Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for Promoting Useful Knowledge, Volume 16American Philosophical Society, 1877 - Electronic journals |
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Page 31
... fire , he delivered an address on the history of fire insurance , and upon the principles adopted by that association . Like every- thing which came from him , the address exhibited the completest understanding of his subject , great ...
... fire , he delivered an address on the history of fire insurance , and upon the principles adopted by that association . Like every- thing which came from him , the address exhibited the completest understanding of his subject , great ...
Page 69
... fire plug , north side of Penn street , intersection with Water street , 719 . † Junction with north track of the Pa . R. R. near Downingtown . Crossing Wilmington and Reading R. R. III . Pennsylvania and Delaware R. R. NOTE . The 1876 ...
... fire plug , north side of Penn street , intersection with Water street , 719 . † Junction with north track of the Pa . R. R. near Downingtown . Crossing Wilmington and Reading R. R. III . Pennsylvania and Delaware R. R. NOTE . The 1876 ...
Page 150
... fire . It runs north into Somerset County towards Johnstown . CCLXIII . Fayette Branch , P. & C. R. R. Levels on this Branch of the Pittsburgh and Connellsville R. R. were copied from a profile in the office of the Company at ...
... fire . It runs north into Somerset County towards Johnstown . CCLXIII . Fayette Branch , P. & C. R. R. Levels on this Branch of the Pittsburgh and Connellsville R. R. were copied from a profile in the office of the Company at ...
Page 168
... fire brick works , main building , opposite Beaver station on east end top of rubble masonry . Cut on top of rock with cross beside it . 688.946 25 Cut and marked with a cross on a flat stone 40 feet from foot of alluvial bank toward ...
... fire brick works , main building , opposite Beaver station on east end top of rubble masonry . Cut on top of rock with cross beside it . 688.946 25 Cut and marked with a cross on a flat stone 40 feet from foot of alluvial bank toward ...
Page 213
... fire- box floor , draft tuyeres , absence of exhaust and smoke stack , length of flame , & c . , & c . Pending nominations Nos . 792 , 793 were read , and the meeting was adjourned . Wootten . ] [ March 3 , A Combination of 213.
... fire- box floor , draft tuyeres , absence of exhaust and smoke stack , length of flame , & c . , & c . Pending nominations Nos . 792 , 793 were read , and the meeting was adjourned . Wootten . ] [ March 3 , A Combination of 213.
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Common terms and phrases
Allegheny Allegheny River AMER American Philosophical Society aphelion argillaceous atmosphere barrels per day Best production Black oil boilers bottom Branch carboniferous centre color containing convulsions Coryphodon County Crossing datum deposits Drilled Earth elevation Farm flora fossil Gas sufficient Geological glacier Gravity Green oil Junction Lake Erie Lesley limestone lower mass massive Mean Tide miles motion Mountain mouth above ocean Mud vein Nicotin nucleal observed ocean in feet Ocean Level Ohio oil rocks Orbisonia pebble Penn Pennsylvania Pennsylvania R. R. perihelion Philadelphia PHILOS Pittsburgh plants Pleasantville pocket PROC Prof Pumped R. R. Levels radius received red shale respiration River rocks salt water sand sandstone seams secular shale slate species specimens STATIONS strata Strychnia sufficient to fire Summit surface Survey tetanic thickness tion torpedo upper Uranus Valley R. R. velocity vis viva West Wet hole
Popular passages
Page 668 - That in clearing the ground, care be taken to leave one acre of trees for every five acres cleared, especially to preserve oak and mulberries for silk and shipping.
Page 251 - But is it, after all, so improbable that, when Central Europe was covered with ice thousands of feet thick ; when the glaciers of Great Britain ploughed into the sea, and when those of the Swiss mountains had ten times their present altitude ; when every lake in Northern Italy was filled with ice, and these frozen masses extended...
Page 26 - Both his judgment and affections bound him to it as a government supreme in its delegated powers, and supreme in the authority to expound and enforce them, proceeding from the people, designed for their welfare, accountable to them, possessing their confidence, representing their sovereignty, and no more to be restrained in the spirit of jealousy, within less than the fair dimensions of its authority, than to be extended beyond them in the spirit of usurpation. These were his constitutional principles,...
Page 242 - It is a sheet of snow ten or fifteen thousand feet in thickness, extending all over the northern and southern portions of the globe ; and must necessarily lead, in the end, in the formation of a northern and southern cap of ice, moving to the equator.
Page 300 - This is so manifest, that all the great inequalities of long period which occur in the solar system depend upon these ratios, and they are interwoven with all the most important irregularities of motion of the primary planets. Whence could this extraordinary coincidence have arisen but from the action of a single mind ? and what does it indicate but that the same Word which created the planet, is expressed in the plant...
Page 242 - Brazil, 403, 402.) These all are words of Agassiz, with no word of apprehension or sympathy for his fellow beings, for whose welfare the noble labors of his life were devoted. Agassiz gives further explanation of his views on the "Ice period in America," in the Atlantic Monthly for July, 1864. The ice moved over the continent as one continuous sheet overriding nearly all the inequalities of the surface, p. 88. Fragments of rocks from Lake Superior are found in New England, and northern rocks on the...
Page 270 - It is quite manifest that the thing most needed to produce the glaciers is an improved condenser ; we cannot afford to lose an iota of solar action ; we need, if anything, more vapour, but we need a condenser so powerful that this vapour, instead of falling in liquid showers to the earth, shall be so far reduced in temperature as to descend in snow. The problem, I think, is thus narrowed to the precise issue on which its solution depends.
Page 245 - We must believe that all the hills and valleys were once swathed in snow and ice ; that the whole of Scotland was at some distant date buried underneath one immense mer de glace, through which peered only the higher mountain-tops. This is no vague hypothesis, or speculation founded on uncertain data, no mere conjecture which the light of future discoveries may explode. The evidence is so clear and so overwhelmingly convincing that we cannot resist the inevitable conclusion.
Page 245 - This great sheet of land-ice levelled 'up the valleys of Britain, and stretched across our mountains and hills down to low latitudes in England. Being only one connected or confluent series of mighty glaciers, the ice crept ever downwards and...
Page 3 - England, and from whom he was the fifth by descent in right line. The family came to this country about that time and settled in Hull, Massachusetts.* The grandfather of Horace was Barnabas Binney, a shipmaster and merchant of Boston, and his father (born in 1751), named also Barnabas Binney, was a surgeon in the revolutionary army, attached to the Massachusetts line, whence he was transferred to the Pennsylvania line. After his transfer he settled permanently in...