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werben, benen bie erßeren wdbrettbber troefuen 5al;rd*
mountains of Adowa, nothing resembling in stape
to those of Europe, nor Ind eld, any other country.
Theis sides were all perpenticular rocks, high like
stuples, or obelisks, and. broken into a thousand dif-
' ferent forms, p. 125. 11 ir not the extreme height of
the mountains in Abyssinia, that occasions surprise,
but the number of them, and the extraordinary
forms the present to the' ege. Some of them arc
Hast, thin, and square, in shape of a hear’th-stone,
or slab, that scarre would serrn to have base sufficient
to resist the action of the winds. Sume'arc
like pyramids, others like obelisks or prisms, and
some, the neost extraordinary of all the rest, pyramids
pitched upon their points, with their base
' uppermost, which, if it was possible, as it is not,
they could have been so formed in the beginning,
would fie strong objections to our received ideas of
gravity.
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ierbrficfelt worben, aid trgenb eine große ©ebtrgfette
in Europa. f)ie Gebirge bet fogenannten&bebatfcfiett
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fefiarfe Spt|eti, ©raten unb (Scfen, wie bte urfprung*
(td)eu [Berge uttferd Srbtbcild, fonbern ftc ftnb faß
1) ^.<8. III. 71. Hamhammon is a mountain of black
■ stones, almost calcined by the violent heat of.the
hew. This is the boundary of the district; etc,
a) Bruce I. 3 85—188 P*