| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1876 - 810 Seiten
...with things of a vast antiquity, and that we have evidences of a very slowly accumulating deposit. When there has been no reason to suppose that the...hundred sharks' teeth and between thirty and forty ear-boues of cetaceans ; some of these have been imbedded in over an inch of the manganese, arranged... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1876 - 818 Seiten
...with things of a vast antiquity, and that we have evidences of a very slowly accumulating deposit. When there has been no reason to suppose that the trawl has suuk more than one or two inches in the clay, we have had in the bag over a hundred sharks' teeth and... | |
| Lord George Granville Campbell - 1877 - 568 Seiten
...of clay have all been found forming the nuclei of these nodules. We have caught in one haul, where there has been no reason to suppose that the trawl has sunk more than two inches in the clay, over 600 sharks' teeth, 100 ear- bones of whales, and fifty fragments of other... | |
| Liverpool Geological Society - 1878 - 480 Seiten
...contributed by the whole surface of the * Mr. Murray says (" Proc. of Eoy. Soo.," vol. xxiv., p. 531): " When there has been no reason to suppose that the...in the clay, we have had in the Bag over a hundred shark's teeth and between thirty and forty ear-bones of cetaceans ; some of them have been imbedded... | |
| Liverpool Geological Society - 1878 - 482 Seiten
...contributed by the whole surface of the * Mr. Murray says (" Proc. of Roy. Soc.," vol. xxiv., p. 531) : "When there has been no reason to suppose that the...in the clay, we have had in the Bag over a hundred shark's teeth and between thirty and forty ear-bones of cetaceans ; some of them have been imbedded... | |
| Liverpool Geological Society - 1878 - 464 Seiten
...whole surface of the * Mr. Murray says (" Proc. of Roy. Soc.," vol. xxiv., p. 531) : "When there 1ms been no reason to suppose that the trawl has sunk...in the clay, we have had in the Bag over a hundred shark's teeth and between thirty and forty ear-bones of cetaceans ; some of them have been imbedded... | |
| Thomas Mellard Reade - 1879 - 76 Seiten
...to resist other evidences that they * Mr. Murray says (" Proo. of Eoy. Soc.," vol. xxiv., p. 531) : "When there has been no reason to suppose that the...in the clay, we have had in the Bag over a hundred shark's teeth and between thirty and forty ear-bones of cetaceans ; some of them have been imbedded... | |
| Henry Woodward - 1883 - 750 Seiten
...are indistinguishable from the huge teeth found in the Eocene beds." On this point Mr. John Murray says : " When there has been no reason to suppose...sharks' teeth, and between thirty and forty ear-bones of whales." . The time since the Eocene, when the Carcharodons lived, is estimated by geologists at more... | |
| Henry Woodward - 1883 - 636 Seiten
...are indistinguishable from the huge teeth found in the Eocene beds." On this point Mr. John Murray says : " When there has been no reason to suppose...sharks' teeth, and between thirty and forty ear-bones of whales." The time since the Eocene, when the Carcharodons lived, is estimated by geologists at more... | |
| Boston Society of Natural History - 1888 - 610 Seiten
...base, and are indistinguishable from the huge teeth found in the Eocene beds." On this point Mr. Murray says : "When there has been no reason to suppose that...sharks' teeth, and between thirty and forty ear-bones of wtales." The time since the Eocene, when the Carcharodons lived, is estimated by geologists at more... | |
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