FIG. 5 in From folkloric belief to fishery bycatch: contrasting cryptozoological and euhemeristic interpretations of Australian sea serpents
FIG. 5. — Pre-plastic maritime material forming the humps of the long tails of putative sea serpents. A, B, blown-glass balls used as floats from the nineteenth-century; C, D, nineteenth-century cork floats; E, F, wooden casks of the type often used as floats on fishing nets. Photos credits: R. Fran...
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Format: | Still Image |
Language: | unknown |
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Zenodo
2022
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Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6334361 https://zenodo.org/record/6334361 |
Summary: | FIG. 5. — Pre-plastic maritime material forming the humps of the long tails of putative sea serpents. A, B, blown-glass balls used as floats from the nineteenth-century; C, D, nineteenth-century cork floats; E, F, wooden casks of the type often used as floats on fishing nets. Photos credits: R. France (taken at the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic, Lunenburg, Nova Scotia [A, D]; the Battle Harbour National Historic District, Battle Harbour, Newfoundland and Labrador [E, F]); the Mystic Seaport Museum Archive and Collections, Mystic, Connecticut (B, C). : Published as part of France, Robert, 2022, From folkloric belief to fishery bycatch: contrasting cryptozoological and euhemeristic interpretations of Australian sea serpents, pp. 101-115 in Anthropozoologica 57 (3) on page 109, DOI: 10.5252/anthropozoologica2022v57a3, http://zenodo.org/record/6334353 |
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