Report of the ... Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 46. köideJ. Murray, 1877 |
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Page lxx
... means of which from fifty to sixty images of the edge of the sun could be taken at short intervals during the critical ... mean distance of the earth from the sun was long supposed to have been fixed within a very small limit of error at ...
... means of which from fifty to sixty images of the edge of the sun could be taken at short intervals during the critical ... mean distance of the earth from the sun was long supposed to have been fixed within a very small limit of error at ...
Page lxxiv
... mean velocity of the wind is greatest in the S.S.W. octant and least in the opposite one , and that the amount of wind attains a maximum in January , after which it steadily decreases , with one slight exception , till July , augmenting ...
... mean velocity of the wind is greatest in the S.S.W. octant and least in the opposite one , and that the amount of wind attains a maximum in January , after which it steadily decreases , with one slight exception , till July , augmenting ...
Page lxxix
... mean time may I venture to suggest that in many localities the waste products of the furnace might be carried off to a distance from the busy human hive by a few horizontal flues of large dimensions , terminating in lofty chimneys on a ...
... mean time may I venture to suggest that in many localities the waste products of the furnace might be carried off to a distance from the busy human hive by a few horizontal flues of large dimensions , terminating in lofty chimneys on a ...
Page 2
... mean gradient of about 1 in 7 ; whilst the Limestone Floor was inclined in the same direction at a higher mean gradient and with still greater irregularity . The discoveries in this branch of the Cavern were neither 2 REPORT - 1876 .
... mean gradient of about 1 in 7 ; whilst the Limestone Floor was inclined in the same direction at a higher mean gradient and with still greater irregularity . The discoveries in this branch of the Cavern were neither 2 REPORT - 1876 .
Page 5
... mean diameter . Second , a layer of Cave - earth , rarely amounting to more than a foot in depth , and sometimes to not more than a few inches , whilst it occasionally reached as much as 2 feet . Third . Though it may be doubted whether ...
... mean diameter . Second , a layer of Cave - earth , rarely amounting to more than a foot in depth , and sometimes to not more than a few inches , whilst it occasionally reached as much as 2 feet . Third . Though it may be doubted whether ...
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Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acid action alizarin amount animal appears appendages axis Bart Belfast Birmingham Bristol British Association Carboniferous centimetres coil colour Committee Crustacea curve denote depth diameter direction Dublin earth Edinburgh effect electromotive force equal experiments feet flow galvanometer geological Glasgow H. J. S. Smith heat height homologous inches increase intestines investigation islands James John Kent's Cavern Kew Observatory length less liquid Liverpool LL.D London lunar Manchester March mass mean measure meteor miles moon's nitrogen nitrous oxide notch nutation observations Observatory obtained ocean Ohm's law orifice peristalsis plane present pressure probably Prof Professor proportion quantity R. I. Murchison R₁ R₂ Red Sandstone remarkable Report resistance rocks semidiurnal Sept sewage solar somite Speed surface temperature theory Thomas Thomson tidal tide tion Total unit velocity volume William wire
Popular passages
Page xvii - cultivate Science in different parts of the British Empire, with one another and with foreign philosophers,—to obtain a more general attention to the objects of Science, and a removal of any disadvantages of a public kind which impede its progress. EULES. Admission of Members and Associates. All persons who
Page xvii - attended the first Meeting shall be entitled to become Members of the Association, upon subscribing an obligation to conform to its Rules. The Fellows and Members of Chartered Literary and Philosophical Societies publishing Transactions, in the British Empire, shall be entitled, in
Page i - Second Report upon the Action of Air and Water, whether fresh or salt, clear or foul, and at various temperatures, upon Cast Iron, Wrought Iron and Steel ;—RW Fox, Report on some Observations on Subterranean Temperature ;—AF Osier, Report on the Observations recorded during the years
Page vi - Prof. Powell, Third Report on the present State of our Knowledge of Radiant Heat ;—Colonel Sabine, on some of the results obtained at the British Colonial Magnetic Observatories;— Colonel Portlock, Report of the Committee on Earthquakes, with their proceedings respecting Seismometers;—Dr. Gladstone, on the influence of the Solar Radiations on the Vital
Page 111 - caves) show no marks of degradation. The former does not present so low a type as that of most existing savages, but is (to use the words of Prof. Huxley) "a fair average human skull, which might have belonged to a philosopher, or might have contained the thoughtless brains of a savage." The latter are still more remarkable, being unusually large and well formed.
Page xviii - of the Association for the year of their admission and for the years in which they continue to pay without intermission their Annual Subscription. By omitting to pay this Subscription in any particular year, Members of this class (Annual Subscribers) lose for that and all future years the privilege of receiving the volumes of the Association
Page xx - each Author should prepare an Abstract of hie Memoir, of a length suitable for insertion in the published Transactions of the Association, and that he should send it, together with the original Memoir, by book-post, on or before addressed thus—" General Secretaries, British Association, 22
Page vii - John P. Hodges, MD, on Flax; — Major-General Sabine, Report of the Committee on the Magnetic Survey of Great Britain; — Rev. Baden Powell, Report on Observations of Luminous Meteors, 1856-57 ; — C. Vignoles, CE, on the Adaptation of Suspension Bridges to sustain the passage of Railway Trains; — Professor WA Miller, MD,on Electro-Chemistry ; — John Simpson, RN, Results of
Page xv - to prepare and print Tables of Wave-numbers ;—Report of the Committee for testing the new Pyrometer of Mr. Siemens ;—Report to the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty on Experiments for the Determination of the Frictional Resistance of Water on a Surface &c. ;—Second Report for the Selection and Nomenclature of Dynamical and
Page iv - Dove on his recently constructed Maps of the Monthly Isothermal Lines of the Globe, and on some of the principal Conclusions in regard to Climatology deducible from them ; with an introductory Notice by Lt.-Col. E. Sabine;—Dr. Daubeny, on the progress of the