The Natural History Review, 3권Hodges & Smith, 1868 Includes the transactions of the Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society, Cork Cuvierian Society, and Dublin Natural History Society. |
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2 페이지
... indicate a country thickly inhabited for a period long " enough to admit of the progressive enlargement and extension of " its movements . " 66 66 The last work on our list is of a very different nature . It is more general and more ...
... indicate a country thickly inhabited for a period long " enough to admit of the progressive enlargement and extension of " its movements . " 66 66 The last work on our list is of a very different nature . It is more general and more ...
13 페이지
... indicates a totally dif- " ferent condition of society and mode of thought " from that of the present Indian . Plates of mica are very generally present , and in some cases the skeleton is entirely covered by them . What now is the ...
... indicates a totally dif- " ferent condition of society and mode of thought " from that of the present Indian . Plates of mica are very generally present , and in some cases the skeleton is entirely covered by them . What now is the ...
21 페이지
... by Euro- peans . The immense number of small earthworks , and the mounds , " which may be counted by thousands and tens of thousands , " might indeed be supposed to indicate either a long time or NORTH AMERICAN ARCHEOLOGY . 21.
... by Euro- peans . The immense number of small earthworks , and the mounds , " which may be counted by thousands and tens of thousands , " might indeed be supposed to indicate either a long time or NORTH AMERICAN ARCHEOLOGY . 21.
22 페이지
... indicate , we think , a population large and stationary ; for which hunting cannot have supplied enough food ; and which must , therefore , have relied in a great measure upon agriculture for its sup- port . " There is not , " say ...
... indicate , we think , a population large and stationary ; for which hunting cannot have supplied enough food ; and which must , therefore , have relied in a great measure upon agriculture for its sup- port . " There is not , " say ...
23 페이지
... indicated by their name , is inferred from the present custom of " the Indians . The corn is planted in the same spot each successive " year , and the soil is gradually brought up to the size of a little hill " by the annual additions ...
... indicated by their name , is inferred from the present custom of " the Indians . The corn is planted in the same spot each successive " year , and the soil is gradually brought up to the size of a little hill " by the annual additions ...
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American Anat Anatomy animals appear Arch Beiträge Berlin Bipinnaria Birds bone botanists British Bull Busk Candolle Carboniferous carpel cartilaginous cavity cells characters Cloth coloured plates Comp crown Crustacean described Description Dicotyledons discs distinct dorsal Echinoderm edition Elephant embryo Entom espèces Estheria été Falconer Family Fauna fishes Flora flowers folio Foraminifera fossil genera genre genus Geol Geological Gymnosperms hâches Hooker Huxley Hydroids Ibid Illustrations Indian Indian Elephant insects Journ Kenntniss Leipzig lobes mâchoire Mammalia Mammoth Mastodon molar mounds Müller Museum NATURAL HISTORY REVIEW naturalists neue Notes notochord nouvelles observations olfactory olfactory lobes organs original ovule Paris plants portion posterior present Proc Prof Professor Agassiz pseudembryo Quatrefages referred regard remarkable rend ribs ridges shells skull species specimens structure surface tion tissue trabeculæ transverse processes trouvée Ueber vascular vertebræ Wiegm Wien woodcuts Zool Zoology
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27 페이지 - In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened.
27 페이지 - And the waters prevailed exceedingly upon the earth; and all the high hills, that were under the whole heaven, were covered.
324 페이지 - ... a little particle of apparently homogeneous jelly changing itself into a greater variety of forms than the fabled Proteus, laying hold of its food without members, swallowing it without a mouth, digesting it without a stomach, appropriating its nutritious material without absorbent vessels or a circulating system, moving from place to place without muscles, feeling (if it has any power to do so) without nerves, multiplying itself without eggs ; and not only this, but in many instances forming...
137 페이지 - Diagrams of the Nerves of the Human Body, exhibiting their Origin, Divisions, and Connexions, with their Distribution to the various Regions of the Cutaneous Surface, and to all the Muscles. By WILLIAM H.
383 페이지 - ... accept the undulatory theory of light, subject to the proof of the existence of the hypothetical ether ; or as the chemist adopts the atomic theory, subject to the proof of the existence of atoms ; and for exactly the same reasons, namely, that it has an immense amount of prima facie probability: that it is the only means at present within reach of reducing the chaos of observed facts to order; and lastly, that it is the most powerful instrument of investigation which has been presented to naturalists...
24 페이지 - ... proportions. The first growth on the same kind of land, once cleared and then abandoned to nature, on the contrary, is nearly homogeneous, often stinted to one or two, at most three kinds of timber. If the ground has been cultivated, the yellow locust will thickly spring up ; if not cultivated, the black and white walnut will be the prevailing growth. * * * Of what immense age then must be the works so often referred to, covered as they are by at least the second growth, after the primitive forest...
17 페이지 - Its solid contents have been roughly estimated at twenty millions of cubic feet. Probably, however, these mounds were not used as temples only, but also as sites for dwellings, especially for those of the chiefs. We are told that among the Natchez Indians "the temples and the dwellings of the chiefs were raised upon mounds, and for every new chief a new mound and dwelling were constructed.
383 페이지 - But if Man be separated by no greater structural barrier from the brutes than they are from one another — then it seems to follow that if any process of physical causation can be discovered by which the genera and families of ordinary animals have been produced, that process of causation is amply sufficient to account for the origin of Man. In other words, if it could be shown that the Marmosets, for example, have arisen by gradual modification of the ordinary Platyrhini, or that both Marmosets...
478 페이지 - Grammar of the Egyptian Language, as contained in the Coptic, Sahidic, and Bashmuric Dialects ; together with Alphabets and Numerals in the Hieroglyphic and Enchorial Characters. By the Rev. HENKY TATTAM, DD, FRS Second edition, revised and corrected. 8vo., cloth. 9«.
383 페이지 - But, even leaving Mr. Darwin's views aside," continues Prof. Huxley, "the whole analogy of natural operations furnishes so " complete and crushing an argument against the intervention of any " but what are termed secondary causes in the production of all the