Dec. 23, 1869]
NATURE
225
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NA JURE
Dec. 23, 1869]
Royal
Irish
Dublin Academy, December
— The
Rev. Trofesscr Professor Sullivan, Ph.D., read Jelletl, president, in the chair. a paper on the lieds of Thenardite of the Valley of Jarania, in connection with climatal effects supposed to be due to the variation of the eccentricity of the earth's orbit, according to the calculations of Messrs. Croll and Moore. The author remarked that M. Adhemar endeavoured to account for change of climate in geological time by the precession of tlie equino.xes, and the change of position of perihelion. These effects are modified by another astronomical movement the change in the eccentricity of the earth's orbit. At the instance of Sir C. Lyell, Mr. Stone made some calculations to determine the eccentricity of the orbit in former periods, which Mr. Croll, by the aid of I.everrier's formula, has completed for one mdlion years before 1800 in parts of a unit equal to the mean distance of the earth from the sun. These calcidations are given by SirC. Lyell in the last edition of his "Geology," with the addition of some calculations made by Mr. John Carrick Moore, of the mean temperature of the 13.
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and coldest months
the latitude of London, supinlluence the distribution of heat to remain the same as at present. According to these tables, several periods of e.streme temperature should have occurred within the million of j-ears. Tlie most marked of them should occur at 200,000, 210,000, and 750,000 years befoie i^co, when the mean teiupeiature of the hottest month should be 113° Fahr., and of the coldest i°-9, o°7, and o°-6 respectively. Professor Tyndall has well pointed out that glaciers require heat as well as cold to produce them, so that extreme temperatures appear to represent the conditions required. These views appear to receive an unexpected support from a phenomenon which, being purely physical, gives more definite results than can in general be obtained from biological ones. In the Valley of tlie Jarania, a branch of the Tagus which receives the waters of the Manzanarcs, which flows through Madrid, occurs a series of beds, thenardite, glauberife, gypsum, and clay, having a variable thickness of from 16 to 19 metres. Through this the alluvial plain of the river has been cut. The formation of anhydrous sul]ihate of soda requires that the solution from which the salt separates should be aboe 35° Cent, or 95° Lahr. This Is a temperature which even a shallow lake could only attain if the tenqierature of the air 'ere considerably above that point. On the other hand, the conditions under which the sulphate of soda could be formed in the first instance requires a low temperature. So that, like glaciers, these beds require gi'eat heat and cold, the limits of which are, however, fixed in this case. If the temperature of the hottest month in the latitude of London were 1 13°, it woukl be still higher on the plain of Madrid, where even 120° Fahr. in the shade is sometimes even now attained in the locality of these beds. The circumstance which should exist at either of the glacial periods indicated by Mr. Croll's and Mr. Carrick Moore's calculations, would be sufiicient to account for those beds ; it would be difficult to account for them on the supposition of a period of intense cold. These beds were fully described in a paper by Professors Sullivan and O'Reilly, published in 1S63 in Vol. iv. of the Atlantis, and afterwards in "Notes on the Geology and Mineralogy of the Spanish hottest
posing other causes which
in
may
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Provinces of Santander and Madrid." (London: Williams and Professors Apjohn and Hennessy tcok part Norgate. 1863.) in the discussion of the paper. J. R. Garstin, A.M., was elected a mcinber of council in the room of Professor Jellett.
Paris
Academy of
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Sciences, December 13. M. H. Sainte-Claire Deville brought under the notice of the Academy a siderostat constnicted by the late M. Leon Foucault, and communicated a Its action depends upon the note upon it by M. C. Wolf. production of a perfectly plane mirror, the mode of obtaining which was described in a posthumous paper by M. Leon Foucault, read to the Academy at a recent meeting (see N.TUKt', p. 177), and its object is to furnish the observer with a perfectly reflected image of .any sidereal body for examination by the telescope. A figure of the instrument, which is provided with a clockwork movement, is given in illustration of M. W^olfs M. Laugier remarked upon the employment of the plane note. minor, and noticed that .'iago had called attention twenty years ago to the advantages which might be derived from it. M. P. A. Favre presented some remarks upon the electric explorer described by M. Trouve (see Nature, p. 177), for the detection of metallic substances in wounds, and claimed for himself the
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invention, in 1S62, of an electrical sound for the same purpose. Marshal Vaillant announced that M. Pasteur was engaged at Trieste in completing a work upon sericulture, and in organising
a silk-worm cultivation on a large scale, to be carried on in accordance with his system.— M. Haton de la Goupilliere presented a memoir on the system of metallic floodgates which require the minimum of attraction. A memoir on the dispersion of light, by M. M. Ricour, was communicated by M. Combes. General Morin presented a note by M. II. Morton, on the origin of the luminous band which is obseri'ed in contact with the margin of the moon's disc in the photographic pictures of various eclipses. In preparing negative photographs of eclipses, a slight band surrounds the border of the moon's shadow, in which the deposit of silver is more dense than elsewhere, producing a light band in that positive. The author has produced a similar eflcct by substituting a disc of dark jiapcr for the moon's shadow, and he comes to the conclusion that the phenomenon is simply chemical, and due to the extension, during the development of the plate, of the nitrate of silver from the )iart protected by the shadow, to a short distance beyond the latter. A note by M. Hugo Schiff, on the constitution of am)-gdaline and phloridzine, was communicated by M. Wurtz. The author describes and formulates these substances and their derivatives. M. E. J. Maumene communicated another memoir on inverted sugar, in reply to Dulirunfant, M. in which he states that none of the latter's assertions .are in accordance with experiment. He s.ays that inverted sugar, properly prepared, is a mixture of three optically neutral bodies, which are neither glucose, nor levulose, nor any of the sugars possessing a rotatory power. The fermentation of inverted sugar is accompanied by no elective phenomena. M. Dubrunfant presented a communication on spectrum analysis applied to the investigation of simple gases, and of their mixtures, in which he described the phenomena presented by various gases and gaseous mixtuies under different conditions of pressure, and indicated that the supposed multiple spectra of certain gases are probably due to admixture. Thus it apjiears to be impossible to obtain hydrogen free from nitrogen, and under a low pressure the spectrum of the latter alone appears. M. '*
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morallon Jos. Boussingault communicated an analysis of the emeralds from the mines of Muso, in New Granada. . memoir was presented by M. Martin de Brettes on the determination of one or more of the following quantities, the others being given : The diameter of an oblong projectile, its weight, its initial velocity, the curve of its tr.ajectory, and the weight of the gun from which it is fired. He gives the formulre for working out these questions, and indicates their applications to artillery and small arms. Of two zoological papers, one, byM.Lacaze Duthiers, calls the attention of naturalists to the Harbour of Roscoff, on the north coast of France, as a locality where the so-called Pcntactifius airo/aiiSy the young form of Anfedon rosairrts, is to be found in abundance. From his description, the Bay of Roscoff is a The second memoir, paradise for the student of marine zoologj". by M. F. Lenormant, discusses the question of the antiquity of Syria and Lg>pt and the domestic animals in the ass horse as and the author states, in opposition to Professor Owen, that the ass is represented very frequently upon the earliest known monuments. The horse, on the contrary, remained unknown in the countries south-west of the luiphrates until the time of the shepherd kings, or .about the nineteenth century B.C.
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M. Milne-Edwards remarked upon
this
communication
that
it
agreed with the conclusions of zoologists as to the distribution of the species of the genus Equus ; the ass is to be regarded as an essentially African species, whilst the horse is a native of He added that if the shepcentral Asia and part of Europe. herd peoples introduced the horse into Egypt, this might throw some light upon their origin. M. Elie de Beaumont remarked that these facts were favourable to the opinion that the existing slate of things on the surface of the globe was not of very ancient
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communicated the results of some Prehisupon the quartemary beds of Paris, in which he indicated the character of numerous worked flints obtained by him from these beds (from a depth of twelve metres upwaids), and gave a long list of animals, the remains of which were found intermixed with the flints. M. Guerin-Meneville A note remarked upon the conditions of production of truffles. was presented from M. Namias, describing lis employment of
M. J. Reboux toric Archaeological researches
date.
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hydrate of chloral with beneficial effects at the Hospital of Venice ; and another from M. Thuau on a process for the instantaneous lighting and extinction of gas-lamps by means of electricity.