Abstract
AS a delegate from the New Zealand Institute I A had the honour and great pleasure to visit Japan on the occasion of the third Pan Pacific Scientific Congress which was held there in October and November last, and an account of that visit may be of interest. As a physicist, and from a scientific point of view, I confined my attention solely to physics, geophysics, and cognate branches of knowledge; and I must leave other delegates to make such remarks as they may think necessary on the branches of science which interested them. Before dealing with the main subject of this article, however, I desire to make several observations of a genera] character.
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FARR, C. Science in Japan. Nature 119, 407–410 (1927). https://doi.org/10.1038/119407a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/119407a0