Report of the Annual Meeting, Band 27

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Professor G WILSON on the Processes for the Detection of Fluorine
xlvi
Report on the Recent Progress of Theoretical Dynamics By
1
45
24
Sixteenth and final Report of a Committee consisting of Professor
43
84
45
Continuation of Report on Steam Navigation at Hull By JAMES
57
Dr T Woods on the Time required by Compounds for Decomposition
61
Report on the Temperature of some Deep Mines in Cornwall
96
Report on the Marine Zoology of Strangford Lough County Down
104
Suggestions for Statistical Inquiry into the extent to which Mercantile
112
Dr HENRY BARTH on the Anomalous Period of the Rising of the Niger
118
Further Report on the Vitality of the Spongiada By J S Bower
121
Report of the Committee on the Magnetic Survey of Great Britain
130
Report on Observations of Luminous Meteors 185657 By the
131
On the Adaptation of Suspension Bridges to sustain the passage
154
Mr JOHN LOCKE on the LandRevolution in Ireland
163
On the Algebraic Couple and on the Equivalents of Indeterminate
184
Report on the Improvement of Telescope and Equatorial Mountings
195
GEOLOGY
200
On the Resistance of Tubes to Collapse By WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN
215
On the Mechanical Effect of combining Girders and Suspension Chains
238
Evidences of Lunar Influence on Temperature By J PARK HARRISON
248
Report on the Animal and Vegetable Products imported into Liverpool
254
Report on the Statistics of Lifeboats and Fishingboats on the Coasts
308
MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICS
1
Dr J H GLADSTONE on the Colour of Salts in Solution each Constituent
8
ELECTRICITY Magnetism
11

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Seite 88 - ... feet, divide each depth into four equal parts ; then measure the inside horizontal breadth at each of the three points of division, and also at the upper and lower points of the depth extending each measurement to the average thickness of that part of the ceiling which is between the points of...
Seite 87 - ... taken into the number of equal parts required by the following table, according to the class in such table to which the ship belongs: TABLE...
Seite 88 - ... area (except the first and last) by two ; add these products together, and to the sum add the first and last if they yield anything; multiply the quantity thus obtained by one-third of the common interval between the areas, and the product will be the cubical contents of the space under the tonnage deck...
Seite 88 - No. 1 being at the extreme limit of the length at the bow, and the...
Seite 88 - ... extending each measurement to the average thickness of that part of the ceiling which is between the points of measurement; number these breadths from above, numbering the upper breadth one, and so on down to the lowest breadth; multiply the second and fourth by four, and...
Seite xv - Empire, with one another, and with foreign philosophers, — to obtain a more general attention to the objects of Science, and a removal of any disadvantages of a public kind which impede its progress.
Seite 89 - ... in a direction perpendicular to the keel from the height so marked on the outside of the ship on the one side to the height so marked on the other side by passing a chain under the keel...
Seite 89 - Measure the length on the tonnage deck from the outside of the outer plank at the stem to the aftside of the stern-post, deducting therefrom the distance between the aftside of the stern-post and the rabbet of the stern-post at the point where the counter plank crosses it; measure also the greatest breadth of the ship to the outside of the outer planking or wales, and then, having first marked on the outside of the...
Seite 89 - All measurements to be recorded on paper ruled to a scale of a quarter of an inch to a foot...
Seite 88 - ... sixth by four, and the third and fifth by two; add these products together, and to the sum add the first breadth and the...

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