. Garden cities in theory and practice; being an amplification of a paper on the potentialities of applied science in a garden city, read before Section F of the British Association . d them intothe jug until he had sufficiently raised the level ofthe milk to be able to drink it. The action taking place will be readily under-stood from the diagram. Many have been the * It has been urged that the molecular weight of carbonicacid gas being greater than air, the former should accumulateupon the floor, weight being added to such reasoning by the factthat loss of life has frequently taken place owi


. Garden cities in theory and practice; being an amplification of a paper on the potentialities of applied science in a garden city, read before Section F of the British Association . d them intothe jug until he had sufficiently raised the level ofthe milk to be able to drink it. The action taking place will be readily under-stood from the diagram. Many have been the * It has been urged that the molecular weight of carbonicacid gas being greater than air, the former should accumulateupon the floor, weight being added to such reasoning by the factthat loss of life has frequently taken place owing to its collectionat the bottom of wells, and to the fact that one can pour the gasfrom vessel to vessel as one would water. Such an effect, how-ever, could only take place in a chamber all parts of which wereat an equal temperature. In dwelling-houses, in consequence ofthe nearness of the walls, the bodily movement taking place inthem, and for other reasons, the air is being constantly churned,principally by convection currents, which lift the heavierupwards and circulate the intrinsically lighter downwards, sothat the degree of vitiation becomes more or less general. 824 A.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1905