¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Telsons
1. telson [n] - See also: telson
Lexicographical Neighbors of Telsons
Literary usage of Telsons
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Report by British Association for the Advancement of Science (1888)
"Flattened pieces of tapering, riband-like telsons, with a central line, sometimes
raised, but usually sunken, which was originally a ridge in all ..."
2. An Introduction to the Study of the Comparative Anatomy of Animals: A by Gilbert Charles Bourne, Arthur Bolles Lee (1900)
"The same paper contains a hint concerning the preparation of telsons for
section-cutting. They are put for eight to fourteen days into 40 per cent. alcohol, ..."
3. The Microtomist's Vade-mecum: A Handbook of the Methods of Microscopic Anatomy by Arthur Bolles Lee (1903)
"The same paper contains a hint concerning the preparation of telsons for
section-cutting. They are put for eight to fourteen days into 40 per cent, alcohol, ..."
4. The Microtomist's Vade-mecum: A Handbook of the Methods of Microscopic Anatomy by Arthur Bolles Lee (1896)
"The same paper contains a hint concerning the preparation of telsons for section
cutting. They are put for eight to fourteen days into 40 per cent. alcohol, ..."
5. Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences by Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences (1882)
"The same species; tips of the telsons of two adult females from off Massachusetts
Bay, with an apparently abnormal arrangement of terminal spines —in the ..."
6. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria by Royal Society of Victoria (Melbourne, Vic.) (1908)
"The surface pits visible in the English examples are interpreted by Messrs.
Jones and Woodward as the bases of spines; a character also seen in the telsons ..."
7. A Monograph of the British Fossil Crustacea, Belonging to the Order Merostomataby Henry Woodward by Henry Woodward (1878)
"A series of detached telsons or tail-spines of Eurypterus, described by Mr.
Salter. Figs. 10—12. E. linearis, Salter. (P. 147.) Fig. 10. ..."