Go to National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa
Volume 83, 1955-56

List of Plates

Caption Plate number
Fig. 1.—Station 4. Bastion Reet [ unclear: ] engulfed by a dense growth of Pomatoceros coeruleus.
Fig. 2.—Station 5. St. Leonards Point: Rock-boring community of Pholadidea spp. Anchomasa similis and Lathophaga truncata burrowing into soft Wartemata Sandstone
Plate 1
Fig. 1.—Long Bay: East Coast Mainland Ecklonia radiata vai richardiana and Carpophyllum maschalocarpum with laminae cast over exposed, sublittoral fringe rocks in the direction of on shore waves.
Fig. 2.—Station 25. Pohutukawa Flat. Little Barrier Island: Irregular zonation patterns on boulders in the lithothamnia and algal turf belts Nemastoma oligarthra appears as black dots at the top left. Cellana sp. and young Codium adhaerens var contolutum are above the mixed algal truf.
Plate 2
Fig. 1.—Station 29. Sugar Loat Rocks: Lessonia tarregata laminae exposed at E.L.W.S. Xiphophora chondrophylla vat minus is in the foreground.
Fig. 2.—Station 33. Needles Point, N. E. Great Barriel Island: Zonation in a north face under conditions of maximum wave exposure for the Haraki Gulf region. Sparse growth of Durrillea [ unclear: ] above Carpophyllum clongatum.
Plate 3
Fig. 1—Station 21. Shag Rock Supralittoral zone, midlittoral zone and sublittoral fringe showing grey and yellow, black. barnacle and brown algal belts.
Photo by R. M. [ unclear: ]
Fig. 2—Miners Head. Northwest Great Barrier Island. Midlittoral marked by a regular white ribbon. of Chamaespipho [ unclear: ] and Elminius [ unclear: ] above and lithothamina below.
Plate 4
Fig. 1.—An mosare of Coverham district photographed at about 16,000ft. Topography Langes from 900ft to 3,500ft Scale and yard grid are only approximately correct River marked by solid lines traeks by dotted lines. and mam drainage divides by dash dot lines Note trench eaused In Recet faulting north and east of the words “Civer Stream. Plate 5
[ unclear: ] 11—A [ unclear: ] growing on [ unclear: ] rocks at Portobello [ unclear: ] Biological [ unclear: ] 221053 showing the typical dusters of adult plants Photograph by Dr. E. J. Bath [ unclear: ] B. [ unclear: ] a belt just above the [ unclear: ] chondrophylla at [ unclear: ] Beach, [ unclear: ] Island 19254 The [ unclear: ] dumps [ unclear: ] again be seen Plate 6
Plate 12—Photomierographs of living plants in seawater of three different cultures of [ unclear: ] 18 22 and 45 days old respectively Photographed 45 52 A 18-day-old plants from St Clam [ unclear: ] which branching of filaments and [ unclear: ] formation has begun B 22-day-old plants from [ unclear: ] Otago Many of the plants have well formed discs but a number of them have retained then filamentous form Hans can also be seen C 45-day-old plants from St Clan, showing well developed discs D, E—Photomierographs of terminal dividing cells of germlings of [ unclear: ] D 8-day old germling fixed at 01 30 hours and showing several [ unclear: ] and a late prophase [ unclear: ] Scale = × 2,750 E 13-day-old germling fixed at 03 30 hours and showing a prophase nucleus Scale = × 3,650 Plate 7
Plate 13—Photomerographs of fixed and stained plants showing [ unclear: ] A 5-day-old germlings with [ unclear: ] still visible it one end The majority of the cells contain only one of two plastids B 19-day-old discord germling, grown for 12 days in running seawater at Portobello Marine Brological Station C 20-day-old germling which has retained the filamentous form and showing branching and an increased number of [ unclear: ] per cell Two harts can be seen passing out of the [ unclear: ] plane to the left Plate 8
Fig. 9.—Shingle disturbed and reported on 26th October. 1951.
Fig. 10—The same area 14 months later December 1952 [ unclear: ] in flower young plants of [ unclear: ] and the grasses [ unclear: ] and [ unclear: ]
9—Shingle disturbed and reported on 26th October. 1951.
Fig. 10—The same area 14 months later December 1952 [ unclear: ] in flower young plants of [ unclear: ] and the grasses [ unclear: ] and [ unclear: ]
Plate 9
Fig. 11.—Colonization of shingle by [ unclear: ]
Fig. 12.—Colonization of a salt deposit [ unclear: ] with a relatively undisturbed area of older shingle marked by grasses [ unclear: ] and [ unclear: ] in the background.
Plate 10
Fig. 1.—A [ unclear: ] exposed in the Malte Brun Range on the western face of Häckel Peak. The visible face extends vertically for 3.500ft. Part of the Darwin Glaerer lies in the foreground. An [ unclear: ] to the right (re west) or the illustration can be seen [ unclear: ] clearly visible from the summit and west ridge of Malte Brun Photographed in March 1954 from 9 000ft on the leading westerly ridge of Mt. Darwn looking N.w. Plate 11
Fig. 1.—Panotama looking north-eastwards from [ unclear: ] B. ridge Mount Dashet with Mount [ unclear: ] immediately behind at [ unclear: ] . [ unclear: ] centre, and [ unclear: ] Hill-Crater mass on right. The Crater is the dark area on the [ unclear: ] .
Fig. 2.—Panotama looking south-eastwards from [ unclear: ] Hut (G. R.177376) showing surface of stopped Late [ unclear: ] peneplam. Note small [ unclear: ] on extreme left foreground ( [ unclear: ] —11360). [ unclear: ] surface on extreme [ unclear: ] falls [ unclear: ] to Shag Valley and is due to [ unclear: ] along Wathemo Fault [ unclear: ] .
Plate 12
Fig. 1.—View south-eastwards from Mount [ unclear: ] showing steeply dipping semi-schist [ unclear: ] Chl. 2 sub-zone Kattothyrst in [ unclear: ] middle distance and the [ unclear: ] in [ unclear: ] middle distance.
Fig. 2.—Headwaters of Deep Creek west of Mount [ unclear: ] looking towards [ unclear: ] B. Note mature valley sides and entrenched stream.
Fig. 3.— [ unclear: ] feldspar basalt (11361) at West [ unclear: ]
Fig. 4.—Dyke [ unclear: ] about 20 feet in diameter formed by columns of [ unclear: ] (11354) 6-10 inches across. west side of Kattothyrst.
Fig. 5.—Large (6ft) blocks of volcanic agglomerate south-west of the Crater.
Fig. 6—Volcame [ unclear: ] south-west of the Crater showing (at left) large block of basalt and (above hammer) [ unclear: ] fragments of quartz 7 inches across.
Plate 13
Fig. 1.—Mount Dasher from summit of [ unclear: ] . Note screes of [ unclear: ] Dark rounded mass in left foreground is dyke [ unclear: ] on west face of [ unclear: ]
Fig. 2.—Olivine nodules (11345) up to 10 inches across in atlantite (11344) at base of [ unclear: ] on north-west face of Mount Dasher. Note differential weathering.
Fig. 3.—Olivine nodule 6 inches across in [ unclear: ] north end of Mount [ unclear: ]
Plate 14
Fig. 1.— [ unclear: ] of [ unclear: ] basanite (11339) from north side of Mount Dasher. White laths of [ unclear: ] (An [ unclear: ] ) in ophitie relation with [ unclear: ] [ unclear: ] of titanaugite. These and black magnetites in a groundmass of skeletal [ unclear: ] of [ unclear: ] X 50 diameters.
Fig. 2.— [ unclear: ] of [ unclear: ] (11377) from Table Top [ unclear: ] Hill [ unclear: ] crystals, of augite and magnetite in a groundmass of [ unclear: ] with needles of apatite. X 120 diameters.
Plate 15
Fig. 2.—Hand specimen of argillite sheared parallel to S1 and containing numerous bouding of grevwacke sandstone. Broken lines indicate the traces of megascopic S2 planes Thin-section 3935 Tawharanui Peninsula.
Fig. 3.—β diagram for S2 planes at Tawharanui Peninsula, contours at 22%. 14%. 8% and 4% per 1% area X = extreme positions of fold axes (A1) involving S1 and measured in the field The pole of the younger told axis A2 is shown.
Plate 16
Fig. 5a—Lower hemisphere projection of the interred position of told axis A1 and A2 at the onset of folding about A2 Axis A1 is restored to a horizontal position, allows on the great circle normal to A indicate the theoretical path for folding of A1, poles about A2
Fig. 5b—Axis A1 unrolled about A2 A1 for Tawharanui occupies a north-and-south position but for Bream Tail trends roughly east-west
Fig. 6—Saussuritized and sheared detrital feldspar in grevwacke sandstone, the matrix is wholly reconstituted to a fine grained mesh of chlorite, prehnite, quart and sericitic mica Crossed nicols Thin-section 3933, near Goat Island Leigh
Fig. 7—Quartz-preh [ unclear: ] te-albite vein in greywacke sandstone Crossed nicols Thin-section 3934, Kawan Island
Fig. 8—S2 shear planes in argillite, bedding planes (S1) run left and right Ordinary light Thin-section 3917. Tawharanui Peninsula
Fig. 9—High angle quartz veins in argillite broken and folded by renewed movement on S1 Ordinary light Thin-section 3913. Thin-section Peninsula
Plate 17
Figs 2. 3—Aulacosphincloides sisyph [ unclear: ] (Hector). Holotype (Do [ unclear: ] on Museum photo).
Fig. 4—On [ unclear: ] chi [ unclear: ] es ma [ unclear: ] naughli Marwick n [ unclear: ] sp Rubber cast from natural mould paratype in Auckland University College. X 2. (N. Beatus, photo).
Plate 18
Plate 19.—The shells of Perissodonla mirabilis (1). Tylospira scululata (2). Aporrliais occrdenlalis (3). and Aporrliais pes-pelicani (4). (Natural size). Plate 19
Fig. a.—View from the point marked A on the map (Fig. 1) looking south-eastwards along the salt meadow (dark turf), showing the paler Salicornia zone in the left middle distance and the tussock-ecotone on the right middle distance In the distance are quite extensive sandhills and behind them (not shown) is the open sea Hooper's Inlet is shown on the extreme left eroding the Salicornia and also the salt meadow where it reaches the water Fig. b.—Vertical section of salt meadow tur [ unclear: ] Each division on the scale = 1 cm Fig. c.—View from above of salt meadow vegetation Each division on the scale = 1 cm Plate 20
Figs. 1-3. — Melanchra meridiana n.sp.
Figs. 4-5. — Melanchra boldensis n.sp.
Fig. 1 and Fig. 4 are of the actual Type spceimens others are Paratypes.
Plate 21
Fig. 1 — Acclina gallaria Walker subsp venustula nov. Type specimen
Figs 2-3. — Bac [ unclear: ] a flammea n.sp., Fig. 2, Type specimen.
Figs. 4-3. — Archyala homer [ unclear: ] a n.sp Fig. 4 — Type specimen
Plate 22
The snapper egg, vertical views. X 37 1—½ hour 2-1 hour 3—½ hours 4—2 hours 5—2 ½ hours 6—3 hours 7—3 ½ hours 8-6 hours 9-10 hours 10-11 hours 11-12 hours 12-13 hours Plate 23
The snapper egg, vertical views X 37. 1—15 hours. 2—17 hours 3—18 hours 4—20 hours 5—22 hours. 6—24 hours 7—26 hours 8—39 hours 9—45 hours. 10—Commencing to hatch 11—The larva newly hatched. Plate 24
The snapper egg oblique and side views X 37 1—½ hour oblique view 2—2 ¾ hours oblique view 3—6 hours side view 4—12 hours, oblique view 5—13 hours end view 6-18 hours side view 7—30 hours, side view 8-45 hours, side view Plate 25
The snapper larva X 37. 1—Newly hatched 2—1 day. 3—2 days 4 and 5—3 to 4 days. Plate 26