Ice, or glaciers, by their immense expanding powers, must beyond doubt have produced this change in their original form, from this circumstance, that they were continually sliding downwards from the higher mountains to the lower districts and, by this... The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal - Pagina 1191827Volledige weergave - Over dit boek
| 1827 - 452 pagina’s
...geographers use Frith from frehtm, instead of the correct word Firth, from the Danish Fiord. — EDIT. •downwards from the higher mountains to the lower...from three, four, to five thousand feet high, and the valleys over which they hang are likewise several thousand feet in breadth, it must be a matter of... | |
| August Böhm (Edler von Böhmersheim) - 1901 - 364 pagina’s
...produced this change in their original form, from this circumstance, that they were continually sliding downwards from the higher mountains to the lower districts,...of stone which they had torn from the mountains.» к. Kasthofi-r Im Jahre 1825 berichtet Karl Kasthofer (302, S. 185) über den «Gletscher von Rocosecco,2)... | |
| Boston Society of Natural History - 1884 - 564 pagina’s
...produced this change in their original form, from this circumstance, that they were continually sliding downwards from the higher mountains to the lower districts,...of stone which they had torn from the mountains." (On the Geological History of the Earth, Edinb. New Phil. Mag., n, 1826-27, 107-121. I have not seen... | |
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