Nature, 18. köideSir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1878 |
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Page 7
... continuous current of warm humid air , which supplies moisture and energy to the storms that descend from the regions of the north - west into the great river valleys . It is the cradle of the equa- torial current that sweeps across the ...
... continuous current of warm humid air , which supplies moisture and energy to the storms that descend from the regions of the north - west into the great river valleys . It is the cradle of the equa- torial current that sweeps across the ...
Page 28
... continuous curve on a moving band of paper . - M . Gaiffe exhibited a manometric safety steelyard . It is mounted on ... continuously diminished since the beginning of last year , so that the minimum appears to fall , not in 1877 , but ...
... continuous curve on a moving band of paper . - M . Gaiffe exhibited a manometric safety steelyard . It is mounted on ... continuously diminished since the beginning of last year , so that the minimum appears to fall , not in 1877 , but ...
Page 32
... continuous , but movable zones , mark the directions of the storm's advance so clearly , as to enable an observer at this side of the ocean to predict with general accuracy , the section on the European coast on which the storm- centre ...
... continuous , but movable zones , mark the directions of the storm's advance so clearly , as to enable an observer at this side of the ocean to predict with general accuracy , the section on the European coast on which the storm- centre ...
Page 38
... continuously chang- ing but indistinct series of vowel sounds , which gradually settle down into the " vowel " proper . In the vowel , if well intoned , beautifully reproducing itself , but , as the intoner becomes the curve remains ...
... continuously chang- ing but indistinct series of vowel sounds , which gradually settle down into the " vowel " proper . In the vowel , if well intoned , beautifully reproducing itself , but , as the intoner becomes the curve remains ...
Page 46
... continuous spectrum of the photosphere . Mr. Ranyard observed the continuous spectrum below C line , but saw no trace of the planet until it was on the sun's disc . No change in the solar spectrum was observed at the limb of the planet ...
... continuous spectrum of the photosphere . Mr. Ranyard observed the continuous spectrum below C line , but saw no trace of the planet until it was on the sun's disc . No change in the solar spectrum was observed at the limb of the planet ...
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Common terms and phrases
Academy acid action American apparatus appears atmosphere blue body Capt carbon centimetres centre chemical coast College colour comet containing described direction distance earth effect Elasmobranch electric Eocene exhibited expedition experiments fact feet flora galvanometer geological give given glass Greenland heat inches increased instrument interesting Irish elk island larvæ light Lignitic magnetic matter means ment metal meteorological meteorology microphone miles Miocene molecules motion Museum nature observations Observatory obtained Owens College paper Paris perihelion phenomena phonograph photographs physical plants plate position present pressure produced Prof recently region remarkable right ascension Royal scientific seen seiches Silurian Society solar sound South species specific gravity spectrum Spitzbergen stars storm substances surface telephone temperature theory tion transit of Mercury tube University vapour variation velocity vibrations vis viva vowel wire
Popular passages
Page 161 - Yet soon he heal'd ; for spirits that live throughout Vital In every part, not as frail man In entrails, heart or head, liver or reins, Cannot but by annihilating die ; Nor in their liquid texture mortal wound Receive, no more than can the fluid air...
Page 140 - Men, my brothers, men the workers, ever reaping something new : That which they have done but earnest of the things that they shall do...
Page 163 - For an ye heard a music, like enow They are building still, seeing the city is built To music, therefore never built at all, And therefore built for ever.
Page 203 - His scales are his pride, shut up together as with a close seal. One is so near to another, that no air can come between them. They are joined one to another, they stick together, that they cannot be sundered.
Page 10 - Slate and Slate Quarrying. A TREATISE ON SLATE AND SLATE QUARRYING, Scientific, Practical, and Commercial. By DC DAVIES, FGS, Mining Engineer, &c. With numerous Illustrations and Folding Plates. Second Edition, carefully revised. I2mo, y. 6d. cloth boards. "Mr. Davies has written a useful and practical hand-book on an important industry, with all the conditions and details of which he appears familiar.
Page 116 - I of the American Journal of Mathematics he has a note " On a Class of Transformations which Surfaces may Undergo in Space of more than Three Dimensions," in which he shows, for instance, that if a fourth dimension were added to space, a closed material surface (or shell) could be turned inside out by simple flexure without either stretching or tearing.
Page 330 - Not unfrequently in the mountain districts broad beams apparently of bluish light may be seen extending from the zenith downwards, converging and narrowing as they approach the horizon. This ray-like appearance is very similar to that seen before sunrise ; only the point from which the rays proceed is opposite the sun : the rays themselves are very broad and blue in colour ; and the spaces between them have the ordinary illumination of the rest of the sky. If we suppose in this instance that the...
Page 240 - I found that one ounce of lead was not sufficient on a surface of contact 1 centimetre square to maintain constant contact; and it was only by removing the musical box to a distance of several feet that I was enabled to preserve continuity of current with a moderate pressure. I have spoken to forty microphones at once, and they all seemed to respond with equal force. Of course there must be a loss of energy in the conversion of molecular vibrations into electrical waves, but it is so small that I...
Page 240 - ... distance of several feet that I was enabled to preserve continuity of current with a moderate pressure. I have spoken to forty microphones at once ; and they all seemed to respond with equal force. Of course there must be a loss of energy in the conversion of molecular vibrations into electrical waves ; but it is so small that I have never been able to measure it with the simple appliances at my disposal. I have examined every portion of my room — wood, stone, metal, in fact all parts — and...
Page 162 - English, with an introduced Arabic guttural, some mispronounced Spanish, and a variety of shades of vowels and diphthongs. The result was perfectly satisfactory ; that is, Mr. Bell wrote down my queer and purposely exaggerated pronunciations and mispronunciations, and delicate distinctions, in such a manner that his...