Geological Magazine, Том 6Henry Woodward Cambridge University Press, 1869 |
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Стр. 3
... nature of the detached specimens . This is the more important , as the scales have been described as complete organisms by M. Pomel , ' who has detected them in the 1 Amtlicher Bericht über du xxv . Versammlung der Gesellschaft ...
... nature of the detached specimens . This is the more important , as the scales have been described as complete organisms by M. Pomel , ' who has detected them in the 1 Amtlicher Bericht über du xxv . Versammlung der Gesellschaft ...
Стр. 7
... nature if either foliage or fruit could be found associated with them . EXPLANATION OF PLATES I. AND II . - PLATE I. FIG . 1. Pinites Leckenbyi , Carr . 2. Section of the same through the axis ; the scales and the seeds . The section is ...
... nature if either foliage or fruit could be found associated with them . EXPLANATION OF PLATES I. AND II . - PLATE I. FIG . 1. Pinites Leckenbyi , Carr . 2. Section of the same through the axis ; the scales and the seeds . The section is ...
Стр. 25
... NATURE AND EXTENT OF SUBAERIAL DENUDATION . By D. T. ANSTED , M.A. , F.R.S. , & c . [ From the Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society . Vol . xi . Part II . 1868 ] PROFES ANSTED here brings forward a number of personal ...
... NATURE AND EXTENT OF SUBAERIAL DENUDATION . By D. T. ANSTED , M.A. , F.R.S. , & c . [ From the Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society . Vol . xi . Part II . 1868 ] PROFES ANSTED here brings forward a number of personal ...
Стр. 35
... nature of the organic remains , present us with conditions very similar to that which prevailed during the deposition of the sedimentary strata of the Upper Coal - measures of Western Scotland . The sandstone of the Gilmorehill quarry ...
... nature of the organic remains , present us with conditions very similar to that which prevailed during the deposition of the sedimentary strata of the Upper Coal - measures of Western Scotland . The sandstone of the Gilmorehill quarry ...
Стр. 45
... nature of a volcanic eruption , my specula- tion as to its cause differs from his theory . He attributes the elevation of mountains and the trains of vol- canoes which often accompany them , to local changes of temperature . " The ...
... nature of a volcanic eruption , my specula- tion as to its cause differs from his theory . He attributes the elevation of mountains and the trains of vol- canoes which often accompany them , to local changes of temperature . " The ...
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Ammonites appear Belaugh Belemnites bones Boulder-clay breccia British Carboniferous Chalk character Chillesford clay coal cone containing Crag Cretaceous denudation deposits described diphya district drift England eruption evidence exhibited existence fauna feet felspathic fissures flint formation fossils Gault genera genus Geol GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE Geological Society Geological Survey geologists Glacial gneiss granite gravel Green Slates Greensand heat hills Hyperodapedon inches Inferior Oolite land lava Lias limestone Lower marine marl mass Mastodon matter miles mineral Miocene Museum nature nearly Neocomien Norwich observations occur Old Red Sandstone origin paper plates Porphyries portion present probably Prof Professor R. I. Murchison Red Sandstone referred remains remarked ridge river rocks sand schists seen shales shells side Silurian Skiddaw Slates soil species specimens sporangia strata structure surface teeth thickness tion tooth trachytic trap Trogontherium valley volcanic zone
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Стр. 183 - Tree and Serpent Worship ; Or, Illustrations of Mythology and Art in India in the First and Fourth Centuries after Christ, from the Sculptures of the Buddhist Topes at Sanchi and Amravati.
Стр. 478 - A great reform in geological speculation seems now to have become necessary." " It is quite certain that a great mistake has been made— that British popular geology at the present time is in direct opposition to the principles of Natural Philosophy.
Стр. 564 - Director of the Geological Survey of Ireland, and Professor of Geology in the Royal College of Science, Dublin. MONTAGUE RHO[)ES JAMES, MA, Litt.D., Fellow and Dean of King's College, and Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. Rev. CHW JOHNS, MA, Queens
Стр. 150 - attractive sensational idea that a molten interior to the globe underlies a thin superficial crust; its surface agitated by tidal waves and flowing freely towards any issue that may here and there be opened for its outward escape...
Стр. 286 - Wallbridge. in reply, stated that the roek must have come at the least twenty miles from its original home. The surface of the Trenton limestone rock in the neighbourhood was striated in the direction of the boulder. There was no evidence of intrusion. The mass was traversed in two or three places by crevices. 2. "On the distribution of Flint Implements in the Drift, -with reference to some recent discoveries in Norfolk and Suffolk.
Стр. 98 - He was elected a Fellow of the Geological Society of London in 1870, and in 1878 was created a CMG through the recommendation of Sir John Glover, then Governor of Newfoundland.
Стр. 479 - Uniformitarianism, to deny that the rapidity of the rotation of the earth may be diminishing, that the sun may be waxing dim, or that the earth itself may be cooling. Most of us, I suspect, are Gallios, " who care for none of these things...
Стр. 564 - Hypsilophodon, from the character of its teeth, probably subsisted on hard vegetable food. He expressed a hope that Mr. Fox would allow a closer examination of his specimens to be made. He was unable to agree with Mr. Seeley's views. He was inclined to think that the progress of knowledge tended rather to break down the lines of demarcation between groups supposed to be distinct than to authorize the creation of fresh divisions.
Стр. 253 - ... strata will thus become crystallized by heat, and may eventually, with their included water, be raised to the melting point, by which process gases would be generated, and earthquakes and volcanic eruptions follow. At the same time the mechanical disturbance of the equilibrium of pressure, consequent upon a transfer of sediments, while the yielding surface reposes on matters partly liquified, will explain the movements of elevation and subsidence of the earth's crust Herschel was probably ignorant...
Стр. 63 - England, had given a clear statement of the results of his own original observations, and had declared that none of the human bones or stone implements met with by him in any of the caverns could be considered to be as old as the mammoth and other extinct quadrupeds. Opinions in harmony with this conclusion continued until very lately to be generally in vogue in England ; although about the time that Schmerling was exploring the Liege caves, the Rev. Mr. M'Enery...