Monthly Journal of Science, and Annals of Biology, Astronomy, Geology, Industrial Arts, Manufactures, and Technology, Volume 4James Samuelson, William Crookes J. Churchill and Sons., 1867 |
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Page 11
... action of rivers running along lines of fracture . Professor Ramsay and others have recently contended that " rain and rivers " and other subaerial agents have produced all the surface - features , not only of the Wealden region , but ...
... action of rivers running along lines of fracture . Professor Ramsay and others have recently contended that " rain and rivers " and other subaerial agents have produced all the surface - features , not only of the Wealden region , but ...
Page 12
... action , produce depressions in consequence of the different degrees of resistance offered by rocks of unequal hardness ; " but the objections to any long continuance of this scooping action on any particular spot are the greater the ...
... action , produce depressions in consequence of the different degrees of resistance offered by rocks of unequal hardness ; " but the objections to any long continuance of this scooping action on any particular spot are the greater the ...
Page 34
... action of those natural causes which we see daily at work , but whose effects during the few years that we can observe them are almost imperceptible . These causes are , the ocean waves , running water , rain and frost ; which , if ...
... action of those natural causes which we see daily at work , but whose effects during the few years that we can observe them are almost imperceptible . These causes are , the ocean waves , running water , rain and frost ; which , if ...
Page 38
... action , and the hardness , toughness , and original form of the rock itself . This peculiar effect of the passage of a glacier is very easily recognized when once seen , espe- cially if one studies the forms that the rock assumes by ...
... action , and the hardness , toughness , and original form of the rock itself . This peculiar effect of the passage of a glacier is very easily recognized when once seen , espe- cially if one studies the forms that the rock assumes by ...
Page 40
... action of floods of water , nor the shocks of earthquakes could have placed them . Very similar phenomena have been pro- duced by the icebergs which deposited the drift , large masses of rock having been carried and dropped on eminences ...
... action of floods of water , nor the shocks of earthquakes could have placed them . Very similar phenomena have been pro- duced by the icebergs which deposited the drift , large masses of rock having been carried and dropped on eminences ...
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Common terms and phrases
action ammonia amongst animals Annelids appears atmosphere attention body British carbonic acid Carboniferous causes chemical cholera coal colliery colour condition considerable containing deposits described disease districts electric Eocene evidence Exhibition existence experiments fact favour feet flesh-formers fossil gases Geological geologists give glaciers gun cotton heat hydrogen important increase interesting iron Journal labour lakes laws light Liverpool London luminosity luminous Manchester manufacture matter means metal miles mineral mines Miocene Naturalists nature nitrogen notice object observations obtained occur Ogham organic origin oxidation oxygen paper Paris passed period plants Pliocene portion Pratas Island present probably produced Professor published quantity Railway recently remarkable river rocks Royal Royal Geographical Society sanitary sewage Silurian Sir Charles Lyell Society solution species specimens supply surface temperature thallium theory tion town tube typhus whilst
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