Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 36±ÇBishop's College Press, 1868 |
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74 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thickness of 8 inches ; but one at the gate , where it is used as an architrave , exceeds 7 feet . plain pillars of red and light coloured sandstone . There are also I could not , in my short visit , ascertain whence the granite columns ...
... thickness of 8 inches ; but one at the gate , where it is used as an architrave , exceeds 7 feet . plain pillars of red and light coloured sandstone . There are also I could not , in my short visit , ascertain whence the granite columns ...
106 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thick . Fine kunkur blocks are rare here , and stone is quite unknown , hence the use of brick . There was , however , one small column shaft in fine kunkur ( Fig . 4 ) which shewed the trace of a small building , probably early Hindoo ...
... thick . Fine kunkur blocks are rare here , and stone is quite unknown , hence the use of brick . There was , however , one small column shaft in fine kunkur ( Fig . 4 ) which shewed the trace of a small building , probably early Hindoo ...
118 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thick and massive as they are , have been broken and thrown down , and the inscription partially effaced . The copy of what remains , fills a small closely written volume , the contents of which I have not yet been able to go through ...
... thick and massive as they are , have been broken and thrown down , and the inscription partially effaced . The copy of what remains , fills a small closely written volume , the contents of which I have not yet been able to go through ...
132 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thick , and having on the top 77 small domes supported on sixty pillars . The ground plan is an oblong of 144 feet by 96 , divided into seven aisles by six rows of pillars . The foundation and the domes are of brick ; while of the ...
... thick , and having on the top 77 small domes supported on sixty pillars . The ground plan is an oblong of 144 feet by 96 , divided into seven aisles by six rows of pillars . The foundation and the domes are of brick ; while of the ...
163 ÆäÀÌÁö
... thickness , these bricks are beautifully burnt , and each one is marked on one side . The lines with which they are marked appear to have been made with the three fingers of the right hand , having been very carefully drawn across the ...
... thickness , these bricks are beautifully burnt , and each one is marked on one side . The lines with which they are marked appear to have been made with the three fingers of the right hand , having been very carefully drawn across the ...
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A. M. Scatd Afghan mountains alba Ammonites animal anticlinal appears Aviculo-pecten Barometer beds Bengal blattaria Calcutta capsules carboniferous limestone chain clear afterwards coins colour covered Dehli Ditto Dry Bulb Thermometer feet fertilised figure fissures formation fossils gaur Geological gneiss grains granite gypsum Himalaya Hindi hot season Hourly Meteorological Observations Hygrometrical elements Inches India jungle jungle fowl Kashmir lutea by pollen lychnitis margin Mean Dry Bulb Meteorological Observations taken miles Miocene month nearly nummulitic Oolitic organic matter P. M. Clear Pegu phoeniceum plain present probably Punjab pure unions quartzite Rain river water rocks Rotta Roh Roxb Saliferian Salt Range sandstone seeds seen Sháh Shaikh Bodeen shales shell shews Silurian silver specimens stone Surveyor General's Office Tank thapsus thick upheaval valley Verch village volcanic W. T. Blanford whilst white variety yellow variety Zeawan السلطان که
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144 ÆäÀÌÁö - But, for all this, our acceptance of the Darwinian hypothesis must be provisional so long as one link in the chain of evidence is wanting ; and so long as all the animals and plants certainly produced by selective breeding from a common stock are fertile, and their progeny are fertile with one another, that link will be wanting.
12 ÆäÀÌÁö - For money they employ the white porcelain shell, found in the sea, and these they also wear as ornaments about their necks. Eighty of the shells are equal in value to a saggio of silver or two Venetian groats, and eight saggi of good silver to one of pure gold.
lxxx ÆäÀÌÁö - Abstract of the results of the hourly meteorological observations taken at the Surveyor General's Office, Calcutta, in the month of April 1855.
144 ÆäÀÌÁö - Darwin, in order to place his views beyond the reach of all possible assault, ought to be able to demonstrate the possibility of developing from a particular stock, by selective breeding, two forms, which should either be unable to cross one with another, or whose cross-bred offspring should be infertile with one another.
54 ÆäÀÌÁö - Ali Shah for the time being continues through 745 into 746, when the annual series is taken up and carried on successively for an uninterrupted twelve years by his more favoured opponent.
59 ÆäÀÌÁö - East in the early part of the fifteenth century is recorded to have said that "he entered the mouth of the river Ganges, and, sailing up it, at the end of fifteen days he came to a large and wealthy city called Cernove. ... On both banks of the stream there are most charming villas and plantations and gardens Having departed hence he sailed up the river Ganges for the space of three months, leaving behind him four very famous cities, and landed at an extremely powerful city called Maarazia .... having...
54 ÆäÀÌÁö - III. to proceed against him in all the pomp and following of an Oriental suzerain — resulting only in the confession of weakness, conveniently attributed to the periodical flooding of the...
2 ÆäÀÌÁö - Glossary of Indian Terms, p. 373. They were estimated in the currency scheme of 1833 at 6,400 per rupee.— Prinsep's UT, p. 2. Major Rennell, who was in Silhet in 1767-8, speaking of the cowrie money, remarks : " I found no other currency of any kind in the country ; and upon an occasion when an increase in the revenue of the province was enforced, several boat loads (not less than 50 tons each) were collected and sent down the Burrampooter to Dacca.
144 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... fulfilled all the conditions of the problem ; you have not shown that you can produce by the cause assumed all the phenomena which you have in nature. Here are the phenomena of hybridism staring you in the face, and you cannot say, 'I can, by selective modification, produce these same results.