It will be impossible to give, in the few pages allotted me in this communication, the results of our meteorological observations. It must suffice to state in general terms, that the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in some of the best grape-growing... Boston School Atlas - Page 66de Benjamin Franklin Edmands - 1841 - 75 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| United States. Congress. House - 586 pages
...compared with the conclusions derived from the examination of the climate, soil, and wild vines. CLIMATE. The extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in other vinegrowing regions; and in the Southern part of the State, the atmosphere is sufficiently dry;... | |
| Jedidiah Morse, Sidney Edwards Morse - 1824 - 372 pages
...is far superior to that of any other nation on the globe. Climate. The climate is moist, and liable to frequent and sudden changes, but the extremes of heat and cold are less than in other countries in the same latitude. Face of the country. England is beautifully diversified... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1858 - 972 pages
...communication, the results of our meteorological observations. It must suffice to state in general terms, that the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in some of the best grape-growing regions ; and that the atmosphere in the southern part of the State... | |
| United States. Patent Office - 1858 - 728 pages
...compared with the conclusions derived from the examination of the climate, soil, and wild vines. CLIMATE. The extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in other vinegrowing regions; and in the Southern part of the State, the atmosphere is sufficiently dry;... | |
| Academy of Science of St. Louis - 1860 - 1166 pages
...communication, the results of our meteorological observations. It must suffice to state in general terms, that the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in some of the best grape-growing regions ; and that the atmosphere in the southern part of the State... | |
| Hastings Fraser - 1865 - 544 pages
...very greatly increase the quantity of the cotton. The soil in West Berar is of a rich black loam, and the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in many other parts of India. In East Berar the soil is of all descriptions ; from the deepest black loam... | |
| Nathan Howe Parker - 1867 - 494 pages
...communication, the results of our meteorological observations. It must suffice to state in general terms, that the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in some of the best grape-growing regions; and that the atmosphere in the southern part of the State is... | |
| 1868 - 468 pages
...commnnication, the results of our meteorological observations. It must suffice to state, in general terms, that the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in some of the best grape-growing regions; and that the atmosphere in the southern part of the State is... | |
| Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden - 1880 - 604 pages
...Burlington, Montreal, the upper Lake Superior region, and the head-waters of the Red River of the North. But the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as at these points. The absence of any very great quantity of moisture has a wonderful effect upon the... | |
| John Lyle Campbell, William Henry Ruffner - 1883 - 170 pages
...year round, probably cannot be surpassed. In the Gulf States, in lower as well as in higher regions, the extremes of heat and cold are not so great as in the Northern States. Contrary to the common impression, a man can do more out-door labor, in the course... | |
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