. Elements of applied microscopy. A text-book for beginners. Microscopy. 42 ELEMENTS OF APPLIED MICROSCOPY. ing the glass. A narrow, even ring may thus be. pro- duced, and, by a gradual process of upbuilding, one of considerable depth. If an object of greater thickness is to be examined, a ring of brass or hard rubber may be attached to the slide by a ring of cement similarly ap- plied. When the cell has become so dry that there is no dan- ger of the cement running, the object to be mounted may be placed within it or attached to the under surface of a. Fig. 24.—^TuKNTABLE. (After Gage.) cover-


. Elements of applied microscopy. A text-book for beginners. Microscopy. 42 ELEMENTS OF APPLIED MICROSCOPY. ing the glass. A narrow, even ring may thus be. pro- duced, and, by a gradual process of upbuilding, one of considerable depth. If an object of greater thickness is to be examined, a ring of brass or hard rubber may be attached to the slide by a ring of cement similarly ap- plied. When the cell has become so dry that there is no dan- ger of the cement running, the object to be mounted may be placed within it or attached to the under surface of a. Fig. 24.—^TuKNTABLE. (After Gage.) cover-sKp. The cover is then pressed gently down on the ring of cement so that contact is complete all the way round, and, after placing the slide on the tmrntable once more, a fresh ring of cement is applied partly on the edge of the cover and partly on .the slide. When thus prepared the dry mount is completed and should be labelled on the left-hand end of the slide, the nature of the specirnen, the treatment to which it has been subjected, the mounting medium, and the date being indicated. S. Mounting in Glycerin Media. — Glycerin mounts, although not easy to make and less permanent than bal-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Winslow, C. -E. A. (Charles-Edward Amory), 1877-1957. New York, J. Wiley; London, Chapman & Hall


Size: 2651px × 942px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookautho, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectmicroscopy