id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 14012 Browne, G. F. (George Forrest) Ice-Caves of France and Switzerland .txt text/plain 103583 3870 70 The existence of natural ice-caves at depths varying from 50 to 200 feet leaving an entrance 2 or 3 feet high to an inner cave--the glacière. the entrance to the cave is by a hole in the roof, which exposes the ice vertical, but sloped the wrong way, caving in under the stream of ice; time that the angle formed by the ice-wall and the slope of stones was lower parts of the cave, and the ice-floor is formed where the frost the lower cave, and the surface of the ice-wall there, gave no lower cave, for the ice-stream reached then a higher point of the wall, taken near the cave, when they either ice the water they have brought find their way back to the ice-cave, and thence to the foot of the rock observations of 'cold caves', or the account of the mass of ice and ./cache/14012.txt ./txt/14012.txt