Abstract
MR. GREGORY has, I fear, slightly mistaken the meaning of my remarks, which were intended rather to excuse than to blame him. The specimen of Eozoon collected by the late Mr. Vennor at Tudor was figured in connection with my paper of 1867 as a type specimen, in so far as macroscopical characters are concerned; but it does not follow that slices from specimens less perfect in that respect, and now in my collection, may not be more instructive as showing minute structures. I may refer in this connection to the three specimens from Tudor and Madoc (Madoc being in the same formation with Tudor) figured by Dr. Carpenter in our original paper in the Journal of the Geological Society, vol. xxiii., pl. xii., Fig. 1. If anyone will take the trouble to compare these with the figures in Mr. Gregory's paper in the same Journal, vol. xvii., he will have a singular and impressive illustration of the different ways in which things supposed to be the same may appear to observers of different types.
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DAWSON, J. Eozoon. Nature 45, 606 (1892). https://doi.org/10.1038/045606a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/045606a0
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