Book, Chapter
1 I, VIII | of the year being either diminished or increased.~Independently
2 I, VIII | distance from the sun had been diminished from 91,000,000 to 66,000,
3 I, VIII | bodies had again sensibly diminished. The captain had ceased
4 I, IX | the atmosphere was so much diminished? Had he observed that the
5 I, X | the schooner (its weight diminished from the same cause as that
6 I, XIII | whether our pay is to be diminished in proportion.”~The colonel
7 I, XV | not only has its gravity diminished, but its rotary speed has
8 I, XXIII| the solar days, had been diminished by one-half. Three days
9 I, XXIII| below zero; the light also diminished in proportion, and all objects
10 I, XXIV | railway-carriage, while the diminished force of gravity contributed
11 II, III | displaced; gravity has been diminished: not that I ever supposed
12 II, VIII | diameter of the sun’s disc was diminished to 5 degrees 46 mins.~And
13 II, XII | greatest alacrity, and the diminished weight combined with the
14 II, XIII | this time no casualties had diminished their original number, but
15 II, XVII | of its rotation had been diminished by about one-half. Only
16 II, XVII | scorn.~“Why, isn’t her mass diminished? Isn’t she split in half?
17 II, XVII | this interval was being diminished at the rate of nearly 208,
|