Nature, Volume 31

Front Cover
Sir Norman Lockyer
Macmillan Journals Limited, 1885
 

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Page 206 - FELKIN, HM— Technical Education in a Saxon Town. Published for the City and Guilds of London Institute for the Advancement of Technical Education.
Page 297 - The sphere of the stars," he affirms, " is stationary ; and the earth, making a revolution, produces the daily rising and setting of stars and planets*.
Page 109 - October, 1 884, for the purpose of discussing and, if possible, fixing upon a meridian proper to be employed as a common zero of longitude and standard of time-reckoning throughout the whole world...
Page 110 - Scott, that at some barometrical stations the atmospheric wave caused by the eruption was still to be traced until about 122 hours after its origin, and that it must have travelled more than three times round the entire circuit of the earth, shows how vast must have been the initial disturbance causing the wave. The possibility of the remarkable atmospheric appearances which so constantly accompanied the rising and setting of the sun for some months subsequent to the eruption being due to volcanic...
Page 223 - Those present resolved to form themselves into a Committee, with power to add to their number, in order to collect a fund for the benefit of Mrs.
Page 133 - Council were elected, and the meeting closed with a vote of thanks to the Chairman, proposed by Dr.
Page 60 - I look upon our English system as a wickedly brain-destroying piece of bondage under which we suffer. The reason why we continue to use it is the imaginary difficulty of making a change, and nothing else; but I do not think in America that any such difficulty should stand in the way of adopting so splendidly useful a reform.
Page 305 - Treasurer. — Henry Perigal, FRAS Trustees. — Hon. Francis Albert Rollo Russell, MA, Stephen William Silver, FRGS Secretaries. — George James Symons, FRS, John William Tripe, MD, MRCPED.
Page 231 - Almost every year gives new examples of the immigration of campestrine western plants into the eastern States. They are well up to the spirit of the age; they travel by railway. The seeds are transported, some in the coats of cattle and sheep on the way to market, others in the food which supports them on the journey, and many in a way which you might not suspect, until you consider that these great roads run east and west, that the prevalent winds are from the west, that a freight-train left unguarded...
Page 111 - It will, perhaps, not be out of place here to say a few words with regard to the administration of this fund, the existence of which dates from 1859, and is in a great degree due to the exertions of the late Mr. Gassiot. The Council of the Royal Society takes charge of any sums contributed to the fund and invests them, applying the interest in grants for the relief of such scientific men or their families as may from time to time require or deserve assistance. These grants are, however, made only...

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