Chapter
1 Pre | deserve to be made widely known in English-speaking countries
2 II | Specimens of everything known in mineralogy lay there
3 II | strange signs be publicly known, for they were the means
4 II | Professor Liedenbrock must have known, for he was acknowledged
5 II | conscientiously.~“I have never known such a thing,” said Martha. “
6 VI | Yes; it is perfectly well known that the internal temperature
7 VI | thousandth part of its radius is known; science is eminently perfectible;
8 VI | perpetually? and is it not known at the present time that
9 VI | of the heaviest minerals known, for in none of these cases
10 VI | same with facts! Is it not known that the number of volcanoes
11 X | are as yet but imperfectly known! Then, without going any
12 XI | of which very little is known. In a complete list of philosophical
13 XI | manometer’ is generally known as a pressure gauge. — TRANS.~[
14 XXV | were in the very deepest of known depths, there was something
15 XXV | obscure law. It is well known that the weight of bodies
16 XXVII| mother, whom I had only known in my tender early years,
17 XXX | thousand species of vegetables known hitherto, and did they claim
18 XXXII| contains none but species known to us in their fossil state,
19 XXXIX| stature all the measurements known in modern palæontology.
20 XL | discovered by yourself be known by your own illustrious
21 XLIII| latitude only the imperfectly known volcanoes of the north-east
22 XLIV | in the highest latitudes known; but contrary to all our
23 XLV | his theories, resting upon known facts, were in opposition
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