Travels in North America in the Years 1841-2: With Geological Observations on the United States, Canada and Nova Scotia, Volumes 1-2Wiley and Putnam, 1845 |
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Pagina v
... entirely of Vegetable Matter . - Rises higher than the contiguous firm Land . - Buried Timber . - Lake in the Middle . The Origin of Coal illustrated by the Great Dis- mal . — Objections to the Theory of an ancient Atmosphere highly ...
... entirely of Vegetable Matter . - Rises higher than the contiguous firm Land . - Buried Timber . - Lake in the Middle . The Origin of Coal illustrated by the Great Dis- mal . — Objections to the Theory of an ancient Atmosphere highly ...
Pagina 3
... entirely free from smoke , so that the shipping may be seen far off , at the end of many of the streets . The Tremont Hotel merits its reputation as one of the best in the world . Recollecting the contrast of every thing French when I ...
... entirely free from smoke , so that the shipping may be seen far off , at the end of many of the streets . The Tremont Hotel merits its reputation as one of the best in the world . Recollecting the contrast of every thing French when I ...
Pagina 31
... entirely , in the su- perficial drift , and the old river - banks cut in this drift are still to be seen facing each other , on both sides of the ravine , for many miles below the Falls . A section of Goat Island from south to north ...
... entirely , in the su- perficial drift , and the old river - banks cut in this drift are still to be seen facing each other , on both sides of the ravine , for many miles below the Falls . A section of Goat Island from south to north ...
Pagina 37
... entirely different strata from those over which they are now thrown . The next inquiry into which we are naturally led by our retrospect into the past history of this region , relates to the origin of the Falls . If they were once seven ...
... entirely different strata from those over which they are now thrown . The next inquiry into which we are naturally led by our retrospect into the past history of this region , relates to the origin of the Falls . If they were once seven ...
Pagina 42
... entirely changed ! Yet how subordinate a place in the long calendar of geological chronology do the successive tertiary periods themselves occupy ! How much more enormous a duration must we assign to many antecedent revolutions of the ...
... entirely changed ! Yet how subordinate a place in the long calendar of geological chronology do the successive tertiary periods themselves occupy ! How much more enormous a duration must we assign to many antecedent revolutions of the ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Travels in North America in the Years 1841-2: With Geological ..., Volumes 1-2 Sir Charles Lyell Volledige weergave - 1845 |
Travels in North America in the Years 1841-2: With Geological ..., Volumes 1-2 Sir Charles Lyell Volledige weergave - 1845 |
Travels in North America: With Geological Observations on the ..., Volume 2 Charles Lyell Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2016 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Alleghany Alleghany mountains alluded American ancient anthracite Appalachian appears Atlantic banks Bay of Fundy beds Boston British called Cape Breton carboniferous CHAP clay cliffs coal coal-field coal-measures coloured corals cretaceous denudation deposits Devonian district drift England Eocene Europe European examined Falls feet thick ferns forest fossil fossiliferous Frostburg furrows geological geologists gneiss granite gypsiferous gypsum height hypogene inches Indian Island Joggins Lake Erie Lake Ontario land lectures Lepidodendron limestone marine marl mass mastodon ment miles Minudie Miocene mountains nearly negroes Niagara Nova Scotia observed Ohio origin Pecopteris Pictou plants present Professor railway recent red sandstone region remarkable ridges river rocks sand seams seen shale shells Shubenacadie side Silurian slaves South Joggins species Stigmaria strata surface tertiary tion traveller trees tutors upper valley Virginia Windsor wood York СНАР
Populaire passages
Pagina 27 - An examination of the geological structure of the district, as laid open in the ravine, shows that at every step in the process of excavation, the height of the precipice, the hardness of the materials at its base, and the quantity of fallen matter to be removed, must have varied. At some points it may have receded much faster than at present, but in general its progress was probably slower, because the cataract, when it began to recede, must have had nearly twice its present height, and therefore...
Pagina 146 - I found another set of similar furrows, having the same general direction within five degrees ; and I made up my mind that, if these grooves could not be referred to the modern instrumentality of ice, it would throw no small doubt on the glacial hypothesis. When I asked my guide — a peasant of the neighborhood — whether he had ever seen much ice on the spot where we stood...
Pagina 114 - ... Dismal," and is no less than forty miles in length from north to south, and twenty-five miles in its greatest width from east to west, the northern half being situated in Virginia, the southern in North Carolina. I observed that the water was obviously in motion in several places, and the morass had somewhat the appearance of a broad inundated river-plain, covered with all kinds of aquatic trees and shrubs, the soil being as black as in a peatbog.
Pagina 115 - I learnt of this singular morass. It is one enormous quagmire, soft and muddy, except where the surface is rendered partially firm by a covering of vegetables and their matted roots ; yet, strange to say, instead of being lower than the level of the surrounding country, it is actually higher than nearly all the firm and dry land which encompasses it, and, to make the anomaly complete, in spite of its semi-fluid character, it is higher in the interior than towards its margin.
Pagina 146 - Parrsborough, and that the icy blocks, heaped on each other, and frozen together or ' packed,' at the foot of Cape Blomidon, were often fifteen feet thick, and were pushed along when the tide rose, over the sandstone ledges. He also stated that fragments of the
Pagina 131 - ... marshes. Thus at Beauly, I found upright stumps of trees of the pine, cedar and ilex, covered with live oysters and barnacles, and exposed at low tides; the deposit in which they were buried having been recently washed away from around them by the waves.
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