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An essential snapshot of inquiry and seasonality: The Entomologist’s Record and Journal of Variation (Volume 85) 1973 compiles field notes, short reports and taxonomic observations from a single, revealing year. A compact witness to change. Drawn from the steady practice of british insect studies, this issue belongs in any entomology journal collection and supplies detailed material on insect species variation, with a notable emphasis on lepidoptera research articles alongside broader natural history observations. Contributors present locality records, timing of life cycles and distributional remarks that together build a practical reference for entomologists and a usable academic research resource for historians, conservationists and students tracing trends in 1973 scientific publications. The concise reporting style -- focused on phenology, host associations and clear locality data -- offers modern readers direct access to the empirical language of the period; such entries are ideal starting points for comparative work on the united kingdom fauna and for assembling historical biodiversity records.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. As a scientific periodical 1970s record, it documents entomological society interest and preserves the contemporary style of reporting that underpinned mid-century field science. That continuity matters: casual readers are drawn to the vividness of on-the-ground observation, while classic-literature collectors and professionals value its role as an academic research resource and as a rigorous reference for entomologists. Whether consulted for its readable natural history observations, mined for lepidoptera research articles or used to compare past and present distributions, Volume 85 stands as both a cultural document and a work of enduring practical use to anyone engaged with british insect studies. Its combination of readable reportage and documented observations rewards leisurely browsing as much as targeted scholarly consultation, making it equally at home on a coffee-table or in a research reading-room.