Ridpath's history of the world; being an account of the ethnic origin, primitive estate, early migrations, social conditions and present promise of the principal families of men (1897) (14596680759)

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Ridpath's history of the world; being an account of the ethnic origin, primitive estate, early migrations, social conditions and present promise of the principal families of men (1897) (14596680759)

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Identifier: ridpathshistoryo01ridp (find matches)
Title: Ridpath's history of the world; being an account of the ethnic origin, primitive estate, early migrations, social conditions and present promise of the principal families of men ..
Year: 1897 (1890s)
Authors: Ridpath, John Clark, 1840-1900
Subjects: World history Ethnology
Publisher: New York, Merrill & Baker
Contributing Library: Mugar Memorial Library, Boston University
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston University

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Text Appearing Before Image:
ty.VARYING VELOCITY OF PLANETARY MOTION. fall respectively in the seasons mentioned.If the conditions were reversed, so thatour aphelion should fall in midwinterand our perihelion in midsummer, it iseasy to see how greatly the seasonswould be intensified. Instead of being-tempered, as they are at present, by therelations of the earth and sun, the coldof winter would be aggravated by theremoval of that luminary to a greaterdistance in space, and on the other handthe heat conditions of summer would beintensified. Astronomers have estimated with carethe variation in climate produced by thecircumstances here referred to. It hasbeen demonstrated that the cold ofwinter in the northern hemisphere is Orbits of Mars ( £), tiw Earth (©),Venus ( ? ), and Mercury ( 5 ). Nodes Q ?3. Nearer Apses M. E. V. vt. The dets round the orbits shoivthepositio-n of the planets atintervals of ten days. The symbols i i indicate the greatest dis. tance of an orbit north and south of the plane of the Ecliptic*
Text Appearing After Image:
The arrow-head on each orbit skowt the direction o/revolution, also the place of each planet on Jan. 1st, /&75, at noon. Mercury Scale fiz>e thousand times that of Orbits.(The Earth, Mars, and the Sun are shown in their true axial position) QttfOsSq The Sun GafOsEqScale fifty times that of Orbits. THE SOLAR SYSTEM DISPLAYED-SHOWING ECCENTRICITY OF ORBITS INSIDE OF MARS.Drawn by Richard A. Proctor, F. R. A. S. TIME OF THE BEGINNING.—ASTRONOMIC A L ARGUMENT. 65 less severe by about one fifteenth than itwould be if the relations of perihelionFavorable re- an(j aphelion were inter- sults of present r position of peri- changed. In like mannerapheiio^ the heats of our summer time are less torrid by one fifteenth thanthey would be if the earth were at itsnearest approach to the sun at thatseason of the year. Or to take theproblem altogether, the distribution ofheat has been tempered and moder-ated in the northern hemisphere byan aggregate of about two fifteenths ofthe whole incremen

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1897
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