Lexicographical Neighbors of Mikrons
Literary usage of Mikrons
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of Bacteriology by Herbert Upham Williams (1908)
"Sporulation frequent; spores numerous spheroidal, .7—2 mikrons. Movement very
active. Habitat, intestinal tract of the guinea-pig. Ameba homines Walker. ..."
2. Proceedings of the Connecticut Medical Society by Connecticut Medical Society (1888)
"corpuscles from the same blood had an average diameter of 6.2 mikrons=, faf inch.
... One nucleated red corpuscle measured 12.0 mikrons^f-fae inch. ..."
3. Saint Louis Medical and Surgical Journal (1895)
"in chains or groups. In form they are ovoid, quite round, or polyhedric. The round
spores have a diameter of from 1.7 to 5 mikrons; the ovoid measure from 4 ..."
4. Practical Bacteriology, Blood Work and Animal Parasitology: Including by Edward Rhodes Stitt (1909)
"Consequently the 100 spaces of the ocular cover 1530 mikrons (15 x 100 = 1500;
... Then if 100 spaces equal 1530 mikrons, one space would equal 15.3 ..."
5. Practical Bacteriology, Blood Work and Animal Parasitology: Including by Edward Rhodes Stitt (1909)
"Consequently the 100 spaces of the ocular cover 1530 mikrons (15 x 100 = 1500;
... Then if 100 spaces equal 1530 mikrons, one space would equal 15.3 ..."
6. Annals of Ophthalmology (1904)
".25 mikrons thick, with both extremities slightly rounded. Both are found in
great numbers in the secretions; both form colony-like groups; sometimes they ..."