The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 23±ÇThe Society, 1867 Vols. 1-108 include Proceedings of the society (separately paged, beginning with v. 30) |
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xii ÆäÀÌÁö
... ( Mass . ) . American Philosophical Society . American Academy of Arts and Sciences . Museum of Compa- rative Zoology . Carlsruhe , Natural History So- ciety of . Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society , Chicago , Academy of Sciences ...
... ( Mass . ) . American Philosophical Society . American Academy of Arts and Sciences . Museum of Compa- rative Zoology . Carlsruhe , Natural History So- ciety of . Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society , Chicago , Academy of Sciences ...
lvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... mass which consist of a single mineral species , -and afterwards the compound crystalline - granular rocks , ranged ... masses entitle him to speak with weight on the subject ; and I feel that it would be very desirable to endeavour to ...
... mass which consist of a single mineral species , -and afterwards the compound crystalline - granular rocks , ranged ... masses entitle him to speak with weight on the subject ; and I feel that it would be very desirable to endeavour to ...
lix ÆäÀÌÁö
... mass of an adjoining clay - slate , and cites various examples where not a single felspar crystal has been produced ... mass of the mate- rials on which we imagine them to produce an effect . Bischof has been one of the foremost ...
... mass of an adjoining clay - slate , and cites various examples where not a single felspar crystal has been produced ... mass of the mate- rials on which we imagine them to produce an effect . Bischof has been one of the foremost ...
lx ÆäÀÌÁö
... masses in the mountains of Brome and Shef- ford , and , as dykes of a clearly intrusive character , at Chambly and near Montreal . No uncertainty appears to exist as to the similar origin of the diorites of Yamaska , Mount Johnson , and ...
... masses in the mountains of Brome and Shef- ford , and , as dykes of a clearly intrusive character , at Chambly and near Montreal . No uncertainty appears to exist as to the similar origin of the diorites of Yamaska , Mount Johnson , and ...
lxi ÆäÀÌÁö
... mass . This in some cases is found to have been displaced and , having forced its way among disrupted strata , to ... masses which in many regions form an important constituent in the structure of the solid crust of the earth is ophite ...
... mass . This in some cases is found to have been displaced and , having forced its way among disrupted strata , to ... masses which in many regions form an important constituent in the structure of the solid crust of the earth is ophite ...
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Ammonites appear Avicula base beds Belemnites bones Boulder-clay Brachiopoda Brick-earths British Brocastle Bucklandi calcareous Carboniferous Limestone cavern chalk clay Clod Coal-measures conglomerate containing corals Crustacea denudation deposits Devonian Devonian rocks district Drift east Eurypterus fauna feet flint formation fossiliferous fossils fragments genera genus Geol Geological Society Glacial Goldf granite gravel grey grits Hill Hunstanton Ilfracombe inches incurva Journ Keuper Liassic Lima lime Lower Lias Lynton marl Martin mass Middle Devonian miles mineral Montlivaltia Moore North Devon noticed numerous occur Old Red Sandstone Oolite organic remains Ostrea Pecten Phill planorbis plate portion posterior Postglacial present Professor Pterygotus quarry quartz Rh©¡tic river sand Schloth shales shells side siliceous Silurian slates Southerndown spec species specimens strata stri©¡ structure surface Sutton Stone Terq Thames thickness tion Uitenhage unconformably Upper Devonian valley veins White Lias whorls zone of Ammonites
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318 ÆäÀÌÁö - supported wholly or in part by annual voluntary contributions, and shall not, and " by its laws may not, make any dividend, gift, division, or bonus in money unto or " between any of its members, and provided also that such society shall obtain the " certificate of the barrister-at-law or lord advocate, as hereinafter mentioned.
253 ÆäÀÌÁö - This very interesting specimen, submitted to me for examination by Sir. WE Logan, is, in my opinion, of great importance, as furnishing a conclusive answer to all those objections to the organic nature of Eozoon which have been founded on comparisons of its structures with the forms of fibrous, dendritic, or concretionary minerals, — objections which, however plausible in the case of highly crystalline rocks, in which organic remains may be simulated by merely mineral appearances readily confounded...
xlii ÆäÀÌÁö - ... travels twice as fast as the Roman Emperor ; and twenty years hence, he may probably travel with a speed that would leave the fleetest courser behind.
lxv ÆäÀÌÁö - These observations bring the formation of silicious minerals face to face with life, and show that their generation was not incompatible with the contemporaneous existence and the preservation of organic forms. They confirm, moreover, the view which I some years since put forward, that these silicated minerals have been formed, not by subsequent metamorphism in deeply buried sediments, but by reactions going on at the earth's surface...
72 ÆäÀÌÁö - Annual Report of the Trustees of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College in Cambridge, together with the Report of the Director 1866.
413 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... rates of economic growth, productivity and technological innovation. Higher productivity growth and technological innovation will generate more resources for financing industrial restructuring and vocational retraining, thereby increasing political support for economic liberalization. At the same time, it is of the utmost importance to bear in mind that there is no single optimal policy stance that is applicable to all countries at all levels of development. A simple replication of policies that...
106 ÆäÀÌÁö - As a contribution to the evidence on the geological position of the blocks of saccharoid sandstone scattered on the surface of many parts of the chalk-districts, I beg to lay before the Society a brief account of the occurrence of similar blocks of large size in the Drift of Suffolk, both in situ and on the surface.
lxiv ÆäÀÌÁö - In conclusion, the author showed that the various silicates already mentioned were directly deposited in waters in the midst of which the Eozoo'n was still growing or had only recently perished, and that they penetrated, enclosed, and preserved the structure of the organisms precisely as carbonate of lime might have done ; and he cites these and other facts in support of his opinion that these silicated minerals were formed, not by subsequent rnetamorphism in deeply buried sediments, but by reactions...
256 ÆäÀÌÁö - In a few places a tubulated cell wall is preserved, with structure similar to that of Eozoon Canadense. Specimens of Laurentian limestone from Wentworth, in the collection of the Geological Survey, exhibit many rounded siliceous bodies, some of which are apparently grains of sand, or small pebbles ; but others, especially when freed from the calcareous matter by a dilute acid, appear as rounded bodies, with rough surfaces, either separate or aggregated in lines or groups, and having minute vermicular...
xx ÆäÀÌÁö - To promote researches concerning the mineral structure of the earth, and to enable the Council of the Geological Society to reward those individuals of any country by whom such researches may hereafter be made,' — ( such individual not being a Member of the Council.