| George McCready Price - Bible and geology - 1913 - 290 pages
...Arctic America to Australia — always attended by such characteristic features," and how it happens "that particular horizons of various ages may be compared...stratigraphical subdivisions extend over the whole globe." (Vol. 1, p. 8.) As already remarked, he considers this one of the great unsolved problems of the science,... | |
| George McCready Price - Bible and geology - 1913 - 282 pages
...question, which he considers one of the greatest problems of geology, as to how one of these formations "recurs in parts of the earth so widely removed from one another, . . . always attended by such characteristic features," and how it comes that even the more minute... | |
| A. M. Celâl ?engör - Science - 2003 - 432 pages
...its end? How is it to be explained that the very earliest of them all. the Silurian formation'394 1, recurs in parts of the earth so widely removed from...particular horizons of various ages may be compared with or distinguished from other horizons over such large areas, that in fact these stratigraphical... | |
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