Monthly Journal of Science, and Annals of Biology, Astronomy, Geology, Industrial Arts, Manufactures, and Technology, 1. köideJames Samuelson, William Crookes J. Churchill and Sons, 1864 |
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Page 19
... greater accuracy and economy than did formerly muscle and bone , and we have our mechanism for sawing , planing , grooving , tongueing , carving , and indeed for every similar operation . And through the observations and experiments of ...
... greater accuracy and economy than did formerly muscle and bone , and we have our mechanism for sawing , planing , grooving , tongueing , carving , and indeed for every similar operation . And through the observations and experiments of ...
Page 20
... greater amount of favour . The pro- cess and its effect are simple and easily understood . In its passage from the boiler to the cylinder , where its work has to be performed , the steam loses a certain amount of heat ; in other words ...
... greater amount of favour . The pro- cess and its effect are simple and easily understood . In its passage from the boiler to the cylinder , where its work has to be performed , the steam loses a certain amount of heat ; in other words ...
Page 30
... greater quantity of coal . It occupies about 47 square miles , and has an available store of 490 millions of tons . The seams dip eastward ( see Fig . 3 ) , under large tracts of Permian and Triassic beds , and were the minerals capable ...
... greater quantity of coal . It occupies about 47 square miles , and has an available store of 490 millions of tons . The seams dip eastward ( see Fig . 3 ) , under large tracts of Permian and Triassic beds , and were the minerals capable ...
Page 50
... greater delicacy in the reading instruments , and especially to Professor Thompson's beautiful reflecting galvano- meter , several long messages were sent backwards and forwards ; America , however , always doing the greater part of the ...
... greater delicacy in the reading instruments , and especially to Professor Thompson's beautiful reflecting galvano- meter , several long messages were sent backwards and forwards ; America , however , always doing the greater part of the ...
Page 54
... greater in the velocity of its wave particle than is the velocity which imparts the shock one may feel by dropping on his heels from a stone - step six inches in height ; but had its wave velocity been only as great as that produced by ...
... greater in the velocity of its wave particle than is the velocity which imparts the shock one may feel by dropping on his heels from a stone - step six inches in height ; but had its wave velocity been only as great as that produced by ...
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acid amongst amount animals appears atmosphere birds body bones British carbon carbonic acid Carboniferous Carnivora character chemical coal coal-field colour considerable contains copper crania cranium deposits diameter engineers exhibit existence experiments fact favour feet Flora force formation fossil geological give glass gun-cotton gutta-percha heat important inches increased infusoria interest iron island labours larv¿ less light Madagascar matter means metal microscope miles milk mineral mines Miocene Neanderthal Neanderthal skull nearly notice object observations obtained ophthalmoscope ordinary organic origin oxygen paper period Permian photosphere plants plate portion present produced Professor quantity R. I. Murchison rays readers recent regard remarkable rocks Royal scientific silver Sir William Armstrong Society solar species specific gravity specimens spectrum spots square miles steam steamer strata substance supply surface telescope temperature thallium tion tons vapour vessel whilst zinc
Popular passages
Page 211 - Arranged to meet the requirements of the Syllabus of the Science and Art Department of the Committee of Council on Education, South Kensington.
Page 763 - A SERIES OF METRIC TABLES. In which the British standard Measures and Weights are compared with those of the Metric System at present in Use on the Continent. By CH DOWLING, CE 8vo, strongly bound 1O/6 "Mr. Dowling's Tables are well put together as a ready reckoner for the conversion of one system into the other.
Page 689 - This seems to have been the origin of some of the round grains met with in meteorites ; for they occasionally still contain a considerable amount of glass, and the crystals which have been formed in it are arranged in groups, radiating from one or more points on the external surface, in such a manner as to indicate that they were developed after the fragments had acquired their present spheroidal shape (Aussun, &c.).
Page 483 - Physician to King's College Hospital, and Professor of Physiology and General and Morbid Anatomy in King's College, London ; Honorary Fellow of King's College.
Page 735 - ... and dimensions from the earliest times to which we can trace back their existence? Yet although their foundations are tens of thousands of years old, they were laid at an era when the Mediterranean was already inhabited by the same species of marine shells as those with which it is now peopled ; so that these volcanos must be regarded as things of yesterday in the geological calendar.
Page 81 - ... a little particle of apparently homogeneous jelly changing itself into a greater variety of forms than the fabled Proteus, laying hold of its food without members, swallowing it without a mouth, digesting it without a stomach, appropriating its nutritious material without absorbent vessels or a circulating system, moving from place to place without muscles, feeling (if it has any power to do so) without nerves, multiplying itself without eggs ; and not only this, but in many instances forming...