| 1860 - 620 str.
...lead Mr. Mallet to the conclusion that the true definition of an earthquake is, the transit of a wave of elastic compression in any direction from vertically...upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through the surface and crust of the earth from any center of impulse, or from more than one, and which may be... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1851 - 572 str.
...thrown down, &c. There is every reason to believe that an earthquake is simply " the transit of a wave of elastic compression in any direction, from vertically...upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through the surface and crust of the earth, from any centre of impulse or from more than one, and which may be... | |
| Henry Thomas De La Beche - 1851 - 752 str.
...impression in any direction, from vertically upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through the crust of the earth, from any centre of impulse, or from more than one, and which may be attended with tidal and sound waves, dependent upon the impulse, and upon the circumstances... | |
| Henry Thomas De La Beche - 1851 - 888 str.
...materially modified.t Mr. Mallet infers that an earthquake " is the transit of a wave of elastic impression in any direction. from vertically upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through the crust of the earth, from any centre of impulse, or from more than one, and which may * Sir Charles Lyell... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel, Robert Main - 1859 - 496 str.
...every reason to consider it established, that an earthquake is simply " the transit of a wave or seaves of elastic compression in any direction, from vertically...centre of impulse or from more than one, and which may be attended with sound and tidal waves, dependent upon the impulse and upon circumstances of position... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1860 - 460 str.
...inertia,) thrown down, &c. There is every reason to consider it established that an earthquake is simply "the transit of a wave or waves of elastic compression...vertically upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through ike crust and surface of the earth, from any centre of impulse, or from more than one, and which may... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1860 - 624 str.
...lead Mr. Mallet to the conclusion that the true definition of an earthquake is, the transit of a wave of elastic compression in any direction from vertically...upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through the surface and crust of the earth from any center of impulse, or from more than one, and which may be... | |
| 1860 - 512 str.
...impression in any direction from verticality upward to horizontality in any azimuth through the crust of the earth, from any centre of impulse, or from more than one, and which may be attended with tidal and sound waves dependent upon the impulse and upon the circumstances of... | |
| William Henry Rosser - 1862 - 322 str.
...Mallett says : — " There is every reason to believe that an earthquake is simply the transit of a wave of elastic compression in any direction, from vertically...upwards to horizontally in any azimuth, through the surface and crust of the earth, from any centre of impulse, or from more than one, and which may be... | |
| 1863 - 556 str.
...elastic compression in any direction to horizontality, in any azimuth, through the surface and crust of the earth, from any centre of impulse or from more than one, which may be attended with tidal and sound waves, dependent upon the impulse, and upon cireumstances... | |
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