Views of Nature: Or, Contemplations on the Sublime Phenomena of Creation; with Scientific Illustrations |
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Page xx
... regarded as writing - p . 82 . Description of the cold mountain regions between 11,000 and 13,000 Parisian , or 11,720 and 13,850 English feet in height , which have been designated Paramos . Character of their vegetation - p . 83 ...
... regarded as writing - p . 82 . Description of the cold mountain regions between 11,000 and 13,000 Parisian , or 11,720 and 13,850 English feet in height , which have been designated Paramos . Character of their vegetation - p . 83 ...
Page 2
... regarded as true Steppes . They are , however , both hilly and of very inconsiderable extent when compared with the Llanos and Pampas of South America , or even with the Prairies on the Missouri ( 5 ) and Copper River , the resort of ...
... regarded as true Steppes . They are , however , both hilly and of very inconsiderable extent when compared with the Llanos and Pampas of South America , or even with the Prairies on the Missouri ( 5 ) and Copper River , the resort of ...
Page 3
... regarded as uninhabitable by man . It is only periodically that the neighbouring civilized nations venture to traverse them . On tracks whose undeviating course was determined by commercial intercourse thousands of years ago , the long ...
... regarded as uninhabitable by man . It is only periodically that the neighbouring civilized nations venture to traverse them . On tracks whose undeviating course was determined by commercial intercourse thousands of years ago , the long ...
Page 12
... regarded as peculiarly the habitation of wild animals , would not have been chosen as a place of settlement by nomadic hordes , who like the Indo- Asiatics generally prefer a vegetable diet , had it not possessed some few fan - palms ...
... regarded as peculiarly the habitation of wild animals , would not have been chosen as a place of settlement by nomadic hordes , who like the Indo- Asiatics generally prefer a vegetable diet , had it not possessed some few fan - palms ...
Page 27
... regarded rather as portions of the shore than as islands in the ancient gulf . I consider the Llanos to have been a gulf , for when their inconsiderable elevation above the present sea level , the adaptation of their form to the ...
... regarded rather as portions of the shore than as islands in the ancient gulf . I consider the Llanos to have been a gulf , for when their inconsiderable elevation above the present sea level , the adaptation of their form to the ...
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according Africa Amazon Amazon River ancient animals appear arborescent Asia Atahuallpa Atlas banks barometric beautiful belong Calluna Caracas chain Chimborazo Cinchona climate coast coloured containing declivity desert earth east eastern Edition elevation English Engravings eruption Europe expedition Fahr fcap feet Flora forests Frémont geographical gilt cloth gilt edges Guiana height hemisphere Himalaya HISTORY Huayna Capac Humboldt illustrated Inca Indian inhabitants interior islands Joseph Hooker Lake land latitude Leguminosa longitude measured Mexico miles morocco mountain natives nature north lat northern observed ocean organic Orinoco palms Peru Peruvian phanerogamia physiognomy Pinus plains plants Plates portion Portrait post 8vo present Quito regarded regions remarkable rise river Robert Schomburgk rocks royal 8vo Schomburgk shores snow South America south lat southern species Steppe summit surface temperature thick tion toises trachyte traveller trees tropical upwards vegetation volcano vols voyage western whilst whole zone
Popular passages
Page 5 - MURPHY'S ARABIAN ANTIQUITIES OF SPAIN ; Representing, in 100 very highly finished line Engravings, by Ln Kxux, FINDEN, LANDSEEE, G. COOEE, &c., the most remarkable Remains of the Architecture, Sculpture, Paintings, and Mosaics of the Spanish Arabs, now existing...
Page 20 - WHYTE'S HISTORY OF THE BRITISH TURF, FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT DAY. 2 vols.
Page 15 - ... HISTORICAL RESEARCHES INTO THE POLITICS, INTERCOURSE, AND TRADES OF THE ANCIENT NATIONS OF AFRICA ; including the Carthaginians, Ethiopians, and Egyptians.
Page 5 - The author appears to us to have neglected no sources of information, and to have exhausted them, as far as regards the general scope and purpose of the inquiry. The graphical illustrations are such as become a work of this character upon such a subject ; at, of course, a lavish cost.
Page 9 - This, though a complete Work In itself, forms an almost Indispensable Supplement to the thirty-six volumes of Sowerby's English Botany, which does not comprehend Cryptogamous Plants.
Page 424 - El camino de las sierras es cosa de ver, porque en verdad en tierra tan fragosa en la cristiandad no se ban visto tan hermosos caminos, toda la mayor parte de calzada.
Page 172 - Raudal other graves of the same character are met with ; indeed it is probable that the last descendants of the Atures did not become extinct until a much more recent period. There still lives and it is a singular fact, an old parrot in Maypures which cannot be understood, because, as the natives assert, it speaks the language of the Atures...
Page 9 - GREVILLE'S CRYPTOGAMIC FLORA, Comprising the Principal Species found In Great Britain, Inclusive of all the New Species recently discovered in Scotland; 6 vols. royal Svo, 360 beautifully coloured Plates, (pub.
Page 5 - NICOLAS'S (SIR HARRIS) HISTORY OF THE ORDERS OF KNIGHTHOOD OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE : with an Account of the Medals, Crosses, and Clasps which have been conferred for Naval and Military Services } together with a History of the Order of the Guelpha of Hanover.
Page 13 - It contains not only every scrap which Burns ever wrote, whether prose or verse, but also a considerable number of Scotch national airs, collected and illustrated by him (not given elsewhere) and full and interesting accounts of the occasions and circumstances of his various writings.