Study of Colorado protozoa

Object Details

View

Title Information
Study of Colorado protozoa

Name:Personal
Carter, Thomas C.
Role :Text(marcrelator)
creator

Name:Corporate
Education
Role :Text(marcrelator)
sponsor

Name:Corporate
State Teachers College of Colorado
Role :Text(marcrelator)
degree grantor

typeOfResource
text
genre(marcgt)
Thesis
Origin Information Place :Text
Greeley, Colorado

State Teachers College of Colorado
(keyDate="yes")
1921

Language :Text
English

Physical Description
82 leaves

digitized other analog

abstract
The following abstract is taken from the introductory paragraph of the thesis. "To the zoologist, the Protozoa which are found in the fresh and marine waters, rivers, lakes, ponds, drinking water, the air we breathe, in fact, nearly every place, afford an intensely interesting and prolific field for special study. They are capable of changing and adapting themselves to nearly every sort of environment and therefore may be expected to occur in nearly every sort of condition. The Protozoa constitute an important group, not only because of the position they occupy in the scale of animal life, but also because of their economic importance both negative and positive. These tiny animals, because of their unicellular nature, lend themselves much more readily to microscopic study than do the higher forms, which fact makes it possible to study some of the phenomena exhibited by the specialized forms by having a knowledge of the characteristics and behavior of these tiny organisms.”
note
State Teachers College of Colorado is a former name of the University of Northern Colorado.
Subject
Protozoa

Related Item :series

Related Item :thesis(displayLabel="Degree Type")
Master of Arts

Location (usage="primary display")
http://hdl.handle.net/10176/cogru:859

accessCondition:useAndReproduction
No copyright restrictions apply.
Record Information languageOfCataloging :Text(ISO639-2B)
English
:Code(ISO639-2B)
eng