| Hugh Macmillan - 1874 - 464 стор.
...tribes in Europe and America, and the more clearly we understand the phenomena which took place on the melting of the ice at the close of the glacial period, and map out the limits of ancient glacial action all "/ over the world, the more confirmed, I believe,... | |
| Thomas Belt - 1874 - 452 стор.
...greatly increased in extent by the lowering of the ocean ; and the overwhelming of this low land, on the melting of the ice at the close of the glacial period, may be that great catastrophe that is recorded on both sides of the Atlantic, but is more clearly remembered... | |
| James Patterson Lawyer - 1904 - 510 стор.
...steep rocky cliffs, resembling very much the walls of the Susquehanna in the mountains of Pennsylvania. The melting of the ice at the close of the glacial period formed large volumes of running water in the summer seasons. The rivers, rising in the glaciated area... | |
| Gerald Massey - 1907 - 416 стор.
...flood that swept the plains of Mesopotamia ; nor in any vast cataclysm that might have been caused by the melting of the ice at the close of the glacial period (Huxley, Nineteenth Century, 1890, pp. 14-15). We find by the Egyptian wisdom that "the deluge," as... | |
| 1908 - 750 стор.
...alone. If we take the alternative to solution, ie erosion of the chalk by means of torrents due to the melting of the ice at the close of the glacial period, it seems to me that you have not got anything like sufficient gathering ground for the snowfields (or... | |
| Geological Survey (U.S.) - 1911 - 608 стор.
...The form and topography of these ridges and the vicinity and the little that could be seen of then- geology indicate pretty clearly that during the melting...by the ice masses, the drainage from the mountains hi the rear found its way out to Ninemile Creek through subglacial tunnels or open ice-walled canyon-like... | |
| Gerald Massey - 2007 - 682 стор.
...flood that swept the plains of Mesopotamia; nor in any vast cataclysm that might have been caused by the melting of the ice at the close of the glacial period (Huxley, Nineteenth Century, 1890, pp. 14-15). We find by the Egyptian wisdom that "the deluge," as... | |
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