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Nature03.10.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 03. Oktober 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] as I then understood, not only of the trustees, but of the authorities at the Board of Works, and that the article on “Botanical Museums” was merely a reproduction of this official paper, without any reference to its answer. After supplying the date of this official document, my [...]
[...] scientific collection to work in his single specimen her barium with the “general naturalist,” “the palaeontolo gist,” and “the mere amateur.” Every systematic botanist is at first, and more or less all along, a “comparer” of plants. The man who begins as a mere comparer natu [...]
[...] the fact that a large proportion of fossil plants have been determined from their internal structure, that is, on evidence which no mere herbarium, however extensive, can supply, far less one for rapidly determining plants without dissection, or a collection of detached [...]
[...] leaves. The palaeontologist requires the most extensive collections possible for his work, and he must be a work ing zoologist or botanist. All such work done by mere “geologists” and on such data as Mr. Bentham proposes to supply would always deserve strong condemnation. [...]
[...] the work under review will be able to make good and correct analyses, but we doubt whether he will learn much beyond the mere analytical details, for in this book there seems little room for the student to use his powers of originality, and nothing to stimulate him to [...]
[...] the east as to the south. There are, it is true, a few currents in the southern hemisphere with an eastern motion, but these the advocates of the gravitation theory would call “mere surface drifts produced by the winds.” Besides the majority of the currents in that hemisphere move in wrong directions to be ex [...]
[...] circumference with the Royal Society's telescope and spectro scope without any d///iances or devices whatsoever (sic), and that with the greatest ease and certainty. Had I merely looked for them, or for anything of the kind, a twelvemonth ago, I do not see how I could have failed to see them [...]
[...] doing, technical terms carefully reduced to the smallest number absolutely required (and text-books bristle with unnecessary ones) should not be taught to boys as mere arbitrary names. Synge nesious, as a mere matter of taste, seems to me preferable to “united by dust-pouches.” [...]
[...] Dov BTLEss the case mentioned by Mr. Lydekker is somewhat unusual; but the mere fact of an animal possessing an extra tooth can hardly upset Prof. Owen's theory. It is by no means an un common thing to meet with examples of supernumerary teeth in [...]
[...] as a means of securing for the egg the protection of the verdure of the grass in which it was deposited 2 or was it merely the effects of a brief confinement and a slight lccal wound The conditions under which this egg was [...]
Nature09.01.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 09. Januar 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] cases porous in their texture, such as sandstone, are all more or less traversed with cracks—sometimes mere lines, like those of a cracked window-pane, but sometimes wide and open clefts and tunnels. These numerous channels serve as passages for the under [...]
[...] him there were prospects of partial success. Only partial be cause we do not hope or expect to ascertain the true fall, but merely the relative fall in different zones, or portions of the ocean. Camden Square, London G. J. SYMONs [...]
[...] involves us in continual physical suffering. In our journey through life thousands of objects impress themselves on our mere outward eyes, yet are never really observed by us. Nay, they may actually in some degree reach the inner eye, and yet from want of training, or [...]
[...] this faculty would be to clip her wings, to forbid her to soar into the highest heavens, and to condemn her to a mere ant-like industry upon this nether earth. In adding to the present curriculum of a liberal educa tion some training in scientific habits of mind and work, [...]
[...] the imaginative faculty. On the contrary, we should ſurnish it with the complement of that anthropomorphic or subjective method of viewing things which mere literary training is apt to produce We should enable it to take a freer, wider grasp of creation and of man's place therein. [...]
[...] it will be your endeavour to add to your knowledge, do not lose an opportunity of cultivating at the same time these two faculties. So long as your knowledge is merely from books, so long as you aré content with a kind 9 mere cramming, such an opportunity will be little likely [...]
[...] certain extent, what happened in the case of the Eclipse Ex pedition of 1870 has been now repeated. Our readers will recollect that on that occasion the mere personal application of the Astronomer Royal was at once very properly refused, while a proper representation by the leading Societies was at once as [...]
[...] stratum—say at every 5 fathoms down to 20 fuhoms. Z/erature Soundings.-The determination of the tempera ture, not merely of the bottom of the ocean over a wide geogra phical range, but of its various intermediate stra a, is one of the most important objects of the expedition ; and should, therefore, [...]
[...] amounting to only 16h 32". The theoretical error of this method is very small, and the result thus obtained is decidedly to be pre ferred to the mere mean of the heights at high and low water. The mean level thus determined is subject to meteorological influences, and it would be desirable, should there be an oppor [...]
[...] 3ut if we consider the moon as acted upon by the sun, receiv ing its magnetic power, as it does its light and heat, from the central body of our system, or merely having its own inherent magnetism modified by solar action, then we must choose as our [...]
Nature04.12.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 04. Dezember 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] architecture of the globe, came gradually to accustom themselves to the notion that, after all, it was really true that rocks were merely so many chemical compounds to be analysed and labelled accordingly. In the midst of the darkness wherein the poor petro [...]
[...] book been required to save such needless expenditure of time, and to give the student those practical hints which he is not likely to meet with in mere scientific communi cations on special subjects. It is this want which Mr. Rosenbusch endeavours to supply in the volume now [...]
[...] subject before the readers of NATURE, in the hope that some of them may re-investigate it and record their results. I will merely remark that the microscopic investiga tions which have recently been made with greatly in creased powers and better methods of preparation, have [...]
[...] with his fellow-animals find fuller expression with regard to the nobler and higher specimens of animal life. And here we would say that pictures like these—not mere passive delineations of the outward shapes, but illustra tions of the habits of wild animals—have an instructive [...]
[...] reflections; we are only eager to impress the superiority in this regard of delineations of active life and habits over mere portraiture, however well executed, of indi vidual forms of life. We are glad to be able to reproduce one of the [...]
[...] Convinced, however, of their essential truth, I looked forward to a time when what might then be regarded as mere dreaming would be established as a recognised part of the groundwork of geology. The views put forward in the volume met, indeed, with an amount of general [...]
[...] and as I have been especially singled out for attack, it appears to me to be only an act of duty to vindicate, not my own position merely, but the reputation of that “younger school” which is accused of seeking to pervert the geological mind from the ancient and true creed. If [...]
[...] by which the rocks were altered and crumpled. This obvious inference is far older than the days of geological inquiry. But surely its mere obviousness is no argument for its truth, any more than the rising and setting of the sun prove the earth to be the centre of the universe. In [...]
[...] would then be time to consider how far they were applic able elsewhere. That they would be found to be not merely of local but of wide general import I then held to be probable, and I now know to be profoundly true. One main object of my chapters was to show how the [...]
[...] thoroughly it had done its work upon the surface, no matter whether the rocks had been originally formed as mere soft mud or had been once in actual fusion. I dwelt on the remarkable fact that as a rule the valleys do not run along lines of fracture, and quoted in support of this [...]
Nature27.01.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 27. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the existence of “disease germs,” as they are called, more probable than they were before. In scientific subjects we cannot accept mere theories for facts. Let the advocates of disease germs first prove their existence, and then possibly optical and microscopic analysis will throw light [...]
[...] various aberrant forms which are from time to time pre sented by the different organs of which plants are composed. Such investigations are no mere idle amusement for the leisure hours of naturalists, but have an important scientific bearing. Since botanists have attempted to arrange the [...]
[...] have been in some cases experiments, seldom remarkable for true appreciation of their professed purpose, or, per haps, merely, the pecuniary speculation of an ignorant writer. Under such circumstances, it is gratifying to meet with a book of this kind, which really is what it was [...]
[...] actually seen corresponded to the relations thus calculated, he would have gone far to render that view certain which Herschel always spoke of as merely an assumption: . But Struve found no such law of stellar distribution. On the contrary, he found a law so different, that in order [...]
[...] association between the nebular group and the galaxy. Every other conceivable explanation will be found to make the relation merely apparent—that is, accidental, which neither of the Herschels admit. But yet stronger evidence of association exists; evidence [...]
[...] assertion should be mistaken, he explicitly tells us that “Space and Time are not merely forms of sensuous intuition, but intui tions themselves” (Meiklejohn's Trans., p. 98): that is, sensuous intuitions, as he has been just before asserting that all human [...]
[...] sensibility and pure thought that Kant founds the possibility of Mathematics—a science which could never be derived from a mere analysis of the concepts employed, but only from the construction of them in intuition. He ridicules, for example, the idea of attempting to deduce the proposition, “Two right [...]
[...] construction of them in intuition. He ridicules, for example, the idea of attempting to deduce the proposition, “Two right lines cannot enclose a space,” from the mere concepts or notions of a straight line and the number two. “All your endeavours,” says he, “are in vain, and you find yourself [...]
[...] Keuper of the Bristol area, of which the beds containing them occupied the highest position. Prof. Ramsay considered these conglomerates not merely as of marine origin, but as breccias which had covered the old land surface, which had been worked up by the water of the New Red period. He objected to the [...]
[...] tracts may have been islands and promontories, and though the water which surrounded them was salt, there was no open sea, but merely a large inland salt-lake, in which the New Red Marl was formed. The marl was less connected with the New Red Sandstone than with the Lias. The Muschelkalk being absent, [...]
Nature11.04.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 11. April 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] its progress has not been checked by extraneous causes, generally by climatological or other physical opposing in fluences, sometimes by the mere struggle with competing races. Wherever a considerable number of species appear to have had their centres within a limited area, that area [...]
[...] to be so. Doubtless I ought to feel thankful for the tenderness with which he has trodden on my toes, but I have scant regard for mere courtesy where questions of science are at stake; and in the interests of truth I would rather that the errors of my [...]
[...] photography, army signalling, torpedo service, &c., all of which the Royal Engineer must know something about. It is evident that mere theoretical instruction in matters like these would be of little use to men who occupy such practical appointments as are filled by most Engineer [...]
[...] kindred duties necessary to be fulfilled in the occupation of a rough untravelled country. As an instance of this, we need point merely to the recent Abyssinian Campaign, which may justly be called a triumph of engineering—a gigantic piece of road-making in fact—rather than a vic [...]
[...] —“Such devastation cannot be incessantly committed for thousands of years without dividing islands, until they become at last mere clusters of rocks, the last shreds of masses once continuous. To this state many appear to have been reduced, and innumerable fantastic forms are [...]
[...] tical and economical questions different members of the Com mission and separate committees have made valuable reports. I wish on this occasion merely to direct your attention to some of the more special geological bearings of the questions discussed in one of the committees, of which the lamented Sir Roderick [...]
[...] Boulonnais, in France. There is nothing to show but that the spur of old land stretching eastward from Herefordshire was merely a promontory ending in Warwickshire, and round which the Carboniferous sea passed and extended southward uninter ruptedly to Belgium and the north of France, and westward to [...]
[...] sanne. This thinning-out of the Secondary strata has now been proved not to be merely hypothetical. At three points, on or near the presumed line of the old underground, range, the Tertiary and Cretaceous strata have been traversed in well-sections, and [...]
[...] of the Atherfield section. Mr. Godwin-Austen did not agree with Mr. Judd in calling the bed at Punfield the Punfield “formation ; ” it was merely a bed intercalated between beds of a different character below and above. Prof. Ramsay thought that the Purbeck strata were connected with lagoons in con [...]
[...] solitarius, eventually becomes entirely blue like the European species, and that the birds usually called P. manilleusis and P. affinis are merely stages of plumage of P. solitarius.-Major Godwin-Austen exhibited a skin of Ceriornis blythii, which had been obtained by Mr. Roberts, of the Indian Topographical [...]
Nature25.10.1877
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 25. Oktober 1877
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Zelandiae,” and the “Flora Tasmanica,” six quarto volumes, the last of which appeared in the year 1860. These do not contain mere reports of explorations, with descrip tions of whatever was novel or of peculiar interest, but are systematically elaborated and complete floras, in [...]
[...] galleries overhead, and some are stored away in cellars at a still lower depth than that in which he sits at work. The library attached to the department contains merely some of the most obvious books of reference, all others have to be obtained on loan from the great national [...]
[...] during the past thirty years. The zoological catalogues of the British Museum are well-known to every worker in natural history; they are not mere catalogues, but in many cases able and exhaustive monographs of the groups of which they treat. Projected and commenced [...]
[...] suggested that will reduce the task to one of more reasonable proportions. It must be recollected that Mr. Sharpe's “Catalogue” is not merely a catalogue of specimens in the National Museum, but approaches in several respects more nearly to a monographic essay on [...]
[...] modern science, and distinguish the conclusions which are definitely established from those that are more or less imperfectly proved, or merely to be ranked as conjectural explanations. In none of these respects does Prof. Pfaff show himself [...]
[...] author is unable to copy from a clear-headed and accurate writer, such as von Sonklar, this part of his work is frequently a mere muddle. In attempting to subdivide the Alps) into separate groups it is possible to apply one or other of two guiding [...]
[...] Giving an aggregate watch of 57 hours and 641 meteors visible for September 4–October 17; but this merely relates to a portion of the work, for I have only included in this list those nights when I watched for long periods together. [...]
[...] with the crushing words, Ignoramus, et ignorabimus, then I close mine with the conditional but more consolatory utterance that we do not merely know, but really understand the fruits of our investigations, and that our knowledge bears in itself the germ of an almost infinite growth, without, however, approaching [...]
[...] even before he had found that sounds could be produced by them artificially by rubbing the parts together or accidentally in the mere handling of alcoholic specimens. He had, however, been enabled to place the matter beyond all doubt, for while at Bombay waiting for the steamer, he had obtained, by a happy [...]
[...] varying from mere traces up to 13 dwts. per ton of gold, the richest being frcm Wainuiomata, the same locality from which Mr. Crawford's specimen had come. In his former communica [...]
Nature05.10.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 05. Oktober 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] or revolving wheel of tinted rock-crystal. But in order to eliminate the effect of unequal areas, so as to ascertain, not merely the absolute amount of light reflected, but the “albedo,” or reflecting power of each surface, it is, of course, necessary to obtain reliable measures of these [...]
[...] exemplary attention to every possible source of accidental error; and.the result is given to the eye in several elabo rate diagrams. We shall merely specify some of the con clusions, which will be found of considerable interest to astronomers. The absolute brightness was found by the [...]
[...] more importance, in the interests both of natural history and geology, to know one limited district thoroughly, than to go roving over half a country merely for the pur pose of picking up finely preserved specimens. Each should mark out for himself some practicable area, and [...]
[...] this we have a “bark-ſorming” cambium (which also adds, but more sparingly, to the wood mass); in Sigillaria and Zepidoden dron we might have had a cambium not merely renewing the bark but adding to the central axis. In whatever way the increase took place, it was, as I think, [...]
[...] at the depôt of the Algerian Society in Paris; and the expense of putting up such in salt and water would be a mere nothing. The same remarks would apply in many cases to portions of the roots of remarkable génera, and also to flowers. In calling attention to these Gardens, we [...]
[...] mind the high temperature and small specific gravity, the extreme tenuity in the higher regions of the solar atmo sphere will be comprehended by mere inspection of our diagram. Already midway towards the assumed boundary, the density of the solar atmosphere is so far reduced that [...]
[...] work done. It is preferable to write down headings of sub jects; the pith and marrow of the subject matter only;-in a word, to make merely an outline of the picture, and to fill in the details afterwards from memory. Sketches of appa ratus are always desired among the notes, also any general [...]
[...] occurrence of a process of organic self-reproduction would be a very adequate way of accounting for the increase of the inſecting material, we must see whether this mere hypothesis can be re conciled with other characteristics of these affections. In the first place, it may be asked, whether such a process is actually known [...]
[...] non-developing germs is constantly postulated, solely on the ground of the occurrence of certain effects supposed to be other wise incapable of occurring. That, if existent, they are no mere ordinary germs of known organisms is obvious, because the presence of these has again and again been shown to beincapable [...]
[...] as between the two theories of fermentation of Liebig and of Pasteur. Amongst the atmospheric particles there are sure to be dead ferments in the form of mere organic fragments. Now the doubt that previously existed was, as to whether they could initiate fermentation and putrefaction, or whether the presence of living germs was absolutely essential. In the ex [...]
Nature09.03.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 09. März 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] recognition it deserves”—a proposition which may or may not be accurate, but is certainly not the one laid down by Sir John Lubbock. But he is not content with merely misrepresenting the book under review. Sir John Lub bock, he correctly remarks, at Liverpool, “frankly avowed [...]
[...] no necessary connection between a state of mere child hood in respect to knowledge and a state of utter bar barism,” and that man “even in his most civilised con [...]
[...] savage,” who has figured so picturesquely in works of historic fiction from the days of Anacharsis downwards— a being who, although represented as in “a state of mere childhood in respect to knowledge,” meets the greatest of [...]
[...] advanced civilisation. On the other hand, civilisation necessarily implies a familiarity with certain ideas to which “a state of mere childhood in respect to knowledge” is equally of necessity an utter stranger. In fact, both Archbishop Whately and the Duke of Argyll seem to have [...]
[...] somewhat contradictory. The determination of the age of the Skye ophite I am willing to leave Dr. Hunt to settle with Professors King and Rowney, merely remarking that both McCulloch and Geikie, as independent ob servers not looking for evidence in support of a theory, declare [...]
[...] more than an aggregation of concentric plates or perhaps only bands, and according to the figure do not show the true segments. 2nd. The microscope reveals “for the most part merely traces * Silliman's American yournal, July 1870 * Geological Magazine, vol. ii. p. 87. [...]
[...] in agreement, excepting that I must contend, from all the facts we are acquainted with, that all Eozoönal forms are imitative, and not merely those that the exigencies of the discussion demand looked at from the organic stand-point. Respect for your space prevents me going into further details, [...]
[...] mercy as heresy in theology. I confess that in one sense of the word I am consciously a perpetual-motionist, but not in the sense of believing that any merely mechanical contrivance can produce [...]
[...] Excluding this the average is reduced to ooz. I will pass over the small amount of chemical change which results from the mere melting of the pig and speigeleisen in the cupola, and regard the above as the composition of the material which enters the converter. When a mixture [...]
[...] reference to the non-existence of the metalloids in the sun, and maintain that “they may all be there though the spectroscope should not detect one of them.” The mere fact that nothing but metals (I include hydrogen with these) should have been discovered in the sun is very [...]
Nature20.05.1875
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 20. Mai 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] their ordinary condition of inorganic atoms, but are some how transubstantiated by the co-existence, along with the mere chemical substance or with its chemical pro perties, of this invisible, imponderable, immaterial, accom panying essence, which derives a kind of vis vivida from [...]
[...] inexplicable and unconditioned. On this principle scien tific men have supposed themselves to prove that the physical universe must one day become mere dead matter. The authors consider that this is a monstrous supposition, although they grant that the visible, or by-sense-perceiv [...]
[...] bility by which a little more work might be got out of a uniform temperature universe, if we could suppose Clerk Maxwell's demons—“mere guidance applied by human intelligence”—occupied in separating those particles of a heated gas which are moving faster than the average [...]
[...] Lucretian theory of an original, indivisible, infinitely hard atom, “strong in solid singleness;” Boscovich's theory that the atom or unit is a mere centre of force ; the theory that matter, instead of being atomic, is infinitely divisible, practically continuous, intensely heteroge [...]
[...] space with an immense velocity, or that it is gradually transferred into an invisible order of things? May we not regard ether or the medium as not merely a bridge between one portion of the visible universe and another but also as a bridge between one order of things and [...]
[...] these special limitations specially and finally remove the difficulty, the principle becomes unintelligible and useless. It is a mere theological dogma to say that what energy perishes in the visible passes into the invisible universe ; and the dogma is worthless as a physical principle on [...]
[...] Mass., are several drills sufficiently large to bore as wide and deep depressions as the “eyes” of this mask. The nose is very flat and angular; the mouth merely a shallow groove. The ears are broken, but appear to have been formed with more care than any other of the features. [...]
[...] been felt of such an institution, not a single original work having been written by Roumanians on the geography of their native land. All geographical school-books are merely translations of [...]
[...] “evident that the Society does much good work in which a com Paratively large proportion of the members take part. Their frequent excursions are not mere pleasure-trips, as, besides a leader, a lecturer is appointed, who generally takes up a parti [...]
[...] absorption spectra of some yellow vegetable colouring matters, by N. Pringsheim. The result of these investigations seems to be that these colouring matters are merely modifications of chlo rophyll, and that there exist numerous modifications of this sub stance, from the brightest yellow to the darkest green.—On thc [...]
Nature03.08.1876
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 03. August 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the os uteri; but in the Red-footed Lemur there are two other bare spaces at the poles of the ovum, so that the placenta en cloche is a mere generic, or accidental, variety of the diffuse form. Moreover, the villi came [...]
[...] tically left untouched. No motion, in fact, is considered, except the motion of a point in a plane. The treatment by the method of instantaneous centres is merely men tioned, although the development of this method certainly furnishes excellent means for the elementary treatment of [...]
[...] of apologetic observation that his “object in applying the treatment to the dead malefactor was not to produce re animation, but merely to obtain a practical knowledge how far galvanism might be employed as an auxiliary to other means in attempts to revive persons under similar [...]
[...] vocable rest. Then I could point out and correct the error. In the absence of the experiment, the correc tion had been impossible. No man on a mere specu lation would have dared to withhold from a dying patient the application of galvanic stimulation, until [...]
[...] shrubs, under-shrubs, and herbs held its ground, though nothing is now better understood than that size, which is a mere matter of habit and mode of growth, is [...]
[...] however, met with, and according to the nature of the fluid, one or other seems to get the upper hand and pre dominate. They vary in shape from a mere rounded speck (swºrn in. in diameter) to elongated rod-like bodies sometimes rolled into a short spiral. The rod-like forms [...]
[...] other series of forms which are colourless or tinged with other pigments. In one condition the Bacterium is in a kind of resting condition (Fig. 1), and is a mere microscopic spherule of protoplasm. This gradually granulates (Fig. 2), [...]
[...] gating the question is to construct radiometers in different gases, carbonic acid and hydrogen, which I intend to do. If the rotation is produced merely by dilatation of the residual gas the motion must be quicker in hydrogen and slower in carbonic acid, owing to the difference of con [...]
[...] of either rotation can be enlarged. These remarks explain facts that, according to the dilatation theory, are a mere impossibility, the rotation in the same direction when a ray of light falls on the black or on the white side. These experiments can be [...]
[...] a lady who had been maid of honour to Maria Theresa, and lived to the extraordinary age of 119 years. The case ought to be noted as being well authenticated and not grounded merely on idle rumour. - [...]
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