| Ferdinand Petrovich Vrangel' - 1840 - 568 pages
...belong to several different species of animals, are not distributed equably over Siberia, but form immense local accumulations, which become both richer...more extensive the further one advances to the north. They are found in the greatest abundance in New Siberia and the Lachow Islands, as mentioned by Reschetnikow... | |
| David Page - Geology - 1872 - 510 pages
...species of animals, are not distributed equally over Siberia, but form immense local accumulation*, which become both richer and more extensive the further one advances to the north. They are found in the greatest abundance in New Siberia and the Luchow Islands, as mentioned by Eeschetuikow... | |
| David Page - Earth sciences - 1876 - 546 pages
...belong to several different species of animals, are not distributed equally over Siberia, but form immense local accumulations, which become both richer...more extensive the further one advances to the north. They are found in the greatest abundance in New Siberia and the Luchow Islands, as mentioned by Reschetnikow... | |
| Henry Woodward - Electronic journals - 1880 - 650 pages
...to the Pacific. They are not, however, distributed equally over Siberia, but, as Wrangell says, form immense local accumulations, which become both richer...more extensive the further one advances to the north, being found in the greatest abundance in the islands of the Leachof archipelago, more sparingly on... | |
| |