Outlines of Physical GeographySheldon & Company, 1867 - 112 ページ |
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... square miles does it contain ? Square miles of the land ? In what proportion does the fluid portion predominate over the solid ? Why can not the extent of each division be exactly ascer- tained ? 13. What is said of the arrangement of ...
... square miles does it contain ? Square miles of the land ? In what proportion does the fluid portion predominate over the solid ? Why can not the extent of each division be exactly ascer- tained ? 13. What is said of the arrangement of ...
3 ページ
... square miles . Its form is triangular . Its unbroken coast - line of 15,800 miles in extent , gives only a mile of sea - coast for every 423 square miles of surface , and presents few bays or even harbors . 22. The slow progress of ...
... square miles . Its form is triangular . Its unbroken coast - line of 15,800 miles in extent , gives only a mile of sea - coast for every 423 square miles of surface , and presents few bays or even harbors . 22. The slow progress of ...
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... square miles ) . and their relative size , as compared with the area of the State of New York 36. The following table exhibits the area of some of the largest islands , level of the waves . Its extent of coast - line is about 8,000 ...
... square miles ) . and their relative size , as compared with the area of the State of New York 36. The following table exhibits the area of some of the largest islands , level of the waves . Its extent of coast - line is about 8,000 ...
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... square miles , or nearly one third of the area of the entire continent . A rising ground di- vides it into a northern and southern slope - the former being drained by the waters which flow into Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean , and the ...
... square miles , or nearly one third of the area of the entire continent . A rising ground di- vides it into a northern and southern slope - the former being drained by the waters which flow into Hudson Bay and the Arctic Ocean , and the ...
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... square miles , and form a sea of ice from the inexhaustible reservoirs of which some of the principal European rivers are supplied . תנו . VIEW OF A GLACIER . 130. Glaciers are not composed of solid ice , but consist of a mixture of ice ...
... square miles , and form a sea of ice from the inexhaustible reservoirs of which some of the principal European rivers are supplied . תנו . VIEW OF A GLACIER . 130. Glaciers are not composed of solid ice , but consist of a mixture of ice ...
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Africa Amazon animals Antarctic Arctic Ocean Asia Atlantic Ocean atmosphere Australia average Baffin Bay basin Black Sea border Brazil breadth Cape Cape Horn Caspian Caspian Sea central chain climate clouds coast cold course currents depth desert direction distance district Ditto earth earthquake east eastern elevation equator Equatorial Europe extend fall feet flow globe grand division greatest Gulf of Mexico Gulf Stream heat height hemisphere highest Indian Ocean Indies islands isothermal Lake land latitude length LESSON limit lowlands Mediterranean Mississippi Missouri Mount navigable nearly Nile northeast northern Orinoco Pacific Ocean parallel Peak peninsula plain plants plateau pole portion prevail principal rivers rain range regions remarkable rises Rocky Mountains Salt shores Siberia snow South America southern species springs square miles summits surface table-land temperate zone temperature trade-winds trees tributaries tropics United valley vapor vegetation volcanoes Western Continent winds
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60 ページ - For the land, whither thou goest in to possess it, is not as the land of Egypt, from whence ye came out, where thou sowedst thy seed, and wateredst it with thy foot, as a garden of herbs : but the land, whither ye go to possess it, is a land of hills and valleys, and drinketh water of the rain of heaven...
10 ページ - Hudson, the Green Mountains of Vermont, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
8 ページ - ... invisible. These animals are of a great variety of shapes and sizes, and in such prodigious numbers, that, in a short time, the whole surface of the rock appears to be alive and in motion. The most common worm is in the form of...
82 ページ - The human animal is the only one which is naked, and the only one which can clothe itself. This is one of the properties which renders him an animal of all climates, and of all seasons. He can adapt the warmth or lightness of his covering to the temperature of his habitation.
24 ページ - The area over which this upraising took place was estimated at one hundred thousand square miles : the rise upon the coast was from two to four feet ; at the distance of a mile inland, it was estimated from five to seven feet.
51 ページ - It comes on indiscriminately at any hour of the day, at any time of the tide, or at any period of the moon, continuing sometimes only a day or two, at other times five or six days, and it has been known to last upwards of a fortnight.
23 ページ - But the extraordinary volume of melted matter produced in this eruption deserves the particular attention of the geologist. Of the two branches, which flowed in nearly opposite directions, the greatest was fifty, and the lesser forty, miles in length. The extreme breadth which the Skapta branch attained in the low countries was from twelve to fifteen miles, that of the other about seven. The ordinary height of both currents was one hundred feet, but in narrow defiles it sometimes amounted to * Henderson's...
23 ページ - Iceland, for their history reaches as far back as the ninth century of our era ; and from the beginning of the twelfth century, there is clear evidence that, during the whole period, there has never been an interval of more than forty, and very rarely one of twenty years, without either an eruption or a great earthquake. So intense is the energy of the volcanic action in this region, that some eruptions of Heel a have lasted six years without ceasing.
8 ページ - But this growth being as rapid at the upper edge as it is lower down, the steepness of the face of the reef is still preserved.
8 ページ - The growth of coral appears to cease when the worm is no longer exposed to the washing of the sea. Thus, a reef rises in the form of a cauliflower, till its top has gained the level of the highest tides, above which the worm has no power to advance, and the reef of course no longer extends itself upwards. The...