| Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Rollin D. Salisbury - 1905 - 740 Seiten
...large body, but the main hypothesis is not dependent on this postulate. It assigns the gathering-in of the planetesimals to the crossing of the elliptical...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
| Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Rollin D. Salisbury - 1905 - 730 Seiten
...planetesimals to the crossing of ibe elliptical orbits in the course of their inevitable shift ings. Out of this process and its antecedents, it develops...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
| Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Rollin D. Salisbury - 1906 - 738 Seiten
...crossing of the elliptical orbits in the course of their inevitable shiftings. Out of this process arid its antecedents, it develops consistent views of the...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
| American Geographical Society of New York - 1906 - 906 Seiten
...their directions of rotation, of their variations of mass, of their varying densities, and of their peculiarities. It deduces a relatively slow growth...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
| Francis Rolt-Wheeler - 1909 - 350 Seiten
...moved about the central mass in elliptical orbits of considerable but not excessive eccentricity. ... It deduces a relatively slow growth of the earth,...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward." From the strictly geological standpoint the most important difference between the Nebular... | |
| Oklahoma Geological Survey - 1914 - 56 Seiten
...directions of rotation, of their variations of mass, of their varying densities, and of other pecularities. It deduces a relatively slow growth of the earth,...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
| Oklahoma Geological Survey - 1914 - 60 Seiten
...directions of rotation, of their variations of mass, of their varying densities, and of other pecularities. It deduces a relatively slow growth of the earth,...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
| Oklahoma Geological Survey - 1914 - 52 Seiten
...directions of rotation, of their variations of mass, of their varying densities, and of other pecularities. It deduces a relatively slow growth of the earth, with a rising internal temperature developed fn the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early... | |
| Frank Buttram - 1914 - 420 Seiten
...directions of rotation, of their variations of mass, of their varying densities, and of other pecularities. It deduces a relatively slow growth of the earth, with a rising iuternal temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth,... | |
| American Geographical Society of New York - 1906 - 954 Seiten
...their directions of rotation, of their variations of mass, of their varying densities, and of their peculiarities. It deduces a relatively slow growth...temperature developed in the central parts and creeping outward. With such a mode of growth, the stages of the earth's early history necessarily depart widely... | |
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