The Travels and Researchs of Alexander Von HumboldtJ.& J. Harper, 1833 |
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Página 22
... although the vessel was not a fast sailer . At six in the morning she rolled so much that the fore topgallant - mast was carried away . On the 7th they were in the latitude EQUINOCTIAL CURRENT . 23 of Cape Finisterre , the group.
... although the vessel was not a fast sailer . At six in the morning she rolled so much that the fore topgallant - mast was carried away . On the 7th they were in the latitude EQUINOCTIAL CURRENT . 23 of Cape Finisterre , the group.
Página 23
... carry the vessel in twenty - four hours from 21 to 30 miles eastward . Between the tropics , especially from the coast of Senegal to the Caribbean Sea , there is a stream that always flows from east to west , and which is named the ...
... carry the vessel in twenty - four hours from 21 to 30 miles eastward . Between the tropics , especially from the coast of Senegal to the Caribbean Sea , there is a stream that always flows from east to west , and which is named the ...
Página 24
... carried round in a continual whirlpool , which Humboldt calculates must take two years and ten months to perform its cir- cuit of 13,118 miles . This great current is named the Gulf - stream . Off the coast of Newfoundland a branch ...
... carried round in a continual whirlpool , which Humboldt calculates must take two years and ten months to perform its cir- cuit of 13,118 miles . This great current is named the Gulf - stream . Off the coast of Newfoundland a branch ...
Página 27
... carried about on the shore , probably by fishermen , and having been employed occasionally during their passage in reading some of the old Spanish voyages , these moving fires re- called to their imagination those seen on the island of ...
... carried about on the shore , probably by fishermen , and having been employed occasionally during their passage in reading some of the old Spanish voyages , these moving fires re- called to their imagination those seen on the island of ...
Página 48
... to submarine rocks , which continually supply what has been carried off by the equinoctial currents . But the causes by which these plants are detached are not yet suffi- FLYING - FISH . 49 ciently known , although the.
... to submarine rocks , which continually supply what has been carried off by the equinoctial currents . But the causes by which these plants are detached are not yet suffi- FLYING - FISH . 49 ciently known , although the.
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animals appearance Apure Aragua Araya arrived ascend atmosphere banks basaltic beautiful Bonpland Calabozo canoe Cape Caraccas Caripe cataracts chain Chaymas climate clouds coast colour containing cordilleras covered crocodiles Cruz Cuba cultivated Cumana Cumanacoa descended distance district earthquakes east elevated equinoctial Europe extent feet forests gneiss granite ground Guanaxuato Guayra Gulf of Cariaco heat height inches Indians inhabitants island jaguar La Guayra lake land latitude llanos maize Mariara masses Mexico miles mission missionary morning mountains mouth natives New-Spain night observed ocean Orinoco palms passed Peak plain plants population present province Quito rain regions remarkable Rio Negro rise river rocks savannas says Humboldt seen shore Silla soil South America Spanish species summit surface surrounded temperature Teneriffe thermometer tion torrid zone town travellers trees tribes Uruana valley vapours vegetation Vera Cruz village volcano voyage wind
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Página 166 - In -less than five minutes two horses were drowned. The eel, being five feet long, and pressing itself against the belly of the horses, makes a discharge along the whole extent of its electric organ. It attacks at once the heart, the intestines, and the plexus cui'tttrus of the abdominal nerves.
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Página 63 - Cumana, for instance, before the great catastrophe of 1797, the earthquakes were felt only along the southern and calcareous coast of the gulf of Cariaco, as far as the town of...
Página 133 - ... a tremendous subterraneous noise was heard, resembling the rolling of thunder, but louder, and of longer continuance, than that heard within the tropics in time of storms. This noise preceded a perpendicular motion of three or four seconds, followed by an undulatory movement somewhat longer. The shocks were in opposite directions, from north to south, and from east to west. Nothing could resist the movement from beneath upward, and undulations crossing each other.
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Página 59 - A river, the temperature of which, in the season of the floods, descends as low as twenty-two degrees, when the air is at thirty and thirty-three degrees, is an inestimable benefit in a country where the...
Página 187 - ... could be accessible only by constructing very lofty scaffolds. When the natives are asked how those figures could have been sculptured, they answer with a smile, as relating a fact of which a stranger, a white man only, could be ignorant, that " at the period of the great waters, their fathers went to that height in boats.
Página 198 - Is this river, then," inquires he, " the Orinoco, which appears to us so imposing and majestic, merely the feeble remnant of those immense currents of fresh water which, swelled by Alpine snows or by more abundant rains, every where shaded by dense forests, and destitute of those beaches that...
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