Aspects of Nature: In Different Lands and Different Climates; with Scientific ElucidationsLea and Blanchard, 1850 - 475 páginas |
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Página 98
... families detach themselves and form new colonies . The European dog , which has become wild , barks as loud as the original American hairy race . Garcilasso relates that , before the arrival of the Spaniards , the Peruvians had dogs ...
... families detach themselves and form new colonies . The European dog , which has become wild , barks as loud as the original American hairy race . Garcilasso relates that , before the arrival of the Spaniards , the Peruvians had dogs ...
Página 107
... families of Cyperaceae and Gramineæ , consists of various species of Paspalum , P. leptostachyum and P. lenticulare ; of Kyl- lingia , K. monocephala ( Rottb . ) , K. odorata ; of Panicum , P. granuliferum , P. micranthum ; of Antephora ...
... families of Cyperaceae and Gramineæ , consists of various species of Paspalum , P. leptostachyum and P. lenticulare ; of Kyl- lingia , K. monocephala ( Rottb . ) , K. odorata ; of Panicum , P. granuliferum , P. micranthum ; of Antephora ...
Página 112
... families of Coniferæ or Amentaceæ , oaks , beeches , and birches , but in the tropics , of an immense variety of trees living separately or " unsocially " -protect the ground from the direct rays of the sun , evaporate fluids elaborated ...
... families of Coniferæ or Amentaceæ , oaks , beeches , and birches , but in the tropics , of an immense variety of trees living separately or " unsocially " -protect the ground from the direct rays of the sun , evaporate fluids elaborated ...
Página 130
... Families belonging to the Wakamba tribe have advanced to the west five or six hundred miles into the interior of the country , as far as the upper course of the river Lusidji , the great Lake Nyassi or Zambeze ( 5 ° S. lat . ? ) , and ...
... Families belonging to the Wakamba tribe have advanced to the west five or six hundred miles into the interior of the country , as far as the upper course of the river Lusidji , the great Lake Nyassi or Zambeze ( 5 ° S. lat . ? ) , and ...
Página 133
... families of languages ; but rivers reveal to us by their course the form of the surface of the earth , and are at once the nourishers of vegetation , the channels of intercourse between men , and pregnant with unknown influences on the ...
... families of languages ; but rivers reveal to us by their course the form of the surface of the earth , and are at once the nourishers of vegetation , the channels of intercourse between men , and pregnant with unknown influences on the ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Aspects of Nature, in Different Lands and Different Climates; with ... Alexander von Humboldt Visualização integral - 1849 |
Aspects of Nature, in Different Lands and Different Climates: With ... Alexander von Humboldt Visualização integral - 1850 |
Aspects of Nature, in Different Lands and Different Climates; with ... Alexander von Humboldt Visualização integral - 1849 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
according Africa Amazons ancient animals appears arborescent Asia Atahuallpa Atlas banks barometric belong called Calluna Chili Chimborazo climate coast Coniferæ Continent coral Cordilleras crater cultivated declivity Desert earth east eastern edition elevation English feet entire eruption Europe expedition extra cloth Fahr families feet high flowers forest Frémont French geographical miles globe ground Guiana heat height Himalaya Huayna Capac Humboldt Inca Indian Infusoria inhabitants interior islands Joseph Hooker Lake latitude Llanos longitude masses measurements Mexico natives nature northern number of species observations ocean octavo volume organic Orinoco Pacific palms Paramo Peru phænogamous plants phenomena physiognomy Pinus plains present Quito Reaumur regions remarkable rise river Robert Schomburgk rocks Rocky royal 12mo Schomburgk shores South America Southern Hemisphere Steppes summits surface temperate zone temperature tion toises trachyte traveller trees tropical valley vegetation volcano Voyage western wild
Passagens conhecidas
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Página 5 - MR. LIONEL J. BEALE, MRCS THE LAWS OF HEALTH IN THEIR RELATIONS TO MIND AND BODY. A Series of Letters from an Old Practitioner to a Patient.
Página 475 - HISTORY OF THE HUGUENOTS— A NEW EDITION, CONTINUED TO THE PRESENT TIME. BY WS BROWNING. In one large octavo volume, extra cloth. " One of the most interesting; and valuable contributions to modern history."— Gentleman's Magaeine.
Página 32 - The lowering sky sheds a dim, almost straw-colored light on the desolate plain. The horizon draws suddenly nearer, the steppe seems to contract, and with it the heart of the wanderer. The hot, dusty particles which fill the air increase its suffocating heat, and the east wind, blowing over the long-heated soil, brings with it no refreshment, but rather a still more burning glow.
Página 412 - ... passes through the wide and arid plain between the Pacific Ocean and the chain of the Andes, and the other over the ridges of the Cordilleras. Mile-stones, or stones marking the distances, are often found placed at equal intervals. The road was conducted across rivers and deep ravines by three kinds of bridges, stone, wood, and rope bridges (Puentes de Hamaca or de...
Página 4 - WILLIAM PROCTER, of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. In one handsomely printed octavo volume, of 570 pages, with over 500 engravings on wood.
Página 243 - Even butterflies are found at sea at great distances from the coast, being carried there by the force of the wind when storms come off the land. In the same involuntary manner insects are transported into the upper regions of the atmosphere, 16,000 or 19,000 feet above the plains. The heated crust of the earth occasions an ascending vertical current of air, by which light bodies are borne upwards.
Página 32 - The pools which the yellow, fading branches of the fan palm had protected from evaporation, now gradually disappear. As in the icy north the animals become torpid with cold, so here, under the influence of the parching drought, the crocodile and the boa become motionless and fall asleep, deeply buried in the dry mud.
Página 152 - As long as the waters of the Orinoco and the Meta are low, these people live on fish and turtles. They kill the former with arrows, shooting the fish as they rise to the surface of the water with a skill and dexterity that has frequently excited my admiration. At the periodical swelling of the rivers, the fishing is stopped, for it is as difficult to fish in deep...
Página 444 - I have already remarked elsewhere (Examen critique de 1'histoire de la Geographic du Nouveau Continent, et des progres de 1'Astronomie nautique aux 15eme et 16eme siecles, T.