Page:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Vol 4.djvu/80

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58

The second region comprises the country of ostracite limestone and feldspath pyroxenic rocks, in the valley of Ghuidaries and the Aphrean, having a mean elevation of 450 feet. This district is extremely fertile, for the most part cultivated, and inhabited by agricultural Kurds.

The third region is the lacustrine plain of Umk, elevated about 305 feet above the Mediterranean, and covered, for the most part, with the gramineous plants which feed the flocks of the pastoral and nomadic Turcomans.

The fourth region, formed by the valley of Antioch, is rocky, irregular, and varying from elevations of 220 to 440 feet. It comprises also the alluvial plain of the Orontes, v^^hich gradually sinks to the level of the Mediterranean. This latter district is covered with shrubs, which are chiefly evergreens; and inhabited by a few families of Syrians, who, in these picturesque solitudes, chiefly follow mysterious rites, presenting a mixture of Mahomedanism and Christianity.

It appears, from the examination of this line of country, that there here exist two distinct regions, the one low and already furnished with the means of water transport; and the other elevated, where the waters, which are lost in the valley of Aleppo, might be turned with facility into an artificial channel. Both regions are remarkably level, and present, when separately viewed, very few difficulties to be overcome for the construction of artificial roads.


May 3, 1838.

FRANCIS BAILY, Esq., V.P. and Treas., in the Chair.

Thomas Burnet, D.D., Sir James Rivett Carnac, Bart., John Merewether, D.D., Benjamin Fonseca Outram, M.D., Jonathan Pereira, Esq., and Edward Hamilton StirHng, Esq., were severally elected Fellows of the Society.

A paper was read, entitled, "Supplementary Note to the Thirteenth Series of Experimental Researches in Electricity." By Michael Faraday, Esq., D.C.L., F.R.S., &c.

The author describes, in this supplementary note, experiments made with the view of determining the specific inductive capacities of dielectrics, by means of an apparatus of the following form. Three circular brass plates were mounted, side by side, on insulated pillars; the middle one was fixed, but the two outer plates were moveable on slides, so that all three could be brought with their sides almost into contact, or separated to any required distance. Two gold leaves were suspended in a glass jar from insulated wires, connecting each of the leaves respectively with the adjacent outer plate. The amount of disturbance in the electric equilibrium of the outer plates produced by interposing a plate of the dielectric substance to be tried, after charging the middle plate, was taken as a measure of the specific inductive capacity of that dielectric. By varying the size and