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NatureInhhaltsverzeichnis 11.1869/12.1869/01.1870/02.1870/03.1870/04.1870
  • Datum
    Montag, 01. November 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] Hind (J. H.) on Temple's Comet, 58 Hofmann (Prof.), Paper on Chloral, 446; on Prof. Graham, 59,316 Holborn Valley Viaduct, 171, 220 Hooker (Dr. J. D.,) on Vegetable Palaeontology, 48 Hope (W.) on the Cloaca Maxima, 243; on the Valuation of [...]
[...] Lengths, 506 Suez Canal, 24, 169 Sullivan (Prof.) on the Beds of Thenardite of the Valley of Jarama (Irish Academy), 225 Sulphide of Carbon, Disinfection of, 273 [...]
Nature04.11.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 04. November 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 2
[...] AMERICAN. — The Mississippi Valley : J. W. Foster. — Production of Precious Metals: W. P. Blake. — Parsons on the Rose. —System of Mine ralogy: Dana and Brush –Guide to the Study of Insects. A. S. Packard. [...]
[...] Coloured Plates. 3 vols. royal 8vo, cloth . . . A Beazatºſul JP'ork on 4 Aine Scenery. Walton's Peaks and Valleys OF THE ALPS. 21 large and exquisite Chromo Lithographs, beautifully coloured in exact imita [...]
Nature11.11.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 11. November 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] level, or nearly so ; including lacustrine and river-sedi ments, turf-moors, ancient forests—sometimes converted into peat-bogs, and now again reclaimed by man; valley sediments, resulting from meteoric causes, and, in fact, all the most modern surface-deposits, including remains of [...]
[...] case. The only essential physical difference in the two cases seems to furnish the explanation of this anomaly, namely, that we now have to deal with a wet valley of very slight slope, the soil on the sides of which consists of the mud (or warp) deposited by the stream in times gone by ; [...]
[...] slight slope, the soil on the sides of which consists of the mud (or warp) deposited by the stream in times gone by ; whereas, in the other case, the valleys are dry, and their slopes have been denuded of any alluvial soil which may formerly have covered them, by an agency which has also [...]
[...] slopes have been denuded of any alluvial soil which may formerly have covered them, by an agency which has also deepened the valleys and increased the pitch of their sloping sides.” All these practical descriptions, the result of actual survey, show clearly that the formation of soils is [...]
[...] of their decay as individuals and as species, and the circumstances under which they had been finally entombed. Mr. Geikie illustrated this subject from the rocks of the central valley of Scotland. He then passed on to the seeond topic, which related to the mineral structure of rocks or petrography. That branch [...]
Nature18.11.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 18. November 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] Walton's Peaks and Valleys [...]
[...] distance of 200 miles. The high land which culminates towards the east in Muchingue was ascended on leaving the valley of the Aroangoa. The traveller then came in lat. Io 34° S., to the river Chambezi, called by Lacerda the New Zambezi, [...]
[...] relations of the Polyzoa ; A. Hyatt. —Observations on a new genus of Polyzoa ; A. Hyatt.—New Species of Fishes obtained by Prof. Orton in the valleys of the Maranon and Napo : T. Gill. —Notice of some new Fossil Plants from Gaspé, discovered by Prof. J. W. Dawson ; J. S. Newberry. —On some points [...]
[...] and Rocks ; W. P. Blake. —Flora and Fauna of the Fresh water Tertiaries of Oregon and Idaho; J. S. Newberry. —On new species of Fishes obtained by Prof. Orton in the Valleys of the Maranon and Napo: T. Gill. SUB-SECTION C. Archæology and Ethnology.—Conjectural ex [...]
Nature25.11.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 25. November 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 4
[...] there as elsewhere. No sooner, too, were the rude imple ments of the Drift type thoroughly recognised in the valley of the Somme, than it came into notice that such had long before been collected in England without know ledge of their special importance ; and now Spain and [...]
[...] other communication with the sufferers is strictly pro hibited. Dr. Bechtinger had a very natural desire to visit this forbidden valley, and ascertain the condition of its inhabitants. Knowing, however, that great opposition would be made to his doing so, he resolved to go thither [...]
[...] its inhabitants. Knowing, however, that great opposition would be made to his doing so, he resolved to go thither privately, and attempt to reach the valley over the moun tain range at its back. Attended by a photographer, he succeeded in his project, and found the poor wretches [...]
[...] formation will be recognised as one of the ordinary operations of nature, when we remember that in 4,150 years the valley of the Nile has been raised eleven feet by [...]
Nature02.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 02. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] the Stone Age in Egypt. They found an immense quantity of worked flints of all kinds upon a small space of the plateau separating the valley of Biban-el-Molouk from the escarpments which look over the ruins of Deir-el-Bahari. They compared the place to what is known in France as a “workshop of the Neolithic [...]
Nature09.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 09. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] with great rapidity. This powerful agent is stated to be changing the face of the country: obliterating valleys, [...]
[...] In the valley beyond this cañon, nearly all the water of [...]
[...] WE have received the following note on the subject of the Holborn Valley Viaduct:—“From the position of the cracks in the columns it is evident that they have been bodily strained over towards the roadway. This may be accounted for by the [...]
[...] groups—1st, plateaux; and 2d, points of local eruption. 1. Pla teaux of carboniferous volcanic rocks are extensively developed in the western part of the midland valley. They form the range of the Campsie and Kilpatrick fells, i. crossing the Clyde into Renfrewshire, sweep for many miles through the north and [...]
[...] terises the Campsie fells and the hills south-westwards to Ar drossan, but it is most conspicuously displayed in some of the valleys at the south end of Bute. One of the distinguishing features of these plateaux is the comparative infrequency with which any vent or true point of eruption can now [...]
[...] upon the denudation of the volcanic rocks of Auvergne and of Scotland. Mr. Scrope had shown conclusively that the wide and deep valleys of the Loire, the Dordogne, and other streams of central France had been carved out of volcanic rocks and fresh-water strata by subaerial erosion alone. The form and [...]
[...] of central France had been carved out of volcanic rocks and fresh-water strata by subaerial erosion alone. The form and structure of these valleys were compared with those of valleys which have been excavated out of volcanic rocks in Scotland, and it was argued that the similarity of result was in all proba [...]
[...] near the railway station, associated with undoubted red crag forms. He also adverted to the paper by Mr. Tylor (read before the Geological Society of London) on Valley Gravels. In the discussion which followed the President's remarks, Mr. Harmer gave an outline of the theory he had put forth in his [...]
[...] to the north. This argued an oscillation of level in the mean. time. Mr. Harmer also expressed himself against the theory that so-called valley gravels were of fluviatile origin, and pointed to Lopham Ford, where the height of the ground was only twenty feet above water level; and yet which was the point of [...]
[...] twenty feet above water level; and yet which was the point of departure for two streams whose much higher banks at some distance were covered with valley gravels containing flint imple. ments. With regard to the opinion that many of the flint implements had been rolled down or transferred to the lower [...]
Nature23.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 23. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 5
[...] the surface of the old claystones, sandstones, and slates, by sinking pits, or making excavations in the valleys and creeks. (3) S/uicing and hydraulic mining—the washing of the auriferous earths, by streams of water, in the [...]
[...] (3) S/uicing and hydraulic mining—the washing of the auriferous earths, by streams of water, in the gulleys and valleys where recent deposits of auriferous gravels and clays occur. [...]
[...] also tending to carry any bergs in another direction. He thought the transport by sheet-ice more probable. The Rev. J. L. Rome had traced the Shap granites over the valley of the Eden, across Stainmoor, to the Yorkshire side. There might have been difficulties in their transport, but there they [...]
[...] Royal Irish Academy, December 13.−The Rev. Professor Jellett, president, in the chair. Professor Sullivan, Ph.D., read a paper on the Beds of Thenardite of the Valley of Jarama, in connection with climatal effects supposed to be due to the varia tion of the eecentricity of the earth's orbit, according to the [...]
[...] menon which, being purely physical, gives more definite results than can in general be obtained from biological ones. In the Valley of the Jarama, a branch of the Tagus which receives the waters of the Manzanares, which flows through Madrid, occurs a series of beds,--thenardite, glauberite, gypsum, and clay, [...]
Nature30.12.1869
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 30. Dezember 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] countless ages, as to make it difficult to determine where and how the elevating forces have operated.” The palaeozoic rocks were carved out into systems of valleys by the descent of rain-water from the watersheds to the lower grounds. Along these valleys river-gravels were [...]
[...] lower grounds. Along these valleys river-gravels were laid down. In later times many volcanoes broke out, and thick streams of basalt rolled into the valleys and buried the ancient river-courses. Thus, in many places, the surface and the drainage of wide areas were wholly [...]
[...] changed. New streams began to flow and to excavate new channels, which often flowed across the trend of the older valleys lying buried beneath them. By slow degrees these later valleys sank deeper into the frame [...]
[...] work of the country, often cutting down through the older water-courses. Speaking of Gippsland, the author remarks that the streams “have scooped out deep valleys. The lofty hills have not been upheaved in isolated masses, but are the remains of formations which have been [...]
[...] whole area. The rocks which once occupied the inter vening spaces have been eroded by water; and the height of the hills above the valleys affords some hint as to the vertical extent which has been cut away.” The author believes that Victorian surface-geology affords “an answer [...]
[...] atmosphere.” And, indeed, no one can study the maps and sections in this volume without being convinced that the erosion of the present and of the old valley-system has been wholly a sub-aērial process. Mining operations have done a good deal towards [...]
[...] east have been followed under the bed of the present river. From the shafts and the natural sections along the sides of the valleys, we learn that the volcanic phenomena continued to manifest themselves for a prolonged period. Showers of ashes and streams of basalt were thrown out [...]
[...] which separated the oldest from the most recent volcanic rocks cannot but have been great. On the one hand, some of the basalt plateaux have been trenched by valleys several hundred feet deep, and fragments of the plateaux have been left isolated ; on the other hand, there occur [...]
[...] greatest of the known dislocations of the Alps—the fracture which has brought down the miocene against the older tertiary and secondary rocks—has not given rise to lakes and valleys, but actually crosses them, as at the lakes of Geneva, Thun, and Lucerne, and in the valleys of the Rhine and Linth. After [...]
Nature06.01.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 06. Januar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 1
[...] Method of Measuring Spectra Bands: John Browning, F.R.A.S. GEological Society, at 8. — On the Superficial Deposits of Portions of the Avon and Severn Valleys and Adjoining Districts: T. G. B. Lloyd, Esq., C. E., F.G.S.–On the Geological Position and Geogra phical Distribution of the Reptilian or Dolomitic Conglomerate of the [...]
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