Science, Volume 6John Michels (Journalist) American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1885 Since Jan. 1901 the official proceedings and most of the papers of the American Association for the Advancement of Science have been included in Science. |
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Page 62
... Yale college has read a series of twenty - one papers , entitled ' Contributions to meteorology , ' before the National academy of sciences . The material for these studies has been drawn largely from the publications of the signal ...
... Yale college has read a series of twenty - one papers , entitled ' Contributions to meteorology , ' before the National academy of sciences . The material for these studies has been drawn largely from the publications of the signal ...
Page 98
... Yale - college observatory , has been engaged for nearly a year and a half past in measuring the group of the Pleiades , his original plan being to measure with this instrument the same stars which Bessel measured with the Königsberg ...
... Yale - college observatory , has been engaged for nearly a year and a half past in measuring the group of the Pleiades , his original plan being to measure with this instrument the same stars which Bessel measured with the Königsberg ...
Page 136
... Yale College , to whom the specimens were referred , reports as follows respect- ing them : " The very small crabs from Cape San Antonio , Cuba , are too young and imperfect for precise deter- mination , but are evidently the young ...
... Yale College , to whom the specimens were referred , reports as follows respect- ing them : " The very small crabs from Cape San Antonio , Cuba , are too young and imperfect for precise deter- mination , but are evidently the young ...
Page 161
... Yale College since 1856 . Virtually , he has had charge of the instructions in that branch of science at New Haven since 1853 , when the college was deprived , by death , of the ser- vices of Professor Stanley . He had evinced , in his ...
... Yale College since 1856 . Virtually , he has had charge of the instructions in that branch of science at New Haven since 1853 , when the college was deprived , by death , of the ser- vices of Professor Stanley . He had evinced , in his ...
Page 200
... University , Ithaca , N.Y. , on July 13 , 1886. The presiding officer will be Pro- fessor Tracy Peck of Yale college . - Nature states that it has been decided to with- hold from publication the report of Drs . Klein and Gibbes upon Dr ...
... University , Ithaca , N.Y. , on July 13 , 1886. The presiding officer will be Pro- fessor Tracy Peck of Yale college . - Nature states that it has been decided to with- hold from publication the report of Drs . Klein and Gibbes upon Dr ...
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Popular passages
Page 340 - vision. In vain,—the blurred record was as blank as ever. The next night he saw the fish again, but with no more satisfactory result. When he awoke it disappeared from his memory as before. Hoping that the same experience might be repeated on the third night, he placed a pencil and
Page 99 - quite like the French academy, — a sovereign organ of the highest literary opinion, a recognized authority in matters of intellectual tone and taste, we shall hardly have, and perhaps we ought not to wish to have it."
Page 6 - communications concerning the proposed change in the time for beginning the astronomical day, as recommended by the recent International meridian conference at Washington, the lords of the committee of council on education requested the following committee to advise them as to what steps should be taken in the matter : Prof. JC Adams,
Page 382 - Helmholtz, HLF The sensations of tone as a physiological basis for the theory of music. 2d
Page 31 - the extent to which the strata above or below the gassand are cracked; (c) the dip of the gassand, and the position of the anticlines and synclines; (d) the relative proportions of water, oil, and gas contained in the sand; and (e) the pressure under which the gas exists before being tapped by wells.
Page 433 - and The preventable causes of disease, injury, and death in American manufactories and workshops, and the best means and appliances for preventing and avoiding them. The
Page 266 - terms such as a competent mathematician could deal with, disentangled from all reference to heredity, and in that shape submitted it to Mr. J. Hamilton Dickson, of St. Peter's college, Cambridge. I asked him kindly to investigate for me the surface of frequency of error that would result from these three data, and the various
Page 265 - discountenances extravagant fears that they will inherit all their weaknesses and diseases. The converse of this law is very far from being its numerical opposite. Because the most probable deviate of the son is only twothirds that of his midparentage , it does not in the least follow that the most probable deviate of the midparentage is
Page 333 - and the tooth became the most efficient weapon of attack. Still later, armor was discarded, and flight or concealment became the main methods of escape, and swift pursuit the principle of attack, while claws were added to teeth as assailing weapons. Finally, mentality came into play, intelligence became the most efficient agent both in attack and