Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian InstitutionThe Institution, 1879 - Discoveries in science |
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... LIBRARY OF THE Peabody Museum of American Archæology and Ethnology IN CONNECTION WITH HARVARD UNIVERSITY . PRESENTED BY Smithsonian Institution Received Sept. 13-1880 Anal . ANNUAL REPORT P.14.15.23-2544-47 ; 77-73 , 453 .
... LIBRARY OF THE Peabody Museum of American Archæology and Ethnology IN CONNECTION WITH HARVARD UNIVERSITY . PRESENTED BY Smithsonian Institution Received Sept. 13-1880 Anal . ANNUAL REPORT P.14.15.23-2544-47 ; 77-73 , 453 .
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... received monthly detailed observations of various degrees of minuteness and accuracy on blanks furnished to them previously by the Institution ; and an extended correspondence was maintained with them , not only on meteorological ...
... received monthly detailed observations of various degrees of minuteness and accuracy on blanks furnished to them previously by the Institution ; and an extended correspondence was maintained with them , not only on meteorological ...
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... received general approval . It was presented to the Board , and adopted as the basis of future opera- tions . It is interesting to note that whatever new lines of research or of practical work have been taken up from time to time by the ...
... received general approval . It was presented to the Board , and adopted as the basis of future opera- tions . It is interesting to note that whatever new lines of research or of practical work have been taken up from time to time by the ...
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... received as the bequest of James Smithson , of England , deposited in the Treasury of the United States in accordance with the act of Congress of August 10 , 1846 ............ The residuary legacy of Smithson , received in 1865 , depos ...
... received as the bequest of James Smithson , of England , deposited in the Treasury of the United States in accordance with the act of Congress of August 10 , 1846 ............ The residuary legacy of Smithson , received in 1865 , depos ...
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... received , a suitable ar- rangement and publication of the material will be made . Twenty years ago ( in 1858 ) , the Institution published a list of the Diptera ( flies , musquitoes , & c . ) of North America , by Baron R. Osten ...
... received , a suitable ar- rangement and publication of the material will be made . Twenty years ago ( in 1858 ) , the Institution published a list of the Diptera ( flies , musquitoes , & c . ) of North America , by Baron R. Osten ...
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10th irritations 1st irritations 30 cent 3d irritations 4th irritations Academy Agassiz Alfred Vail alphabet apparatus Ascending polarization audibility axis Baron Schilling battery Block Island Capt cell centimetres chord circuit coil collections Condorcet connection Daboll trumpet Daniel Daniel cells direction discovery distance echo effect electric telegraph electro-magnetic telegraph experiments fact feet Fish Commission fog-signal galvanic galvanometer George's Bank heard heat Henry's inches increased instrument invention investigations irritating current irritations.-Salt solution Island length letter light-house Light-House Board magnet ment miles minutes Mistletoe Morse's needle nerve observed obtained patent periment phenomena polarizing current produced Prof Professor Henry Professor Morse Rana esculenta Rana temporaria Remarks rheo rheochord Samuel F. B. Morse schooner scientific Secretary signal siren Smithsonian Institution Smithsonian Report Society sound-wave species specimens station steam steamer surface temperature tion trumpet United States Fish velocity vessel Washington whistle wind wire York
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Page 264 - Upon their separating from one another into distant countries, they agreed to withdraw themselves punctually into their closets at a certain hour of the day, and to converse with one another by means of this their invention.
Page 264 - Which one possess'd, nor pause nor quiet knew The sure associate, ere, with trembling speed, He found its path, and fix'd unerring there.
Page 287 - ... and quantity magnets were introduced to avoid circumlocution, and were intended to be used merely in a technical sense. By the intensity magnet I designated a piece of soft iron so surrounded with wire that its magnetic power could be called into operation by an intensity battery ; and by a quantity magnet a piece of iron so surrounded by a number of separate coils that its magnetism could be fully developed by a quantity battery.
Page 300 - Up to the autumn of 1837 my telegraphic apparatus existed in so rude a form that I felt a reluctance to have it seen. My means were very limited — so limited as to preclude the possibility of constructing an apparatus of such mechanical finish as to warrant my success in venturing upon its public exhibition. I had no wish to expose to ridicule the representative of so many hours of...
Page 22 - III. A. — On the Distribution of the Fishes of the Alleghany Region of South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee, with descriptions of new or little known species.
Page 265 - In electricity he has made a remarkable discovery; you write two or three words on a paper; he takes it with him into a room, and turns a machine enclosed in a cylindrical case, at the top of which is an electrometer, a small fine...
Page 125 - RESOLUTION for the appointment of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution. Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the vacancies in the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution of the class "other than members of Congress" be filled by the appointment of Theodore D.
Page 166 - It is, however, more in accordance with all the phenomena of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the polarity of the molecules so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis.
Page 159 - ... first to prove by actual experiment that, in order to develop magnetic power at a distance, a galvanic battery of intensity must be employed to project the current through the long conductor, and that a magnet surrounded by many turns of one long wire must be used to receive this current.
Page 281 - Shortly after the publication mentioned, several other applications of the coil, besides those described in that paper, were made in order to increase the size of electro-magnetic apparatus, and to diminish the necessary galvanic power. The most interesting of these was its application to a development of magnetism in soft iron, much more extensive than to my knowledge had been previously effected by a small galvanic element.