|
CANYONS...................46 (0.006%)
|
effect of the catastrophes that carved canyons and raised mountains. | 22552 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : THE EXPONENTIAL PRINCIPLE |
surface of Mars is rent by canyons and craters of prodigious size. | 30004 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE WOUNDS OF PLANET MARS |
the many great cracks, rilles and canyons of the surface. | 30023 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE WOUNDS OF PLANET MARS |
Basins 22.Fractures and Cleavages 23.Canyons and Channels 24. | 32674 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS - |
waters filled the rivers and ocean canyons of the world; | 40199 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides - |
to form slopes. Hundreds of deep canyons were grooved into the land and slopes around the world, | 40877 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
shape. The deep valleys, rifts, and canyons of the globe will soon here be assigned to the greatest of movements. | 41115 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes - |
features: the ocean basins; the rifts, canyons and channels; | 43718 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny - |
to provide the profile. Deep river canyons extend hundreds of kilometers into them. | 44060 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins - |
continental blocks into the ocean. The canyons occur where the blocks were fractured, | 44074 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins - |
waters poured out most heavily. The canyons, | 44075 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins - |
Grazia CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE CHANNELS AND CANYONS The model river channel combines the history of an earth fault, | 44831 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
of rivers to that of undersea canyons by way of the most famous of natural monuments, | 44995 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
and a minor canyon among submarine canyons. | 45056 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
created the sea basins, slopes, and canyons. | 45061 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
common ancestry. Scores of impressive submarine canyons extend the courses of rivers around the world. | 45066 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
stands unresolved 8 : Investigations of submarine canyons carried on for a number of years with the cooperation of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, | 45070 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
have revealed that these sea-floor canyons have all the characteristics of river canyons and are distinctly different from fault valleys. | 45072 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
have all the characteristics of river canyons and are distinctly different from fault valleys. | 45073 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
of the idea that the submarine canyons might be the product of currents have produced negative results so that they have evidently been cut by rivers. | 45074 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
is particularly disturbing, since the submarine canyons extend out to depths of from 2, | 45077 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
favors a Pleistocene age for the canyons. | 45079 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
indicated not only by the submarine canyons but also by many of the phenomena of coral reefs and by oceanographic data from various parts of the world. | 45085 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
insufficient to account for the deeper canyons it is felt that it would have resulted in the development of a universal canyon system which, | 45090 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
which, connecting with much older sunken canyons in some places and modified by subsequent sinking elsewhere, | 45092 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
striking solution. They saw in the canyons evidence of recency, | 45100 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
evidence that the depths of the canyons would decrease from the equator to the poles, | 45120 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
of the submarine canyon problem. The canyons were instantly created great river courses that rushed down, | 45159 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
in his Oceanography, says that submarine canyons would soon fill up if they were not being emptied by turbidity currents. | 45168 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
fill, rather than clean out the canyons? | 45175 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
ridges, fissures, and volcanos. Anyhow, the canyons were working rivers after the continents ceased to move rapidly, | 45185 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels - |
Notes (Chapter Twenty-three: Channels and Canyons) 1. | 45231 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels : Notes (Chapter Twenty-three: Channels and Canyons) |
had before been tropical. Huge submarine canyons depict a scene of inpouring waters afterwards. | 45537 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
according to Chumakov. Libyan off- shore canyons are also impressive, | 45540 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
once altogether mysterious but impressive submarine canyons. | 45602 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
over 10,000 kilometers of submarine canyons are notable. | 45606 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
To the average kilometer of these canyons is assigned the task of ingesting . | 45611 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
fit. Thus, the fact that submarine canyons are coincidental with earthquake and volcanic and mountainous zones implies a turbulent function, | 45630 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
water was involved. The great river canyons that course down the continental slopes to the abyss were in existence before the Deluge and were now inundated and probably greatly eroded, | 56118 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN - |
1974 75) has demonstrated that the canyons and rilles observed on the Moon and Mars and sometimes accredited to deluge and fluvial erosion cannot be water features, | 56212 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN : Notes on Chapter 14 |
from these hills and from the canyons of Mars comparable material is presently impracticable, | 56960 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS - |
its hundreds of wavy rilles, its canyons and its craters. | 80552 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 9: THE RUINED FACE OF A CLASSIC BEAUTY : THE RILLES OF MOON |
demand. The article describes the enormous canyons and craters, | 81685 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 11: THE BLASTED CAREER OF THE MIGHTY SWORDSMAN : THE FATAL WOUND |
earth-like atmosphere and that produced canyons, | 81691 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 11: THE BLASTED CAREER OF THE MIGHTY SWORDSMAN : THE FATAL WOUND |
devastation of "fiery, bridling" Mars: the canyons and crater system. | 81743 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 11: THE BLASTED CAREER OF THE MIGHTY SWORDSMAN : THE FATAL WOUND |
cliffs fall away and streams erode canyons or coal mines are dug. | 104866 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS - |
|
CAP.......................74 (0.009%)
|
Age termination Ice age( s) ice cap ice cave ice core ice dump ice fall ice-free corridor iceberg Iceland icon iconography id Idaho idealism identification identity ideology iderot, -. | 3354 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - - |
a million years. The present ice cap is usually regarded as a retreat phase of the ice that descended into the United States and Europe and regressed only some 10, | 25376 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE ICE DUMPS |
Alternatively one wonders whether the ice cap may have been a scattered set of accumulations from sky drops and brief frigid episodes. | 25404 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE ICE DUMPS |
head she wore at times a cap resembling a cone and distaff of raw wool. | 27538 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : THE HEAVENLY SPINNER |
defense of continental drift and ice cap depression as originating the Atlantic rupture, | 27638 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : Notes (Chapter Seven: Earth Parturition and Moon Birth) |
the Farraud and Gadja Wisconsin Ice Cap studies and the Heiskanen and Vening-Meinisz Fennoscandian studies, | 27639 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : Notes (Chapter Seven: Earth Parturition and Moon Birth) |
of the hill, it forms a cap just as caps will form on the sparking end of a discharging rod. | 35151 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity - |
the siliceous fluid to reach and cap its peak. | 35157 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity - |
of sudden exponential erosion and ice cap avalanche, | 36295 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash - |
as follows: around the old ice cap of the north grew a heavy biosphere. | 38198 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil - |
a heavy biosphere. The towering ice cap, | 38199 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil - |
the break-out of an ice cap of enormous size; | 38232 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil - |
the sudden collapse of an ice cap such as that of the Pleistocene, | 39458 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges - |
and fold phase of the ice cap avalanche and crustal movement, | 40278 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides - |
pole and center of an ice cap. ( | 40643 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
the weight of the Wisconsin ice cap would have been 3. | 40737 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
among uniformitarian geologists that the ice cap disappeared rapidly, | 40739 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
000 years for the Greenland ice cap, | 40916 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
the present geographical poles. The Antarctic cap is largely contained on a land mass with an ice flow over its boundaries and into the sea. | 40977 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
discovered where once the Uranian ice cap lay. | 40985 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
settling down from the great ice cap collapse and crustal shifts of Lunaria and the new ice caps of Jovea that remain today. | 40996 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
provided a singular theory of ice cap avalanche with a mechanism different than Cook's. ( | 40999 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
Hapgood's idea that the ice cap would have shoved the continental crust on a wedge principle to be mechanically acceptable 13 .) | 41000 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth - |
in cores of the Greenland ice cap as an indication of mean temperatures between 1200 and 1976 A. | 41840 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism - |
thrust points of the old ice cap and shell-slip. " | 43509 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny - |
by crustal thrusts, between the ice cap depression zones and the concentric, | 43511 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny - |
flow-resisting mountain ranges." 5 Ice cap fragments moved outwards upon the biosphere with the scooping and scraping motions of a giant earth-moving machine, | 43512 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny - |
are new, occurred when the ice cap avalanched in Lunarian times and then were covered up during the Saturnian-Jovian age-breaking events that included a new ice cover, | 43947 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins - |
direct southerly course. The polar ice cap is said by Weyer to have shifted its position by 10 to 15 degrees along a line 60 degrees west and 120 degrees east 2 . | 44444 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
120 degrees east 2 . Possibly the cap was cleaved and the rift began running; | 44445 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
free and or that an ice cap, | 44520 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
at the center of the ice cap was along the seashore where presently stand Baffin Bay, | 44593 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
The ice stored in the ice cap is calculated as equal to providing the water that would fill the Arctic and Atlantic basins. | 44603 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
They contributed directly to the ice cap, | 44629 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
in, with the form of a cap. | 44649 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
to the depth of the ice cap causes a continual heat at its edges. | 44651 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
and granites below. These grease the cap undersurfaces. | 44654 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
blow upon the center of the cap, | 44656 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
the center of the cap, the cap would crack radially. | 44656 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
addition the weakened crust beneath the cap would give way. | 44657 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
it. The bolt struck the ice cap and sent radial fractures in all directions. | 44665 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
pole, wrenching the Earth by its cap against its rotational direction. | 44667 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 22 Fractures and Cleavages - |
was depressed originally by the ice cap and is still rising, | 45391 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
former land mass under the ice cap load. | 45395 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
additionally compressed by the new ice cap formed in the Age of Jovea. | 45395 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
It, too, received a new ice cap beginning in the later "Age of Jupiter," | 45400 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
the shape of the destroyed ice cap, | 45483 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
uplift (where presumably once an ice cap and a polar region had produced Earth-flattening) exhibit by one estimate 2. | 45898 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
and he uses the northern ice cap as a self-mover, | 45935 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting - |
by the melting of an ice cap, | 49210 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness - |
mountain from whose peak (a metallic cap), | 86427 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : WHY PHARAOH PURSUED THE HEBREWS |
consolidated rocks, as a hard dense cap. | 87547 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : THE ELECTROSTATIC AGE |
the siliceous fluid to reach and cap its peak before the current is dissipated in heat or finds enough discontinuities of strata and faults to disperse in different directions. | 87555 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : THE ELECTROSTATIC AGE |
passed since the Great Wisconsin Ice Cap suddenly melted to create the Great Lakes and their Niagara outlet towards the sea. | 102071 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN - |
floodwaters of the suddenly destroyed ice cap, | 102115 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN - |
Quickly the quantavolutionary puts on the cap of a mythologist. | 102130 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN - |
vase, a bottle of gold, a cap of gold and then other vessels of pure and alloyed metals, | 102357 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY |
drilled from beneath the Greenland Ice Cap pass through the mid-second millennium with an extraordinary appearance of debris, | 104617 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS - |
not disappear while the Greenland ice cap was still picking up its usual ration of new ice each year. | 105471 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
great distance to the Greenland ice cap, | 105495 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
this temperature constant? Does an ice cap melt from the top or from the bottom, | 105530 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
local conditions on the Greenland ice cap itself, | 105557 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
rise over the whole of the cap and much of the ice melted and flooded away, | 105569 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
in the altitude of the ice cap) would not, | 105635 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
uniform rate of precipitation, the ice cap of, | 105635 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
constant. If it happens that the cap is here growing, | 105661 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND - |
other words and their implications. The cap worn by priests and augurs, | 112698 KA: - - Chapter 1: AUGURY - |
et circum tempora pasci." Iulus's cap poured out light, | 113039 KA: - - Chapter 1: AUGURY - |
his stele from Susa, a horned cap. | 114816 KA: - - Chapter 6: SKY LINKS - |
this second Paris, wearing a Phrygian cap tied under his chin and over his oiled hair, | 115319 KA: - - Chapter 7: SACRIFICE : MAGIC; SACRIFICE: SOME RELEVANT PASSAGES. |
tells how an eagle seized the cap of Lucius Tarquinius, | 117069 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC : STATUES AND MUMMIES |
on his head a ferret-skin cap. ' | 118096 KA: - - Chapter 17: BYWAYS OF ELECTRICITY : SOME PASSAGES OF INTEREST IN THE ILIAD |
skin cap. 'Kunee' is a leather cap. ' | 118096 KA: - - Chapter 17: BYWAYS OF ELECTRICITY : SOME PASSAGES OF INTEREST IN THE ILIAD |
Sennacherib's army? The weasel-skin cap and wolf's pelt worn by Dolon may be a clue. | 118127 KA: - - Chapter 17: BYWAYS OF ELECTRICITY : SOME PASSAGES OF INTEREST IN THE ILIAD |