Chapter
1 II | later. Her mountains, her plains, every projection was as
2 VII | hemisphere, where stretch immense plains, and where mountains are
3 VII | wound through the immense plains. But all relief was as yet
4 X | hemisphere presented vast plains, dotted with isolated mountains.~
5 XI | are not liquid spaces, but plains, the nature of which the
6 XII | recognize its nature. Are these plains composed of arid sand, as
7 XII | supposed that these vast plains are strewn with blocks of
8 XII | passing over the surrounding plains, Barbicane noticed a great
9 XIII | oceans and the continental plains than those on the moon present
10 XIII | color common to the vast plains known by the name of “seas”
11 XIII | but desert beds, immense plains, and toward the north, arid
12 XIII | distances of the different plains. A lunar landscape without
13 XV | immense spaces, no longer arid plains, but real seas, oceans,
14 XVII | Leibnitz rose in the midst of plains of a medium extent, which
15 XVII | circles, the craters, and the plains alone remained, and still
16 XVII | other incessantly. No more plains; no more seas. A never ending
17 XVIII| rays, which shone on the plains as well as on the reliefs,
18 XVIII| of their passage on those plains which the atmosphere must
19 XIX | her rays. On the disc, the plains were already returning to
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