Nature, Volum 13Sir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1876 |
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Side 203
... and is such that all straight lines drawn from a certain point in its centre to the circumference are equal ; " but it is not what we should expect in a text - book for boys . Again , " a circumference is generally described in language ...
... and is such that all straight lines drawn from a certain point in its centre to the circumference are equal ; " but it is not what we should expect in a text - book for boys . Again , " a circumference is generally described in language ...
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Academy acid action Algæ Anatomy animals Annelids appears Arctic ASTRONOMICAL birds Breccia carbon carbonic acid chemical collection colour connection considerable contains described diameter direction discovery distance Eocene evidence examination exhibited expedition experiments exploration fact feet fluid force fossil Geissler tubes geological give given heat hyæna illustrated inches instrument interesting Island Jenisei larvæ lectures London lower magnetic matter means ment Meteorological method miles Minor Planets Miocene motion Museum nitrogen Novaya Zemlya observations Observatory obtained organic paper Paris Paris Observatory pipe plants plates portion position present pressure Prof published recent referred regard region remarkable Report researches river Royal scientific Society solar species specific gravity specimens spectrum Spitzbergen stalagmite surface temperature theory tion Transit of Venus tube upper velocity W. T. Blanford waterspout Zoological
Populære avsnitt
Side 236 - From the evidence it would appear that the submergence took place at the end of the fourteenth or the beginning of the fifteenth century.
Side 60 - XVIII. The Nature of Light: With a General Account of Physical Optics.
Side 2 - The Abode of Snow : Observations on a Journey from Chinese Tibet to the Indian Caucasus, through the Upper Valleys of the Himalaya. New Edition.
Side 63 - It has often been vaguely asserted that plants are distinguished from animals by not having the power of movement. It should rather be said that plants acquire and display this power only when it is of some advantage to them...
Side 251 - This reasoning applies word for word to the development of Bacteria from that floating matter which the electric beam reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to render it unlikely that the notion of Bacterial life developed from dead dust can ever gain currency among the members of a great scientific profession. A novel mode of experiment has been here pursued, and it may be urged that the...
Side 202 - Imperial l6mo, over 300 pages, 70 Woodcuts, and Specimens of Prints by the best Permanent Processes. Second Edition, with an Appendix by the late Mr. HENRY FOXTALBOT.
Side 258 - Taylor. — SOUND AND MUSIC : A Non-Mathematical Treatise on the Physical Constitution of Musical Sounds and Harmony, including the Chief Acoustical Discoveries of Professor Helmholtz. By SEDLEY TAYLOR, MA, late Fellow of Trinity Colledge, Cambridge.
Side 258 - WHITE'S MOC-MAIN LEVER TRUSS is allowed by upwards or 500 Medical Men to be the most effective invention in the curative treatment of Hernia. The use of a steel spring, so often hurtful In its effects, is here avoided ; a soft bandage being worn round the body, while the...
Side 200 - MORELL, JR— Euclid Simplified in Method and Language. Being a Manual of Geometry. Compiled from the most important French Works, approved by the University of Paris and the Minister of Public Instruction.
Side 211 - Hence the rule has been derived, that the number of beats per second is equal to the difference of the number of vibrations per second of the two sounds.