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 12
... sufficient to warrant the general conclusion that all valleys have been formed by one agent , or by the other . Another phase of the question is that respecting the meaning to be attached to the expression " form of the ground , " this ...
... sufficient to warrant the general conclusion that all valleys have been formed by one agent , or by the other . Another phase of the question is that respecting the meaning to be attached to the expression " form of the ground , " this ...
Page 17
... sufficient has been quoted to show the parallelism of the two cases , and the skill with which Sir Charles Lyell has brought into relief those points of the Aryan hypothesis which bear the most striking similarity to the theory of Mr ...
... sufficient has been quoted to show the parallelism of the two cases , and the skill with which Sir Charles Lyell has brought into relief those points of the Aryan hypothesis which bear the most striking similarity to the theory of Mr ...
Page 19
... sufficiently formidable to suggest the offering up of public prayers , and even the institution of the Rogation - days , set apart ever since in the Church for divine worship , those who denied the recent date of the volcanic eruptions ...
... sufficiently formidable to suggest the offering up of public prayers , and even the institution of the Rogation - days , set apart ever since in the Church for divine worship , those who denied the recent date of the volcanic eruptions ...
Page 33
... sufficient to justify the expense in a commercial sense , they might be completed substantially so as to unite with the existing system of high - speed railways , just as it is customary to make a fair - weather road in the first place ...
... sufficient to justify the expense in a commercial sense , they might be completed substantially so as to unite with the existing system of high - speed railways , just as it is customary to make a fair - weather road in the first place ...
Page 38
... sufficient to prove that there has been a glacial period . There is , however , much other confirmatory evidence . 3rd . ROCHES MOUTONNÉES . - Glaciers are often many hundred or even several thousand feet thick , and as they move slowly ...
... sufficient to prove that there has been a glacial period . There is , however , much other confirmatory evidence . 3rd . ROCHES MOUTONNÉES . - Glaciers are often many hundred or even several thousand feet thick , and as they move slowly ...
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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
Popular passages
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Page 127 - I tell you, captain, if you look in the maps of the 'orld, I warrant you shall find, in the comparisons between Macedon and Monmouth, that the situations, look you, is both alike. There is a river in Macedon ; and there is also moreover a river at Monmouth...
Page 289 - ... -0067 in diameter, by its making a powerful electro-magnet, by its decomposing water, and by other tests. The explanation of these effects is as follows : — The electro-magnet always retains a slight residual magnetism, and is therefore in the condition of a weak permanent magnet ; the motion of the armature occasions feeble currents in alternate directions in the coils thereof, which, after being reduced to the same direction, pass into the coil of the electro-magnet in such...
Page 162 - ... 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 manure for grain and grass.
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