Licence: In copyright
Credit: Further preliminary reports on flies as carriers of infection. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image![Gleichen and Keller (circa 1760). Geschichte der gemeinen Stuhenfliege.—Histoire de la mouche commune. (Rare,—bound in one volume ; in the possession of Mr. E. E. Austen, Nat. Hist. Museum, London, S.W.) Gbassi, B. (1883). Les mefaits des mouches. Archiv. ital. de biologic^ IV, 205-208. Also Gazz. deqli. Ospedale, 1883, p. 467. Griffith, A. (May, 1908). Life History of House Flies. Public Health., p. 122. Griffith (1907). Description of a house-fly parasite. Med. Brief, St. Louis, XXXV, 59-63. (Inaccessible.) Haeser (1882). Geschichte der med. u. epidem. Krankh. 3. Aufl. Vol. III. (Cited re plague and flies by Nuttall, 1899.) Hamer, W. H. (1908). Nuisance from flies. Report of Public Health Committee of London County Council, No. 1138. Hamer, W. H. (1908). Nuisance from flies. Report oj Public Health Committee of London County Council, No. 1202. Hamerton, a. E. (1908). Introduction to methods of study of the morbid histology of disease-carrying insects. Journ. Roy. Army Med. Corps, XI, 243-249. Hamilton (1903). Brit. Med. Journal, p. 149. (Isolation of Tubercle bacillus from flies caught in privy.) Hamilton, A. (28th Feb., 1903). Journ. Amer. Med. Assoc. (Cited by Dickinson, 1907.) Hamilton, A. (1906). The role of the house-fly and other insects in the spread of infectious diseases. Illinois Med. Jovrn., Springfield, IX, 583-587. Hart and Smith (1898). Twentieth Century Practice of Medi- cine, Vol. XIII. (Cited by Dickinson, 1907.) Hayward, E. H. (1904). The Fly as a Carrier of Tuberculous Infection. New York Med. Journ., LXXX, 643-644. Helm, O. (1875). Ueber Monas prodigiosa, &c. Arch. f. Pharm., LIV., 2. (Quotation in Abel, 1899, p. 1068;) Henschen (1896). (The larvje of flies as the cause of a chronic pseudomembranous enteritis.) Wien. klin. Rundschau, No. 33. (Review in Amer. Journ. Med. Sci., 1897, CXIII, 732. Aurivillius stated to have assigned the larvae to “ a species nearly related to the common house-fly.”) Hervieux (16th June, 1904). [Report on carriage of small-pox by flies, read to the Academy of Medicine, Paris, June 5th, 1904.] Lancet, I, 1761. Hewitt, C. G. (1906). Preliminary account of the life history of the common house-fly. Alemoirs, ^'c. of Manchester Literary and Philos. Soc. Session 1906-1907. Hewitt, C. G. (1907). The structure, development, and biono- mics of the house-fly, Alusca domestica, Linn. Quart. Journ. Microsc. Sci., LI, Part 3. Hewitt, C. G. (1907). Bionomics of certain Calyptrate Muscidae and their economic significance, with special reference to flies inhabiting houses. Journ. Peon. Biology, II, pt. 3. Heavitt, C. G. (1908). Biology of house-flies in relation to Public Health. Journ. Roy. Inst. Puhl. Health, XVI, 596- 608.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28143061_0038.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)