... this stage of the refrigeration the central portion of a mass so large as the earth might become perfectly solid, so that at the instant when the circulation should entirely cease, the whole might consist of a solid central nucleus, surrounded by... Geological Magazine - Página 294editado por - 1878Visualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1839 - 504 páginas
...consist of a solid central nucleus, surrounded by the external portion still in a state of fusion, and of which the fluidity would vary continuously from...would be just such as not to admit of circulation. When the mass should have arrived at this stage of the cooling, a change would take place in the process... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1848 - 680 páginas
...consist of a solid central nucleus, surrounded by the external portion still in a state of fusion, and of which the fluidity would vary continuously from...would be just such as not to admit of circulation. " When the mass should have arrived at this stage of the cooling, a change would take place in the... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1848 - 784 páginas
...consist of a solid central nucleus, surrounded by the external portion still in a state of fusion, and of which the fluidity would vary continuously from...would be just such as not to admit of circulation. " When the mass should have arrived at this stage of the cooling, a change would take place in the... | |
| Osmond Fisher - 1881 - 332 páginas
...transition from perfect to imperfect fluidity, and subsequent solidity, will commence at the centre4." Assuming the latter to be the case, when the mass...formed, surrounded by an external portion of which the 1 " Chemical News," Vol. xvm. p. 191. 2 "Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc." Part ii. 1839, quoted in his "Report... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting - 1848 - 754 páginas
...consist of a solid central nucleus, surrounded by the external portion still in a state of fusion, and of which the fluidity would vary continuously from the solidity of the nucleus to the fluidity of t*e surface, where, at the instant we are speaking of, it would be just such as not to admit of circulation.... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1839 - 508 páginas
...consist of a solid central nucleus, surrounded by the external portion still in a state of fusion, and of which the fluidity would vary continuously from...would be just such as not to admit of circulation. When the mass should have arrived at this stage of the cooling, a change would take place in the process... | |
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