The Lithology of EdinburghWilliam P. Kennedy, 1859 - 102 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 22
Page ix
... believe that he was much at his ease in the place he was in , and well able , though probably a native of more northern regions , to live in our seas . The additional infor- * Le Cepede describes the specimen sent by Sir Joseph Banks as ...
... believe that he was much at his ease in the place he was in , and well able , though probably a native of more northern regions , to live in our seas . The additional infor- * Le Cepede describes the specimen sent by Sir Joseph Banks as ...
Page xvii
... believe , give an advice to our friends without being satisfied that it will be well with ourselves . I grant you that I have often devised similar plans , and often chalked out a magnum opus . I will frankly tell you , mine is to be ...
... believe , give an advice to our friends without being satisfied that it will be well with ourselves . I grant you that I have often devised similar plans , and often chalked out a magnum opus . I will frankly tell you , mine is to be ...
Page xxiv
... believe , by his Lordship's servants since its resurrection , as its appearance plainly indicated . " I have enclosed a copy of my paper on Hybernation for Mr Scoresby , that he may see the laws which have been established with regard ...
... believe , by his Lordship's servants since its resurrection , as its appearance plainly indicated . " I have enclosed a copy of my paper on Hybernation for Mr Scoresby , that he may see the laws which have been established with regard ...
Page xxviii
... believe , was the first popular statement of some of those remarkable facts in the reproduction of insects , which go to establish a true , so called , lucina sine concubitu , in certain families of insects . " In the Aphides , he says ...
... believe , was the first popular statement of some of those remarkable facts in the reproduction of insects , which go to establish a true , so called , lucina sine concubitu , in certain families of insects . " In the Aphides , he says ...
Page xxxiii
... believe me , my dear Sir , with much esteem , yours very truly , JOHN BARCLAY . " " Edinburgh , Oct. 16. 1822 . " My Dear Sir , I have now got as far in your second volume as page 437 , and am much pleased with your excellent ...
... believe me , my dear Sir , with much esteem , yours very truly , JOHN BARCLAY . " " Edinburgh , Oct. 16. 1822 . " My Dear Sir , I have now got as far in your second volume as page 437 , and am much pleased with your excellent ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aberdeen appearance Arthur's Seat bones boulder-clay Bressay British Animals Buckland Chair of Natural character Christian Clackmannan clay cloth College Contents Cupar Cuvier dear Sir deposit Dr Chalmers Dr Fleming Dr Fleming's dressed surfaces Edin Edinburgh Edition exhibited favour feel feet Fife fish Flisk foolscap 8vo fossils Free Church genus geologists geology GIDEON MANTELL give Granton gravel Holoptychius hope Hugh Miller illustrative inches indicated influence interesting John Journal kind labours lectures letter Lord Lord Dundas Lyell Memoirs mind Mineralogy minister Natural History Natural Science naturalist neighbourhood Neill notice observed occurred Old Red Sandstone paper parish phenomena Phil Philosophy of Zoology portion present Professor Jameson proof quadrupeds quarry referred regarded remarks rocks Royal Society sand says scientific Scotland Scottish shells shew silt species specimens St Andrews stone strata structure tion views Wernerian Society wrote Zoology
Popular passages
Page xxix - For, to say nothing of half the birds, and some quadrupeds which are almost entirely supported by them, worms seem to be the great promoters of vegetation, which would proceed but lamely without them, by boring, perforating, and loosening the soil, and rendering it pervious to rains and the fibres of plants, by drawing straws and stalks of leaves and twigs into it ; and, most of all, by throwing up such infinite numbers of lumps of earth called worm-casts, which, being their excrement, is a fine...
Page xxix - Earthworms, though in appearance a small and despicable link in the chain of Nature, yet, if lost, would make a lamentable chasm. For to say nothing of half the birds, and some quadrupeds which are almost entirely supported by them, worms seem to be great promoters of vegetation...
Page 96 - A great wave swept over the coast of Spain, and is said to have been sixty feet high at Cadiz. At Tangier, in Africa, it rose and fell eighteen times on the coast; at Funchal, in Madeira, it rose full fifteen feet perpendicular above high-water mark, although the tide, which ebbs and flows there seven feet, was then at half-ebb.
Page xliii - Many horses' heads, and bones of several kinds of deer, the horns of the antelope, the heads and tusks of boars, and the heads of beavers, are also found embedded in it.
Page xxix - Worms probably provide new soil for hills and slopes where the rain washes the earth away ; and they affect slopes, probably, to avoid being flooded. Gardeners and farmers express their detestation of worms ; the former, because they render their walks unsightly, and make them much work ; and the latter, because they think worms eat their green corn. But these men would find, that the earth without worms would soon become cold, hardbound, and void of fermentation ; and consequently sterile...
Page xl - ANGER is one of the sinews of the soul: he that wants it hath a maimed mind, and with Jacob sinew-shrunk in the hollow of his thigh, must needs halt. Nor is it good to converse with such as cannot be angry, and with the Caspian Sea, never ebb nor flow.
Page 46 - Lyell has given to the divisions of the tertiary strata the appellations pleiocene, meiocene, eocene, accordingly as they contain a majority of recent species of shells, a minority of such species, or a small proportion of living species, which may be looked upon as indicating the dawn of the existing state of the animate creation. But in this case, he wisely treats his distinctions, not as definitions, but as the marks of natural groups. " The plurality of species indicated by the name pleiocene,...
Page 51 - ... Taragmite series, formed subsequently to the dressings and groovings of the solid rocks, and, where present, reposing on them. They seem to have been formed when violent aqueous movements were taking place, and probably at a period when the state of our island was widely different from the present. The second, or Akumite series, is chiefly characterised by its laminated clays and sands, and indicates the assorting power of water under circumstances of comparative tranquillity. The third, or Phanerite...
Page 96 - There were twenty-three ships and vessels, great and small, in the harbor of Callao, of which nineteen were sunk ; and the other four, among which was a frigate called St. Fermin, were carried by the force of the waves to a great distance up the country, and left on dry ground at a considerable height above the sea.
Page 2 - It is thus, for example, turned to account by the author of the " Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation.