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قراءة كتاب Through a Microscope Something of the Science, Together with many Curious Observations Indoor and Out and Directions for a Home-made Microscope.

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Through a Microscope
Something of the Science, Together with many Curious Observations Indoor and Out and Directions for a Home-made Microscope.

Through a Microscope Something of the Science, Together with many Curious Observations Indoor and Out and Directions for a Home-made Microscope.

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THROUGH A MICROSCOPE

 

SOMETHING OF THE SCIENCE
TOGETHER WITH MANY CURIOUS OBSERVATIONS
INDOOR AND OUT
AND DIRECTIONS FOR A HOME-MADE MICROSCOPE

 

 

BY

SAMUEL WELLS, MARY TREAT AND
FREDERICK LEROY SARGENT

 

 

CHICAGO
The Interstate Publishing Company
BOSTON: 30 FRANKLIN STREET

 

 

Copyright, 1886,
by
Interstate Publishing Company.


CONTENTS.

Chapter.   Page.
I. Through a Microscope 7
II. The Outfit 14
III. The Objects 20
IV. Home Experiments 26
V. Cochituate Water 33
VI. Interesting objects 39
VII. The Brickmaker 46
VIII. The Vorticellas 54
IX. The Utricularia 61
X. Free Swimming Animalcules 70
XI. On the Beach 78
XII. Rizopods 86
XIII. How to See a Dandelion 97
XIV. How to See a Bumble Bee 107
XV. Some Little Things to See 114


PART I

THROUGH A MICROSCOPE

By Samuel Wells


THROUGH A MICROSCOPE

 

I

An object one hundredth of an inch in diameter, or of which it would take one hundred placed side by side to make an inch, is about the smallest thing that can be easily seen by the unassisted eye. Take a piece of card and punch a little hole through it with the point of a small needle, hold it towards a lamp or a window, and you will see the light through it.

FIG. 1.

This hole will be about the size just mentioned, and you will find that you can see it best and most distinctly when you hold it at a certain distance from your eye; and this distance will not be far from ten inches, unless you are near-sighted. Now bring it towards your eye and you will find it becomes blurred and indistinct. You will see by this experiment that you cannot see things distinctly when held too close to your eye, or in other words, that you cannot bring your eye nearer to an object than eight or ten inches and see it well at the same time.

You could see things much smaller than one hundredth of an inch if you could get your eye close enough to them. How can that be done? By a microscope? yes, but what is that? This name comes from two Greek words that mean "to see small things;" and a microscope is an instrument by which your eye can get very close to what you want to see.

To understand this, take out one of your eyes and look at it with the other one. You see that it is a little round camera; most boys have seen a camera and some boys can make one. The simplest way to do that is to take a box, say a cigar box (empty, of course); pull off the cover and fasten in the place of it a piece of ground glass if you have one: if not a piece of white letter paper, oiled, will do; bore a hole in the middle of the bottom with a small gimlet and your camera is done. Point the bottom with the hole in it out of the window, and throw a piece of cloth over your head and over the box, as the photographers do, to shut out the side light, but mind and not cover up the hole; look at the ground glass (or oiled paper) and you will see things upside down. (Fig. 1.) But what has it to do with my eye? you say. Why, your eye is just like it, only round, as in fig. 2. And if you hold a doll or anything else about ten inches in front of the eye you have taken out and look at the inside of it (the eye, not the doll) just as you look at

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