The Earth and Man ...Gould and Lincoln, 1855 |
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Side 15
... temperature the principal cause of the winds Theory of the general winds - The winds of the tropical regions -Trade winds of the Pacific Ocean - Trade winds of the Atlantic- The monsoons of the Indian seas - The winds of the temperate ...
... temperature the principal cause of the winds Theory of the general winds - The winds of the tropical regions -Trade winds of the Pacific Ocean - Trade winds of the Atlantic- The monsoons of the Indian seas - The winds of the temperate ...
Side 16
... temperature the principal , acting indirectly by the winds , directly by the unequal density of the waters — Coinci- dence between the great atmospheric currents and the marine currents -System of general currents The Equatorial current ...
... temperature the principal , acting indirectly by the winds , directly by the unequal density of the waters — Coinci- dence between the great atmospheric currents and the marine currents -System of general currents The Equatorial current ...
Side 52
... temperature of a place by one degree of Fahrenheit ; that is to say , the effect is the same as if the place were situated sixty miles further south . A few thousand feet of height , which are nothing to the mass of the globe , change ...
... temperature of a place by one degree of Fahrenheit ; that is to say , the effect is the same as if the place were situated sixty miles further south . A few thousand feet of height , which are nothing to the mass of the globe , change ...
Side 85
... temperature taken at 6,000 feet below the surface . With regard to the depths of the open sea , they are still but little known ; we have , however , some very interesting measurements in the Atlantic Ocean . I cite the most remarkable ...
... temperature taken at 6,000 feet below the surface . With regard to the depths of the open sea , they are still but little known ; we have , however , some very interesting measurements in the Atlantic Ocean . I cite the most remarkable ...
Side 93
... temperature , and the mutual action immediately commences ; they combine with an activity which be comes visible to the senses by the rapid development of heat and light ; and in this continuous , vital movement their differences are ...
... temperature , and the mutual action immediately commences ; they combine with an activity which be comes visible to the senses by the rapid development of heat and light ; and in this continuous , vital movement their differences are ...
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The Earth and Man: Lectures on Comparative Physical Geography, in Its ... Arnold Guyot Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1857 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abundance Africa Alps already animal ARNOLD GUYOT Asia Minor Atlantic atmosphere Australia basin Cape Caucasus centre character civilization climate continental continents contrast countries currents depth desert direction earth Eastern element elevated epoch equator equatorial Europe existence extreme fact Fahr feet forms frozen gentlemen geographical geology give globe Gulf Gulf of Mexico heat height hemisphere Himalaya human important inches Indian Ocean inferior influence islands latitude less Mexico miles monsoon nations nature Nevertheless North north-east northern continents Old World organized Pacific Ocean peninsulas perfect Persia physical plains plateaus plates polar present principal progress race rains relief rivers seas seems shores side slopes societies soil South America south-west southern species square miles superior surface table lands temperate regions temperature terrestrial masses three continents tinents tion trade wind tropical regions unequal vapors variety vast vegetation waters Western Asia western coast whole zone
Populære avsnitt
Side 21 - Geography ought to be something different from a mere description. It should not only describe, it should compare, it should interpret, it should rise to the how and the wherefore of the phenomena which it describes.
Side 21 - It must endeavor to seize those incessant mutual actions of the different portions of physical nature upon each other, of inorganic nature upon organized beings, upon man in particular, and upon the successive development of human societies, in a word, studying the reciprocal action of all these forces, the perpetual play of which constitutes what might be called the life of the globe, it should, if I may venture to say so, inquire into its physiology.
Side 82 - Alps; further north, it becomes deeper. The Adriatic, between Venice and Trieste, has a depth of only 130 feet. In these two cases, we see that the bed is only the continuation of the gentle inclination of the plains of Northern Germany and of Friuli.
Side 157 - Floods of forty feet rise and upwards are frequent at this season in the great rivers of South America; the llanos of the Orinoco are changed into an inland sea. The Amazon inundates the plains through which it flows to a vast distance. The Paraguay forms lagoons, which, like those of Xarayes, are more than three hundred miles in length, and ooze away during the dry season.
Side 264 - In man, the degree of perfection of the types is in proportion to the degree of intellectual and moral improvement. The law is of a moral order.
Side 233 - As the plant is made for the animal, as the vegetable world is made for the animal world, America is made for the man of the Old World.... The man of the Old World sets out upon his way. Leaving the highlands of Asia, he descends from station to station towards Europe. Each of his steps is marked by a new civilization superior to the preceding, by a greater power of development. Arrived at the Atlantic, he pauses on the shore of this unknown ocean, the bounds of which he knows not, and turns upon...
Side 269 - ... influences, forgetful of his high moral destination. In the temperate climates all is activity, movement. The alternations of heat and cold, the changes of the seasons, a fresher and more bracing air, incite man to a constant struggle, to forethought, to the vigorous employment of all his faculties.
Side 255 - ... continents, at the centre of AsiaEurope, in the regions of Iran, of Armenia, and of the Caucasus ; and, departing from this geographical centre in the three grand directions of the lands, the types gradually lose the beauty of their forms, in proportion to their distance, even to the extreme pointr of the southern continents, where we find the most deformed and degenerate races, and the lowest in the scale of humanity.
Side 327 - Asia, Europe, and North America, are the three grand stages of humanity in its march through the ages. Asia is the cradle where man passed his infancy, under the authority of law, and where he learned his dependence upon a sovereign master. Europe is the school where his youth was trained, where he waxed in strength and knowledge, grew to manhood, and learned at once his liberty and his moral responsibility.