Utiliser "earth's surface" dans une phrase
earth's surface exemples de phrases
earth's surface
1. "I heard from a mortal on Earth's surface
2. forms near the Earth's surface
3. While most meteors burn up before reaching the Earth's surface, many
4. locations on Earth's surface
5. then turned to liquid which fell upon the Earth's surface in
6. reaching the Earth's surface, the land giving birth to grass
7. A thick cloud of tiny water droplets suspended in the atmosphere at or near the earth's surface
8. the Earth's surface was covered by ice
9. across the earth's surface solving a Rubik cube at the same moment
10. In the human species, there is the majority of Earth's surface that bend for the laws of human attraction, which are not so stringent, that require the abolition of the species
11. in the earth's surface
12. The earth's surface is divided by an imaginary set of grid lines, the
13. Latitude lines on the earth's surface are drawn connecting all
14. degree of theearth's surface at the equator
15. The deepest point on the Earth's surface is in the Pacific Ocean located in the Marianas Trench
16. until this loose all-encompassing energy-flow system became the condition of the earth's surface; where more energies could meet-mix-join-connect to each other through the incredible medium of this highly dynamically balanced substance
17. And this is the dissolution:--In plants that grow in the earth, as well as in animals that move on the earth's surface, fertility and sterility of soul and body occur when the circumferences of the circles of each are completed, which in short-lived existences pass over a short space, and in long-lived ones over a long space
18. But so far is he from having any desire for a more accurate knowledge of the earth's surface, that he said he should prefer not to know the sources of the Nile, and that there should be some unknown regions preserved as hunting grounds for the poetic imagination
19. We are thus brought to the question which has been largely discussed by naturalists, namely, whether species have been created at one or more points of the earth's surface
20. If the existence of the same species at distant and isolated points of the earth's surface can in many instances be explained on the view of each species having migrated from a single birthplace; then, considering our ignorance with respect to former climatical and geographical changes, and to the various occasional means of transport, the belief that a single birthplace is the law seems to me incomparably the safest
21. The situation of the earth's surface in respect to the sun, the influence of his rays thereon, and the nature of the elements or compounds on which these rays act:
22. Under the second head I proceed to notice the situation of the earth's surface in respect to the sun, &c
23. The atmosphere is a thin, elastic, gravitating fluid, that completely envelopes the earth, to which it may be considered a kind of appendage or external covering; its base resting on the earth's surface, is of an uniform density, growing rare as it recedes therefrom, in a due ratio to the diminution of its gravitating force, until it is lost in empty space
24. I answer, if it be admitted that sensible heat acts on solids in an increasing ratio to its intensity, it follows that lower degrees, though acting in an inverse ratio to higher, must affect the same bodies in a conceivable degree at any temperature above their natural zero:[40] and though the heat of the sun beating on a plane surface for several hours is feeble, compared with that produced by a burning lens, or air furnace, yet if it be sufficient to detach from one square foot of the earth's surface the 104023 part of a grain in twenty-four hours, the quantity taken from 100 square miles, in the same time and proportion, would amount to ten pounds, which is abundantly sufficient for all meteoric phenomena; and the loss to each square foot, supposing the process to be uninterrupted, would be no more than one grain in 284 years
25. There appears to have been an expansion of the earth's surface around both these spots, or disruptions, by which it was forced to give way at the point where there was the least resistance, which, of course, would be on the highest ground
26. Fragments of vases found on the Acropolis itself picture wings in just this way; or it may be Athena's aegis, the fleece of a sheep or the earth's surface that is so represented
27. —, views on dislocations and fractures of the earth's surface, xxxiii, 83