Report of the Annual MeetingJ. Murray., 1913 |
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Page 29
... appear to be essential . To quote M. Gley , to whose researches we owe much of our knowledge regarding the functions of this organ : La genèse et l'exercice des plus hautes facultés de l'homme sont con- ditionnés par l'action purement ...
... appear to be essential . To quote M. Gley , to whose researches we owe much of our knowledge regarding the functions of this organ : La genèse et l'exercice des plus hautes facultés de l'homme sont con- ditionnés par l'action purement ...
Page 34
... appear to have Average an average duration of existence.28 Some species are duration of life and pos- known the individuals of which live only for a few hours , sibility of its whilst others survive for a hundred years.2 29 In man ...
... appear to have Average an average duration of existence.28 Some species are duration of life and pos- known the individuals of which live only for a few hours , sibility of its whilst others survive for a hundred years.2 29 In man ...
Page 35
... appear at the end of life , just as the need of sleep appears at the end of the day . ' The change has been led gradually up to by an orderly succession of phases , and is itself the last manifestation of life . Were we all certain of a ...
... appear at the end of life , just as the need of sleep appears at the end of the day . ' The change has been led gradually up to by an orderly succession of phases , and is itself the last manifestation of life . Were we all certain of a ...
Page 92
... appear that marked differences in the duration of two rectangular components of motion are possibly associated with the azimuth of its origin . VI . Megaseismic Activity and Periods of Quiescence . In the British Association Report ...
... appear that marked differences in the duration of two rectangular components of motion are possibly associated with the azimuth of its origin . VI . Megaseismic Activity and Periods of Quiescence . In the British Association Report ...
Page 117
... appears to be free in the system . ( iii ) The solid crystalline nitroamine changes into the nitroaniline , the crystals of the latter apparently growing out of the former in the presence of gaseous hydrogen chloride in a P , O , -dry ...
... appears to be free in the system . ( iii ) The solid crystalline nitroamine changes into the nitroaniline , the crystals of the latter apparently growing out of the former in the presence of gaseous hydrogen chloride in a P , O , -dry ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. C. Haddon acid Agios Nikolaos agriculture animals appear average body bones brachycephalic brain bregma brow-ridges caloric caloric theory Cambrian cells cent cephalic index character colour Committee considerable curve D.Sc diffusion dorsal fin Education effect electric evidence examination Excavations existence experiments fact fauna feet fossils further given heat inches increase individual investigation island larvæ length less limestone living Loch Loch an Duin material matter means measure ment metal method nature neopallium Norma lateralis normal North observations obtained occipital occur organisms origin oxydase Palaikastro pectoral fin period physical plants possible present probably Prof Professor recognised recorded regard Report road rocks Scotland Secretary Section similar skull Society solution species specimens stones structure substance suggested surface Table temperature theory tibiæ tion Tip of snout whales White Nile
Popular passages
Page 23 - ... of the blood. It is also true for the cells which compose the heart, since this serves to pump oxygenated blood to all other cells of the body : without such blood most cells soon cease to live. Hence we examine respiration and heart to determine if life is present : when one or both of these are at a standstill we know that life cannot be maintained. These are not the only organs necessary for the maintenance of life, but the loss of others can be borne longer, since the functions which they...
Page 35 - And Jacob said unto Pharaoh, The days of the years of my pilgrimage are an hundred and thirty years : few and evil have the days of the years of my life been, and have not attained unto the days of the years of the life of my fathers in the days of their pilgrimage.
Page v - ... give a stronger impulse and a more systematic direction to scientific inquiry, — to promote the intercourse of those who cultivate Science in different parts of the British Empire, with one another and with foreign philosophers, — to obtain a more general attention to the objects of Science, and a removal of any disadvantages of a public kind which impede its progress.
Page lviii - To summon meetings in London or elsewhere for the consideration of matters affecting the Interests of Zoology or Zoologists, and to obtain by correspondence the opinion of Zoologists on matters of a similar kind, with power to raise by subscription from each Zoologist a sum of money for defraying current expenses of the Organisation. Sec.- — Prof.
Page 35 - The days of the years of my pilgrimage are a hundred and thirty years : few and evil have been the days of the years of my life, and they have not attained unto the days of the years of the life of my fathers in the days of their pilgrimage...
Page 12 - But though I cannot express this conviction of mine too strongly, I must carefully guard myself against the supposition that I intend to suggest that no such thing as Abiogenesis ever has taken place in the past, or ever will take place in the future.
Page 753 - ... obliged to resort to hypotheses requiring great changes in the relative levels and drainage of valleys, and, in short, the whole physical geography of the respective regions where the caves are situated — changes that would alone imply a remote antiquity for the human fossil remains, and make it probable that man was old enough to have co-existed at least with the Siberian mammoth.
Page 376 - Every road is to be made of broken stone without mixture of earth, clay, chalk, or any other matter that will imbibe water, and be affected with frost ; nothing is to be laid on the clean stone on pretence of binding ; broken stone will combine by its own angles into a smooth solid surface that cannot be affected by vicissitudes of weather, or displaced by the action of wheels...
Page 14 - But the acceptance of such theories of the arrival of life on the earth does not bring us any nearer to a conception of its actual mode of origin ; on the contrary, it merely serves to banish the investigation of the question to some conveniently inaccessible corner of the universe...
Page 16 - It is true that up to the present there is no evidence of such happening : no process of transition has hitherto been observed. But on the other hand, is it not equally true that the kind of evidence which would be of any real value in determining this question has not hitherto been looked for ? We may be certain that if life is being produced from nonliving substance it will be life of a far simpler character than any that has yet been observed — in material which we shall be uncertain whether...