Proceedings of the Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow, Volume 27The Society, 1896 |
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Pagina 4
... sides and in all its sections . The arrangement of the subject is masterly , and displays not merely a necessarily great familiarity with the details , but an unrivalled power of bringing widely diverse material under its appropriate ...
... sides and in all its sections . The arrangement of the subject is masterly , and displays not merely a necessarily great familiarity with the details , but an unrivalled power of bringing widely diverse material under its appropriate ...
Pagina 16
... side of it ; and the third set are most susceptible to violet light , less so to green , least of all to red ; ( 3 ) that by a stimulation of all three " end - organs , " in nearly equal intensities , we perceive white . By Maxwell and ...
... side of it ; and the third set are most susceptible to violet light , less so to green , least of all to red ; ( 3 ) that by a stimulation of all three " end - organs , " in nearly equal intensities , we perceive white . By Maxwell and ...
Pagina 39
... side the fields are being absorbed by the extending town . Rural suburbs are swallowed up , and become in reality , if not in name , part of the growing city . The country track that ran between the city and its suburb becomes a busy ...
... side the fields are being absorbed by the extending town . Rural suburbs are swallowed up , and become in reality , if not in name , part of the growing city . The country track that ran between the city and its suburb becomes a busy ...
Pagina 40
... side ; and closes , dark and filthy , running at right angles to the streets , were literally swarming with inhabitants . Within a comparatively narrow area 75,000 persons were huddled together , a large proportion of them under ...
... side ; and closes , dark and filthy , running at right angles to the streets , were literally swarming with inhabitants . Within a comparatively narrow area 75,000 persons were huddled together , a large proportion of them under ...
Pagina 43
... side of the Trongate , at the Cross . It is said that , if we are to build at all , we have no right to erect anything save houses for the poor , in order to accommodate the multitudes whom we have dispossessed . Now Clause XXII ...
... side of the Trongate , at the Cross . It is said that , if we are to build at all , we have no right to erect anything save houses for the poor , in order to accommodate the multitudes whom we have dispossessed . Now Clause XXII ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
207 Bath Street Alexander amount animal anti-cyclone antitoxine Architect argon atmospheric B.Sc barometer Ben Nevis blast furnace body Buchan building carried cells chemical chemistry coal colour Council cyclone David diphtheria disease district Dowanhill electricity employers Engineers England erected experiments feet furnace gases Glasgow Cathedral held as read helium Hillhead immunity important industry infective interest James James Chalmers John Mann JOHN MAYER Kelvinside Kopp labour Lancashire land lecture LL.D London Lord Lord Rayleigh Members Meteorological microbes moulding nature Nevis nitrogen observations Observatory obtained Ordinary Meeting oxygen particles Philosophical Society photographs pillars plate poison Pollokshields President pressure produced Professor rays Robert Röntgen Royal Sanitary Section Session Society of Glasgow temperature terrace tetanus toxine trade Trust tube University of Glasgow vaulting Vincent street wages weather West George street William winds women workers
Populaire passages
Pagina 62 - Inclosures at that time began to be more frequent, whereby arable land, which could not be manured without people and families, was turned into pasture, which was easily rid by a few herdsmen ; and tenances for years, lives, and at will, whereupon much of the yeomanry lived, were turned into demesnes.
Pagina 42 - Whereas various portions of many cities and boroughs are so built, and the buildings thereon are so densely inhabited, as to be highly injurious to the moral and physical welfare of the inhabitants...
Pagina 138 - They which builded on the wall, and they that bare burdens, with those that laded, every one with one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the other hand held a weapon.
Pagina 97 - I let up some solution of liver of sulphur to absorb the dephlogisticated air, after which only a small bubble of air remained unabsorbed, which certainly was not more than -j-^ of the bulk of the phlogisticated air let up into the tube ; so that if there is any part of the phlogisticated air of our atmosphere which differs from the rest and cannot be reduced to nitrous acid, we may safely conclude that it is not more than T^ part of the whole.
Pagina 96 - ... not. For this purpose I diminished a similar mixture of dephlogisticated and common air, in the same manner as before, till it was reduced to a small part of its original bulk. I then, in order to decompound as much as I could of the phlogisticated air which remained in the tube, added some dephlogisticated air to it, and continued the spark till no further diminution took place. Having by these means condensed as much as I could of the phlogisticated air, I let up some solution of liver of sulphur...
Pagina 139 - Cambrensis, who lived at the end of the twelfth century and the beginning of the thirteenth century, states that in his time the bodies of King Arthur and Queen Guinevere were exhumed at Glastonbury.
Pagina 168 - Stand with your back to the wind, and the lowest barometer, or centre of depression, will be to your left in the northern hemisphere (in the southern hemisphere to the right) ; this rule holds universally.
Pagina 166 - ... simply the flow of the air from a region of higher towards a region of lower pressure, or from where there is a surplus to where there is a deficiency of air. It...
Pagina 108 - I thank you for the great honour you have done me in asking me to preside over your deliberations.
Pagina 218 - SMITH, J. Guthrie— STRATHENDRICK, AND ITS INHABITANTS FROM EARLY TIMES : An account of the parishes of Fintry, Balfron, Killearn, Drymen, Buchanan, and Kilmaronock. By JOHN GUTHRIE SMITH, FSAScot., author of 'The Parish of Strathblane.