‘Science Gossip’ is born from a collaboration between an Arts and Humanities Research Council project in the UK, called ‘Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the 19th and 21st Centuries’ (ConSciCom) and the Missouri Botanical Garden who are providing content from the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL).
Link to Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) Page
Journal
Magazine of Natural History and Journal of ZoologyYear
1834Volume
v. 7 (1834)Page
Page 223Species
Coordinates: [545, 1204, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "common"=>["", "n/a"], "scientific"=>["Teredo navalis"]Inscription
Coordinates: [164, 695, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "text"=>["The course of the stomach and intestines of Teredo Navalis", "38", "d", "e"]; Coordinates: [143, 213, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "text"=>["a", "e", "l", "f"]; Coordinates: [212, 1216, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "text"=>["e", "* This figure represents the course of the sto-mach and intestines of Teredo navalis, removed from the body. a, The oesophagus; b, the stomach; c, the septum, dividing if into two cavities; d, the aperture by which the two cavities of the stomach communicates; e, the course of the intestine to its termination."]Drawing
Coordinates: [0, 0, 47, 131, 184, 1199], Details: "keywords"=>["Molluscs", "digestive system", "esophagus", "stomach", "septum", "intestine", "intestines", "Teredines", "Intestines", "mollusc", "digestion", "anatomy", "dissection", "zoology", "organs", "digestive organs", "oesophagus", "aperture", "bivalves", "molusc", "shell", "teredo", "œsophagus"]PageID
2351705Classification No
15Image Scale
0.363259