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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 18 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 58211 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 man 5 Europe 4 illustration 4 great 4 fig 4 Professor 3 time 3 cave 3 Sea 3 North 3 France 3 America 2 tribe 2 look 2 like 2 fire 2 find 2 egyptian 2 Valley 2 Tharn 2 Tamar 2 Stone 2 Sephar 2 Sadu 2 Old 2 New 2 Mr. 2 Lake 2 Jotan 2 Ireland 2 Indians 2 God 2 England 2 Egypt 2 Dylara 2 Dr. 2 Ammad 2 Age 2 Africa 1 woman 1 water 1 tomb 1 stone 1 slab 1 sexual 1 scottish 1 roman 1 primitive 1 people 1 neolithic Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3567 man 2086 time 1677 foot 1510 cave 1352 stone 1196 period 1048 day 995 head 944 way 922 tree 908 water 899 eye 898 place 863 hand 816 bone 815 animal 809 year 809 side 790 people 783 ice 776 woman 763 part 747 fire 740 fact 737 life 731 girl 671 type 633 face 622 illustration 611 race 611 point 600 age 599 evidence 594 tribe 593 river 592 form 591 valley 589 body 578 flint 574 rock 536 line 529 implement 529 case 518 thing 513 ground 491 spear 491 mile 483 one 480 epoch 476 end Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6114 _ 731 Tharn 659 | 576 Professor 499 Europe 437 Grôm 435 Ab 413 Fig 376 M. 374 Jotan 359 Dylara 339 Mr. 337 England 332 Britain 319 Egypt 292 Lake 273 Trakor 258 America 253 River 249 Age 243 New 226 Challenger 221 Sephar 220 France 216 Scotland 215 Ammad 209 North 206 Ireland 203 et 200 de 191 Lord 185 ya 185 pp 181 Man 180 Switzerland 179 Stone 177 John 176 c. 175 Vokal 175 B.C. 174 Dr. 174 Alurna 170 Old 169 god 169 Jaltor 168 God 165 Sadu 165 Ohio 164 Chief 162 Urim Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8742 it 6953 he 4359 i 4064 they 3589 we 2468 them 2266 him 1976 you 1921 she 1041 us 1037 her 1019 me 509 himself 296 themselves 279 itself 136 herself 108 one 107 myself 66 ourselves 27 mine 26 yourself 18 theirs 13 yours 13 his 13 hers 12 ya 10 thee 10 ''em 9 ''s 6 ours 4 thyself 4 oneself 2 em 1 you''ll 1 with-- 1 i''m 1 furies"--apparently 1 > Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 36134 be 12639 have 2545 find 2302 do 2044 come 1966 make 1682 say 1571 see 1386 take 1235 know 1152 go 1093 give 827 seem 729 show 688 bring 673 look 608 call 603 follow 590 stand 587 become 586 lie 584 leave 581 think 559 turn 556 appear 549 reach 539 use 534 form 520 tell 508 fall 496 begin 495 remain 495 exist 474 carry 468 get 466 run 450 pass 433 hold 418 rise 372 cover 368 keep 366 discover 361 draw 356 live 349 lead 347 move 345 bear 340 contain 334 meet 332 occur Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4681 not 2112 great 2028 more 1919 so 1711 other 1525 only 1484 long 1478 then 1438 up 1383 now 1271 very 1216 first 1162 out 1006 also 997 as 992 down 990 many 973 most 958 back 952 same 943 well 921 even 916 still 913 far 881 early 868 such 859 much 841 glacial 839 old 798 little 793 high 709 human 694 here 679 small 668 large 656 again 643 few 619 there 615 almost 608 however 581 low 579 away 578 ancient 554 about 550 present 542 too 535 own 530 thus 527 good 522 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 238 least 227 most 225 early 153 good 101 old 86 great 84 high 71 near 59 late 57 low 54 Most 49 large 37 fine 18 long 18 bad 17 deep 16 slight 15 strong 15 close 12 hard 11 tall 11 small 10 rude 8 simple 8 farth 7 manif 7 eld 7 big 6 wise 6 wide 6 rich 5 sure 5 lithe 5 full 5 easy 5 common 4 young 4 swift 4 strange 4 pure 4 narrow 4 cold 4 brave 3 wild 3 warm 3 short 3 sharp 3 rough 3 mighty 3 mere Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 746 most 40 least 32 well 4 oldest 2 early 1 watcher 1 tempest 1 near 1 lookest 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://archive.org/details/B20442208 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 man was not 6 tharn did not 5 _ is _ 5 man did not 5 time was not 4 _ did _ 4 girl did not 4 men were not 3 eyes went wide 3 girls do not 3 ice was still 3 man had not 3 people do not 3 people were not 3 tharn had not 3 tharn was satisfied 3 woman was not 2 _ do _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ is also 2 _ is equally 2 _ is sufficient 2 _ know _ 2 _ was _ 2 animals were afraid 2 animals were so 2 bones are also 2 bones are relatively 2 bones were fresh 2 eyes are not 2 eyes was not 2 eyes were blue 2 eyes were bright 2 eyes were hard 2 fact is certain 2 fact were not 2 fire was out 2 girls had already 2 heads are very 2 ice came down 2 ice was not 2 man is nothing 2 man is perfect 2 man was ab 2 man was quick 2 men are enemies 2 men are often 2 men did not 2 men do not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ do not essentially 1 animals are not directly 1 animals had not yet 1 bones are not available 1 caves were no longer 1 caves were not numerous 1 eyes are not that 1 fact is not commonly 1 facts were not yet 1 feet does not necessarily 1 feet found no ramp 1 feet was not anything 1 girl did not at 1 girl made no objection 1 girl was not aware 1 girls had no children 1 girls make no secret 1 girls were not married 1 ice was not _ 1 ice was not sufficient 1 man had no existence 1 man had not yet 1 man has not yet 1 man is not so 1 man was not around 1 man was not content 1 man was not fertile 1 men are not due 1 men do not always 1 men having no great 1 men were not arboreal 1 men were not aware 1 men were not so 1 part was not more 1 people are not stationary 1 people had no ideas 1 people have no idea 1 people were not averse 1 people were not tribe 1 people were not wholly 1 peoples show no trace 1 peoples were no mere 1 period are not only 1 period was not such 1 stone was not locally 1 stones are not so 1 tharn did not at 1 tharn did not fully 1 tharn had no difficulty 1 tharn had no intention A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 32462 author = Browne, Howard title = Warrior of the Dawn date = keywords = Alurna; Ammad; Cro; Dylara; Games; God; Jotan; Katon; Nada; Pryak; Sadu; Sephar; Tamar; Tharn; Urim; Vulcar; man summary = What little light came through was enough for Tharn''s eyes to fighting-men rose from the edge of the jungle, directly in Tharn''s path! Dylara dropped from the tree, reaching Tharn''s side as he rose "O Urim," he said, "my friends and I would like to look about Sephar. Tharn pushed it open, and still keeping an eye on the men outside, Noticing Tharn was awake, the man lowered the spear point with Hardly had Tharn left the throne-room when Dylara and Nada entered, Tharn, seeking to change the subject, said, "I saw that this man, Urim, When the door had closed behind Dylara and Nada, Jotan turned to his two "Urim," said the guard gruffly, "wishes the slave-girl Dylara brought to "Come, Tharn," said Katon hurriedly. Vulcar stepped forward and placed both hands on Tharn''s shoulders. In the great cell beneath Sephar''s streets, Tharn, Katon, Vulcar, The smile came back to Tharn''s face. id = 33529 author = Browne, Howard title = The Return of Tharn date = keywords = Ammad; Ammadians; Dylara; Ekbar; Garlud; Gerdak; Heglar; Jaltor; Jotan; Sadu; Sephar; Tamar; Tharn; Trakor; Vokal; high; man summary = When Trakor was finished, Tharn said, "There will be other days for With a panther-like leap Tharn reached Trakor''s prone figure. Finally Tharn came to rest upon a wide branch high above the ground. For a long moment Tharn seemed lost in thought and Trakor was The time had come for the high point of danger in Tharn''s plan. "You say that, Jotan," Dylara said, "because you do not know Sadu as I "How can you think of returning to such a life, Dylara?" Jotan said, Tharn was already among the lower branches of a tree when Trakor came Truly, Trakor had come a long way since that day when Tharn "This way," Tharn said, and the two cave men raced into the night. "We are men of Sephar," Tharn said, following the first line of thought were Jotan and his father, Tamar, Tharn and young Trakor. id = 551 author = Burroughs, Edgar Rice title = The Land That Time Forgot date = keywords = Ahm; Benson; Bradley; Caprona; Caspak; Germans; Lys; Nobs; Olson; Schoenvorts; look; man; water summary = the exposure to a night of cold and wet upon the water in an open boat, turned her head during the night so that as I opened my eyes I saw her a few times and lay down again, and the girl opened her eyes and looked The tug came close beside us, and a man on deck threw us a rope. I called Bradley and Olson on deck and told them what had happened, but reported having seen Lys with von Schoenvorts two nights before. moment later Olson returned, and the girl followed him. Germans, for the man Bradley had struck still lay upon the deck. deck, passing through the conning-tower where Benson sat, and looking I watched the water rise until the little deck I stood on was awash, Olson and von Schoenvorts came up a minute later with their men; then id = 139 author = Doyle, Arthur Conan title = The Lost World date = keywords = America; Challenger; George; Gladys; Indians; John; London; Lord; Malone; Maple; Mr.; Professor; Roxton; South; Summerlee; White; Zambo; good; great; hand; like; look; man summary = place, I don''t think my ideal would speak like that," said she. I always liked McArdle, the crabbed, old, round-backed, red-headed news "DEAR PROFESSOR CHALLENGER," it said, "As a humble student of Nature, I He wished, he said, to ask Professor Challenger whether Mr. Summerlee desired to know how it was that Professor Challenger Lord John Roxton has some points in common with Professor Summerlee, "It was on that," said Professor Challenger, pointing to this tree, "As to the man''s identity," said Professor Challenger, "I have no doubt "Maple White again," said Professor Challenger. "Our young friend has glimpses of lucidity," said Professor Challenger, lunch-time among those very bushes," said Lord John, looking across the "We shall know in the morning," said Lord John. "I think I should back my little friend," said Lord John, caressing his "By George, young fellah, you''ve put your hand on it!" said Lord John, id = 44331 author = Duckworth, W. L. H. (Wynfrid Laurence Henry) title = Prehistoric Man date = keywords = Chapelle; Galley; Hill; Krapina; Mauer; Penck; Pithecanthropus; Professor; fig; mousterian; neanderthal summary = skeleton resembling the Neanderthal type but presenting (it is said) worked implements resting beneath strata referred to the Pliocene period. the bones are examined, the contrast they provide with all human remains than the corresponding teeth furnished by primitive existing human types. Professor Dubois assigned the bones to one and the same skeleton, and for human types upon evidence furnished by the limb bones has already been remarked by Professor Klaatsch, as evidence that the skeleton at Le animals have been shewn to differ, so the types of implements provide a jaw is referred by Professor Rutot to the Mafflian (implement) period of Professor Rutot''s scheme carries this evidence of human existence far have been found in the presence of implements where no human bones could assigns the Mousterian types to the first inter-glacial period of Penck, mark the presence of the Neanderthal type of skeleton) do present forms id = 58475 author = Fehlinger, Hans title = Sexual Life of Primitive People date = keywords = Africa; Australia; India; Indians; New; child; girl; marriage; people; primitive; sexual; tribe; woman summary = Africa, we find that married men and women are in certain cases allowed In Southern India married women enjoy a great deal of sexual freedom, marriage age of the men is about twenty, of the girls still earlier. exception to this rule only occurs when a rich man marries a girl Marriage takes place at an early age, sometimes between boys intercourse with a girl or woman of the same age class is not considered girls were not married to one man; any children born were fathered on of sexual morality generally held by primitive people are different from Among the peoples whose girls are married at a very young age no wooing girl the young man goes to live in the house of his father-in-law, general custom for a woman who has just given birth to a child to say to savage and barbarous people the men married women not of their own, but id = 42380 author = Figuier, Louis title = Primitive Man date = keywords = Age; Aurignac; Boucher; Bronze; Cave; Denmark; Desor; Dr.; Epoch; Europe; France; Germain; Habitations; Horn; Lacustrine; Lake; Museum; Neuchâtel; Reindeer; Saint; Stone; Switzerland; fig; find; illustration; man summary = The Man of the Great Bear and Mammoth Epoch lived in Caverns-shaped flints and other implements belonging to primitive man, existing If we place side by side the skull of a man belonging to the Stone Age, [Illustration: Fig. 2.--Skull of a Man belonging to the Stone Age (the [Illustration: Fig. 16.--Man in the Great Bear and Mammoth Epoch.] The Man of the Great Bear and Mammoth Epoch lived in Caverns--Bone caves belonging to the Stone Age. In the New World various bone-caverns have been explored. this head of a man belonging to the epoch of the great bear and mammoth, [Illustration: Fig. 39.--Man of the Reindeer Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 76.--Man of the Polished-stone Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 80.--Fishing during the Polished-stone Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 87.--Danish Axe of the Polished-stone Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 149--A Swiss Lake Village of the Bronze Epoch.] Everywhere, man must have had his Stone Age, his Bronze Epoch, and his id = 27645 author = Hasse, Henry title = The Beginning date = keywords = Gral; Kurho; Obe; Otah summary = Obe stood directly astride the pointed shaft which Gral had left Otah came, and Lak and one other, and together they brought Obe back. within him; Gral could not have known that this "thing-that-prodded" was tribe from Far End. It was not often that Kurho''s people foraged this mushroom-shape: that with each great thing of man''s devising comes Three times more he brought Obe the Great Bear, but And then came a day when _Otah_ brought Obe the Bear. "A weapon of great magic," Gor-wah pronounced, and he prodded with his But, if it was to be, then what the tribe of Gor-wah devised Kurho''s the two great tribes of Kurho and Otah. And now came the time for Otah to cross. a full day''s journey beyond the river; he was not of Otah''s Tribe nor finality in Kurho''s boast and Otah''s boast of weapons. Kurho''s Tribe was no more, but the weapons yet remained._ id = 46379 author = Laing, S. (Samuel) title = Human Origins date = keywords = Abraham; America; Asia; B.C.; Bible; Chaldæa; Deluge; Egypt; Empire; Europe; Genesis; God; Hyksos; King; Manetho; Menes; Miocene; Moses; North; Old; Pliocene; Professor; Quaternary; Sargon; Sea; Testament; accadian; egyptian; evidence; find; great; illustration summary = Dynasties--Summary of Evidence for Date of Menes--Period prior World--Glacial Period in America--Palæolithic Implements--Quaternary years--Neolithic Races--Palæolithic--Different Races of Man as far different races of men and animals were in existence 5000 years ago Dead certainly date from this period, and the great Temple of the gods or kings, who reigned long ago in Egyptian cities. Records--Chaldæa and Egypt give similar results--Historic Period Race--Origin Cappadocia--Great Wars with Egypt--Battle of Race--Origin Cappadocia--Great Wars with Egypt--Battle of latest Assyrian kings, Asshurbanipal, in the year 645 B.C. We have already pointed out the great historical importance of the In fact the state of civilization in Egypt 6000 years ago appears the existence of a very long period of advanced civilization prior great civilized empires of Egypt and Chaldæa during the long interval the old great glacial period is that these conditions were formerly races of historical times and of civilized nations." At the present id = 32396 author = Livingston, Berkeley title = Oogie Finds Love date = keywords = Allerdyce; Finster; Sam; Sobar summary = Oogie, the Caveman, finally won beautiful Sala for his woman all, Algernon Allerdyce, known to the wrestling public as Oogie the Allerdyce didn''t know it but Sam had been the two, Allerdyce and Finster, were in the lounge, playing gin. Finster and Allerdyce felt For a full ten seconds Algernon Allerdyce looked into the face of At the same time Allerdyce whispered, "Don''t act scared," to Finster. "But they must come through the cleft in the rock," Allerdyce said. "Men of Sobar!" Allerdyce shouted. seemed to want to come from, Allerdyce leaped forward and grabbed And before Allerdyce could do more than turn, Finster was on him. Allerdyce had broken Finster''s first hold, and was I''ve been wanting to do this for a long time," Ed Finster said. while the rest walked behind, one man led Allerdyce from the cave into Allerdyce stared in horror at the women, turned and started for the id = 43750 author = Mackenzie, Donald A. (Donald Alexander) title = Ancient Man in Britain date = keywords = Age; Britain; Celts; Crô; Egypt; England; Europe; France; Gaelic; Ireland; Magnon; North; Picts; Red; Scotland; Sea; Spain; St.; Stone; Wales; Welsh; Western; aurignacian; british; celtic; early; egyptian; irish; neolithic; roman; scottish summary = The Culture Ages--Ancient Races--The Neanderthals--Crô-Magnon the Red Sea. Neanderthal man had originally entered Europe when the climate was An Ancient Welshman--Aurignacian Culture in Britain--Coloured red the wooden images of gods was evidently connected with the belief The ancient religious beliefs connected with shells appear to have Great dogs were kept in Ancient Britain and Ireland for protection Dog gods figure on the ancient sculptured stones of Scotland. Long ages before the Roman period the early peoples entered Britain "Maggot God" of Stone Circles--Ancient Egyptian Beads at population in Great Britain and Ireland are of the early types known numbers of peoples appear to have reached Britain and Ireland by sea In a country like Britain, subjected in early times to periodic certain peoples in ancient Britain and Ireland. when Red Sea shells were imported into Italy by Crô-Magnon man; and -chief people in ancient England, Ireland, and Scotland, 132. id = 26989 author = Meek, S. P. (Sterner St. Paul) title = B. C. 30,000 date = keywords = Anak; Father; Invar; Uglik summary = "Anak, the Chief Hunter, gave it to her," he repeated slowly. Uglik leaped to his feet, spear in hand, but before the Chief Hunter''s "Then Uglik killed the lion and so became Father," replied Anak, "since Anak led the way, Uglik with the warriors and youths following closely. Anak dropped his spear and buried his face in his hands. "I am Father of the tribe of Ugar," replied Uglik with a dangerous note "Hold, Uglik!" cried the Chief Hunter. "Anak should be Father of the tribe of Ugar!" he cried. "More stones, Invar!" cried Anak. "Una!" cried Invar and Anak in one voice. Throwing-spear and smiting-stone in hand, the two hunters approached the "The word of the Father is the law of the tribe," said Uglik. "The maiden, Una, dwells in the Father''s cave!" said Uglik. "Then cry I rannag on you, Uglik, the Father!" cried Anak. id = 15590 author = Peet, T. Eric (Thomas Eric) title = Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders date = keywords = Africa; Europe; France; Ireland; Malta; Sardinia; Stonehenge; circle; fig; illustration; megalithic; monument; slab; stone; tomb summary = country town of Amesbury, lies the great stone circle of Stonehenge. spoken in favour of a date in the first half of the third century B.C. He believes that the great circles are religious monuments which in form T-shaped chamber-tombs arranged in a circle with entrances to the north circle is formed by thirteen stones from 12 to 15 feet high, and its It originally consisted of sixty stones forming a circle 340 feet in The cairn originally covered a circular stone chamber 12-1/2 feet in stones 280 feet in diameter surrounded by a circle of upright blocks. Giant''s Tomb consists of a long rectangular chamber of upright slabs Each grave consists of a dolmen within a circle of stones. of dolmens often surrounded by stone circles from 25 to 33 feet in of upright slabs of stone, and is surrounded by a circle formed in the id = 28936 author = Roberts, Charles G. D., Sir title = In the Morning of Time date = keywords = Bawr; Bow; Chief; Grôm; Hills; Loob; Mawg; Ook; cave; eye; fire; foot; great; head; like; man; time; tribe summary = The girl came forward timorously, and knelt at Grôm''s feet. When both bears were high in the two trees, Grôm and the girl slipped faced his approach, but Grôm saw the shrinking in his furious eyes, A haughty look came over Grôm''s face, his broad shoulders squared strode to the front, and stood like Grôm, with unbowed head, leaning "Either the girl must die," said he, eyeing Grôm''s face, "or she must Like Grôm, the girl carried two flint-headed spears. For a moment or two Grôm looked into the girl''s eyes steadily, From their place in the tree Grôm and the girl had followed wounded Bow-leg; but at the sight of Grôm and the Chief leaping down "Courage!" cried Grôm, lifting his head and dashing his great hand Then a stab of Grôm''s great spear caught it full in the eye, and this Grôm stood staring for a long time, with wide, brooding eyes, at the id = 47845 author = Robinson, C. H. (Charles Henry) title = Longhead: The Story of the First Fire date = keywords = Broken; Longhead; Tooth; animal; cave; fire; long; man; time summary = a long time he continued to pile sticks upon the coals and to delight in finally the man killed a small animal with his club, which they shared, Longhead finally crawled outside and Broken Tooth soon Late in the morning Longhead and Broken Tooth emerged from the cave. keep the fire alive while the man sought for food for both, Broken Tooth Nearly every day Longhead would go into the forest in search of small roasted flesh supplied the man and woman food for several days. At a late hour Longhead and Broken Tooth retired to their cave, leaving When Longhead and Broken Tooth emerged from the cave in the morning, Longhead and Broken Tooth each produced a flint knife and proceeded to dragged by the men to Longhead''s cave and set upon a stick on the people were assured that so long as Longhead and Broken Tooth should be id = 8644 author = Waterloo, Stanley title = The Story of Ab: A Tale of the Time of the Cave Man date = keywords = Bark; Boarface; CHAPTER; Fire; Hilltop; Lightfoot; Mok; Moonface; Oak; Old; People; Shell; Valley; cave; ear; great; man; time summary = the close resemblance between most of the trees of the cave man''s age, so There came no new alarm, and soon the cave was reached, though on the way his cave home, to venture far away; but this in Oak''s life was a great creature was the great elk of the time of the cave men, the Irish elk, as cave men were to old Mok as the child is to the man. young cave males were good boys until the time came when their thews and cave man, panting for breath, came running down the river bank and paused by a hundred well-armed people of the time of the cave men. attention to the cave man with a spear than to one of the little wild was the daughter of a cave man living not far from the home of old here came out the splendid death-facing quality of the cave man--well, it id = 50957 author = Wright, G. Frederick (George Frederick) title = Man and the Glacial Period date = keywords = America; County; Dr.; England; Europe; Footnote; Geological; Glacier; Great; Lake; Mississippi; Mountains; Mr.; New; North; Ohio; Pennsylvania; Professor; River; Sea; Society; Valley; York; fig; glacial; illustration summary = 1. THE FORMS OF WATER IN CLOUDS AND RIVERS, ICE AND GLACIERS. of glacial ice, "of more than a hundred feet in height, formed the usual glacial ice at an elevation of thousands of feet above the sea. ice during the Glacial period, the surface of the rocks when freshly on the true glacial deposits of the valley, and extending down the river County, about ten miles north of the Ohio River, the glacial boundary about the time the ice of the Glacial period had reached its maximum produce the climatic conditions of the great Ice age of North America, we hundred feet; so that the glacial streams from the retreating ice-front between the Glacial period and the Great Lakes of North America, several Glacial period is found in the fact that the gravel deposit is continuous since that point of time in the Glacial period when the ice-barrier