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161
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1966
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161.
Oyster drill (Urosalpinx cinirea). Drawn from shell
162.
Tangle of frayed rope or pieces of cotton waste used in collecting starfish on oyster beds
Drawn from a figure published by the U. S. Fish Commission
163.
Largest of the northern oyster fleet. This vessel, drawing six huge dredges, has a capacity of 8,500 bushels of oysters a day in forty feet of water
164.
Powerful ice-breaking steamer owned at New Haven, Conn.
This vessel is capable of dredging 1,200 bushels of oysters an hour in water forty feet deep. From a report of the Conn. Shell-fish Commission.
165.
New York steam dredging vessel towing the dredges.
From a report of the Forest, Fish and Game Commission
166.
Steam Dredging VEssel Owned at New Haven
From a report of the R. I. Shell-Fish Commission
167.
Steam Dredging Vessel on Long Island Sound
From a report of the R. I. Shell-Fish Commission
168.
Drawing a More Modern Dredge by Steam Power on the New York Oyster Grounds
From a report of the N. Y. Forest, Fish and Game Commission
169.
North Carolina dredging schooner, showing dredge and hand-windlass
From Dr. Caswell Grave in U. S. F. C. report
170.
Tongers and Cullers at Work on Pamlico Sound, N. C.
From the U. S. F. C. Report
171.
Fleet of gasoline tonging boats in Hampton Roads, Va.
From State Board of Fisheries, Va.
172.
Fuigs. 25-27: Objects to which small oysters have attached, from N. Y. Forest Fish and Game Commission
Fig.28: Iron Mast Hoop from Chesapeake Bay covered by thousands of oysters of various sizes
173.
Oyster park or growning ground in Japan
Figures from Professor Bashford Dean in the U. S. F. C. Bulletin
174.
Newly Arranged Collectors of Bamboo on a tidal flat in Japan
175.
Arcachon. Parks with somewhat higher walls containing cases for the growing young
Figures from Professor Bashford Dean, U. S. F. C. Bulletin
176.
Tile Collectors in Place on a Tidal Flat in Auray, France
177.
Development of the American Oyster, after Professor W. K. Brooks
178.
Anatomy of the Oyster
From a model in the Amer. Museum of Nat. Hist.
179.
Anatomy of the round clam or 'little neck.'
From a model in the Amer. Museum of Nat. Hist.
180.
Sugar Bowl, from Up River, Dells of Wisconsin
The Dells of Wisconsin are a wonder, whimsical creation of nature. One may wander through miles of caverns, crevasses, chasms and grottoes, cushioned with multicolored mosses, festooned with ferns, vines and silver birches, made musical with the ripple of tiny cascades, or one may pass by the most astonishing and grotesque rock formations on the deck of an elegant steamer, seeing here an imposing cave, scooped out by the hand of nature, and there a fantastic rugged column left standing by the rushing, grinding waters. The Sugar Bowl with the Inkstand and the nearby Cave of Dark Waters are an especially charming group of wonders. And every one of these landmarks has its legend from the time when the Wisconsin was a great artery of pioneer traffic and travel, and the Dells were the meeting place of trappers, missionaries, traders, adventurers and Indians.
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161
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180
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1966
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page 9 of 99 : (
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