Nature, 14. köideSir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1876 |
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Page iii
... Connection with their Geological History , 435 Arlberg Tunnel , Dr. G. A. Koch on the , 304 Asia , Central , Col Prejevalsky's Exploration of , 60 Asia , Russian Exploration of , 534 Asiatic Bats , G. E. Dobson , 472 Astronomical Column ...
... Connection with their Geological History , 435 Arlberg Tunnel , Dr. G. A. Koch on the , 304 Asia , Central , Col Prejevalsky's Exploration of , 60 Asia , Russian Exploration of , 534 Asiatic Bats , G. E. Dobson , 472 Astronomical Column ...
Page iv
... connection with Sunspot Periodicity , 479 ; Mr. O. L. Lodge on the passage of elec- tricity through Metals , 479 ; Capt . A. W. Baird on Tidal Operations in the Gulf of Cutch , 480 ; Various Experiments and Papers in this Section , 480 ...
... connection with Sunspot Periodicity , 479 ; Mr. O. L. Lodge on the passage of elec- tricity through Metals , 479 ; Capt . A. W. Baird on Tidal Operations in the Gulf of Cutch , 480 ; Various Experiments and Papers in this Section , 480 ...
Page 3
... connected with mining may be noted the apparatus constructed by Sir Humphrey Davy in his researches on the safety lamp ... connection with the idea of separate condensers , and the expansive work- ing of steam . In Watt's first engine ...
... connected with mining may be noted the apparatus constructed by Sir Humphrey Davy in his researches on the safety lamp ... connection with the idea of separate condensers , and the expansive work- ing of steam . In Watt's first engine ...
Page 8
... connection one with another being made manifest . It is owing to this want of concatenation in the teaching that has ... connected with structural and physiological botany . These facts , by means of a judicious arrangement and proper ...
... connection one with another being made manifest . It is owing to this want of concatenation in the teaching that has ... connected with structural and physiological botany . These facts , by means of a judicious arrangement and proper ...
Page 22
... connected with Measurement , Section 3 , occupy a large space : there are upwards of 350 entries under this head , comprising , besides a variety of extremely interesting and curious special collections , apparatus for Measurement of ...
... connected with Measurement , Section 3 , occupy a large space : there are upwards of 350 entries under this head , comprising , besides a variety of extremely interesting and curious special collections , apparatus for Measurement of ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid action ammonia animals apparatus appears ASTRONOMICAL birds body carbonic carbonic acid Carboniferous cause chemical coast College colour comet conidium connection contains depth described direction distance electricity engine exhibited expedition experiments fact fathoms favour feet fermentation geological give given globigerina ooze Greenwich heat illustrated important inches inductor inner bank instruments interesting investigation Island known lake light Loan Collection London magnetic matter means measure ment meteorite meteorological meteorology method Miocene motion Museum natural nitrite of amyl object observations Observatory obtained organ original Owens College paper Paris Paris Observatory passed perihelion Permian phenomena Phylloxera physical plants position present President pressure produced Prof proper motion radiometer recent reference regard remarkable researches Royal Society scientific Section South species specimens stream surface temperature theory Thomson tion tube various wind Zoological
Popular passages
Page 285 - And he spake of trees, from the cedar tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall: he spake also of beasts, and of fowl, and of creeping things, and of fishes.
Page 2 - To teachers the Primer will be of inestimable value, and not only because of the simplicity of the language and the clearness with which the subject matter is treated, but also on account of its coming from the highest authority, and so furnishing positive information as to the most suitable mehods of teaching the science of botany.
Page 50 - Accurate and minute measurement seems to the non-scientific imagination a less lofty and dignified work than looking for something new. But nearly all the grandest discoveries of science have been but the rewards of accurate measurement and patient long-continued labour in the minute sifting of numerical results.
Page 196 - The third area, bounded on the north by the Bristol Channel, on the south by the English Channel, on the east by the Blackdown range, and on the west by the Culm and Devonian highlands, presents the most complex relations of the Trias in the southwestern counties.
Page 79 - As we descend deeper and deeper into this region, the inhabitants become more and more modified, and fewer and fewer, indicating our approach to an abyss where life is either extinguished, or exhibits but a few sparks to mark its lingering presence.
Page 263 - In connection with this subject, it may be interesting to some of your readers to know that I have just entered into an arrangemert with a Danish botanical collector — Mr.
Page 133 - Tiddeman before the Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire. U is printed by McCorquodale and Co., Leeds. A WORK entitled the " Anatomía dell' Ape," by Cleric!, has been recently published at Milan under the auspices and special supervision of the Central Italian Bee-keepers
Page 228 - According to the hypothesis of pangenesis, " every unit or cell of the body throws off gemmules or undeveloped atoms, which are transmitted to the offspring of both sexes and are multiplied by self-division. They may remain undeveloped during the early years of life or during successive generations; their development into units or cells, like those from which they were derived, depending on their affinity for, and union with, other units or cells previously developed in the due order of growth.
Page 177 - Arranged to meet the requirements of the Syllabus of the Science and Art Department of the Committee of Council on Education, South Kensington.
Page 228 - The units and the aggregate must act and re-act on each other. The forces exercised by each unit on the aggregate and by the aggregate on each unit, must ever tend towards a balance. If nothing prevents, the units will mould the aggregate into a form in equilibrium with their pre-existing polarities. If, contrariwise, the aggregate is made by incident actions to take a new form, its forces must tend to re-mould the units into harmony with this new form. And to say that the physiological units are...