A Text-Book of the Physiological Chemistry of the Animal Body, Including An Account of the Chemical Changes Occurring in Disease; V.1

Cover A Text-Book of the Physiological Chemistry of the Animal Body, Including An Account of the Chemical Changes Occurring in Disease; V.1
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[book I.
Percentage The analyses which have been made of the various composition pigmentary matters induded under the term Melanin of Melanin. have led to widely discordant results. The carbon in 100 parts has varied between 517 and 58-3; the H between 4-02 and 5-09; the N between T'l and 13-8; the between 2203 and 35-44 \ Pigments of the Feathers of Birds.
The brilliant colours of the plumage of birds is due in part to the optical characters of the surface of the feathers (interference- colour
...s) : in part to the presence, within the feathers, of colouring matters, which may usually be extracted from them by alcohol, ether, or hot acetic acid, and which, as a rule, are very unstable, becoming decolourized by exposure to air.
These colouring matters have hitherto not been subjected to a thorough chemical investigation, with the exception of the one to be described in the ensuing paragraph.
Turacin.
In various species of birds belonging to the family Musophagidae and which, from the nature of their food, are designated Plaintain- eaters, the primary and secondary pinion-feathers, are more or less of a crimson colour.


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