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1.
Tugboat Harbor Queen, submerged in the Hoquiam River, November 1925
2.
December 7, 1902 Page three
News notes of the army posts
Submerged derelict
Where to worship
3.
Tallulah, Louisiana submerged in floodwater after the Great Mississippi Flood, with a woman drying laundry on a deck at left, citizens rowing through the streets, and the P.P. Williams & Co. Wholesale Grocery building at right, Tallulah, Louisiana, May 24, 1927
4.
Mariposa, a passenger steamer, wrecked and submerged, Strait Island, Alaska, 1918
5.
Princess Kathleen, a passenger steamer, sinking and almost completely submerged near Point Lena, Alaska, 1952
6.
Admiral Watson, an ocean-going passenger steamer, half submerged, n.d.
7.
Remains of partially submerged old forest near Muir Glacier, Alaska, June 1899.
8.
Inner surface of 1" redwood sheathing, submerged 20 months in Pearl Harbor. Martesia striata coming through from outside. Looking through empty burrows, note small openings, through which borers entered. At upper left is seen a strip of tarred ship felt whicch they have penetrated
9.
Sample of 12" x 12" timber submerged in Pearl Harbor. Split surface showing damage by Teredo parksi and Martesia striata, the latter organisms still in place in burrows
10.
Spongilla Flies: Climacia dictyona Needham: 1. Imago, lateral view; 2. Imago, dorsal view; 3. Larva, dorsal view; 4. Pupal cases, in situ; 5. One of the same....showing the hexagonal meshes of the outer covering.
Sisyra ambrata Needham: 6. Imago, lateral view; 7. Imago, dorsal view; 8. Two newly formed pupae, lateral and ventral views; 9. Macronychus glabratus Say (Coleoptera : Parnidae) : an associate of the sponge fly larvae, on submerged timbers; 10. Fresh-water sponges (Spongilla ? fragilis Leidy) in situ, witht he sponge fly larvae crawling about over them; 11. Two pupal cases of S. umbrata, showing the closely woven outer covering....
11.
One of the propagation baskets with the bottom still submerged and photographed from directly above. Owing to disturbance of the water supply the young mussels, as shown by their trails, have migrated considerably. Such migrations apparently do not occur under ordinary conditions
12.
Location of known 'fishing grounds,' mostly submerged coral reefs, offshore from the region of Beaufort, N.C. (From Radcliffe, 1914) The largest of these, the 'Fishing Grounds,' is larger than shown here, extending from New River Inlet and probably including Station No.1. Algae referred to as coming from the coral reef offshore were gathered from this reef
13.
Fishing apparatus for the artificial culture of mussels, consisting of a double frame formed of beams, on which are fixed, by the aid of hooks, either vertically or horizontally, as the case requires, planks covered with mussels. The horizontal planks, submerged from 15 to 20 centimeters, receive the seed-beds of very young mussels, which attach themselves there, and allow the suspension of these seed-bed planks vertically.
14.
Rampart Rapids, showing rock island partially submerged in midstream. At times of high water this island is entirely under water and is a dangerous menace in navigation
15.
Potamogeton amplifolius (7) rootstock; Potamogeton heterophyllus (8); Potamogeton heterophyllus (9-12)
7, rootstock; 8, submerged plant; 9, rootstock not tuberous; 10, tuberous rootstock; 11, tuberous rootstock
16.
Kern Lake from near its head; shows stumps of submerged trees
17.
Typographic map of Monterey Bay, showing submerged valley and probable ancient courses of Pajaro, San Lorenzo, and Salinas Rivers
18.
One of the propagation baskets with the bottom still submerged and photographed from directly above. Owing to disturbance of the water supply the young mussels, as shown by their trails, have migrated considerably. Such migrations apparently do not occur
19.
Photographs Taken with Camera Submerged
20.
Photographs Taken with Camera Submerged
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