Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 58917 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 82 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Canyon 3 Powell 3 Major 3 Grand 3 Colorado 2 River 2 Gulf 2 Green 2 Creek 1 water 1 rock 1 rapid 1 mile 1 illustration 1 chinese 1 boat 1 White 1 Valley 1 Utah 1 Suns 1 Sun 1 Sea 1 Prof. 1 Pimo 1 Paria 1 Lake 1 Kanab 1 Jones 1 Jimmy 1 Jacob 1 Jack 1 Great 1 Emery 1 Edith 1 Eastern 1 Dunn 1 Dirty 1 Devil 1 Dean 1 Clem 1 Cataract 1 Cap 1 California 1 Bright 1 Beaman 1 Angel 1 Andy Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 902 boat 842 river 816 water 737 foot 734 mile 553 day 546 rock 541 canyon 488 time 474 camp 425 man 417 place 413 rapid 373 wall 371 side 304 stream 301 way 270 cliff 253 morning 240 end 230 party 228 night 205 work 205 one 202 mouth 195 point 193 mountain 180 top 175 trail 174 line 173 shore 164 year 163 horse 162 distance 156 country 154 tree 153 fire 151 name 151 head 148 hour 145 current 139 other 135 bottom 132 bank 126 trip 125 nothing 124 hand 122 sand 115 picture 113 ranch Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 647 _ 622 Canyon 362 Major 317 River 307 Colorado 261 Prof. 234 Grand 192 Powell 161 Green 142 Kanab 137 Jack 126 Creek 117 Andy 107 Beaman 96 Jones 89 Indians 81 Gulf 79 Valley 79 Photograph 78 Jacob 76 Cap 71 White 68 Clem 67 Emery 66 Dunn 65 San 65 Lake 64 Steward 62 Utah 61 Paria 59 Dirty 59 Devil 57 Cataract 56 Mountains 55 Salt 54 O. 54 Mrs. 54 Lee 54 Kaibab 54 Dean 53 Mr. 53 Marble 52 Thompson 52 Mormon 52 E. 52 Dellenbaugh 51 Navajo 51 Mountain 51 Great 51 CaƱonita Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4210 we 2153 it 1498 i 1220 he 930 they 861 us 517 them 360 him 277 me 115 she 86 her 80 you 70 ourselves 65 one 57 themselves 47 myself 44 himself 39 itself 10 ours 5 his 4 mine 3 theirs 3 herself 2 yourselves 1 yourself 1 yiu= 1 thee 1 oneself 1 elk 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 8553 be 3214 have 807 make 734 go 706 see 558 do 549 find 549 come 466 get 413 take 398 run 328 say 322 leave 284 give 255 know 245 reach 241 call 219 look 215 follow 208 seem 204 pass 199 climb 185 tell 176 begin 168 keep 161 pull 159 turn 156 think 155 carry 149 put 147 fall 142 start 134 arrive 133 feel 132 break 128 try 128 stand 128 hear 122 bring 119 cover 113 remain 111 use 109 rise 107 stop 106 continue 104 cross 103 meet 103 hold 103 become 102 catch Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1067 not 603 up 508 down 493 then 490 so 468 out 409 little 401 more 356 first 354 about 343 here 337 very 329 now 319 back 313 as 299 great 294 other 284 next 280 only 280 high 276 well 257 small 257 long 250 few 244 rapid 242 just 233 there 230 large 229 good 227 much 223 many 216 again 206 on 206 far 191 away 189 in 183 soon 182 low 171 also 166 last 165 still 165 old 159 several 159 same 158 wide 158 even 154 bad 136 deep 132 almost 131 never Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 least 40 most 39 good 24 bad 12 near 10 large 10 high 10 great 8 Most 6 long 5 narrow 5 low 5 early 5 deep 4 slight 4 fine 3 young 3 strong 3 hard 2 thin 2 small 2 old 2 manif 2 hot 2 farth 2 easy 1 wild 1 wealthy 1 vast 1 topmost 1 sultry 1 straight 1 soft 1 safe 1 rough 1 rich 1 rare 1 poor 1 plain 1 northw 1 loud 1 lonely 1 lively 1 late 1 heavy 1 grand 1 gloomy 1 gentle 1 fond 1 fair Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 most 14 least 3 well 1 greatest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ see _ 5 river was not 4 day was sunday 4 prof. took observations 3 canyon was now 3 major had not 3 night was very 3 prof. got back 3 rapid was not 3 river was about 3 river was very 3 water was so 2 _ left behind 2 _ was ready 2 _ went first 2 boats were not 2 canyon coming in 2 canyon is about 2 canyon was gloomy 2 canyon was similar 2 day was so 2 day went on 2 grand is largely 2 major goes out 2 men did not 2 night came on 2 night was cold 2 prof. climbed out 2 river was much 2 river was narrow 2 river was perfectly 2 river was wide 2 stream coming in 2 times is less 2 walls ran along 2 walls were about 2 water comes down 2 water was cold 2 water was deep 2 water was not 2 work was necessary 1 _ coming back 1 _ got too 1 _ had bravely 1 _ pulled directly 1 _ ran down 1 _ see also 1 _ was as 1 _ was equally 1 _ was generously Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 boats were not seriously 1 boats were not so 1 camp was not satisfactory 1 canyon gives no hint 1 canyon were not more 1 major had not yet 1 major having no right 1 rapid was no longer 1 rapid was not bad 1 river had no real 1 river was no more 1 river was not more 1 river was not turbulent 1 side gave no opportunity 1 streams was not far 1 time had no knowledge 1 time was not too 1 time were not common 1 walls were no more 1 water was not so 1 water was not swift 1 ways was not as A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 35268 author = Bass, William Wallace title = Adventures in the Canyons of the Colorado, by Two of Its Earliest Explorers date = keywords = Canyon; Dunn; Major; Powell; White summary = [Illustration: Inscription of Powell Monument, Grand Canyon National charge, was in camp at this place, Major Powell and party pulled in Powell told us he intended to make his winter camp over on White River After we both got over on White River where our cabins were, he said he C. Sumner and William Dunn and the Major; next was Walter Powell and through the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River. that Dunn came near being drowned and the Major''s brother made the Dunn, Hall, Bradley and myself were near the cook boat and trouble, and told Powell that Dunn had been wounded four times by the put them in the boat, as the Major said that each man should keep his THE STORY OF JAMES WHITE, THE FIRST MAN TO PASS THROUGH THE CANYONS OF My first interest in White''s trip through the Grand Canyon dates back id = 20667 author = Dellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel title = A Canyon Voyage The Narrative of the Second Powell Expedition down the Green-Colorado River from Wyoming, and the Explorations on Land, in the Years 1871 and 1872 date = keywords = Andy; Beaman; Canyon; Cap; Clem; Colorado; Creek; Dean; Devil; Dirty; Grand; Green; Jack; Jacob; Jones; Kanab; Lake; Major; Paria; Powell; Prof.; River; Valley; illustration summary = the Grand Canyon 300 feet above the river, some miles below Canyon 300 feet above the river, some miles below Bright Angel trail. We remained on the Major''s old camp ground a day so that Jones and Cap. could climb to the top of the cliff to get the topography. feet above the river in an air-line distance of about five miles. The river ran about 300 feet wide, with a current of 10 to 15 miles an and ran half a mile more in easy water to the head of a very bad place, came a river was discovered less than half a mile below our camp coming reached it; a small river coming through a great canyon on the right. travelled twenty miles along the line of cliffs and camped near a canyon within half a mile of the place where the river canyoned and received a id = 13150 author = Kolb, E. L. (Ellsworth Leonardson) title = Through the Grand Canyon from Wyoming to Mexico date = keywords = Angel; Bright; Canyon; Cataract; Colorado; Creek; Edith; Emery; Grand; Green; Gulf; Jimmy; Major; Powell; River; Utah; boat; mile; rapid; rock; water summary = Green River City proved to be a busy little place noisy with switch The canyon-walled river turned southeast here, and continued of Major Powell''s parties had upset a boat in a Red Canyon rapid. river, and noon found us several miles below the camp, having run About the lower end of Red Canyon the river turned directly east, The river at the entrance of this rock-walled canyon was nothing through Cataract Canyon''s forty-one miles of rapids, with their boats, this, or in the 120 miles of good boating from Green River, Utah, to rapids, although the descent of the river would make rough water even like the rapid at Dark Canyon, sweeping under the wall until turned by water a great deal as we lifted and lined the boats over the rocks at boats over the rocks at the head of the rapid. left, the boating party was camped at the end of the canyons. id = 34909 author = McAllan, Alexander title = Ancient Chinese account of the Grand Canyon, or course of the Colorado date = keywords = California; Canyon; Colorado; Eastern; Grand; Great; Gulf; Pimo; Sea; Sun; Suns; chinese summary = The ancient Chinese records tell of a "Place of Ten Suns," where "Ten a gulf." A river flowing through the "Great Canyon," swells or widens The Chinese term rendered "Canyon" is =Hoh=, which stands also for "a the =shan= or mountain-range of the Great Canyon, is "beautiful." The little Child of the Sun at the =Ta-Hoh= or Great Canyon should not called "=Shao Hao''s= country" (or the land of the Sun-child) on account The Chinese commentator, of course, never saw either the Gulf or Canyon The sea connected with the Great Canyon is elsewhere called a =Puh hai= The ancient Chinese account connects a baby king, a supreme ruler, with The Canyon should be hot, and one of our own visitors says: "The sun It will be noticed that the ancient Chinese account connects lights, or Grand Canyon, the Colorado River, and the Gulf of California, in an