Lake Superior: Its Physical Character, Vegetation, and Animals, Compared with Those of Other and Similar RegionsGould, Kendall and Lincoln, 1850 - 428 páginas |
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Página 45
... inches radius , and as smooth and even as if cut with a gouge . These marks were almost entirely confined to the inner side of the point , where some of the scratches could be traced as far below the surface of the water as we could ...
... inches radius , and as smooth and even as if cut with a gouge . These marks were almost entirely confined to the inner side of the point , where some of the scratches could be traced as far below the surface of the water as we could ...
Página 57
... inches ' depth , run- ning off into the lake , formed apparently by the grating back and forth of sand and small pebbles . July 7th.We were off by four this morning , but the wind The bowman and steersman of a canoe are called the ...
... inches ' depth , run- ning off into the lake , formed apparently by the grating back and forth of sand and small pebbles . July 7th.We were off by four this morning , but the wind The bowman and steersman of a canoe are called the ...
Página 59
... inches deep , I traced for some twenty feet . A sudden exclamation from the men , as we passed a deep narrow cleft , called our attention , but too late to see what they maintained they saw , namely , a quantity of snow at the bottom of ...
... inches deep , I traced for some twenty feet . A sudden exclamation from the men , as we passed a deep narrow cleft , called our attention , but too late to see what they maintained they saw , namely , a quantity of snow at the bottom of ...
Página 65
... way . John , for instance , though the best fellow in the world , would never allow the due sweep of his oar to be obstructed even by an inch , and any one whose back or head 66 came in the way , was reminded of the NARRATIVE . 65.
... way . John , for instance , though the best fellow in the world , would never allow the due sweep of his oar to be obstructed even by an inch , and any one whose back or head 66 came in the way , was reminded of the NARRATIVE . 65.
Página 69
... inches deep by eighteen inches to two feet across ; a few armfuls of this made a very comfortable bed . After the sunset faded , the moon shone out brilliantly , and we sat on the edge of the slope talk- ing of many things , long after ...
... inches deep by eighteen inches to two feet across ; a few armfuls of this made a very comfortable bed . After the sunset faded , the moon shone out brilliantly , and we sat on the edge of the slope talk- ing of many things , long after ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abdomen Agass Alps anal anal fins angle angulis posticis angustato animals antennæ antice apice Aubé basi beach belong body bones branchiostegal membrane branchiostegal rays canoe caudal character color continent convex COREGONUS covered Dekay dense distance dorsal dorsal fin Eagle Harbor elytris Esox Europe extends extremity Fabr fauna feet Feronia fert fins fishes forests Fort William genera genus head height inch Indian islands Jura Lake Huron Lake Superior land lateral line lateribus latitudes Latr length Lepidosteus less lower jaw Michipicotin middle miles mountain mouth narrow natural niger nitidus northern shores oblique occur opercular opercular apparatus operculum palpis pectorals peculiar phenomena plants posterior margin punctato rays region remarkable river rocks rotundatis rounded Sault side slope snout species specimens spots subtiliter surface tail teeth thorace tibiæ tion trees upper utrinque vegetation ventrals whole
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Página 463 - PRINCIPLES OF ZOOLOGY; Touching the Structure, Development, Distribution, and Natural Arrangement, of the RACES OF ANIMALS, living and extinct, with numerous Illustrations. For the use of Schools and Colleges.
Página 137 - Christian, will never be satisfactory to the man of science, in that form. In these studies evidence must rest upon direct observation and induction, just as fully as mathematics claims the right to settle all questions about measurable things. There will be no scientific evidence of God's working in nature until naturalists have shown that the whole Creation is the expression of a thought, and not the product of physical agents.
Página 459 - THE ANNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY is designed for all those who desire to keep pace with the advancement of Science and Art. The great and daily increasing number of discoveries in the different departments of science is such, and the announcement of them is scattered through such a multitude of secular and scientific publications, that it is very difficult for any one to obtain a satisfactory survey of them, even had he access to all these publications.
Página 467 - The design of this work is to furnish an epitome of the leading principles of the science of Zoology, as deduced from the present state of knowledge, so illustrated as to be intelligible to the beginning student.
Página 461 - BYRON ; a full length portrait of DR. JOHNSON, and a beautiful scenic representation of OLIVER GOLDSMITH and DR. JOHNSON. These important and elegant additions, together with superior paper and binding, render the American far superior to the English edition.
Página 137 - Coniferse, which differ so wonderfully from those of other plants, the hieroglyphics of a peculiar age ; in their needle-like leaves, the escutcheon of a peculiar dynasty; in their repeated appearance under most diversified circumstances, a thoughtful and thought-eliciting adaptation. He beholds indeed the works of a being thinking like himself, but he feels at the same time that he stands as much below the Supreme Intelligence in wisdom, power and goodness, as the works of art are inferior to the...
Página 453 - At first, the fundamental outlines, alone, should be presented, and nest, not only additional facts, but a deeper understanding of the connection, and so on ; and thus, by a regular and natural path, a full and intelligent knowledge of the globe in all its relations, will be finally attained. THIRD. The comparative method, recently adopted with so much success in Europe, should always be employed ; for it is by the recognition...
Página 453 - SECOND. To distribute geographical instruction throughout the whole course of education, so as to divide the labor of learning, and to give at the same time to each period of life the nutriment most appropriate for its intellectual taste and capacity. To this end, the globe should be studied from the different points of view successively ; graduating each view to the capacity of different classes of students.
Página 465 - Concordance. The principal variation from the larger book consists in the exclusion of the Bible Dictionary, which has long...