Flora of Dorsetshire, Or a Catalogue of Plants Found in the County of Dorset: With Sketches of Its Geology and Physical GeographyWhittaker, 1874 - 320 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 2
... chalk land which nearly encircles the county is almost exclusively devoted to the cultivation of corn , roots , and forage , sustaining large flocks of sheep , the superiority of which gives the Dorsetshire farmer a preeminence in the ...
... chalk land which nearly encircles the county is almost exclusively devoted to the cultivation of corn , roots , and forage , sustaining large flocks of sheep , the superiority of which gives the Dorsetshire farmer a preeminence in the ...
الصفحة 4
... chalk . The researches of Professor Rupert Jones confirm the idea that life , at least in its lower forms , has continued uninterruptedly from age to age , and that the entomostraca especially have con- tributed to form the carbonate of ...
... chalk . The researches of Professor Rupert Jones confirm the idea that life , at least in its lower forms , has continued uninterruptedly from age to age , and that the entomostraca especially have con- tributed to form the carbonate of ...
الصفحة 9
... Chalk escarpment ; its western extremity lying at the base of Melbury Bubb , being less regular , owing to the dislocation of the subsequent beds . It appears on the southern side of the chalk range at Long Bredy , where it takes a ...
... Chalk escarpment ; its western extremity lying at the base of Melbury Bubb , being less regular , owing to the dislocation of the subsequent beds . It appears on the southern side of the chalk range at Long Bredy , where it takes a ...
الصفحة 18
... chalk as well . The Purbeck beds have been examined and mapped in great detail by Mr. Bristow , and published in the works of the Geological Survey of Great Britain . In Sheet 22 of the ... CHALK MARL , AND LOWER CHALK . - 18 GEOLOGY .
... chalk as well . The Purbeck beds have been examined and mapped in great detail by Mr. Bristow , and published in the works of the Geological Survey of Great Britain . In Sheet 22 of the ... CHALK MARL , AND LOWER CHALK . - 18 GEOLOGY .
الصفحة 19
... CHALK MARL , AND LOWER CHALK . - It is difficult distinctly to recognize the sub - division of the lowest beds of this series ; only on the eastern side of the county is it of any importance ; it accompanies the Chalk in its varied ...
... CHALK MARL , AND LOWER CHALK . - It is difficult distinctly to recognize the sub - division of the lowest beds of this series ; only on the eastern side of the county is it of any importance ; it accompanies the Chalk in its varied ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Abbotsbury Alban's Head August banks beds Bere Regis Bexington Blandford Bogs Borrer Bradford Abbas Bridport Buckman C. B. Pin Chamberlayne's Church Knowle Clenston Wood Cliffs common Copse Corfe Castle Corn-fields Creech Cultivated ground Devon distributed ditches Durweston E. B. iii E. B. viii E. B. xi fields flore folio frequent Gadcliff Gorwell Gramen cyperoides Grange Wood Hants Heath Hedge-banks hedges Hill Hook Park Huds Isle of Wight J. C. Dale July June June-August June-September Kimeridge Langton Matravers Lodmoor Longthorns Lyme Regis Marsh meadows Melbury Milborne St Morden Moreton native Normandy palustris pastures Piddle plants ponds Poorstock Portland Prof Pult Pulteney Puncknoll Purbeck Radipole Raii Syn rare river road-sides Salt-marshes Salter Salter's List Shitterton side Somerset Spettisbury Stoborough Stour Studland Swanage sylvestris Syme Tournef vulgaris W. B. Barrett walls Wareham waste ground waste places West Lulworth Weymouth Whatcombe Wilts Wimborne Wootton Fitzpaine
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 39 - I can, at any rate, show that the experiments made with it at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century fully confirm the high encomium bestowed by Dioscorides upon his indicum.
الصفحة 22 - In the compact clays of these localities there are not only dicotyledonous leaves but numerous fronds of ferns allied to Gleichenia, which are well preserved, with their fruit...
الصفحة 5 - ... assumed that the 17.6 cc. of milk taken for the determination will weigh 10 times as much as 2 cc. of warm butter fat. It is important that the final readings be taken while the fat is still warm. On account of the unavoidable contraction of the fat while taking these readings it is customary to read from the bottom of the lower to the top of the upper meniscus. The result is usually within 0.2 per cent of that found by the gravimetric method. The column of fat should be of a clear yellow color...
الصفحة 11 - Eimmeridge district ; where it is upwards of 600 feet thick, and strongly impregnated with bitumen, giving out a disagreeable smell. It burns vividly with a bright and clear flame, but is unfit for ordinary use as fuel ; the poor of the neighbourhood, however, use it as a substitute for other fuel. It burns with a cheerful flame, lighting up the chamber, as well as cooking the dinner and boiling the kettle. It has, however, an unpleasant odour when burning, resembling petroleum, and yields a reddish...
الصفحة 40 - The new botanist's guide to the localities of the rarer plants of Britain; on the plan of Turner and Dillwyn's Botanist's guide.
الصفحة 226 - And hence it is, that there is an ancient statute (though now disused and neglected) that the cable ropes for the navy royal were to be made thereabouts, as affording the best tackling for that purpose.
الصفحة 15 - Palndina elongata, which takes a high polish. It was held in high repute by the architects of the middle ages, and there are but few of our cathedrals and old churches which do not contain pillars and window shafts of this material. Mr. Bristow considers there is sufficient evidence that the greatest part of this material for ancient ecclesiastical ornamentation was procured from the neighbourhood of Swanage. The remainder of the Upper Purbecks consists of a series of bands of clays and stone, the...
الصفحة 16 - FRS, stimulated by these discoveries, proceeded to make a close and systematic search in the fresh-water marl-beds, and with complete success. In three weeks he brought to light, from an area forty feet long by ten wide, and from a layer the average thickness of which was only five inches, several species, many of which were new. They are the subject of an exhaustive memoir by Professor Owen, in the Palteontographical Society's works for the year 1870.
الصفحة 12 - Bingsteacl, and, owing to the rock losing its shaly character, the fossils are well preserved. The beds have a northward dip, and are, as already noticed, intersected by numerous faults, causing dislocations, analogous to those of the Coal-measures. The distinctive character of this formation, as compared with the true Carboniferous, is, that the bituminous matter is principally a result of the decomposition of animal matter. Like the Lias of the western side of the county, it yields a rich supply...
الصفحة 40 - HC Watson, vol. i. 1835 ; vol. ii. 1837. Newman. A history of British Ferns and allied plants.