Nature, Volum 13Sir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1876 |
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Side 3
... feet . It proves that Raptores , Passeres , Gallinæ , & c . , exist in reality but it also renders it evident that there are divisions beyond these not capable of being included among these primary forms . For instance , the Parrots ...
... feet . It proves that Raptores , Passeres , Gallinæ , & c . , exist in reality but it also renders it evident that there are divisions beyond these not capable of being included among these primary forms . For instance , the Parrots ...
Side 5
... feet deep , had to risk being lost in glaciers and frozen to death on passes upwards of 16,000 feet high . He bore it all with infinite good humour , and reached the Khyber Pass , we have no doubt , a stronger and a wiser , and quite as ...
... feet deep , had to risk being lost in glaciers and frozen to death on passes upwards of 16,000 feet high . He bore it all with infinite good humour , and reached the Khyber Pass , we have no doubt , a stronger and a wiser , and quite as ...
Side 8
... feet , there will cease to be any increase at all in the temperature exactly at the depth of one English mile , or 5,280 feet . The reason of the discrepancy between this result and that previously given , is to be found in the last ...
... feet , there will cease to be any increase at all in the temperature exactly at the depth of one English mile , or 5,280 feet . The reason of the discrepancy between this result and that previously given , is to be found in the last ...
Side 12
... feet between the clouds and the ground , a con- ductor doubtless very imperfect , but on a great scale , and capable of affording to some extent a passage to the electricity . It is , however , far from being comparable with the ...
... feet between the clouds and the ground , a con- ductor doubtless very imperfect , but on a great scale , and capable of affording to some extent a passage to the electricity . It is , however , far from being comparable with the ...
Side 13
... feet , and the lower dia- meter of the gyratory movements , or cyclones , where they meet the ground , from 120 to 180 nautical miles , it will be seen that cyclones must have a figure very dif- ferent from waterspouts and tornadoes ...
... feet , and the lower dia- meter of the gyratory movements , or cyclones , where they meet the ground , from 120 to 180 nautical miles , it will be seen that cyclones must have a figure very dif- ferent from waterspouts and tornadoes ...
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Academy acid action Algæ animals Annelids apparatus appears Arctic ASTRONOMICAL birds Breccia carbonic acid chemical collection colour connection considerable contains described diameter direction discovery distance Eocene evidence examination exhibited existence expedition experiments exploration fact feet fluid force fossil geological give given heat hyæna illustrated important inches instruments interesting Island Jenisei larvæ lectures light Lord Salisbury lower magnetic matter means ment Meteorological method miles Minor Planets Miocene motion Museum nitrogen Novaya Zemlya observations Observatory obtained oxygen paper Paris Paris Observatory pipe plants plates portion position present pressure Prof published recent referred regard region remarks researches river Royal scientific Society solar species specific gravity specimens spectrum stalagmite surface temperature theory tion Transit of Venus tube upper velocity W. T. Blanford waterspout Zoological
Populære avsnitt
Side 238 - 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 62 - XVIII. The Nature of Light: With a General Account of Physical Optics.
Side 4 - 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 65 - 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 204 - 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 253 - 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 252 - Into two other smaller apertures in the top of the case are inserted, air-tight, the open ends of two narrow tubes, intended to connect the interior space with the atmosphere. The tubes are bent several times up and down, so as to intercept and retain the particles carried by such feeble currents as changes of temperature might cause to set in between the outer and the inner air.
Side 213 - 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.
Side 202 - 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 254 - The warmth played upon one side of the bell-jar, causing currents within it ; and the day after the lighting of the stove, the beef-infusion gave birth to a tuft of mycelium. In this case the small spots of Penicillium might have readily escaped attention ; and had they done so we should have had three cases of "spontaneous generation'' far more striking than many that have been adduced.