Works, with a memoir of the author, Volume 11822 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 17
Page xlviii
... intersected by numerous fissures , which cut one another at the angle peculiar to the crystal- lization of the carbonate of lime . The fine white saline marble , employed in the arts , lies between beds of blue limestone , of no value ...
... intersected by numerous fissures , which cut one another at the angle peculiar to the crystal- lization of the carbonate of lime . The fine white saline marble , employed in the arts , lies between beds of blue limestone , of no value ...
Page lv
... intersected by the great vallies in which the rivers flow , forming altogether a great ex- tent of cultivated land , or of picturesque scenery , such as could hardly be exceeded . " From the great lakes which are enclavés , as it were ...
... intersected by the great vallies in which the rivers flow , forming altogether a great ex- tent of cultivated land , or of picturesque scenery , such as could hardly be exceeded . " From the great lakes which are enclavés , as it were ...
Page 81
... intersected by veins of whinstone , porphyry , and granite , the characters of which are next to be examined . The term whin , or whinstone , with Dr. Hut- ton , like the word trap , with the German minera- logists , denotes a class of ...
... intersected by veins of whinstone , porphyry , and granite , the characters of which are next to be examined . The term whin , or whinstone , with Dr. Hut- ton , like the word trap , with the German minera- logists , denotes a class of ...
Page 176
... intersected by quartz veins . It is impossible to doubt , in this instance , that the thin plates of the one substance , and the small grains of the other , were deposited together at the bottom of the sea , and that they 176 ...
... intersected by quartz veins . It is impossible to doubt , in this instance , that the thin plates of the one substance , and the small grains of the other , were deposited together at the bottom of the sea , and that they 176 ...
Page 179
... intersected by veins of quartz . The shells from Plymouth are from a rock , that Werner would , I think , admit to be truly primitive . Those from the lakes , also , are from the centre of a country , occupied by porphyry , schorl ...
... intersected by veins of quartz . The shells from Plymouth are from a rock , that Werner would , I think , admit to be truly primitive . Those from the lakes , also , are from the centre of a country , occupied by porphyry , schorl ...
Contents
xix | |
lxi | |
17 | |
33 | |
37 | |
72 | |
95 | |
107 | |
235 | |
278 | |
320 | |
321 | |
341 | |
346 | |
368 | |
369 | |
114 | |
145 | |
153 | |
170 | |
172 | |
180 | |
188 | |
190 | |
199 | |
207 | |
376 | |
407 | |
410 | |
432 | |
448 | |
456 | |
466 | |
472 | |
497 | |
514 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action appearances aqueous argillaceous argument basaltes beds bitumen bodies breccia calcareous carbonic cause chalcedony circumstances coal coast considered consolidation contained crystallized deposited direction doubt Dr Hutton earth elevation existence extend fact feet feldspar fire fluid fluidity force formation fossil fracture fusion geology gneiss Goatfield granite veins gravel hills horizontal Huttonian Theory hypothesis igneous inclined indurated instances intersected junction kind Kirwan lake lava less limestone mark mass materials matter melted mentioned metal mineral kingdom mineral veins mineralogist Mont Blanc moun mountains nearly Neptunian Neptunian theory Neptunists observed origin parallel petrifactions phenomena plane Portsoy primary schistus primary strata produced proof quartz remarkable river rock sand sandstone Saussure secondary strata shells side solid spar specimen stances stone stratified stratum structure substances subterraneous heat supposed supposition surface tains thing tion unstratified Val di Noto vertical volcanic Voyages aux Alpes Webb Seymour whin whinstone whole
Popular passages
Page 112 - Every river appears to consist of a main trunk, fed from a variety of branches, each running in a valley proportioned to its size, and all of them together forming a system of valleys, communicating with one another, and having such a nice adjustment of their declivities, that none of them join the principal valley, either on too high or too low a level...
Page lxix - ... dignity over all the society in which he moved. The same admirable taste which is conspicuous in his writings, or rather the higher principles from which that taste was but an emanation, spread a similar charm over his whole life and conversation ; and gave to the most learned philosopher of his day the manners and deportment of the most perfect gentleman.
Page lxvi - His chief effort and greatest pleasure was in their revisal and correction ; and there were no limits to the improvement which resulted from this application. It was not the style merely, or indeed chiefly, that gained by it. The whole reasoning, and sentiment, and illustration, were enlarged and new modelled in the course of it, and a naked outline became gradually informed with life, colour, and expression. It was not at all like the common finishing and polishing to which...
Page 190 - ... the means of producing heat, even in a very great degree, without the assistance of fuel, or of vital air. Friction is a source of heat, unlimited, for .what we know, in its extent ; and so perhaps are other operations, both chemical and mechanical ; nor ate cither combustible substances or vital air concerned in the heat thus produced.
Page lxvi - ... harmonizing taste. In comparing it with the styles of his most celebrated contemporaries, we would say that it was more purely and peculiarly a written style — and, therefore, rejected those ornaments that more properly belong to oratory. It had no impetuosity, hurry, or vehemence— no bursts, or sudden turns, or...
Page lxvii - ... case was, not only that he left this most material part of his work to be performed after the whole outline had been finished, but that he could proceed with it to an indefinite extent...
Page xcii - By and bye, to any one that is stationed on the side, even to those at a great distance, the same is announced by the roaring of the tree itself, which becomes always louder and louder ; the tree comes in sight when it is perhaps half a mile distant, and in an instant after shoots past, with the noise of thunder and the rapidity of lightning.
Page 114 - ... occasionally, that is, when they are flooded or swollen with rains. The quantity of earth thus carried down varies according to circumstances : it has been computed in some instances, that the water of a river in a flood, contains earthy matter suspended in it, amounting to more than the two hundred and fiftieth part of its own bulk.
Page 121 - Oreologist would trace back the progress of waste, till he come in sight of that original structure, of which the remains are still so vast, he perceives an immense mass of solid rock, naked and unshapely, as it first emerged from the deep, and incomparably greater than all that is now before him. The operation of rains and torrents...
Page 380 - For the moving of large masses of rock, the most powerful engines without doubt which nature employs are the glaciers...