A Monograph of the Trilobites of North America: with Coloured Models of the Species

Multa renacentur quæ jam cecidere.—Hor.
JACOB GREEN, M. D. Professor of Chemistry in Jefferson Medical College.
PHILADELPHIA: Published by Joseph Brano, No. 12, Castle Street. Clark & Raser, Printers. 1832.
Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1832, by Joseph Brano, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
The kindness which a traveller receives when in a distant land, must ever be among his most pleasing recollections your attentions therefore to me, during any short residence in London a few years since, cannot easily be forgotten. Suffer me, then, to inscribe this little work to you as a token of my gratitude.
Our pursuits in the Natural and Physical Sciences have been congenial. Your interesting researches with your original and magnificent Galvanic Battery, first drew my attention to the calorific effects of that mysterious agent; and your works on Natural History have stimulated my exertions in the same fascinating pursuit.
A large portion of your time and fortune have been devoted to the patronage or the cultivation of Natural Science so that the dedication of this work to you, if it were infinitely more worthy of your acceptance, would be due from me, both as a tribute of high respect, as well as of grateful acknowledgment.
Philadelphia, October 1st, 1832.
Some geologists imagine that the order of creation is registered in the rocks which compose the external crust of the earth, and that they can there clearly read a progressive development of organic life; in other words, that a succession of more perfect animals may be traced in ascending from the lower strata to the upper or more recent formations; that there is a gradual approach to the present system of things, and a succession of destructions and creations; worlds of living beings alternating with worlds of desolation and death, antecedent to the existence of man.
In some varieties of rocks there is often found the fossil remains of an animal which bears some resemblance to certain species of the crab. The back of this organic relic is commonly divided by two deep grooves or furrows, into three longitudinal lobes, and from this circumstance, the term Trilobite has been applied as a family name to distinguish this whole race of beings. This general appellation, however, though in most of the species, highly appropriate, is by no means applicable to all.

Jacob Green
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2021-09-18

Темы

Paleontology -- North America; Trilobites -- North America

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