Book,  chapter

 1    1,   14|    insensibly to the plain. The soil is carpeted with rich herbage,
 2    1,   16|       42d degrees the Argentine soil slopes eastward, and all
 3    1,   17|        peculiar appearance. The soil is composed of sand and
 4    1,   23|        is planted firmly in the soil, not only by its great roots,
 5    1,   23|       for the depression of the soil made this part of the plain
 6    1,   25|     were tearing it up from the soil; for as he and his companions
 7    2,    3|         rose above the volcanic soil. Some of these springs were
 8    2,    9|        was the same grassy flat soil, the same sharply-defined
 9    2,    9|     either in the air or in the soil; where the trees lose their
10    2,   11|   plowed deep into the alluvial soil, where irregular creeks
11    2,   13|        and fifty feet above the soil. Not a branch, not a twig,
12    2,   15|   shrubs. The damp argillaceous soil gave way under their feet.
13    2,   15|        hilly district where the soil was reddish. There was every
14    2,   18|       it firmly imbedded in the soil, like a fortress resting
15    2,   18|      broken branches; the marly soil, soaked by the torrents
16    3,    7|        population to defend the soil, and promised the extermination
17    3,   10|  hastened to the defence of the soil, one hundred and fifty were
18    3,   12|         on twenty feet off.~The soil was light and friable, and
19    3,   12|         now protruded above the soil, but seized the hand that
20    3,   13|        kind of vibration in the soil. It was not a movement like
21    3,   13|       and sweet potatoes in the soil. The temperature of the
22    3,   13|    thermometer plunged into the soil would have marked from 160
23    3,   13|       colony, and cultivate the soil and settle here for life!
24    3,   13| potatoes, cooked in the burning soil, were excellent. The geographer
25    3,   15|      vast arches, over a clayey soil which the foot of man had
26    3,   20|     yacht, which to him was the soil of his native land, was
27    3,   20|       of the liquid plain. Then soil formed. The vegetable kingdom
28    3,   20|      vast country, whose virgin soil abounds in untouched stores
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