A History of the Earth, and Animated Nature, 1. köideWingrave and Collingwood, 1816 |
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Page 24
... weight : those parts of the earth which are heaviest , sink into the subja- cent fluid more deeply , and become vallies : those that are lightest , rise higher upon the earth's sur- face , and are called mountains . Such was the face of ...
... weight : those parts of the earth which are heaviest , sink into the subja- cent fluid more deeply , and become vallies : those that are lightest , rise higher upon the earth's sur- face , and are called mountains . Such was the face of ...
Page 29
... weight by considering , that in those parts of the earth where the power of the ocean is greatest , the inequalities on the surface of the earth are highest : the ocean's power is greatest at the equator , where its winds and tides are ...
... weight by considering , that in those parts of the earth where the power of the ocean is greatest , the inequalities on the surface of the earth are highest : the ocean's power is greatest at the equator , where its winds and tides are ...
Page 38
... weight with their fellow shells upon shore . They answered all the chymical trials in the same manner as sea shells do . Their parts , when dissolved , had the same appearance to view , the same smell and taste . They had the same ...
... weight with their fellow shells upon shore . They answered all the chymical trials in the same manner as sea shells do . Their parts , when dissolved , had the same appearance to view , the same smell and taste . They had the same ...
Page 46
... weight in proportion as they lie deeper . This is , in general , the disposition of the different materials where the earth seems to have remained unmolested ; but this order is frequently inverted ; and we cannot tell whether from its ...
... weight in proportion as they lie deeper . This is , in general , the disposition of the different materials where the earth seems to have remained unmolested ; but this order is frequently inverted ; and we cannot tell whether from its ...
Page 91
... weight occasions a tremor of the adjacent parts , sometimes producing a noise , and sometimes an inundation of water . Not to tire the reader with a history of opinions instead of facts , some have ascribed them to electricity , and ...
... weight occasions a tremor of the adjacent parts , sometimes producing a noise , and sometimes an inundation of water . Not to tire the reader with a history of opinions instead of facts , some have ascribed them to electricity , and ...
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Common terms and phrases
amazing animals Antiparos appearance ascend barometer beauty become begins body bottom Buffon Caspian Sea cataract cause cavern climates clouds coasts cold colour considered continue covered curiosity degree deluge depth distance dreadful earth earthquake embryo evaporation fall feet fire flame floating fluid force formed former give globe greater greatest gulph heat History of Greenland hundred inches increase inhabitants intumescence island kind known lake land leagues less manner marine meteors miles moon motion mountains mouth nature neral ocean perceived petrifaction philosopher placenta plain polypus pounds weight produced proportion putrefaction quadrupeds quantity quicksilver rain raised regions resembling rise rivers rocks round salt sand scarcely seems seen shells shore side sink sometimes stream substances supposed surface tains tempests tides tion tops trees umbilical vessels vapours vegetable vessel violent volcano weight whence whole winds womb wonders
Popular passages
Page 162 - All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full; unto the place from whence the rivers come, thither they return again.
Page 48 - It is this alone, of all the elements around us, that is never found an enemy to man. The body of waters deluge him with rains, oppress him with hail, and drown him with inundations. The air rushes in storms, prepares the tempest, or lights up the volcano ; but the earth, gentle and indulgent, ever subservient to the wants of man, spreads his walks with flowers, and his table with plenty ; returns with interest every good...
Page 297 - I scarce could turn to fall upon the ground, with my head to the northward, when I felt the heat of its current plainly upon my face. We all lay flat on the ground, as if dead, till Idris told us it was blown over. The meteor or purple haze which...
Page 244 - Some mariners out at sea one day observing something at a distance from them, regarded it as a sea-monster; but upon its approach it was known to be Nicholas, whom they took into their ship. When they asked him whither he was going in so stormy and rough a sea, and at such a distance from land, he...
Page 244 - In order to aid these powers of enduring in the deep, nature seemed to have assisted him in a very extraordinary manner; for the spaces between his fingers and toes were webbed as in a goose ; and his chest became so very capacious, that he could take in at one inspiration as much breath as would serve him for a whole day.
Page 120 - Nothing can be finer, or more exact, than Mr. Pope's description of a traveller straining up the Alps. Every mountain he comes to he thinks will be the last ; he finds, however, an unexpected hill rise before him ; and that being scaled, he finds the highest summit almost at as great a distance as before. Upon quitting the plain, he might have left a green and a fertile soil, and a climate warm and pleasing.
Page 246 - This account, however, did not satisfy the king's curiosity ; being requested to venture once more into the gulf for further discoveries, he at first refused ; but the king, desirous of having the most exact information possible of all things to be found in the gulf, repeated his solicitations ; and to give them still greater weight, produced a larger cup than the former, and added also a purse of gold. Upon these considerations, the unfortunate Pessacola once again plunged into the whirlpool, and...
Page 123 - Our gloves were indeed some defence to our hands, but our faces were entirely exposed ; nor were our clothes a sufficient defence for the rest of our bodies, for their stings penetrating through the cloth, caused a very painful and fiery itching.
Page 93 - ... which happened in the province of Mutina. Two mountains shocked against each other, approaching and retiring with the most, dreadful noise. They, at the same time, and in the midst of the day, appeared to cast forth fire and smoke, while a vast number of Roman knights and travellers from the jEmilian way, stood and continued amazed spectators. Several towns were destroyed by this shock ; and all the animals that were near them were killed.
Page 81 - After an hour's stay, the smoke, being moved by the wind, gave us short and partial prospects of the great hollow, in the flat bottom of which I could discern two furnaces almost contiguous : that on the left, seeming about three yards in diameter, glowed with red flame, and threw up red-hot stones with a hideous noise, which as they fell back, caused the fore-mentioned clattering.