| Jean André Luc - 1810 - 444 páginas
...of what he considered as evident proofs of progress in the destruction of the coasts, had said : " It is true, we do not see the ," successive steps...phenomena " are sufficiently multiplied and varied, is as irreft sistible, as if we saw the changes actually effected " jn the moment of observation." I hope... | |
| John Playfait - 1822 - 668 páginas
...hollowed, perforated, as they HUTTONfAN THEORY. 113 are farther advanced in the sea, and at last insulated, lead to the same conclusion, and mark very clearly...saw the changes actually effected in the moment of observation. On such shores, the fragments of rock once detached, become instruments of further destruction,... | |
| George Fairholme - 1837 - 490 páginas
...the rocks hollowed and perforated, as they are further advanced in the sea, and at last insulated, lead to the same conclusion, and mark, very clearly,...successive steps of this progress, exemplified in the same individual rock ; but we see "them clearly in different individuals ; and the conviction thus... | |
| Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1846 - 216 páginas
...deep, the rocks hollowed, perforated as they are further advanced in the sea, and at last insulated, lead to the same conclusion, and mark, very clearly, so many different stages of decay. The fragments of rock, when detached, become instruments of further destruction, and make a part of... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 484 páginas
...deep, the rocks hollowed, perforated, as they are farther advanced in the sea, and at last insulated, lead to the same conclusion, and mark very clearly...saw the changes actually effected in the moment of observation. On such shores, the fragments of rock once detached, become instruments of further destruction,... | |
| Liverpool Geological Society - 1914 - 434 páginas
...deep, the rocks hollowed, perforated as they are farther advanced into the sea, and at last insulated, lead to the same conclusion and mark very clearly so many different stages of decay. . . " On such shores the fragments of rock once detached become instruments of further destruction,... | |
| C. D. Woodroffe - 2002 - 640 páginas
...the rocks, prove, that the present line of the shore has been determined by the action of the sea ... It is true, we do not see the successive steps of...saw the changes actually effected in the moment of observation. (Playfair. l802) Rocky coasts occur where rugged or relatively resistant terrestrial lithology... | |
| Oliver J. Thatcher - 2004 - 466 páginas
...deep, the rocks hollowed, perforated, as they are farther advanced in the sea, and at last insulated, lead to the same conclusion, and mark very clearly...saw the changes actually effected in the moment of observation. On such shores, the fragments of rock once detached, become instruments of further destruction,... | |
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