The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, Zväzok 52A. and C. Black, 1852 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 27.
Strana 10
... collected examples of the food and clothing and other works of art of nations in every stage of the progress of art . From Otaheite , so long in the eyes of Englishmen the type of gentle but uncultured life , Queen Pomare sends mats and ...
... collected examples of the food and clothing and other works of art of nations in every stage of the progress of art . From Otaheite , so long in the eyes of Englishmen the type of gentle but uncultured life , Queen Pomare sends mats and ...
Strana 22
... collected of fruits and oils , and medicines and dyes ; of threads and cordage , as we had here from New Zealand and from China examples of such novelties ; of gums and vegetable substances , which may , in some unforeseen manner ...
... collected of fruits and oils , and medicines and dyes ; of threads and cordage , as we had here from New Zealand and from China examples of such novelties ; of gums and vegetable substances , which may , in some unforeseen manner ...
Strana 47
... collected ; and a blow in any part puts in hazard every branch throughout it , on account of its elasticity and brittleness . Its specific gravity varies from 2.5 to 2.8 : 2.523 was the average from fifteen specimens examined by ...
... collected ; and a blow in any part puts in hazard every branch throughout it , on account of its elasticity and brittleness . Its specific gravity varies from 2.5 to 2.8 : 2.523 was the average from fifteen specimens examined by ...
Strana 49
... collected in the vicinity of the coral islands , and at different distances from them , for the purpose of analysis , in order to compare the constitution of the sea in different parts ; but they were lost with the Peacock on the bar of ...
... collected in the vicinity of the coral islands , and at different distances from them , for the purpose of analysis , in order to compare the constitution of the sea in different parts ; but they were lost with the Peacock on the bar of ...
Strana 56
... collected during the voyage of the Bonite.- Jameson's Edin . Jour . , July 1838 , p . 164. - Darondeau . Observations require confirmation . † Afterwards also in the Astrolabe . S. Stutchbury , West of England Journal , i . 48 . Mr ...
... collected during the voyage of the Bonite.- Jameson's Edin . Jour . , July 1838 , p . 164. - Darondeau . Observations require confirmation . † Afterwards also in the Astrolabe . S. Stutchbury , West of England Journal , i . 48 . Mr ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
abundant action analysis vide Table ancient animals appear atmosphere Bay of Bengal beautiful beds blood brass Cambrian carbonic acid cause Celt coins colour contain copper coral crystals deposits depth described diameter earth elevation epoch evidence exhibited existence fact fathoms feet filaria footprints forest formation fossils geological glaciers gneiss goitre gold height Himalaya improvements inches iodine iron island Lake Agnano land lead lime limestone lower manganese manufacture mass means metal microscopic miles mineral mountains natural history nearly observed obtained occur ocean octahedrons Old Red Sandstone origin period phenomena polyps portion present prism probably produced quantity racter reef remarkable rocks sand sandstone Savigny seen shew shores showers side Silurian silver Simaba Cedron similar species specimens stars Strabo strata surface temperature tide tion trace trees tropical valleys various vegetation vessels volcanic zodiacal light zoophytes
Populárne pasáže
Strana 91 - Memmi. arma antiqua manus ungues dentesque fuerunt et lapides et item silvarum fragmina rami, et flamma atque ignes, postquam sunt cognita primum. : >Ss posterius ferri vis est aerisque reperta. et prior aeris erat quam ferri cognitus usus, quo facilis magis est natura et copia maior.
Strana 302 - If brethren dwell together, and one of them die, and have no child, the wife of the dead shall not marry without unto a stranger: her husband's brother shall go in unto her, and take her to him to wife, and perform the duty of an husband's brother unto her.
Strana 92 - It is drawn, and cometh out of the body; yea, the glittering sword cometh out of his gall: terrors are upon him.
Strana 76 - Son of man, the house of Israel is to me become dross: all they are brass, and tin, and iron, and lead, in the midst of the furnace ; they are even the dross of silver.
Strana 335 - Pharaohs, and in rocky folds of Lebanon still untouched by the tool. So long as Ocean exists, there must be disintegration, dilapidation, change ; and should the time ever arrive when the elevatory agencies, motionless and chill, shall sleep within their profound depths, to awaken no more, — and should the sea still continue to impel its currents and to roll its waves, — every continent and island would at length disappear, and again, as of old, " when the fountains of the great deep were broken...
Strana 303 - Ye are forbidden to marry your mothers, and your daughters, and your sisters, and your aunts both on the father's and on the mother's side, and your brother's daughters, and your sister's daughters, and your mothers who have given you suck, and your foster-sisters, and your wives...
Strana 66 - Assuming, therefore, that the sun's light is the result of some peculiar action by which it brings forth into visible existence the element of light, which I conceive to be latent in and diffused throughout space, we have but to imagine the existence of a very probable condition ; namely, the unequal diffusion of this light-yielding element, to catch a glimpse of a reason why our sun may, in common with his solar brotherhood, in some portions of his vast stellar orbit, have passed, and may yet have...
Strana 335 - Reasoning from what we know,' — and what else remains to us? — an earth without a sea would be an earth without rain, without vegetation, without life, a dead and doleful planet of waste places, such as the telescope reveals to us in the moon. And yet the Ocean does seem peculiarly a creature of time, — of all the great agents of vicissitude and change, the most influential and untiring ; and to a state in which there shall be no vicissitude and no change, — in which the earthquakes shall...
Strana 222 - And life, in rare and beautiful forms, Is sporting amid those bowers of stone, And is safe when the wrathful spirit of storms Has made the top of the wave his own...
Strana 334 - ... stillness amid the calm of the arid and rainless desert, where no spring rises and no streamlet flows, and the long caravan plies its weary march amid the blinding glare of the sand, and the red unshaded rays of the fierce sun. But once and again, and yet again, has the roar of Ocean been there. It is his sands that the winds heap up ; and it is the skeleton remains of his vassals — shells, and fish and the stony coral — that the rocks underneath enclose.