Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878

The monthly evening meeting of the Society was held on Tuesday, the 9th July, His Excellency the Governor in the chair. -The Secretary read a paper by Mrs. Charles Meredith, descriptive of the form and character of several specimens of the sea Annelida, or "sea worms" found in the kelp at...

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Main Author: Royal Society of Tasmania
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1878
Subjects:
VDL
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/1/1878-proceedings-for_July.pdf
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spelling ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:15398 2023-05-15T16:53:03+02:00 Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878 Royal Society of Tasmania 1878 application/pdf https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/ https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/1/1878-proceedings-for_July.pdf en eng https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/1/1878-proceedings-for_July.pdf Royal Society of Tasmania, 1878 , 'Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878' , Papers & Proceedings and Report of the Royal Society of Tasmania , pp. 10-11 . cc_utas Royal Society of Tasmania Van Diemens Land VDL Hobart Town natural sciences proceedings records Article NonPeerReviewed 1878 ftunivtasmania 2020-05-30T07:29:12Z The monthly evening meeting of the Society was held on Tuesday, the 9th July, His Excellency the Governor in the chair. -The Secretary read a paper by Mrs. Charles Meredith, descriptive of the form and character of several specimens of the sea Annelida, or "sea worms" found in the kelp at Prossers' bay, and representative of the families of Nereididele, Serpulidae and Terebellidae. Generically they are to be classed under Nereis, Sabella, and Terebella, but it is probable that as to species they are new to science. All the species referred to in the paper were depicted by the writer in beautifully executed water-colour drawings. -Mr. T. Stephens read "Notes on a visit to the Hot Spring near South Port in 1877." -His Excellency thought Mr. Stephens' suggestion of decomposing pryites being the source of heat in this case, was probably correct, but he was not certain that this could apply to the hot water and mud springs in New Zealand, which extended over a very large area. These springs, which he had visited many years ago, presented some very peculiar features; for instance, an individual seated in one with water at a comfortable temperature, might hold in his hand a net containing vegetables, and, without moving, could cook them by dipping the net in a boiling spring close to him. The deposit between the springs seemed to be a sort of tufa, or a mixture of lime and silex. The formation of the country in the immediate vicinity, appeared to be recent, and as far as he (the Chairman) could recollect there was no rock in situ, though Plutonic and Metamorphic rocks existed in the neighbourhood. -The Secretary remarked as to boiling springs, and similar phenomena that the Yellowstone region of North America threw all the Geysers of Iceland, and the hot water and mud springs of New Zealand, into comparative insignificance. So great were the wonders of this extraordinary region, and so vast was the scale on which they occurred, that the United States Government had wisely reserved it for all future time as a public park and a play-ground for the American Nation. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints Meredith ENVELOPE(67.717,67.717,-71.200,-71.200) New Zealand
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
op_collection_id ftunivtasmania
language English
topic Royal Society of Tasmania
Van Diemens Land
VDL
Hobart Town
natural sciences
proceedings
records
spellingShingle Royal Society of Tasmania
Van Diemens Land
VDL
Hobart Town
natural sciences
proceedings
records
Royal Society of Tasmania
Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878
topic_facet Royal Society of Tasmania
Van Diemens Land
VDL
Hobart Town
natural sciences
proceedings
records
description The monthly evening meeting of the Society was held on Tuesday, the 9th July, His Excellency the Governor in the chair. -The Secretary read a paper by Mrs. Charles Meredith, descriptive of the form and character of several specimens of the sea Annelida, or "sea worms" found in the kelp at Prossers' bay, and representative of the families of Nereididele, Serpulidae and Terebellidae. Generically they are to be classed under Nereis, Sabella, and Terebella, but it is probable that as to species they are new to science. All the species referred to in the paper were depicted by the writer in beautifully executed water-colour drawings. -Mr. T. Stephens read "Notes on a visit to the Hot Spring near South Port in 1877." -His Excellency thought Mr. Stephens' suggestion of decomposing pryites being the source of heat in this case, was probably correct, but he was not certain that this could apply to the hot water and mud springs in New Zealand, which extended over a very large area. These springs, which he had visited many years ago, presented some very peculiar features; for instance, an individual seated in one with water at a comfortable temperature, might hold in his hand a net containing vegetables, and, without moving, could cook them by dipping the net in a boiling spring close to him. The deposit between the springs seemed to be a sort of tufa, or a mixture of lime and silex. The formation of the country in the immediate vicinity, appeared to be recent, and as far as he (the Chairman) could recollect there was no rock in situ, though Plutonic and Metamorphic rocks existed in the neighbourhood. -The Secretary remarked as to boiling springs, and similar phenomena that the Yellowstone region of North America threw all the Geysers of Iceland, and the hot water and mud springs of New Zealand, into comparative insignificance. So great were the wonders of this extraordinary region, and so vast was the scale on which they occurred, that the United States Government had wisely reserved it for all future time as a public park and a play-ground for the American Nation.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Royal Society of Tasmania
author_facet Royal Society of Tasmania
author_sort Royal Society of Tasmania
title Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878
title_short Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878
title_full Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878
title_fullStr Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878
title_full_unstemmed Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878
title_sort proceedings of the royal society for the month of july, 1878
publishDate 1878
url https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/1/1878-proceedings-for_July.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(67.717,67.717,-71.200,-71.200)
geographic Meredith
New Zealand
geographic_facet Meredith
New Zealand
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation https://eprints.utas.edu.au/15398/1/1878-proceedings-for_July.pdf
Royal Society of Tasmania, 1878 , 'Proceedings of the Royal Society for the month of July, 1878' , Papers & Proceedings and Report of the Royal Society of Tasmania , pp. 10-11 .
op_rights cc_utas
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