Book, Chapter
1 I, V | earth’s rotation on her axis.~Captain Servadac consoled
2 I, VI | earth was revolving on a new axis; but not a rift appeared
3 I, VII | inclination of the earth’s axis with regard to the ecliptic
4 I, VII | of the question that the axis of the earth indefinitely
5 I, VII | opinion that the earth’s axis had been suddenly and immensely
6 I, VII | and from the fact that the axis, if produced, would pass
7 I, VIII| his knowledge that if the axis of the earth, as everything
8 I, VIII| earth’s rotation on her axis, there would be a corresponding
9 I, VIII| great inclination of the axis, are scarcely separable;
10 I, VIII| observed to turn upon its own axis in twenty-three hours twenty-one
11 I, XVI | regions; it is true that her axis is not so much inclined
12 II, III | supposition, that the rotatory axis of the earth had been subject
13 II, III | but an ellipse with its axis indefinitely produced, for
14 II, III | 3. The direction of the axis major of the orbit, which
15 II, VIII| that his rotation on his axis occupies only 9 hours and
16 II, VIII| about 2,378 miles; how the axis, being nearly perpendicular,
17 II, X | to the extremity of its axis major, would travel only
18 II, X | water. He revolves on his axis in 10 hours 29 minutes,
19 II, X | great inclination of his axis to the plane of his orbit,
20 II, X | primary, rotating on its axis in 2212 hours, and revolving
21 II, XVII| comet still rotated on its axis from east to west, yet the
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