The New Geology: A Textbook for Colleges, Normal Schools, and Training Schools; and for the General ReaderPacific Press publishing association, 1923 - 726 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 68
Page 17
... represents a group which at some re- mote time occupied the world exclusively and universally , this group in its turn giving place to other forms of a different type . Of late years , however , this " life - succession theory , " as it ...
... represents a group which at some re- mote time occupied the world exclusively and universally , this group in its turn giving place to other forms of a different type . Of late years , however , this " life - succession theory , " as it ...
Page 27
... represented by a small dot 8/10 millimeter in diameter , some 9.3 meters away from the baseball , or about the distance across an ordinary schoolroom . Mercury and Venus would be represented by smaller ( 27 ) Part I — Physiographic Geology.
... represented by a small dot 8/10 millimeter in diameter , some 9.3 meters away from the baseball , or about the distance across an ordinary schoolroom . Mercury and Venus would be represented by smaller ( 27 ) Part I — Physiographic Geology.
Page 28
... represented by smaller dots intermediate in distance between the earth and the sun ; but the major planets are farther off , Jupiter being about the size of the end of a chalk crayon and some 160 feet away , while Neptune would be much ...
... represented by smaller dots intermediate in distance between the earth and the sun ; but the major planets are farther off , Jupiter being about the size of the end of a chalk crayon and some 160 feet away , while Neptune would be much ...
Page 34
... representing the earth be drawn on a blackboard on the scale of an inch to a hundred miles , the circle would be 79 inches in diameter . On such a circle , the height of Mount Everest would be a slight irregularity .055 of an inch in ...
... representing the earth be drawn on a blackboard on the scale of an inch to a hundred miles , the circle would be 79 inches in diameter . On such a circle , the height of Mount Everest would be a slight irregularity .055 of an inch in ...
Page 36
... represented as one hundredth of an inch , and this in only a very few places . As to what it was that primarily elevated parts of what we now call the continents , or depressed other parts that we call the ocean basins , we have little ...
... represented as one hundredth of an inch , and this in only a very few places . As to what it was that primarily elevated parts of what we now call the continents , or depressed other parts that we call the ocean basins , we have little ...
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Common terms and phrases
America ancient Archæan areas bottom brachiopods calcareous calcium carbonate called Cambrian Cañon Carboniferous changes chemical classed clay coal beds coast common composed contain corals Cretaceous crinoids crystalline Dana deep deposits depth Devonian diatoms dolomite earth earthquake Eocene erosion Europe evidence extend fact feet feldspar fishes Foraminifera formation forms fossiliferous found as fossils gastropods genera geological geologists glacier Grabau index fossils iron Jurassic kinds known Lake land latter lava layers limestone living localities lower marine mass materials Mesozoic mineral modern mollusks mountain North numbers occur ocean ooze Ordovician origin oxide Paleozoic Permian plants and animals present quartz reef regions reptiles river rocks sand sandstone sediments shales shells shore side siliceous Silurian similar skeleton South species square miles strata stratified structure supposed surface Tertiary theory thick tion Triassic trilobites tropical true types Upper usually Valley valve various volcanoes waves
Popular passages
Page 246 - There rolls the deep where grew the tree. O earth, what changes hast thou seen! There where the long street roars, hath been The stillness of the central sea. The hills are shadows, and they flow From form to form, and nothing stands ; They melt like mist, the solid lands, Like clouds they shape themselves and go.
Page 526 - You will observe by these remains The creature had two sets of brains — One in his head (the usual place), The other at his spinal base. Thus he could reason a priori As well as a posteriori.
Page 592 - But never in the history of science did a stranger hallucination arise than that of Cuvier and the modern school, when they supposed themselves to discard theory and build on a foundation of accurately ascertained fact. Never was a system devised in which theory was more rampant; theory, too, unsupported by observation, and, as we now know, utterly erroneous.
Page 526 - Twas rescued by the one behind: And if in error he was caught He had a saving afterthought. As he thought twice before...
Page 308 - But that particular and essential bit of the theory of evolution which is concerned with the origin and nature of species remains utterly mysterious. We no longer feel as we used to do, that the process of variation, now contemporaneously occurring, is the beginning of a work which needs merely the element of time for its completion; for even time can not complete that which has not yet begun.
Page 584 - We live in a zoologically impoverished world, from which all the hugest, and fiercest, and strangest forms have recently disappeared ; and it is, no doubt, a much better world for us now they have gone.
Page 592 - Werner and his school, when they supposed themselves to discard theory and build on a foundation of accurately-ascertained fact. Never was a system devised in which theory was more rampant ; theory, too, unsupported by observation, and, as we now know, utterly erroneous. From beginning to end of Werner's method and its applications, assumptions were made for which there was no ground, and these assumptions were treated as demonstrable facts. The very point to be proved was taken for granted, and...
Page 531 - ... these creatures is a marvel of mechanical design; the bones of the vertebral column are of the lightest possible construction consistent with strength, the bony material being laid down only where stresses arise, and reduced to a minimum at other points. The assembled skeleton reminds one forcibly of a cantilever bridge borne on two massive piers — the limbs — between which the trunk represents the shorter channel span, and the long neck and tail the spans leading to the shores. Over the...
Page 419 - At this period of our history, some terrible catastrophe involved in sudden destruction the Fish of an area at least a hundred miles from boundary to boundary, perhaps much more. The same platform in Orkney as at Cromarty is strewed thick with remains, which exhibit unequivocally the marks of violent death. The figures are contorted, contracted, curved, the tail in many instances is bent round to the head; the spines stick out; the fins are spread to the full, as in fish that die in convulsions...
Page 419 - Pterichthyes of the Lower Old Red Sandstone are to be found. We read in the stone a singularly preserved story of the strong instinctive love of life, and of the mingled fear and anger implanted for its preservation — " The champions in distorted postures threat.