Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 86.djvu/50

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46
THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.

hyphenated word was joined on the previous page because of the intervening image.— Ineuw talk 08:51, 21 January 2014 (UTC) (Wikisource contributor note)

Entrance to Castleton Gardens. The palm above the gate (Attalca) has leaves ten yards long and two yards wide.

trees. The other garden, which is at Hope, is on the dry Liguania plain, slightly higher than Castleton, but with a mean temperature of 76 degrees, and a rainfall of only 61 inches. At Hope Gardens there are an excellent library, laboratory accommodations, and very interesting collections of living orchids, cacti and economic tropical plants. For one wishing to study the marine algae it would be readily possible to secure rooms or a building on the water front, at Kingston or Port Royal. It is probable also that a marine zoological station will soon be established at Montego Bay, and will be available for botanists wishing to study the algae of that region.

A fourth very important advantage of Cinchona is that it is located in the healthy highlands where the climate is stimulating for workers from the temperate zones; where the water supply is pure, and where malaria and enteric troubles are not to be feared. Professor Goebel, after having much experience in tropical travel, wrote, when advising the Tropical Laboratory Commission referred to above:

If at all possible the main station should be in the highlands, with a subsidiary station in the lowlands or on the seashore for the study of the algae, and the vegetation of tropical plains.

It means much also to workers of normal social instincts, especially to those who are to settle down at such a station for some months, to be