|
Showing 1 - 25 of
55 matches in All Departments
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text.
Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book
(without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated.
1826 edition. Excerpt: ... to have consisted of sulphuretted
hydrogen. e Some days afterwards the neighbouring waters grew hot,
and many dead fish were thrown upon the shore. A frightful
subterranean noise was at the same time heard, long streams of fire
rose from the ground, and stones continued to be thrown out, until
the rocks became joined to the Wliite Island originally existing. r
Showers of ashes and pumice extended over the sea, even to the
coasts of Asia Minor and the Dardanelles, and destroyed all the
productions of the earth in Santorino. These, and similar frightful
appearances continued round the island for nearly a year, after
which nothing remained of them but a dense smoke. On the 15th July,
1708, the same observer had the courage to attempt visiting the
island, but when his boat approached within 500 paces of it, the
boiling heat of the water deterred him from proceeding. He made
another trial, but wasdriven back by a cloud of smoke and cinders
that proceeded from the principal crater. This was followedhy
ejections of red-hot stones, from which he very narrowly escaped.
The mariners remarked that the heat of the water had carried away
all the pitch from their vessel.. During lb? tell. $1bSeq1Bm years,
the volcanic action had given rise to several other eruptions, but
the same reporter states, that in 1712 all was quiet, and no other
indication of szzvrozuzvo. the kind existed, excepting a quantity
of sulphur and bitumen, which floated on, without mixing with, the
waters. Its circumference at that time was about four miles. It is
important, with reference to the natural history of volcanos, to
remark that in this case, as in many others, the mountain appears
to have been elevated, before the crater existed, or gaseous
matters were...
This short but distinctive paper was published in 1835 by Charles
Daubeny (1795 1867), who began his career as a physician but soon
found his passion to be volcanos. At this time, Daubeny held chairs
in chemistry and botany at Oxford. He had made many field trips to
European volcanic regions between 1819 and 1825, was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1822, and in 1826 published the
first edition of his famous Description of Active and Extinct
Volcanos, of which a later version also appears in this series.
Here Daubeny describes a winter trip to the Apulia (Puglia) region
in the south-east of Italy, rarely described by travel writers of
his time, to visit Lake Amsanctus, famously mentioned by Virgil,
and the extinct volcano Mount Vultur. Although Daubeny's overall
focus is scientific, his account also includes lively descriptions
of classical remains and rural society in southern Italy.
Charles Daubeny (1795 1867) first published Active and Extinct
Volcanos in 1826. This reissue is of the second, augmented edition
of 1848, which the author explains was significantly updated in the
light of the work of Charles Darwin. Part I contains geological
descriptions of most of the world's known volcanos, arranged by
region, many of them based on Daubeny's own observations. Part II
contains descriptions of earthquake-prone regions, thermal springs,
and thermal waters. In Part III Daubeny introduces his influential
theory of the causes of volcanic action, proposing that it results
from contact between water and metals beneath the earth's surface.
He also discusses the factors that give volcanos particular
characteristics, and the impact of volcanos on their environments.
This pioneering work of Victorian geology provided the scientific
community with some of the first descriptions and data sets on
previously unstudied volcanic regions, and is still referred to
today.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|