The Intellectual Observer, Том 12Groombridge and Sons, 1868 |
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Стр. 42
... animals , the hum of insects , and the multitudinous noises of active life . What we call the silence of night and of waste places , and which , for a brief period , yields the * " Sound : " a Course of Eight Lectures , delivered at the ...
... animals , the hum of insects , and the multitudinous noises of active life . What we call the silence of night and of waste places , and which , for a brief period , yields the * " Sound : " a Course of Eight Lectures , delivered at the ...
Стр. 66
... animals , swamps will be drained , waste land reclaimed , barren land cultivated , and thus many thousands of square miles will experience a considerable modi- fication of climate as well as of aspect . When sandy wastes are ...
... animals , swamps will be drained , waste land reclaimed , barren land cultivated , and thus many thousands of square miles will experience a considerable modi- fication of climate as well as of aspect . When sandy wastes are ...
Стр. 86
... animal , is no longer the utter , hopeless mystery which it has for ages remained . Careful microscopic measurements have been made of the size of the corpuscles in the blood of different animals , and it is now generally agreed that in ...
... animal , is no longer the utter , hopeless mystery which it has for ages remained . Careful microscopic measurements have been made of the size of the corpuscles in the blood of different animals , and it is now generally agreed that in ...
Стр. 87
... animal body . During its passage through the lungs , the blood , as every one knows , loses carbonic acid and takes up oxygen . Every 100 volumes of the blood which enters the lungs is capable , according to Claude Bernard , of ...
... animal body . During its passage through the lungs , the blood , as every one knows , loses carbonic acid and takes up oxygen . Every 100 volumes of the blood which enters the lungs is capable , according to Claude Bernard , of ...
Стр. 88
... is of extreme importance in regard to the question of animal oxidation . He * " Proceedings of the Royal Society , " vol . xiii . 357 . found that a solution of the blood - corpuscles from 88 The Functions of the Blood .
... is of extreme importance in regard to the question of animal oxidation . He * " Proceedings of the Royal Society , " vol . xiii . 357 . found that a solution of the blood - corpuscles from 88 The Functions of the Blood .
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
acid amongst animals Annelids antennæ aperture apparatus appear barrow Bladderwort body bones Brady centre cilia cleft colour considerable Copernicus crater Crustacea curious dark deposited Derbyshire described diameter direction disk distance earth effect eggs electricity engraving Entomostraca Eratosthenes evidence exhibited existence extremely fact feet fish G. O. Sars genus germinal vesicle glass heat Hyginus inches instruments interment length less light Linné Little Chester lunar LYNCEUS matter meteors microscope miles minute Moon mountain nearly noticed objects observations obtained ornamented Ostracoda oxygen pass Planaria plants plate portion present probably produced quantity Quatrefages rain red fox region remains remarkable ring Roman rotifers round salmon scale Schr seen setæ shadow shell side silver similar skins species specimens spot stars stream surface T. W. WEBB telescope temperature terminator tion tube tumuli urns utricles vessels XII.-NO yellow
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Стр. 42 - SOUND : a Course of Eight Lectures delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain. By JOHN TYNDALL, LL.DFRS New Edition, crown 8vo. with Portrait of M. Chladni and 169 Woodcuts, price 9s. HEAT a MODE of MOTION.
Стр. 383 - Several writers have misapprehended or objected to the term Natural Selection. Some have even imagined that natural selection induces variability, whereas it implies only the preservation of such variations as arise and are beneficial to the being under its conditions of life.
Стр. 394 - The conclusions he had thus been able to arrive at are the following : — (1) That the surface of the chalk in the Valley of the Somme had assumed its present form prior to the deposition of any of the gravel or loess...
Стр. 382 - There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity...
Стр. 332 - I have seen the wild stone-avalanches of the Alps, which smoke and thunder down the declivities with a vehemence almost sufficient to stun the observer. I have also seen snow-flakes descending so softly as not to hurt the fragile spangles of which they were composed ; yet to produce, from aqueous...
Стр. 88 - We may infer from the facts above mentioned that the colouring matter of blood, like indigo, is capable of existing in two states of oxidation, distinguishable by a difference of colour and a fundamental difference i/i the action on the spectrum.
Стр. 404 - Capra hircus. The fourth skull belonged to the pig, and had a round hole in the frontals rather larger than a crown piece, which had the appearance of being made by human hands. The presence of the lower jaws with the skulls indicates that they were deposited in the cavern while the ligaments still bound them together. They were all more or less covered with decaying stalagmite. The outer chamber was remarkable for the absence of earth of any kind, except underneath the hole in the roof, where there...
Стр. 401 - AT the time man first appeared on the earth, the physical conditions obtaining in Western Europe were altogether different from those under which we now live. Britain formed part of the mainland of Europe, and low fertile plains, covered with the vegetation peculiar to a moderately severe climate, stretched far away into the Atlantic, from the present western coast line.* The Thames also, instead of flowing into the German ocean, joined the Elbe and the Rhine in an estuary, opening on the North Sea...
Стр. 179 - Kingdom, and for more effectually employing the Poor, by prohibiting the use and wear of all printed, painted, stained, or dyed Callicoes in Apparel, Household Stuff, Furniture or otherwise...
Стр. 406 - ... out of those thirty-one, all, with the exception of six, are still living in our island. The cave bear, cave lion, and cave hyaena had vanished away, along with a whole group of pachyderms, and of all the extinct animals but one, the Irish elk, still survived.