Geology in 1835: A Popular Sketch of the Progress, Leading Features, and Latest Discoveries of this Rising Science |
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Page 11
... hundreds of yards beneath the surface were once elevated above its waters ? But we have unquestionable evidence of this mighty boulevèrsement records as clear as any that Herculaneum and Pompeii can exhibit of their former condition ...
... hundreds of yards beneath the surface were once elevated above its waters ? But we have unquestionable evidence of this mighty boulevèrsement records as clear as any that Herculaneum and Pompeii can exhibit of their former condition ...
Page 14
... hundred feet from the surface , or one thousand five hundred and thirteen feet below the level of the ad- jacent ocean , a depth far greater than had ever before been * Getting the coals is termed by miners working them . reached in ...
... hundred feet from the surface , or one thousand five hundred and thirteen feet below the level of the ad- jacent ocean , a depth far greater than had ever before been * Getting the coals is termed by miners working them . reached in ...
Page 20
... hundred and forty - five thousand nine hundred aud eighty - one cubic feet of solid matter is borne past Bonn every twenty - four hours , on its voyage from the Alps to the German ocean . No wonder that the Rhine should lose its ...
... hundred and forty - five thousand nine hundred aud eighty - one cubic feet of solid matter is borne past Bonn every twenty - four hours , on its voyage from the Alps to the German ocean . No wonder that the Rhine should lose its ...
Page 23
... hundred and thirty square leagues of this icy territory , and all other great mountain - chains present the same phenomena . The Mer de Glace of Mont Blanc , the most remark- able glacier of the Alps , is twelve or fourteen miles in ...
... hundred and thirty square leagues of this icy territory , and all other great mountain - chains present the same phenomena . The Mer de Glace of Mont Blanc , the most remark- able glacier of the Alps , is twelve or fourteen miles in ...
Page 24
... hundred feet , a deep gorge or depression in the side of the mountain.— Viewed from above , * it can be compared only to a tur- bulent river of dazzling brightness , whose waves are tossed about in the wildest confusion - nothing but mo ...
... hundred feet , a deep gorge or depression in the side of the mountain.— Viewed from above , * it can be compared only to a tur- bulent river of dazzling brightness , whose waves are tossed about in the wildest confusion - nothing but mo ...
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Geology in 1835: A Popular Sketch of the Progress, Leading Features, and ... John Laurance No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
abundance accumulation action Alps ancient animals antediluvian appear Astronomy basalt beds beneath Billesdon bones breccia Buckland buried causes caverns caves chalk changes Charnwood Forest circumstance coal coast contain convulsions Cornwall covered Cuvier deluge deposit depth diluvial discovered earth earthy matter effect elephant elevation England Eningen enormous Europe existing extinct fact fissures forests formation formed fossil fragments geologists Geology globe gradual granite gravel heat hills Humphry Davy hyænas ichthyosaurus imbedded inferred inhabitants instance interior island Jura mountains lake land Leicestershire lias lime limestone Lyell megatherium miles mineral masses Monkwearmouth mountains nature observed ocean oolitic organic contents organic remains origin period phenomena plants plesiosaurus portion position present primitive rocks produced proved pterodactylus quadrupeds recent regions relics remarkable remote reptiles river sand sandstone sedimentary shells situations skeleton solid species specimens strata stratified substance supposed temperature termed thickness thousand tion traces tropical valleys vast violent volcanic
Popular passages
Page 97 - swarmed in the seas, or crawled on the shores of a turbulent planet."* « The fiend O'er bog, or steep, through strait, rough, dense, or rare, With head, hands, wings, or feet, pursues his way, And swims, or sinks, or wades, or creeps, or flies.
Page 46 - In the six hundredth year of Noah, in the second month, and the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of Heaven were opened, and the waters prevailed
Page 46 - seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of Heaven were opened, and the waters prevailed and were
Page 99 - flying in the air, and shoals of no less monstrous ichthyosauri and plesiosauri, swarming in the ocean, and gigantic crocodiles and tortoises crawling on the shores of the primeval lakes and rivers, air, sea, and land must have been strangely tenanted, in these early periods of
Page 57 - C'est en vain que l'on cherche dans les forces qui agissent maintenant à la surface de la terre, des causes suffisantes pour produire les révolutions et les catastrophes dont son enveloppe nous montre les traces ; et si l'on veut recourir aux forces extérieures constantes connues
Page 98 - as having the snout of a dolphin, the teeth of a crocodile, the head and sternum of a lizard, the extremities of cetácea, * (being, however, four in number,) and the vertebrae of fish.
Page 54 - depth by the length and breadth of the cavern, will be found to exceed five thousand cubic feet The quantity of animal matter accumulated on this floor is the most surprising and the only thing of the kind I ever
Page 47 - and caused to disappear the countries formerly inhabited by men and the animal species at present best known, and on the other has laid bare the bottom of the last ocean, thus converting its channel into the now habitable earth.
Page 34 - covered by the water in May, and in the April following, he had some difficulty in breaking, with a sharppointed hammer, the mass which adhered to the stick, and which was several inches in thickness.
Page 22 - within the general line of coast are all of a subordinate nature, in no way tending to arrest the march of the great ocean, nor to avert the destiny eventually awaiting the whole region : they are like the petty wars and conquests of the independent states and republics of Greece, while the power of Macedón was steadily