ORGANIZATION, organized world, organized nature, living nature, animated nature; living beings; organic remains; organism, bion [physiological individual]; morphon [morphological individual]; biota, animal and plant life, fauna and flora.\n FOSSILS, fossilization, lapidification, petrification, petrifaction, paleontology or palæontology, paleozoölogy or palæozoölogy; paleontologist or palæontologist.\n [SCIENCE OF LIVING BEINGS] biology, natural history; 1zoölogy [See Zoölogy]; botany [See Botany]; physiology, anatomy, cytology, embryology, organic chemistry, morphology; promorphology, tectology; cell theory or cellular theory, evolution, metabolism; abiogenesis, spontaneous generation; archigenesis (production) [See Production]; biotaxy, ecology or œcology, ontogeny, phylogeny, polymorphism, oxidation, invagination, vertebration.\n NATURALIST, biologist, zoölogist, botanist, bacteriologist, embryologist, Darwinian.\n PROTOPLASM, plasma or plasm, cytoplasm, metaplasm, karyoplasm, bioplasm, trophoplasm, idioplasm; cell, proteid, protein, albumen, albumin, albuminoid; structure [See Texture]; chromatin; centrosome, nucleolus, karyosome, vacuole, chromosome; protoplast, protozoan, amœba; karyaster, erythroblast, dysmeromorph, antherozoid.\n