id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 18562 Shaler, Nathaniel Southgate Outlines of the Earth's History: A Popular Study in Physiography .txt text/plain 146536 5038 63 we can readily note very great changes in its form since the land forms and falls in the air, as the streams flow to the sea, and as the Meanwhile the sea, because of the great heat-storing power of water, The great water store of the earth is contained in two distinct water in the beds, which in time is returned to the earth's surface by land, where a great body of water journeys like an alternating river water tends, of course, to fall downward toward the earth's surface, their heat through the water, and thus form ice on their surfaces, The crevice water of the earth, although forming at no time more than penetrates far below the earth's surface or the open-air streams which material at the time when the rocks were formed in the sea. the surface to very great depths, so that not only is the rock water ./cache/18562.txt ./txt/18562.txt