Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian InstitutionThe Institution, 1873 - Discoveries in science |
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Page 41
... existence , and any one who has given thought to the subject cannot but sympathize with Mr. Catlin , who , in his old age and after a life of hard labor and the devotion of all that he possessed in the world to its formation , is now ...
... existence , and any one who has given thought to the subject cannot but sympathize with Mr. Catlin , who , in his old age and after a life of hard labor and the devotion of all that he possessed in the world to its formation , is now ...
Page 130
... existence of this luminous vapor amidst large tracts of the heavens , and regarded it as lying within the limits of the galaxy . Nay more , he believed this vaporous matter to be the material from which the stars were made . According ...
... existence of this luminous vapor amidst large tracts of the heavens , and regarded it as lying within the limits of the galaxy . Nay more , he believed this vaporous matter to be the material from which the stars were made . According ...
Page 133
... existence of analogies throughout the whole range of creation . In a private letter written to Richard A. Procter , as late as 1869 , we find him saying : " An opinion which the structure of the Magellanic clouds has often suggested to ...
... existence of analogies throughout the whole range of creation . In a private letter written to Richard A. Procter , as late as 1869 , we find him saying : " An opinion which the structure of the Magellanic clouds has often suggested to ...
Page 143
... existence . Fifteen hun- dred citizens of all ages , dispatched from the principal district towns , assembled together , not to study in all their ramifications the different branches of human knowledge , but in order to learn the art ...
... existence . Fifteen hun- dred citizens of all ages , dispatched from the principal district towns , assembled together , not to study in all their ramifications the different branches of human knowledge , but in order to learn the art ...
Page 148
... existence . It consisted of forty - eight mem- bers , divided into four sections . Monge had the honor of being the first president . As at Paris , Bonaparte belonged to the section of mathematics . The situation of perpetual secretary ...
... existence . It consisted of forty - eight mem- bers , divided into four sections . Monge had the honor of being the first president . As at Paris , Bonaparte belonged to the section of mathematics . The situation of perpetual secretary ...
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Academy acid adjusted algæ American animals appearance Arctic arithmetical means arrow-heads astronomical bones collections Comptes-rendus hebdomadaires constants County Dakota language determine diameter diffusion direction earth equation especially expedition experiments feet formula fossils Fourier gases Gila River glaciers graduated Graham groups heat hebdomadaires des séances Herschel hydrogen important inches increase Indians instance interest interval invariable plane investigations Kettle Lakes l'académie des sciences labors large number larvæ latter lxxii means memoir meteorological method motion mound museum natural history number of terms object observations obtained orbit original palladium parthenogenesis period phenomena Pimas present probably Professor regard remains remarkable researches River Royal Society scientific séances de l'académie similar Sioux language Sir John skeleton Smithsonian Institution specific gravity specimens stars stone stratum superior plane surface taken temperature tion tribe Ural-Altaic languages Uranus values vessel weights word
Popular passages
Page 10 - Ethnological researches, particularly with reference to the different races of men in North America; also explorations and accurate surveys of the mounds and other remains of the ancient people of our country.
Page 10 - By the publication of a series of reports, giving an account of the new discoveries in science, and of the changes made from year to year in all branches of knowledge not strictly professional. 1. These reports will diffuse a kind of knowledge generally interesting, but which, at present, is inaccessible to the public. Some of the reports may be published annually, others at longer intervals, as the income of the institution, or the changes in the branches of knowledge, may indicate.
Page 9 - II. By appropriating a part of the income, annually, to special objects of research, under the direction of suitable persons. — 1. The objects and the amount appropriated, to be recommended by counsellors of the Institution. 2. Appropriations in different years to different objects; so that in course of time each branch of knowledge may receive a share. 3. The results obtained from these appropriations to be published, with the memoirs before mentioned, in the volumes of the Smithsonian...
Page 197 - When two elastic fluids, denoted by A and B, are mixed together, there is no mutual repulsion amongst their particles; that is, the particles of A do not repel those of B, as they do one another. Consequently, the pressure or whole weight upon any one particle arises solely from those of its own kind.
Page 10 - By the publication of separate treatises on subjects of general interest. 1. These treatises may occasionally consist of valuable memoirs translated from foreign languages, or of articles prepared under the direction of the institution, or procured by offering premiums for the best exposition of a given subject. 2. The treatises should, in all cases, be submitted to a commission of competent judges, previous to their publication.
Page 8 - In order to compensate, in some measure, for the loss of time occasioned by the delay of eight years in establishing the Institution, a considerable portion of the interest which has accrued should be added to the principal.
Page 126 - ... of it, above the average of humanity. It is morally impossible but that the manners should take a tinge of good breeding and civilization from having constantly before one's eyes the way in which the best bred and the best informed men have talked and conducted themselves in their intercourse with each other.
Page 11 - To carry out the plan before described, a library will be required, consisting, 1st, of a complete collection of the transactions and proceedings of all the learned societies in the world; 2d, of the more important current periodical publications, and other works necessary in preparing the periodical reports.
Page 11 - Regents, including these objects in the plan of organization, resolved to divide the income * into two equal parts. 2. One part to be appropriated to increase and diffuse knowledge by means of publications and researches, agreeably to the scheme before given. The other part to be appropriated to the formation of a library and a collection of objects of nature and of art. 3. These two plans are not incompatible with one another.
Page 9 - Facilities afforded for the production of original memoirs on all branches of knowledge. 2. The memoirs thus obtained to be published in a series of volumes, in a quarto form, and entitled Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge.