| Robert Bakewell - 1829 - 602 páginas
...burying their inhabitants in the wreck, or sweeping them away by the overflowing of the waters. Even the Green Mountains of Vermont, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire, have been the scenes of similar catastrophes, and the Notch in the White Mountains, will long record... | |
| Benjamin Silliman - 1829 - 140 páginas
...villages—burying their inhabitants in the wreck, or sweeping them away by the overflowing of the waters. Even the Green Mountains of Vermont, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire, have been the scenes of similar catastrophes, and the Notch in the White Mountains, will long record... | |
| Richard Brookes - 1832 - 864 páginas
...of Virginia, the Alleghany and Laurel mountains of Pennsylvania, the Catskill mountains of New York, the Green mountains of Vermont, and the White mountains of New Hampshire. They are sometimes broken into groups and isolated chains. Their highest summits are in N. Hampshire... | |
| Richard Brookes - 1839 - 828 páginas
...Virnnii, the Allegheny and Laurel mountains of rennsylfania, the (Jatskill mountains of New Tor«, the Green mountains of Vermont, and the White mountains of New Hampshire. They ire »metí пи- 1 broken into groups and isolated rliiini. Their hijrhfst summits are in N.... | |
| Bishop Davenport - 1843 - 604 páginas
...of Virginia, the Alleghanyand Laurel Mountains of Pennsylvania, the Catskill Mountains of New York, the Green Mountains of Vermont, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire. They are sometimes broken into groups and isolated chains. Their hi ihc<t summits arc in New Hampshire;... | |
| 1852 - 218 páginas
...Cumberland Mountains, the Blue Ridge, the Alleganies, the Delaware and Lehigh, the Highlands of the Hudson, the Green Mountains of Vermont, and the "White Mountains of New Hampshire. In many of these vast ranges or sierras, nature still reigns in indomitable wildness: their rocky ridges,... | |
| 1852 - 36 páginas
...Mountains, the Blue Ridge, the Allcghanics, the Delaware and I<ehigh, the Highlands of the Hudson, the Green Mountains of Vermont, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire. In many of these vast ranges or sierras Nature still reigns in indomitable wildness; their rocky ridges,... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1854 - 480 páginas
...and, rising into numerous hills and ridges, they finally assume the character of mountainranges, as in the Green Mountains of Vermont and the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Devonian metamorphic. — The altered rocks of the age of the Chemung and Portage groups of New York,... | |
| George William Fitch - 1856 - 280 páginas
...consists of numerous parallel ridges separated by longitudinal valleys/ The northeastern section embraces the Green Mountains of Vermont and the White Mountains of New Hampshire. The Adirondack Mountains, which extend through the northern part of New York to the west of Lake Champlain,... | |
| Robert Montgomery Smith Jackson - 1860 - 656 páginas
...groups of mountains would be more correctly designated "geographical dependencies of the system." Thus, the Green Mountains of Vermont and the White Mountains of New Hampshire are described as belonging to this range. They are crystalline in structure, and some of their peaks... | |
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