissimus; the valve figured is a carina, I believe, of Scalpellum maximum. POLLICIPES . J. Sowerby. Geolog. Transact. 2d series, vol. v, pl. ix, fig. 2. The specimens here figured by Mr. Sowerby, were found by Mr. Wetherell in a deep well in the London Clay, at Hampstead, together with portions of Scalpellum quadratum. The specimens are in a broken condition, and have been kindly lent me by Mr. Wetherell: they consist of some fragments of terga, and I believe
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
Thaliella . . . . . . . 15 Trigonellites . . . . . . 3 Tubicinella fossil . . . . . 5 Valves, nomenclature of . . . . 9 Verruca fossil in the chalk . . . . 5 Wetherell, Mr., on a well at Hampstead . . 22 Xiphidium, Genus . . . . . 15 angustum . . . . . 37 quadratum . . . . . 22 maximum . . . . . 61 [page break
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
margin almost rounded. Upper latera five-sided, smooth. Eocene Tertiary. Bognor; Hampstead. Mus. S. Wood, F. Edwards, N. Wetherell. My materials consist of a slab of rock, belonging to Mr. S. Wood, almost made up of the valves of this species, of two beautiful specimens in Mr. F. Edwards's collection, and of some excellent drawings from Mr. Dixon's specimens by Mr. James de C. Sowerby, in the Mineral Conchology.1 The valves in several of these specimens are nearly in their proper positions, though
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
several months, his unrivalled collection of Cirripedia from the Upper Chalk of Norwich, the fruit of twenty years' labour. Mr. Bowerbank has given me the freest use of his fine collection, rich in specimens from the Gault. Mr. Wetherell placed in my hands his beautiful and unique specimen of Loricula pulchella, and other species. Professor Buckman sent me, of his own accord, a fine series of the valves of Pollicipes ooliticus, the most ancient Cirripede as yet known, discovered and named by him
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
pointed; upper latera five sided, with two slight ridges extending from the apex to the basal margin. Upper Chalk. Norwich; Northfleet, Kent. Mus. Fitch, J. de C. Sowerby, Wetherell. General Remarks. My materials consist of two specimens, belonging to Mr. Fitch, most kindly lent me for examination; in which, taken together, the scuta, terga, carina, upper and carinal latera, are seen almost in their proper places. In Mr. J. Sowerby's collection there is a single scutum, also, from Norwich. From
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
, Norfolk. Lower Chalk, Hanover, according to Roemer. Pläner (Chalk-marl), Sarstedt, near Hildesheim, Mus. Roemer. Upper Chalk, Northfleet and Gravesend, Kent. Chalk Detritus, Charing, Kent. Maëstricht Formation, Scania ? Mus. Flower, Wetherell, Harris, Univers. Copenhagen, Geolog. Soc., and Bowerbank. General remarks. My materials consist of several scuta, in Mr. Flower's collection from Stoke Ferry, together with some carinæ, and a rostrum of apparently the same species; of a single scutum from
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F342.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851. A monograph on the fossil Lepadidae, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
the opposite side, making altogether ten rows. The base is sharply pointed, down to which the full complement of scales extends. In each row 1 Since Mr. Sowerby made his description, Mr. Wetherell has cleared away more of the Chalk, thus exposing a row of small scales at the carinal end of the peduncle, not seen by Mr. Sowerby. [page] 83 LORICULA
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F880.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1875. The variation of animals and plants under domestication. London: John Murray. 2d ed. vol. 1.   Text   Image   PDF
l'Espèce,' tom. ii., 1859, p. 299. 56 Nevertheless Mr. Wetherell states, 'Nature,' Dec. 1870, p. 168, that when he visited fifteen years ago the Sioux Indians, he was informed by a physician, who has passed much of his time with these tribes, that sometimes a child was born with these marks. This was confirmed by the U.S. Government Indian Agent. [page] 46
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F880.2    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1875. The variation of animals and plants under domestication. London: John Murray. 2d ed. vol. 2.   Text   Image   PDF
young pigs in, i. 80. WESTWOOD, J. O., on peloric flowers of Calceolaria, ii. 338. WETHERELL, Mr., on inheritance of mutilations, i. 466. WHATELY, Archbishop, on grafting early and late thorns, i. 386. WHEAT, specific unity or diversity of, i. 329, 330, 334, 335; Hasora, i. 335; presence or absence of barbs in, i. 331; Godron on variations in, ibid.; varieties of, i. 331, 332; effects of soil and climate on, i. 333; deterioration of, i. 334; crossing of varieties of, ibid., ii. 74, 83, 110; in the
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F913.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1879. De la variation des animaux et des plantes à l'état domestique. Traduit sur la seconde édition anglaise par Ed. Barbier; préface de Carl Vogt. Paris: C. Reinwald et Cie. vol. 1.   Text   Image   PDF
trace de sang juif dans la famille de ces deux sœurs. Les mahométans pratiquent la circoncision, mais 66 De l'Espèce, t. II, 18S9, p. 299. 66 Néanmoins M. Wetherell constate, Salure, déc. 1870, p. 168, que lors d'une visite qu il a faite aux Indiens Sioux, on médecin, qni a passé de nombreuses années au milieu de ces tribus, lui a affirmé que certains enfants naissent parfois avec ces marques sur le corps. Cette assertion est confirmée par le Directeur des affaires indiennes aux Etats Unis. 57
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