CDROMS available from BGM Jamieson

Feeding and classification of Polychaeta (Annelida)


 

For information on obtaining this CDROM
email b.jamieson@.uq.edu.au

This CDROM is of value to undergraduate students, postgraduates and research workers in Marine Biology who wish to familiarize themselves with the characteristics, taxonomy, phylogeny and feeding mechanisms of a wide range of polychaete families. It contains more than 80 original colour photographs and drawings.
(This site is independent of the University of Queensland)

Native earthworms of Australia

This CDROM electronic book described all 45 genera and 404 species of  native Australian earthworms of the family Megascolecidae, subfamily Megascolecinae. There  is an extensive introduction to anatomy, biology, oligochaete classification,  molecular phylogeny and zoogeography which is of value to  students of the Oligochaeta worldwide.

Enquiries as to how to purchase may be directed to the publishers, Science Publishers, Inc., Enfield, New Hamphire, U.S.A. (see below) or to the author (B.G.M. Jamieson) at this website.

Email b.jamieson@uq.edu.au

PDF Document for PC or Mac

Native Earthworms of Australia
(Megascolecidae, Megascolecinae)
B. G. M. Jamieson B.Sc., Ph.D., D.Sc.
Department of Zoology and Entomology
University of Queensland
Brisbane
Queensland 4072, Australia

SCIENCE PUBLISHERS, INC.
Post Office Box 699
Enfield, New Hampshire 03748
United States of America

Internet site: http://www.scipub.net
Sales@scipub.net (marketing department)
Editor@scipub.net (editorial department)
Info@scipub.net (for all other inquiries)

© 2000, Barrie Jamieson
(Published 11 December 2000)

ISBN 1-57808-161-0

All rights reserved.

Also available in the following libraries:
Library of Congress, USA
National Museum of Australia, Canberra
Cambridge University Library, UK

Hector Library, Te Papa, Wellington, New Zealand
Queensland Museum Library, Australia
Smithsonian Institute Library, USA
Stockholm Museum of Natural History Invertebrate Zoology Library
Natural History Museum (London) Zoology Library

Click for CONTENTS OF CD

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Supplement published in August 2001 containing corrections to original CD published in December 2000. Note  that the December 2000 publication holds the priority for new taxa and taxonomic changes made in that document and reviewed in the supplement.
Available free to those who purchased the original CD.
b.jamieson@uq.edu.au

© 2001, Barrie Jamieson

Libraries in which this CD monograph supplement has been deposited
Library of Congress, USA
Cambridge University Library, UK
Hector Library, Te Papa, Wellington, New Zealand
Queensland Museum Library, Australia
Smithsonian Institute Library, USA
Stockholm Museum of Natural History Invertebrate Zoology Library
University of Queensland Library, Australia

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G.R. Dyne and B.G.M. Jamieson 2004. Native Earthworms of Australia II (Megascolecidae, Acanthodrilinae). ABRS, Australian Government Department of Environment and Heritage. 200pp.
ISBN 0 642 56839 1(CDROM). Available from Australian Biological Resources Study, GPO Box 787, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia. Email abrs@deh.gov.au




Historic Sydney – 1788 to Today
 An electronic book

Sydney is unique, the only city to have its founding years portrayed in detail in paintings and prints. Colonial and European artists paint the unique atmosphere of Old Sydney Town. Contemporary photographs reveal modern Sydney, the convict gulag that turned into an Olympic venue.

See the first taverns in the Rocks, the bustle of early George Street, the Argyle Cut hacked out by convicts from Hyde Park Barracks, its stone used to pave Circular Quay, Government House on Bridge Street (now the Museum of Sydney), the Governor's Stables, (now the Conservatorium), the dreaded convict treadmill, Old Paddington Village, Archy Mosman’s whaling station on the North Shore, the first ferries, Elizabeth Bay and Vaucluse Houses, and imaginative plans for a cast iron bridge over the Harbour.
Read about the city’s vivid convict past, filled with colourful characters and see a map of the first streets of colonial Sydney.
  This fascinating electronic book in CD form is an ideal gift for visitors, Sydneysiders or friends overseas and a valuable aid for school or University assignments.
  Recommended by teachers of art and history and librarians, this artistically designed CD ROM, a valuable document in its own right, is based on what has become a classic book.

Windows Version (Mac useable if Acrobat 4 available).

Copyright © worldwide Susanna de Vries and Barrie Jamieson, 2000.

E-mail address:
b.jamieson@uq.edu.au


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Revised: 1 January 2010