Part, Chapter
1 I, X | banks, composed of fine firm sand, and clothed in part with
2 I, XII | singular accumulation of sand and earth instead of by
3 I, XIII | consisted entirely of earth and sand, without a morsel of silica
4 I, XIII | mixture of fine earth and sand, had been beaten and consolidated
5 I, XV | here plentiful; the black sand and porous lava were strewn
6 I, XIX | some five feet of earth and sand a bed of snow, as hard as
7 I, XIX | granite, and the earth and sand upon it have accumulated
8 II, I | had not even built upon sand. The peninsula of Victoria,
9 II, I | by successive deposits of sand and earth into apparently
10 II, I | strewn it with earth and sand, and scattered over them
11 II, I | beneath the soil of earth and sand—in a word, beneath our feet
12 II, III | merely of an aggregation of sand and earth, without any firm
13 II, III | cliffs covered with earth and sand showed no signs of a recent
14 II, III | little by little, that the sand has accumulated grain by
15 II, III | the layers of earth and sand became thicker; this of
16 II, IV | The banks- half ice, half sand and earth-rose some ten
17 II, IV | kind of cement of snow and sand, such as covered the rest
18 II, IV | thin layer of earth and sand mixed with crushed shells;
19 II, IV | had been covered over with sand and earth for so many centuries.
20 II, VI | north-east winds, but the sand and earth from its summit
21 II, VI | without much difficulty. The sand and earth blinded him, it
22 II, VII | ground. The loose earth and sand were whirled into the air
23 II, VII | separation, and crept along the sand to a little rising ground
24 II, VII | Sergeant, crouching in the soft sand.~“Well!” said Hobson, “here
25 II, VII | sonorous than the earth and sand of which it was composed!~
26 II, VII | shelter, for they felt the sand giving way beneath them,
27 II, VII | and creeping along the sand climbed to the foot of the
28 II, VIII | claws, and stamping the sand and snow about him.~Presently
29 II, IX | Kalumah, seated on the sand between Mrs Barnett and
30 II, IX | she was flung upon the sand in a dying state by a large
31 II, IX | had encroached upon the sand. And so dragging herself
32 II, X | waves now covered tracts of sand which were formerly out
33 II, XV | direction of the current on the sand with a little piece of wood,
34 II, XVII | supporting the earth and sand, and found that it had not
35 II, XVII | existed, the mass of earth and sand of which it was composed
36 II, XVII | pointing to the heap of sand, earth, and ice, beneath
37 II, XVIII| the masses of earth and sand, upon which rolled blocks
38 II, XVIII| this accumulation of earth, sand, and ice, that the victims
39 II, XVIII| the layer of earth and sand with which the roof was
40 II, XVIII| pickaxes. The masses of ice, sand, and earth, were vigorously
41 II, XVIII| experienced when the earth and sand were reached, as, being
42 II, XVIII| reached the layer of earth and sand, and could not hope to get
43 II, XVIII| in the shifting masses of sand and earth, and it became
44 II, XVIII| in the mass of earth and sand, so that twenty remained
45 II, XVIII| feet of ice and thirty of sand and earth.~It was at this
46 II, XIX | out, the mass of earth and sand, which was but a moment
47 II, XIX | any covering of earth or sand.~Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs
48 II, XX | was the layer of earth and sand of greater extent—which
49 II, XX | this storm; the earth and sand were washed away from the
50 II, XX | beneath a mass of earth and sand, had remained fixed in the
51 II, XX | rise no more. Earth and sand were pouring through this
52 II, XXIII| deep into the earth and sand of which the little hill
53 II, XXIII| dissolution; the earth and sand were carefully spread about,
|