THE DEPTHS OF THE SEA |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 50
Page 4
... appears to have been the first who undertook the systematic study of Marine Zoology with special reference to the distribu- tion of marine animals in space and in time . After making himself well acquainted with the fauna of the British ...
... appears to have been the first who undertook the systematic study of Marine Zoology with special reference to the distribu- tion of marine animals in space and in time . After making himself well acquainted with the fauna of the British ...
Page 12
... appears to have an area of maximum development , and this has been called the metropolis of the species ; and practically we must employ the same methods in investigating the laws of its distri- bution as if we still regarded it as ...
... appears to have an area of maximum development , and this has been called the metropolis of the species ; and practically we must employ the same methods in investigating the laws of its distri- bution as if we still regarded it as ...
Page 21
... appear to affect these creatures ; hitherto we have not been able to determine this point beyond a thousand fathoms , but from that depth several shell - fish have been brought up with the mud . " On the 28th of June 1845 , Mr. Henry ...
... appear to affect these creatures ; hitherto we have not been able to determine this point beyond a thousand fathoms , but from that depth several shell - fish have been brought up with the mud . " On the 28th of June 1845 , Mr. Henry ...
Page 27
... appear that their presence had injured the cable , for they were attached to the sound as well as to the corroded portions . On his return , Mr. Fleeming Jenkin sent specimens of the animals which he had himself taken from the cable ...
... appear that their presence had injured the cable , for they were attached to the sound as well as to the corroded portions . On his return , Mr. Fleeming Jenkin sent specimens of the animals which he had himself taken from the cable ...
Page 38
... appear to be temperature almost entirely which regulates the distribution of species . The nature of the ground can have little to say to it , for on every line of coast of any extent almost every condition and every kind of sediment is ...
... appear to be temperature almost entirely which regulates the distribution of species . The nature of the ground can have little to say to it , for on every line of coast of any extent almost every condition and every kind of sediment is ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
500 fathoms abundant Admiralty ambulacral animal Antedon apparatus Arctic arms attached August basin Bay of Biscay Belfast bottom temperature British Calveria Captain Calver carbonic acid Carpenter Cent chalk Cidaris cold area corals crinoids cruise crustaceans currents Date and Position deep water deep-sea disk distribution dredge echinoderms Edward Forbes expedition Fĉroe fathoms fauna foraminifera Forbes fossil genus Gulf-stream Gwyn Jeffreys haul Holtenia Hyalonema inch instrument Islands July Killibegs Lightning Majesty's Government Mediterranean Midn miles Miller-Casella mollusca MÜLLER naturalists nearly Noon North Atlantic northern observations ocean ophiurids passing plates Porcupine pressure Professor Rockall rope Royal Society SARS sea-water serial sounding shallow water shells Shetland singular species specimens spicules spines sponge star-fish Station Stornoway Strait Strait of Gibraltar taken tangles tempera Temperature of Air Temperature of Sea-Surface thermometer tion ture valves vessel warm area weight WYVILLE THOMSON
Popular passages
Page 16 - New Edition. Crown 8vo. $s. KEY TO PLANE TRIGONOMETRY. Crown 8vo. los. 6d. A TREATISE ON SPHERICAL TRIGONOMETRY. New Edition, enlarged. Crown 8vo. 4-?. 6d. PLANE CO-ORDINATE GEOMETRY, as applied to the Straight Line and the Conic Sections. With numerous Examples.
Page 11 - MORGAN — A COLLECTION OF PROBLEMS AND EXAMPLES IN MATHEMATICS. With Answers. By HA Morgan, MA, Sadlerian and Mathematical Lecturer of Jesus College, Cambridge.
Page 25 - GUILLEMIN. Translated from the French by MRS. NORMAN LoCKYER ; and Edited, with Additions and Notes, by J. NORMAN LOCKYER, FRS Illustrated by II Coloured Plates and 455 Woodcuts.
Page 22 - The object of the author in this book is to present the philosophy of Chemistry in such a form that it can be made with profit the subject of College recitations, and furnish the teacher with the means of testing the student's faithfulness and ability.
Page 10 - HEMMING— AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON THE DIFFERENTIAL AND INTEGRAL CALCULUS, for the Use of Colleges and Schools. By GW HEMMING, MA, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. Second Edition, with Corrections and Additions. 8vo.
Page 25 - I propose to show in this book that a man's natural abilities are derived by inheritance, under exactly the same limitations as are the form and physical features of the whole organic world.
Page 11 - Prelector of St. John's College, Cambridge. AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON MECHANICS. For the Use of the Junior Classes at the University and the Higher Classes in Schools.
Page 50 - AN INTRODUCTION TO ARISTOTLE'S RHETORIC. With Analysis, Notes, and Appendices. By EM COPE, Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. 8vo.
Page 5 - In the practical part of the subject he has advanced somewhat beyond the majority of preceding writers; particularly in Division, in Greatest Common Measure, in Cube Root, in the chapters on Decimal Money and the Metric System, and more especially in the application of Decimals to Percentages and cognate subjects. Copious examples, original
Page 19 - Wolstenholme. — A BOOK OF MATHEMATICAL PROBLEMS, on Subjects included in the Cambridge Course. By JOSEPH WOLSTENHOLME, Fellow of Christ's College, sometime Fellow of St. John's College, and lately Lecturer in Mathematics at Christ's College. Crown 8vo. cloth.