Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, 55. köideTaylor & Francis, 1894 |
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Page 2
... fact we may begin with the actual bounding surface of leaves , bark , and roots of each tree . Wherever there is a contact , whether with leaves , bark , or roots of neighbouring trees , the areas of contact form part of the required ...
... fact we may begin with the actual bounding surface of leaves , bark , and roots of each tree . Wherever there is a contact , whether with leaves , bark , or roots of neighbouring trees , the areas of contact form part of the required ...
Page 16
... facts also . To reach this aim , I have tabulated the age of the 71,800 married couples given in the Census of 1891 , conforming to the single year- combinations . The virtual number of these combinations - as 45 pro- ductive years of ...
... facts also . To reach this aim , I have tabulated the age of the 71,800 married couples given in the Census of 1891 , conforming to the single year- combinations . The virtual number of these combinations - as 45 pro- ductive years of ...
Page 22
... fact is conspicuously evident from the columns headed B + C in Table II . This is the first curious law . Again , through a coincidence between the increasing age of either parent , and the decrease of fertility , it happens that the ...
... fact is conspicuously evident from the columns headed B + C in Table II . This is the first curious law . Again , through a coincidence between the increasing age of either parent , and the decrease of fertility , it happens that the ...
Page 29
... fact the minimum value of ( R1 / R // ) 2 is only tan2 7 ' or 0 · 000004 , and an error of only a few minutes in the determination of the azimuth would make a great difference in the value of B. In cases of such difference between B and ...
... fact the minimum value of ( R1 / R // ) 2 is only tan2 7 ' or 0 · 000004 , and an error of only a few minutes in the determination of the azimuth would make a great difference in the value of B. In cases of such difference between B and ...
Page 30
... fact , crystals may be strongly eolotropic electrically , whilst their magnetic eolotropy , if existent , is insignificant . This , of course , justifies Maxwell's ascription of double refraction to electric eolotropy . Properties ...
... fact , crystals may be strongly eolotropic electrically , whilst their magnetic eolotropy , if existent , is insignificant . This , of course , justifies Maxwell's ascription of double refraction to electric eolotropy . Properties ...
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Common terms and phrases
A.-Last absorption acetylene acid action alcohol alloys amount ampère arborisations astigmatism atropine axis B.-Liver Biafo glacier Bile canaliculi blood from ear carbon carbonic acid cells cellules cent cerebellum Coagulation coarsely granular leucocytes collatérales colour connexions containing copper corpuscules couche crystals cylindre-axe density deposit diorite éléments ether ethylene experiments F.R.S. Received fibres ganglion glacier Glycogen gneiss grains gram granules Hæmoglobin value heat hyaline leucocytes hydrogen increase injection Iron reaction leucocytes to chromocytes liquid Liver London methane mica mineral mitoma moelle moléculaire Museum nerveuses neuropile nitrogen normal Number of chromocytes observations Observatory obtained olfactive oxygen parallelepiped pigment pilocarpine plane pressure produced Professor protoplasmiques refraction rock Royal schist side Single overcoil Society solution specimens Sphenophyllum spongioblastes substance grise sulphate surface Table temperature terminales tion total leucocytes tube Tyndall urine urobilin urochrome vapour viscosity wave-surface whilst yellow
Popular passages
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Page 390 - WILLIAMSON.— INTRODUCTION TO THE MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF THE STRESS AND STRAIN OF ELASTIC SOLIDS.
Page 321 - Society." 2. — The registered office of the Association will be situate in England. 3. — The objects for which the Association is established are...
Page 489 - With Observations on the Osteology, Natural Affinities, and probable Habits of the Megatherioid Quadrupeds in general. By RICHARD OWEN, FRS, &c.
Page xxi - At all the points, not situate in the centre of the tree, wood possesses three unequal axes of calorific conduction, which are at right angles to each other. The first and principal axis is parallel to the fibre...
Page xx - and the investigation of diamagnetism and magne-crystallic action was subsequently continued by me in the laboratory of Professor Magnus of Berlin. In December, 1851, after I had quitted Germany, Dr. Bence Jones went to the Prussian capital to see the celebrated experiments of Du Bois...
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