The Geographical Journal, Volume 15Royal Geographical Society., 1900 - Geography Includes the Proceedings of the Royal geographical society, formerly pub. separately. |
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Results 1-5 of 100
Page 22
... important part in a conversion of transverse into longitudinal dunes . I first saw these dunes in the morning ; on my return in the afternoon the wind had increased , and there was a haze of flying sand 20 or 30 feet high over the ...
... important part in a conversion of transverse into longitudinal dunes . I first saw these dunes in the morning ; on my return in the afternoon the wind had increased , and there was a haze of flying sand 20 or 30 feet high over the ...
Page 34
... important occasion . Her maiden voyage was from Newcastle to St. Petersburg . We entered the ice at the meridian of Revel , and had to force our way through 160 miles of ice . It never occurred to any one that the ship would go to ...
... important occasion . Her maiden voyage was from Newcastle to St. Petersburg . We entered the ice at the meridian of Revel , and had to force our way through 160 miles of ice . It never occurred to any one that the ship would go to ...
Page 48
... importance . We cannot expect these lines to be straight or the directions to be mathematically true . Various ... important so long as the Rocky mountains and the Andes were regarded as a single moun- tain system , connected into ...
... importance . We cannot expect these lines to be straight or the directions to be mathematically true . Various ... important so long as the Rocky mountains and the Andes were regarded as a single moun- tain system , connected into ...
Page 53
... importance of any particular crop compared with the total cereal crop in any region , but they give no indication of the relative importance of the particular crop in different regions , which is by far the most important consideration ...
... importance of any particular crop compared with the total cereal crop in any region , but they give no indication of the relative importance of the particular crop in different regions , which is by far the most important consideration ...
Page 54
... important in Suffolk than Ross and Cromarty , and would conceal the fact that they were by far the most important cereal in the latter county . Surely a comparison of wheat , barley , and oat maps would at once indicate this fact . The ...
... important in Suffolk than Ross and Cromarty , and would conceal the fact that they were by far the most important cereal in the latter county . Surely a comparison of wheat , barley , and oat maps would at once indicate this fact . The ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abyssinian Africa altitude Arun Arundel Asia basin Bhotiyas Bognor British Captain Central centre Chalk Chichester Chitambo coast coastal plain crossed depth district dunes east eastern elevation escarpment expedition exploration fathoms feet forest Fort Jameson Geographical Society geological glacial glacier gorge ground harbour height high-road hills inches India island Journal journey Kalonga lake Lake Kivu land large number Lavant valley Littlehampton Loanda Loch Loch Katrine Loch Lubnaig Loch Voil London Lukchun Map and Illustrations Meteorological Midhurst Milam miles mountains native Nile north-east north-west northern observations pass Petworth plateau Presented Price Prof published Pulborough railway rainfall reached region Report ridge river road rocks route runs sand sheet shows slope south-west southern Spitsbergen square miles Stane Street station stream sudd surface Survey temperature Tibet Tibetan travellers trees valley village White Nile whole wind
Popular passages
Page 238 - I am directed by the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury to acquaint you that my Lords are...
Page 74 - Rawson, at the advanced age of eightyeight years, the Society has lost one of its oldest and most valued members.
Page 510 - Tables relating to the Output of Coal and other Minerals and the number of persons employed at mines worked under the Coal and Metalliferous Mines Regulation Acts during the Year 1899.
Page 33 - I was engaged at that time with my service, and did not then see my way to disclose my ideas, but I made some preliminary preparations. I wrote to Dr. Nansen a letter, in which I stated that I was entirely of his opinion, that he would be carried by the currents somewhere in the direction he imagined, and advised him that help should be sent for him to Franz Josef Land. My letter to him and his answer were duly published in the Russian newspapers and in geographical publications.
Page 511 - Report of the Expeditions organized by the British Astronomical Association to observe the total Solar Eclipse of 1898, January 22.
Page 122 - Sound, as commentators generally assume. " Now, having the wind at north-north-east, we steered away south and by east, with purpose to fall with the southermost part of this land, which we saw ; hoping by this meane, either to defray the charge of the voyage [? by discovery], or else, if it pleased God in time to give us a faire wind to the north-east, to satisfie expectation.
Page 57 - Dickson a'so contributed a paper on the temperature and salinity of the surface water of the North Atlantic during 1896 and 1897.
Page 422 - SOUTH AMERICA AND PACIFIC OCEAN. South America Pilot, part 1. East coast of South America, from cape St. Roque to cape Virgins, with the Falkland, South Georgia, Sandwich, and South Shetland islands ; also the north coast from cape St. Roque to cape Orange, in...
Page 181 - Report on the geology of the area covered by the Seine River and Lake Shebandowan map sheets, comprising portions of Rainy River and Thunder Bay districts, Ontario.
Page 125 - On the norther side of the mouth of this inlet lie three ilands [really blocks of mountains divided by valleys, which would look like islands from the distance (10 leagues) they were from land], not farre the one from the other, being very high mountainous land. The farthest of the three to the north-west [ie the block of the sea-front just south of the entrance to Ice fiord] hath four very high mounts [Mount Starashchin], like heapes of corne.