‘Science Gossip’ is born from a collaboration between an Arts and Humanities Research Council project in the UK, called ‘Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the 19th and 21st Centuries’ (ConSciCom) and the Missouri Botanical Garden who are providing content from the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL).
Link to Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) Page
Journal
Recreative ScienceYear
1860Volume
1Page
Page 129Inscription
Coordinates: [110, 895, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "text"=>["Ideal Section of Chalk Promontory, showing the crown of the arch broken down by the continued action of the frost. The faint portions indicate the parts afterwards worn away by the continuance of the same agency, until a \"needle\" and cliff result, as shown by the darker portions of the engraving.", "Fig 5.-Ideal Section of Chalk Promontory, showing the crown of the arch broken through by the continued action of the frost. The faint portions indicate the parts afterwards worn away by the continuance of the same agency, until a \"needle\" and cliff result, as shown by the darker portions of the engraving", "Fig. %.--Ideal Section of Chalk Promontory, showing the crown of the arch broken through by the continued action of the frost. The faint portions indicate the parts afterwards worn away by the continuance of the same agency, until a \"needle\" and cliff result, as shown by the darker portions of the engraving.", "Ideal section of Chalk Promontory, showing the crown of the arch broken through by the continued action of the frost. The faint portionsindicate the parts afterwards worn away by the continuance of the same agency, until a \"needle\" and cliff result, as shown by the darker portions of the engraving.", "Ideal Section of Chalk Promontory, showing th crown of the arch broken through by the continuous action of the frost.", "Ideal section of a chalk promontory showing the crown of the arch broken through by the continued action of frost.", "Fig. 5 - Ideal Section of Chalk Promontory, showing the crown of the arch broken through by the continued action of the frost. The faint portions indicate the parts afterwards worn away by the continuance of the same agency, until a \"needle\" and cliff result, as shown by the darker portions of the engraving.", "Ideal section of chalk promontory, showing the crown of the arch broken through by continued action of the frost. The faint portions indicate the parts afterwards worn away by the continuance of the same agency, until a \"needle\" and cliff result, as shown by the darker portions of the engraving."]Drawing
Coordinates: [0, 0, 55, 475, 433, 465], Details: "keywords"=>["chalk", "erosion", "chalk promontory", "geology", "sediment", "needles", "Landscape", "frost", "Chalk Promontory", "Cliff", "promontory", "needle", "undercuts", "steps", "caves", "sea", "arch", "ship", "section", "cliff", "Geology:section of chalk promontory:frost action", "water", "shoreline", "coast", "ocean", "rock", "boat"]PageID
2539521Classification No
20Image Scale
0.450741