Online Encyclopedia

SOLE (Solea)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 358 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SOLE (Solea)  , the most valuable of
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European fiat-fishes.' For most
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people who look at fish merely from the culinary point of view, soles are of two kinds: true soles, with such varieties as Dover soles and
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Brixham soles (slips being the name applied to young specimens), and lemon soles, an inferior fish, which is no
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sole at all, but a sort of dab (Glyptocephalus microcephalus) . Leaving out the latter, there are five
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species on the
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British coasts; the
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common sole (Solea vulgaris) the French sole, or sand sole lemon sole of Yarrell (S. lascaris), the thick-back (S. variegate), and the solenette or little sole (S . Wert) . All these agree in the right side being coloured and bearing the eyes, in the elongate form, in the small eyes (separated by a space covered with scaly skin, in the small,
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twisted mouth, with minute teeth on the colourless side only), and with the snout projecting beyond the mouth and more or less hooked . All true soles are.excellent, but the common species is the only one which, from its larger
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size, growing to a length of 26 in. and attaining maturity at a length of about to in., regularly appears on all the markets . It occurs from the south-west coast of Scandinavia,
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Mecklenburg and
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Great Britain to the Mediterranean . Most of the best fishing grounds for soles lie comparatively near
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land, though the spawning takes place some miles away . Much information on the
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life
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history of the sole will be found in the monograph by J . T . Cunningham (Plymouth, 1890) .

End of Article: SOLE (Solea)
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