Town GeologyD. Appleton, 1873 - 239 páginas |
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Página 12
... once that you thrust it under something else . You may say , " What ? When I want to hide a paper , say , under the sofa - cover , do I not thrust it under ? " No , you lift up the cover , and slip the paper in , and let the cover fall ...
... once that you thrust it under something else . You may say , " What ? When I want to hide a paper , say , under the sofa - cover , do I not thrust it under ? " No , you lift up the cover , and slip the paper in , and let the cover fall ...
Página 21
... and certainly in still water . But more . Suppose once more , then , that looking and watching a pond being cleared out , under the lowest layer of mud , you found -as you would find in any of those magnifi- cent THE SOIL OF THE FIELD . 21.
... and certainly in still water . But more . Suppose once more , then , that looking and watching a pond being cleared out , under the lowest layer of mud , you found -as you would find in any of those magnifi- cent THE SOIL OF THE FIELD . 21.
Página 32
... once covered by a shallow sea , and their soils made as the soil of any tide - flat is being made now ? But you may say , and most reasonably , " The tide - flats are just at the sea level . The whole of the lowland is many feet above ...
... once covered by a shallow sea , and their soils made as the soil of any tide - flat is being made now ? But you may say , and most reasonably , " The tide - flats are just at the sea level . The whole of the lowland is many feet above ...
Página 33
... once beneath the sea ; then will it not be certain that , somehow or other , they must have been raised out of the sea again ? And that I propose to do in my next paper , when I speak of the pebbles in the street . Meanwhile I wish you ...
... once beneath the sea ; then will it not be certain that , somehow or other , they must have been raised out of the sea again ? And that I propose to do in my next paper , when I speak of the pebbles in the street . Meanwhile I wish you ...
Página 40
... once angular , and have been rubbed round , either in getting hither or before they started hither ? Does all this seem to you mere truism , my dear reader ? If so , I am sincerely glad to hear it . It was not so very long ago that such ...
... once angular , and have been rubbed round , either in getting hither or before they started hither ? Does all this seem to you mere truism , my dear reader ? If so , I am sincerely glad to hear it . It was not so very long ago that such ...
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Términos y frases comunes
æstuary age of ice ancient animals ashes beautiful beds believe beneath the sea bottom boulder-clay boulders Cambrian carbonic acid chalk Cheshire clay coal common sense coral deposited dry land earth earthquakes England explain fact fancy feet thick forest formed fossils geologists geology glacier Greenland habit of mind heat hundred feet islands Keuper known laid lava layers least lignite lime limestone live London clay look lowlands marl miles millstone grit mortar Natural Science Old Red sandstone once Oolites pebbles perhaps plants probably proof quarry rain readers red marl Red sandstone reef rivers rocks round sand scientific Scotland sea-bottom seen shells Silurian sinking Sir Henry Holland slate Snowdon Snowdonia soil Stigmaria stones strange strata sunk suppose surely surface tell theory things thousand feet trees tropic true trust upheaved vast vegetable volcanic Wales whole
Pasajes populares
Página xix - Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small; Though with patience he stands waiting, with exactness grinds he all.
Página 137 - I think, be solved, by attending to what is now taking place in deltas. The dense growth of reeds and herbage which encompasses the margins of forest-covered swamps in the valley and delta of the Mississippi is such that the fluviatile waters, in passing through them, are filtered and made to clear themselves entirely before they reach the areas in which vegetable matter may accumulate for centuries, forming coal if the climate be favourable. There is no possibility of the least intermixture of earthy...
Página liii - I will not again curse the ground any more for man's sake; for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will I again smite any more every thing living, as I have done.
Página xlviii - I judge it as certain and clear a truth as can any where be delivered, that "the invisible things of God are clearly seen from the creation of the world, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead.
Página 98 - ... simply watching the flowers along the railway banks and the sections in the cuttings: then it grieves me to see what little use people make of the eyes and of the understanding which God has given them. They complain of a dull journey: but it is not the journey which is dull; it is they who are dull. Eyes have they, and see not; ears have they, and hear not; mere dolls in smart clothes, too many of them, like the idols of the heathen.
Página xlvii - revealed in facts" — and then you will not fear physical science ; for you will be sure that, the more you know of physical science, the more you will know of the works and of the will of God. At least, you will be in harmony with the teaching of the Psalmist. " The heavens," says he, "declare the glory of God ; and the firmament showeth his handiwork.
Página xlviii - declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His handiwork. There is neither speech nor language where their voices are not heard among them." So held the Psalmist concerning astronomy, the knowledge of the heavenly bodies; and what he says of sun and stars is true likewise of the flowers around our feet, of which the greatest Christian poet of modern times has said — To me the meanest (lower that grows may give Thoughts that do lie too deep for tears.
Página 59 - As a huge stone is sometimes seen to lie Couched on the bald top of an eminence, Wonder to all who do the same .espy By what means it could thither come, and whence, So that it seems a thing endued with sense, Like a sea-beast crawled forth, which on a shelf Of rock or sand reposeth, there to sun himself.
Página xxxi - play freely round" a question; and look it all over, boldly, patiently, rationally, charitably. And I tell you that if you, or I, or any man, want to let our thoughts play freely round questions, and so escape from the tendency to become bigoted and narrow-minded which there is in every human being, then we must acquire something of that inductive habit of mind which the study of Natural Science gives. It is, after all, as Professor Huxley says, only common sense well regulated. But then it is well...