Vestiges of the natural history of creation [by R. Chambers]. |
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Page vi
... fossils in the series of rock - forma- tions , he applied himself to the task of elucidating the Great Mystery , as it was frequently termed by men of science . He did not do so - as far as he knows himself , —in an irreverent spirit ...
... fossils in the series of rock - forma- tions , he applied himself to the task of elucidating the Great Mystery , as it was frequently termed by men of science . He did not do so - as far as he knows himself , —in an irreverent spirit ...
Page vi
... fossils in the series of rock - forma- tions , he applied himself to the task of elucidating the Great Mystery , as it was frequently termed by men of science . He did not do so - as far as he knows himself , —in an irreverent spirit ...
... fossils in the series of rock - forma- tions , he applied himself to the task of elucidating the Great Mystery , as it was frequently termed by men of science . He did not do so - as far as he knows himself , —in an irreverent spirit ...
Page xii
... Fossil Plants , from the earliest Strata in which they are found , to the highest . XXV 10. The comparatively large bulk of some of the early Fossils is to be regarded as a mark of their inferiority in the scale xxvii 11. Variability of ...
... Fossil Plants , from the earliest Strata in which they are found , to the highest . XXV 10. The comparatively large bulk of some of the early Fossils is to be regarded as a mark of their inferiority in the scale xxvii 11. Variability of ...
Page 21
... also , is carbon , a small ingredient in the atmosphere , but the chief constituent of animal and vegetable substances , and of all fossils which ever were in the latter condition , amongst which AND OF THE OTHER BODIES OF SPACE . 21.
... also , is carbon , a small ingredient in the atmosphere , but the chief constituent of animal and vegetable substances , and of all fossils which ever were in the latter condition , amongst which AND OF THE OTHER BODIES OF SPACE . 21.
Page 32
... fossils . For this various reasons might be surmised , apart from the assumption of this being a time when no life existed on earth . Some geolo- De la Beche's Geological Researches , 1834 . gists who have a theory to support explain it ...
... fossils . For this various reasons might be surmised , apart from the assumption of this being a time when no life existed on earth . Some geolo- De la Beche's Geological Researches , 1834 . gists who have a theory to support explain it ...
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Common terms and phrases
admitted advance affinity Agassiz America amongst animal kingdom Annelides appear aquatic belemnites birds bivalve body brachiopods brain called carboniferous carnivorous cephalopoda character civilization cloth connexion creation cretaceous Crinoidea crustacea Devonian dicotyledons DISEASES distinct earth eocene example existence external fact faculties favour Fcap feet fishes formation fossils gasteropods genera genus geological globe grade habits herbivorous higher human hypothesis Ichthyosaur idea Illustrations inferior Infusoria insects instances invertebrate kind land language larvæ living mammæ mammalia manner marine matter Medical mental mind mode mollusks naturalists nature observed oolite organic origin peculiar phenomena plants portion Post 8vo present principle produced Professor race regard regions remarkable reptiles resemblance respect rocks saurian says Second Edition Sedgwick seen shells species stirps strata structure superior supposed surface tertiary thecodonts tion trace tribes Trilobites vegetable vertebrata vertebrate whole
Popular passages
Page lx - Thus, the production of new forms, as shewn in the pages of the geological record, has never been anything more than a new stage of progress in gestation, an event as simply natural, and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy.
Page 329 - A law presupposes an agent, for it is only the mode according to which an agent proceeds: it implies a power, for it is the order according to which that power acts. Without this agent, without this power, which are both distinct from itself, the law does nothing, is nothing. The expression, "the law of metallic nature...