Spring
e, making it uneven, and causing the air bubbles which
it contains to extend til it is
completely last disappears suddenly in a single
spring rain. Ice s grain as well as wood, and when a cake
begins to rot or quot;comb,quot; t is, assume the appearance of
ever may be its position, t right
angles er surface. here is a rock or a
log rising near to t is muchinner, and
is frequently quite dissolved by ted ; and I have
been told t in t at Cambridge to freeze er in a
sed underneath, and
so o botion of the
bottom more terbalanced tage. hen a warm rain
in ter melts off the snow-ice from alden, and
leaves a ransparent ice on there will be a
strip of rotten te ice, a rod or more
ted by ted . Also, as I have said,
te as burning-glasses to
melt th.
take place every day in a pond on a
small scale. Every morning, generally speaking, ter
is being may not be
made so er all, and every evening it is being cooled more
rapidly until tome of the
niger, the spring and
fall, and the
ice indicate a cemperature. One pleasant morning after a
cold nigo Flints Pond to
spend ticed he ice
resounded like a gong for many rods
around, or as if I ruck on a tighe pond began
to boom about an er sunrise, the influence of
ted upon it from over t stretched
itself and yah a gr