Journal, Volume 19 |
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Page 10
... feet beneath them , the remains of a building . Walls of unbaked bricks could still be traced ; but the slabs with which they had been cased , were no longer in their places , being scattered about without order , and lying mostly with ...
... feet beneath them , the remains of a building . Walls of unbaked bricks could still be traced ; but the slabs with which they had been cased , were no longer in their places , being scattered about without order , and lying mostly with ...
Page 23
... feet , brought to them by victorious soldiers . The possible use of the papyrus by these scribes leads Mr. Layard on to a consideration of the intercourse between Assyria and Egypt , about the period recorded in the sculpture , and this ...
... feet , brought to them by victorious soldiers . The possible use of the papyrus by these scribes leads Mr. Layard on to a consideration of the intercourse between Assyria and Egypt , about the period recorded in the sculpture , and this ...
Page 39
... feet above the level of the sea , the people are not the less Indian as to the tracing of their Hindu origin , and , as has been already noted , the only Indian history of any authenticity , is that belonging to their land . But to ...
... feet above the level of the sea , the people are not the less Indian as to the tracing of their Hindu origin , and , as has been already noted , the only Indian history of any authenticity , is that belonging to their land . But to ...
Page 50
... feet . On the northern peak are the remains of an old fort , which was destroyed by the Sikhs , near this is a hole 2 feet in dia- meter , descending perpendicularly into the hill , concerning which a curious legend exists . It is ...
... feet . On the northern peak are the remains of an old fort , which was destroyed by the Sikhs , near this is a hole 2 feet in dia- meter , descending perpendicularly into the hill , concerning which a curious legend exists . It is ...
Page 64
... feet ; and in * See J. A. S. No. 206. Phys . Geog . of Himálaya . Schinz in his Genera Mammalium has actually ranged this animal with the Gnoos . This is a mistake , but one indicative of remote affinity . The Thár is a typical ...
... feet ; and in * See J. A. S. No. 206. Phys . Geog . of Himálaya . Schinz in his Genera Mammalium has actually ranged this animal with the Gnoos . This is a mistake , but one indicative of remote affinity . The Thár is a typical ...
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alluvium appearance Arakan Asiatic Society Aspect of Sky B. H. HODGSON Barometer basalt Bengal Bovine Calcutta Capt Ceylon Cirro-cumuli Cirro-strati Cloudy colour containing copies Cumuli Cyclone Dhuni district Ditto ditto East Falco feet felspar gale granite greenstone grey hills Hodgson hornblende horns hurricane Ibn Isháq Inches India iron clay Jerdon Journal Jumna Khadyjah limestone Malayan peninsula masses midnight miles Mohammad mountain N. W. Clear Nágá Noon observed Oriental pass Pergannáh plain prophet quartz rain Rájá remarkable river S. W. Ditto sandstone ship Singh soil species specimens Spiti stone storms surface syenitic Tabary Tákin Temminck Ther veins village Waraqah weather wind ابن الله صلى الله الله عليه وسلم ان بن ثم ذلك رسول الله صلى صلى الله عليه على عن فقال قال كان لا ما محمد من ولا