Annual of Scientific Discovery: Or, Year-book of Facts in Science and ArtGould, Kendall, and Lincoln, 1869 |
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Results 1-5 of 83
Page v
... cause of civilization , by improving the resources of other countries The price of labor in this country , combined with the low standard of work allowed by the unions and the uncertainty in the labor market , which prevents ...
... cause of civilization , by improving the resources of other countries The price of labor in this country , combined with the low standard of work allowed by the unions and the uncertainty in the labor market , which prevents ...
Page vii
... cause of technical education , and the promotion of engineering and mechanical industry in his own country . In competing for these scholarships , proficiency must be shown in the use of one or more of the following classes of tools ...
... cause of technical education , and the promotion of engineering and mechanical industry in his own country . In competing for these scholarships , proficiency must be shown in the use of one or more of the following classes of tools ...
Page ix
... cause development of heat , and thereby chemical action , accounting for many of the facts of metamorphism and other disputed points in geology . The fungoid origin of most , if not all contagious , epidemic , and malignant diseases ...
... cause development of heat , and thereby chemical action , accounting for many of the facts of metamorphism and other disputed points in geology . The fungoid origin of most , if not all contagious , epidemic , and malignant diseases ...
Page xiii
... cause of the extinction of superior races . The earth must become lone and voiceless long before the incandescence of the crust . Science may follow it into the condi- tion of an attendant star , and then of an expanding nebula . " He ...
... cause of the extinction of superior races . The earth must become lone and voiceless long before the incandescence of the crust . Science may follow it into the condi- tion of an attendant star , and then of an expanding nebula . " He ...
Page 18
... cause of steel and iron production in the well - known Bessemer process . By the method of Messrs . Whelpley and Storer , a powerful oxide of carbon blast or " deoxidizing flame " is generated by a peculiar machine , of their device and ...
... cause of steel and iron production in the well - known Bessemer process . By the method of Messrs . Whelpley and Storer , a powerful oxide of carbon blast or " deoxidizing flame " is generated by a peculiar machine , of their device and ...
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Common terms and phrases
According action ammonia aniline animal appears atmosphere atoms battery Bessemer process body boiler bridge British Association carbonic acid cast iron cause cent centre chemical chloride coal coal gas color containing copper crystals cylinder deposits depth diameter earth effect electric engine experiments fact feet fire flame fluid force formation furnace gases glass heat hydrogen inches less light lime liquid magnesia magnetic manganese mastodon material matter mechanical metal miles minute mixture motion naphtha nature observed obtained ordinary organic ounces oxide oxygen paper passed pig iron plants plate portion potash pounds present pressure produced Prof puddling puddling furnace quantity rays recent result river rocks salt sand Scientific American silver soda sodium solution species specific gravity spectrum steam steel stone substances sulphuric acid surface temperature thick tion tube vapor vegetable vessel wire wood zinc
Popular passages
Page 276 - In affirming that the growth of the body is mechanical, and that thought, as exercised by us, has its correlative in the physics of the brain, I think the position of the " Materialist " is stated, as far as that position is a tenable one. I think the materialist will be able finally to maintain this position against all attacks; but I do not think, in the present condition of the human mind, that he can pass beyond this position.
Page 310 - Hence ovules and pollen grains — the fertilized seed or egg, as well as buds — include and consist of a multitude of germs thrown off from each separate atom of the organism.
Page 310 - Each living creature must be looked at as a microcosm — a little universe, formed of a host of self-propagating organisms, inconceivably minute and as numerous as the stars in heaven.
Page 369 - University on the condition of the State Cabinet of natural history, and the historical and antiquarian collection annexed thereto.
Page 276 - Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone, has been placed in its position by molecular force. And unless the existence of law in these matters be denied, and the element of caprice introduced, we must conclude that, given the relation of any molecule of the body to its environment, its position in the body might be determined mathematically.
Page 275 - Instead of cutting our grain of corn into thin slices, and subjecting it to the action of polarized light, let us place it in the earth, and subject it to a certain degree of warmth. In other words, let the molecules, both of the corn and of the surrounding earth, be kept in a state of agitation ; for warmth is, in the eye of science, tremulous molecular motion.
Page 275 - ... science, the animal body is just as much the product of molecular force as the stalk and ear of corn, or as the crystal of salt or sugar.
Page xi - A time may therefore come when this ultra-scientific region by which we are now enfolded may offer itself to terrestrial, if not to human investigation. Two-thirds of the rays emitted by the sun fail to arouse in the eye the sense of vision. The rays exist, but the visual organ requisite for their translation into light does not exist.
Page 274 - This tendency on the part of matter to organize itself, to grow into shape, to assume definite forms in obedience to the definite action of force, is, as I have said, all-pervading. It is in the ground on which you tread, in the water you drink, in the air you breathe. Incipient life, as it were, manifests itself throughout the whole of what we call inorganic nature.