Book, Chapter
1 I, X | had reached an altitude of 1,200 feet; but even this
2 I, XIII | survivors of a garrison of 1,895 men, but with true British
3 I, XIII | than draw up a report that 1,882 names were missing from
4 I, XIII | that had reared itself some 1,600 feet above the sea,
5 I, XV | Indubitably, to less than 1,400 miles. So brief a voyage
6 I, XV | earth being completed in 1 ,400 miles, was that the
7 I, XV | estimated to be something under 1,400 miles, so that the Arctic
8 I, XV | sole, au 15 fev. 59,000,000 1. ! Chemin parcouru de janv.
9 I, XV | janv. a fev. 82,000,000 1. !! Va bene! All right!!
10 I, XVII | message:~“Gallia Ab sole, au 1 mars, dist. 78,000,000 1.!
11 I, XVII | 1 mars, dist. 78,000,000 1.! Chemin parcouru de fev.
12 I, XVII | fev. a mars: 59,000,000 1.! Va bene! All right! Nil
13 I, XXIII| au 1er Avril: 39,000,000 1.!~Distance du soleil: 110,
14 I, XXIII| Distance du soleil: 110,000,000 1.!~Capte Nerina en passant.~
15 II, IV | the equator to be about 1,400 miles.”~“Ah!” said the
16 II, IV | himself, “a circumference of 1,400 miles would give a diameter
17 II, IV | this time.”~“Circumference, 1,400; diameter, 450; area
18 II, VII | attraction on the earth as 1, that on Mercury is 1.15,
19 II, VII | as 1, that on Mercury is 1.15, on Venus it is .92,
20 II, VIII | the earth; his volume is 1,387 times, and his mass
21 II, VIII | planet at a distance of 1,192,820 miles.~“They have
22 II, VIII | back. Uranus, revolving 1,753,851,000 miles from the
23 II, VIII | old. Mars has existed for 1,000,000,000 years at a distance
24 II, VIII | inclined at an angle of 1 degrees 19 mins to the orbit
25 II, X | circumscribed to little over 1,500 millions of miles; and,
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