Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories, Volume 6U.S. Government Printing Office, 1882 - Geological surveys |
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... Colorado , between South and Hayden Parks . By Samuel H. Scudder 279 XII . - Revision of the Genus Sciurus . By E. L. Trouessart XIII . - Osteology of the North American Tetraonidæ . By R. W. Shufeldt .... XIV . - Osteology of Lanius ...
... Colorado , between South and Hayden Parks . By Samuel H. Scudder 279 XII . - Revision of the Genus Sciurus . By E. L. Trouessart XIII . - Osteology of the North American Tetraonidæ . By R. W. Shufeldt .... XIV . - Osteology of Lanius ...
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... .... Fig . Map of Florissant , Colorado .... Fig . Fossil Cray - fish vi Page 118 118 148 148 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 121 203 208 256 300 396 557.3 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR . UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL AND.
... .... Fig . Map of Florissant , Colorado .... Fig . Fossil Cray - fish vi Page 118 118 148 148 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 350 121 203 208 256 300 396 557.3 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR . UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL AND.
Page 2
... that of Henry Gannett , " On the Ara- ble and Pasture Lands of Colorado " ( 1875 , reprinted in 1878 ) , is note- worthy . " J Our sketch must be , like our observations , a 2 BULLETIN UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY . Į Vol VI .
... that of Henry Gannett , " On the Ara- ble and Pasture Lands of Colorado " ( 1875 , reprinted in 1878 ) , is note- worthy . " J Our sketch must be , like our observations , a 2 BULLETIN UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY . Į Vol VI .
Page 12
... Colorado at between eight or nine and ten or eleven thousand feet ; is naturally absent from the Nevada and most of the Utah ranges ; in British Columbia , according to young Dr. Dawson , " it is the charac- teristic tree over the ...
... Colorado at between eight or nine and ten or eleven thousand feet ; is naturally absent from the Nevada and most of the Utah ranges ; in British Columbia , according to young Dr. Dawson , " it is the charac- teristic tree over the ...
Page 14
... Colorado between 8,500 and 11,000 feet , and at the upper tree - line is dwarfed to a shrub , accompanying Pinus contorta , but growing also at higher ele- vations . It is the representative of the Atlantic Spruces , in aspect and in ...
... Colorado between 8,500 and 11,000 feet , and at the upper tree - line is dwarfed to a shrub , accompanying Pinus contorta , but growing also at higher ele- vations . It is the representative of the Atlantic Spruces , in aspect and in ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant American angle anteriorly arch articular articulation Atlantic flora Balana Baleine base bird bone border Bosgoed Bull Cachalot California centimetres Centrocercus Cetacea Cétacés characters Colorado Colorado Valley concave condyle convex Cope coracoid crest cusp Dauphin Delphinus Diameters distal dorsal Dugong Eastern elevated external extremity facet Felida figg foramen foramina fore wings Fort Mojave fossil fuscous genera genus gibbar groove Grote Guen Hind wings Humboldt Mountains humerus Hyperoodon incisor inferior molar inner Lamantin latter Length Linn macrocephalus Manatus mandible margin median middle millimetres Miocene Mojave molar Monodon Morr mysticetus nearly neural Nevada North northern Orca outer peculiar Philos Physeter plate portion posterior posteriorly premolar region ribs ridge Ridgway River Rocky Mountains sectorial seen segment shaft side Sirenia skull southern species specimens spine superior surface teeth tibia tibiæ Trans transverse true molar tubercle vertebra Whale Width
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Page 75 - ... synchronous. The beds in the lower latitudes must be later, and were forming when Greenland probably had very nearly the climate which it has now. Wherefore the high, and not the low, latitudes must be assumed as the birth-place of our present flora;* and the present arctic vegetation is best regarded as a derivative of the temperate. This flora, which when circumpolar was as nearly homogeneous round the high latitudes as the arctic vegetation is now, when slowly translated into lower latitudes,...
Page 69 - Nor in any of the genera common to the two does the Pacific forest equal the Atlantic in species. It has not half as many Maples, nor Ashes, nor Poplars, nor Walnuts, nor Birches, and those it has are of smaller size and...
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Page 76 - To what extent displaced, and how far superseded by the vegetation which in our day borders the ice, or by ice itself, it is difficult to form more than general conjectures, so different and conflicting are the views of geologists upon the Glacial period. But upon any, or almost any. of these views it is safe to conclude that temperate vegetation, such as preceded the refrigeration, and has now again succeeded it, was either thrust out of northern Europe and the northern Atlantic States or was reduced...