XI.—Notes on some North American Pyrrhotites, and other Minerals containing Nickel

Author(s):  
Henry How

It is a well-known fact that Pyrrhotite, or Magnetic Iron Pryrites, frequently, if not invariably, contains nickel, generally with cobalt in various proportions, amounting together from traces, up to nearly six per cent., and that most of the nickel of commerce is derived from this mineralThe following notes contain in the first place the results of the examination of a few varieties of pyrrhotite, occurring in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the United States, chiefly with reference to presence or amount of nickel and cobalt, and they shew also that remarkable differences exist in the intensity of the magnetism displayed, which ranges from distinct polarity in the mass, down to very iceble attraction by a magnet in the finely powdered state of the mineral, and further, that the most feebly magnetic of the specimens examined is that containing the largest per centage of nickel. The subsequent notes relate to other species from h~ova Scotia and Newfoundland.

1957 ◽  
Vol 89 (12) ◽  
pp. 546-546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Hudon

In July, 1956, a pupa of the imported cabbageworm, Pieris rapae (L.), was found attached to the undersurface of a corn leaf in experimental plots at St. Jean. After the pupa had been incubated at 75°F. for six months, a dipterous parasitic larva emerged and pupated immediately; a tachinid fly emerged two weeks later. The parasite was identified by Mr. J. G. T. Chillcott, Entomology Division, Ottawa, as Phryxe vulgaris (Fall.). P. vulgaris has been reported as a parasite of Pieris rapae, P. brassicae (L.), P. napi (L.), and Vanessa urticae (L.) from many central and northern European countries (Thompson, 1946, pp. 467-469; 1947, p. 598). Aldrich and Webber (1924), Chittenden (1926), and Schaffner and Griswold (1934) reported this parasite from P. rapae in the United States. P. vulgaris has been reported from Canada only on larvae of the armyworm, Pseudaletia unipuncta (Haw.), in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (Gibson, 1915, p. 14).


2020 ◽  
Vol 56 ◽  
pp. 111-145
Author(s):  
Carmen Álvarez-Vázquez

A systematic revision of Alethopteris and Neuralethopteris from upper Namurian and lower Westphalian (Middle Pennsylvanian) strata of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, eastern Canada, has demonstrated the presence of eight species: Alethopteris bertrandii, Alethopteris decurrens, Alethopteris cf. havlenae, Alethopteris urophylla, Alethopteris cf. valida, Neuralethopteris pocahontas, Neuralethopteris schlehanii and Neuralethopteris smithsii. Restudy of the Canadian material has led to new illustrations, observations and refined descriptions of these species. Detailed synonymies focus on records from Canada and the United States. As with other groups reviewed in earlier articles in this series, it is clear that insufficient attention has been paid to material reposited in Canadian institutions in the European literature. The present study emphasizes the similarity of the North American flora with that of western Europe, especially through the synonymies.


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