The origin of his condition was enigmatic to the scientists who studied him, for nowhere in the vast store of case histories was there another human being so gloriously esquamulose. |
Some aging process peculiar to the esquamulose was afoot, so that, while his suit grew softer and more pliant with each mutation, his scales grew sharper and more pointed. |
Ancestors of the esorediate and esquamulose endemics of genus Cladina may have reached the islands by means of easily disintegrating thallus fragments. |
Generally, the first specimen differs from the others morphologically in having usually esquamulose podetia with broader scyphi. |
A chemical examination of 50 specimens from localities in New South Wales near Sydney showed 36 esquamulose specimens to contain fumarprotocetratic acid only. |
Yet at the very end, both misspelled esquamulose, meaning without scales, a smooth skin. |