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" Wollaston concludes, that all the phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the Earths atmosphere is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate atoms, of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. "
The Elements of the Theory of Astronomy - Page 137
by John Hymers - 1840 - 354 pages
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The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, Volume 7

Science - 1822 - 450 pages
...concludes, that all the phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the Earths atmosphere is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms, of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. Having thus stated Dr Wollaston's reasoning as perspicuously as we can, we...
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Monthly Review; Or Literary Journal Enlarged

Ralph Griffiths, George Edward Griffiths - Bibliography - 1822 - 572 pages
...the contrary, all the' phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the earth's' atmosphere is of finite' extent, limited by the weight of ultimate"...atoms of definite magnitude no longer divisible by repulsiti^ '&f their parts.' On the Expansion ma Series of the Attraction of a Spheroid* By James Ivory,...
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The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 18

English literature - 1822 - 696 pages
...concludes, that all the phenomena accord entirely with the supposition, that the earth's atmosphere is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. The reader will also find in this paper, some important remarks. on the power...
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The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, Volume 7

Science - 1822 - 446 pages
...concludes, that all tJte phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the Earth"s atmosphere is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms, of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. Having thus stated Dr Wollaston's reasoning as perspicuously as we can, we...
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Annals of Philosophy, Volume 4

Science - 1822 - 536 pages
...the contrary, all the phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the earth's atmosphere is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms of definite magnitude no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. ARTICLE IV. . Analysis of Mica with only One Axis of Double Refraction. By...
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The Annals of Philosophy, Volume 20

Agriculture - 1822 - 526 pages
...the contrary, all the phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the earth's atmosphere is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms of definite magnitude no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. ARTICLE IV. Analysis of Mica with only One Axis of Double Refraction. By...
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The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, Volume 7

Science - 1822 - 484 pages
...that all flie phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the EartKs atmosphere is afjmite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate atoms, of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. Having thus stated Dr Wollaston's reasoning as perspicuously as we can, we...
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The Quarterly Journal, Volume 17

1824 - 452 pages
...shew) is found in the earth's atmosphere, all the pheuomema according with the supposition that it is "of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts." But though the atomic theory, in its general outline, seems to me to rest...
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The Boston Journal of Philosophy and the Arts, Volume 1

Science - 1824 - 628 pages
...concludes, that all the phenomena accord entirely with the supposition that the Earth's atmosphere is nf finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate atoms, of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts. Having thus stated Dr Wollaston's reasoning as perspicuously as we can, we...
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A London Encyclopaedia, Or Universal Dictionary of Science, Art ..., Volume 3

Thomas Curtis - Aeronautics - 1829 - 852 pages
...(Phil. Trans. 1822); all the phenomena according with the supposition that the earth's atmosphere ' is of finite extent, limited by the weight of ultimate...atoms of definite magnitude, no longer divisible by repulsion of their parts.' An atom, therefore, must be mechanically indivisible, and of course a fraction...
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