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" Every blade of grass, and every branch of tree would drip with moisture deposited by the passing air ; our dresses would become wet and dripping, and umbrellas useless ; but our miseries would not end here. "
Meteorology, Practical and Applied - Page 206
by John William Moore - 1894 - 445 pages
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Proceedings, Volume 11

Royal Society of Edinburgh - Science - 1882 - 958 pages
...clouds, no mista, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit ; 4th, our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning, and every puff of steam as it escapes...
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Nature, Volume 23

Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1881 - 770 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on •which it would deposit ; (4) our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning, and every puff of steam as it escapes into...
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Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution

Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - Discoveries in science - 1881 - 806 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit ; and 4th, that our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning, and every puff of steam as it...
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journal of the society of arts

george bell - 1881 - 896 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the super-saturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit." During the present month, he read a paper, illustrated by experiments, before the Philosophical Society...
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The Popular Science Monthly, Volume 19

Science - 1881 - 904 pages
...no clouds, no mists, and probably no rain ; that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit ; and that our breaths, when they became visible on a cold morning, and every puff of steam as it escapes...
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Outlines of elementary physiography

George Thom (principal of Dollar inst.) - 1881 - 152 pages
...no clouds, no mist, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit. 3. Our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning, and every puff of steam as it escapes into...
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Education, Volume 1

Education - 1881 - 662 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit ; (4) our breath, when it becomes visible on a cold day, and every puff of steam as it escapes into...
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The American Journal of Science

Science - 1881 - 1100 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit ; (4) our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning and every puff' of steam shows the impure...
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Nature, Volume 23

Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1881 - 656 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit ; (4) our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning, and every puff of steam as it escapes into...
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Van Nostrand's Engineering Magazine, Volume 24

Engineering - 1881 - 612 pages
...clouds, no mists, and probably no rain, and that the supersaturated air would convert every object on the surface of the earth into a condenser on which it would deposit; (4) our breath when it becomes visible on a cold morning^ and every puff of steam •as it escapes...
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