10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «GEOGNOSTICALLY»
Discover the use of
geognostically in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
geognostically and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The geognosy of the Appalachians and the origin of ...
... are sometimes accompanied by pyroxene, garnet, idocrase, sphene and
graphite, as in the corresponding rocks of the Laurentian, which this series, in its
more gneissic portions, closely resembles, though apparently distinct
geognostically.
Thomas Sterry Hunt, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1871
2
A Geognostical Essay on the Superposition of Rocks in Both ...
Alexander von Humboldt. and geognostically belonging (even when they contain
no trace of hornblende) to syenite, as transition mica-slates and gneiss belong to
micaceous quartz. Syenites, whether simply forming beds in green clay- slate, ...
Alexander von Humboldt, 1823
3
The American Naturalist
... are sometimes accompanied by pyroxene, garnet, idocrase, sphene and
graphite, as in the corresponding rocks of the Laurentian, which this series, in its
more gneissic portions, closely resembles, though apparently distinct
geognostically.
4
The Topographical, Statistical, and Historical Gazetteer of ...
The district lying north of the isthmus between the head of Loch-na-Keal and the
mouth of Aross- water, is all hilly and irregular, yet, though high, cannot be called
mountainous. Geognostically a trap district, it everywhere presents that terraced ...
5
The Topographical, Statistical, and Historical Gazetteer of ...
_The district lying north of the isthmus between the head of Loch-na-Keal and the
mouth of Arosswater, is all hilly and irregular, yet, though high, cannot be called
mountainous. Geognostically a trap district, it everywhere presents that terraced ...
6
The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal: Exhibiting a View ...
Still there are not merely differences in the characters of identical strata, but there
are strata geognostically distinct from others. This is the case with the great oolite,
which is so important in the English and French “ J ura,” but entirely wanting in ...
7
The Edinburgh philosophical journal
Pansner concludes his memoir with the following remark : " Geognostically
considered, the Mons Alaunus of the ancients, the Height of the Wolga of modern
geographers, is nothing more than a gentle inclined rising ground, intersected by
...
8
Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal
Let us try, lastly, to determine geognostically the chief places of the continents in
the various geological periods, in going back from the present time to the oldest.
As the subsidences increase always in a certain arithmetical progression to ...
... it will be found to form only one of those deposits of red sandstone, which, with
those of white sandstone, coal, and shale, form the secondary system of the
Lothians, and geognostically represent the coal formation. t As an instance of this
we ...
Wernerian Natural History Society, Edinburgh, 1838
10
The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal: Exhibiting a View ...
Let us try, lastly, to determine geognostically the chief places of the continents in
the various geological periods, in going back from the present time to the oldest.
As the subsidences increase always in a certain arithmetical progression to the ...