 | Isaac Taylor - 1836 - 462 pages
...this shoal is such as to alter the appearance of the very ocean : it is divided into distinct columns, five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth, driving the water before them with a kind of rippling. Sometimes, they sink for the space of ten or... | |
 | Edmund Ruffin - 1838 - 834 pages
...breadth and depth are such as to alter the very appearance of the ocean. It is divided into distinct columns of five or six miles in length and three or four in breadth, and they drive the water before them with a kind of rippling ; sometimes they sink for the space of... | |
 | Edmund Ruffin - 1838 - 782 pages
...breadth and depth are such as to alter the very appearance of the ocean. It is divided into distinct columns of five or six miles in length and three or four in breadth, and they drive the water before them with a kind of rippling; sometimes they sink for the space of... | |
 | Thomas Gisborne - 1838 - 184 pages
...breadth and its depth are such as to alter the appearance of the very ocean. It is divided into distinct columns of five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth. 1 See the sky curtained by locusts. View the living inundation of the lemings. Expose to a powerful... | |
 | Isaac Taylor - 1839 - 460 pages
...this shoal is such as to alter the appearance of the very ocean: it is divided into distinct columns, five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth, dividing the water before them with a kind of rippling. Sometimes they sink, for the space often or... | |
 | Samuel Augustus Mitchell - 1840 - 612 pages
...from the Arctic seas, and appear off the Shetland Isles in April and May : they frequently move in columns of five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth. The pilchards, on the southern coast of England, and the sardines, on that of France, are caught to... | |
 | 1840 - 274 pages
...breadth and depth are such as to alter the appearance of the very ocean. It is divided into distinct columns of five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth, and they drive the water before them with a kind of rippling: sometimes they sink, for the space of... | |
 | 1840 - 272 pages
...breadth and dopth arc such as to alter the appearance of the very ocean. It is divided into distinct columns of five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth, and they drive the water before them with a kind of rippling: sometimes they sink, for the space of... | |
 | Isaac Taylor - 1841 - 352 pages
...abounds. The great shoal becomes straitened for room in the narrow seas ; it then separates into columns, five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth — some of these traverse the English Channel, some the Irish, and others fill the bays of northern... | |
 | Charles Ellms - 1841 - 606 pages
...navigators. But more recent observations have ascertained that, instead of a shoal, it is a low island, about five or six miles in length, and three or four in breadth, lying in 22° 28" south latitude, and 40° 51" east longitude. Many trees grow upon it, and the western... | |
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