| Benjamin Smith Barton - 1803 - 630 pagine
...intimate properties of the fluids or other matters, which are originally taken up by the roots. We are certain, that the leaves are incapable of essentially...few simple, but conclusive experiments. Mr. Papin • By Gusuvus Bondc, Professor Ludwig, Sir John Hill, &c. found, that a plant which he had put into... | |
| Benjamin Smith Barton - 1812 - 392 pagine
...intimate properties of the fluids or other matters, which are originally taken up by the roots. We are Certain, that the leaves are incapable of essentially...few simple, but conclusive experiments. Mr. Papin * By Gustavus Bonde, Professor Ludwig, Sir John Hill, Sic. found, that a plant which he had put into... | |
| Benjamin Smith Barton - 1812 - 390 pagine
...intimate properties of the fluids or other matters, which are originally taken up by the roots. We arc certain, that the leaves are incapable of essentially...few simple, but conclusive experiments. Mr. Papin " By Gustavus Bonde, Professor Ludwig, Sir John Hill, &c found, that a plant which he had put into... | |
| 1838 - 844 pagine
...the temporalities; but, in other respects, held no rank superior to any other member. Dr Jamieson, to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the Coldees, thinks be can discover, in their ecclesiastical government, a great resemblance to the Presbyterian.... | |
| John Knox - 1851 - 216 pagine
...fertilizing the empire of mind, as it flows over the old world and the new. She can boast of a Ferguson, to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the heavenly bodies ; of a Watt, who first rendered the steam engine of practical utility ; of a Reid,... | |
| Henry Reed Stiles - 1868 - 144 pagine
...genealogy, and to Doctor JB POUTER, of Coventry, Conn., and to Mrs. ALMIRA (Dow) WILSON, of South Coventry, to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the Dow family. HRS BROOKLYN, NY, September, 1868. So ^tvanahatt »«*1 Jitth famf.s of theit Dedicated... | |
| 1868 - 312 pagine
...1868. Mr. Spender is Surgeon to the Bath Mineral Water Hospital, and son of the celebrated gentleman to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the natural treatment of ulcers. In this volume the author treats ofthehutory, diagnosis, prognosis, and... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - 1919 - 688 pagine
...in those languages. He was one of the survivors of a group of naturalist explorers and investigators to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the fauna and flora of tropical America. He belonged to an illustrious company which, beginning with Humboldt... | |
| William Henry Flower, Richard Lydekker - 1891 - 792 pagine
...other forms less distinctly carnivorous, to the whole of which, including the modern Insectivora, Cope (to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the American extinct species) gives the name of BUNOTHERIA, those more specially related to the existing... | |
| Ludwig Edinger - 1899 - 472 pagine
...involved in these curious structures is, in fishes, supplied by the Vagus and Trigeminus. Fritsch, to whom we are indebted for much of our knowledge of the fish-brain, found that the nuclei of these nerves in Loph ius — and in this fish alone — were supplemented... | |
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