Vestiges of the Natural History of CreationJ. Churchill, 1844 - 390 pagina's |
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Pagina
... Plants , Corals , & c . 54 Era of the Old Red Sandstone - Fishes abundant . Secondary Rocks - Era of the Carboniferous Formation • -Land formed - Commencement of Land Plants . 76 Era of the New Red Sandstone - Terrestrial Zoology ...
... Plants , Corals , & c . 54 Era of the Old Red Sandstone - Fishes abundant . Secondary Rocks - Era of the Carboniferous Formation • -Land formed - Commencement of Land Plants . 76 Era of the New Red Sandstone - Terrestrial Zoology ...
Pagina 53
... plants or animals which were included in them . But this is only an hypothesis of negation ; and it certainly seems very unlikely that a degree of heat suffi- cient to obliterate the remains of plants or animals when dead , would ever ...
... plants or animals which were included in them . But this is only an hypothesis of negation ; and it certainly seems very unlikely that a degree of heat suffi- cient to obliterate the remains of plants or animals when dead , would ever ...
Pagina 54
Robert Chambers. 54 COMMENCEMENT OF ORGANIC LIFE- SEA PLANTS , CORALS , ETC. WE can scarcely be said to have passed out of these rocks , when we begin to find new conditions in the earth . It is here to be observed that the subsequent ...
Robert Chambers. 54 COMMENCEMENT OF ORGANIC LIFE- SEA PLANTS , CORALS , ETC. WE can scarcely be said to have passed out of these rocks , when we begin to find new conditions in the earth . It is here to be observed that the subsequent ...
Pagina 55
... plants take it in , and transform it into substance ; and we also know that there are classes of animals ( marine polypes ) which are capable of appropriat- ing it , in connexion with lime , ( carbonate of lime , ) from the waters of ...
... plants take it in , and transform it into substance ; and we also know that there are classes of animals ( marine polypes ) which are capable of appropriat- ing it , in connexion with lime , ( carbonate of lime , ) from the waters of ...
Pagina 57
... plants will flourish in air containing one - twelfth of this gas , or 166 times more than the present charge of our atmosphere . The results which we observe are perfectly consistent with , and may be said to presuppose an atmosphere ...
... plants will flourish in air containing one - twelfth of this gas , or 166 times more than the present charge of our atmosphere . The results which we observe are perfectly consistent with , and may be said to presuppose an atmosphere ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation: in large print Robert Chambers Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2023 |
Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation: in large print Robert Chambers Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2023 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abundant advance amongst analogy animal kingdom animalcules appear arrangements ascertained become beds birds body brain called carbon carbonic acid carboniferous Cetacea chalk character circumstances coal coccosteus considerable constitution crag and tail creatures cretaceous crinoidea crustacea deposits early earth eocene evil existence external fact faculties favourable feet fishes formation fossils genera geological globe heat human hypothesis idea inference insects instance kind land animals language less limestone lower animals mammalia marsupialia mass matter ment mental mind Mosaic record mountain nature nebulous observed Old Red Sandstone oolite operation organic creation origin pachydermata particular peculiar phenomena plants plesiosaurus present presumed primary produced quadrumana race racter rasorial red sandstone regard remains remarkable reptile rocks seen shew shewn Silurian space species stars strata sub-typical substance supposed surface terrestrial animals tion traces tribes various vast vegetable vertebrata whole
Populaire passages
Pagina 360 - The inorganic has one final comprehensive law, GRAVITATION. The organic, the other great department of mundane things, rests in like manner on one law, and that is — DEVELOPMENT. Nor may even these be after all twain, but only branches of one still more comprehensive law, the expression of that unity which man's wit can scarcely separate from Deity itself...
Pagina 222 - ... the simplest and most primitive type under a law to which that of like production is subordinate, gave birth to the type next above it, that this again produced the next higher, and so on to the very highest, the stages of advance being in all cases very small — namely, from one species only to another; so that the phenomenon has alwiiys been of a simple and modest character.
Pagina 154 - Deity, but of natural laws which are the expression of His will. What is to hinder our supposing that the organic creation is also a result of natural laws which are in like manner an expression of His will? (p. 154, 1st edition). And creation " operating by law " is constantly cited as relieving the Creator from trouble about insignificant details.
Pagina 234 - It has pleased Providence to arrange that one species should give birth to another, until the second highest gave birth to man, who is the very highest: be it so, it is our part to admire and to submit. The very faintest notion of there being anything ridiculous or degrading in the theory — how absurd does it appear, when we remember that every individual amongst us actually passes through the characters of the insect, the fish, and reptile (to speak nothing of others,) before he is permitted to...
Pagina 172 - Jissiparous generation. So that all animated nature may be said to be based on this mode of origin ; the fundamental form of organic being is a globule, having a new globule forming within itself, by which it is in time * See Dr.
Pagina 202 - Here we apparently have very clear demonstrations of a parity, or rather identity, of laws presiding over the development of the animated tribes on the face of the earth, and that of the individual in embryo. The tendency of all these illustrations is to make us look to development as the principle which has been immediately concerned in the peopling of this globe, a process extending over a vast space of time, but which is nevertheless connected in character with the briefer process by which an...
Pagina 63 - ... the fossil sharks of the later formations, resemble lines of miniature pyramids, larger and smaller alternating; some with teeth sharp, thin, and so deeply serrated that every individual tooth resembles a row of poniards set up against the walls of an armory ; and these last, says Agassiz, furnished with weapons so murderous, must have been the pirates of the period.
Pagina 389 - ... at first sight, like geology, not in perfect harmony with that record, and arranges all the rest into a system which partakes of the same character. But may not the sacred text, on a liberal interpretation, or with the benefit of new light reflected from nature, or derived from learning, be shewn to be as much in harmony with the novelties of this volume as it has been with geology and natural philosophy...
Pagina 153 - ... of this creative power at one time ^to produce zoophytes, another time to add a few marine mollusks, another to bring in one or two conchifers, again to produce crustaceous fishes, again perfect fishes, and so on to the end? This would surely be to take a very mean view of the Creative Power — to, in short, anthropomorphize it. or reduce it to some such character as that borne by the ordinary proceedings of mankind.
Pagina 307 - The leading characters, in short, of the various races of mankind, are simply representations of particular stages in the development of the highest or Caucasian type. The Negro exhibits permanently the imperfect brain, projecting lower jaw, and slender bent limbs, of a Caucasian child, some considerable time before the period of its birth.