Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 62759 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 73 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 illustration 4 water 4 time 4 rock 4 foot 3 great 3 form 3 North 3 New 3 Mr. 3 Cave 3 CHAPTER 2 sea 2 place 2 find 2 earth 2 cave 2 South 2 Professor 2 Limestone 2 July 2 Glacière 2 Georges 2 Europe 2 England 2 August 1 way 1 turkish 1 temperature 1 surface 1 stalactite 1 russian 1 page 1 mountain 1 meter 1 man 1 like 1 large 1 ice 1 high 1 french 1 formation 1 christian 1 air 1 Wookey 1 Wind 1 Wells 1 Wales 1 Vesuvius 1 Turks Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2351 ice 2174 cave 1909 water 1705 foot 1679 rock 1237 time 1143 part 1002 earth 981 way 975 place 923 surface 898 air 888 mountain 824 side 692 year 686 sea 650 floor 633 wall 625 stream 612 man 608 meter 598 day 579 point 560 temperature 556 snow 527 fact 523 page 518 mile 505 case 490 entrance 489 form 485 stone 463 region 454 work 450 action 440 line 439 distance 433 river 427 end 422 slope 418 winter 416 roof 410 glacière 408 passage 408 formation 402 land 399 cavern 398 bottom 396 depth 390 heat Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4033 _ 389 Cave 301 Mr. 253 de 226 M. 177 Footnote 167 Professor 165 vol 154 . 153 Dr. 148 Limestone 139 S. 135 Alps 132 North 132 A. 128 I. 123 F. 122 E. 120 Glacière 117 New 112 Hole 104 River 104 Ice 103 St. 102 August 101 C. 100 South 100 Mountains 95 Fugger 95 England 94 July 93 Part 92 Eishöhlen 91 CHAPTER 89 | 89 Great 87 CAVE 85 America 82 la 82 Europe 80 Lake 76 Photo 75 Pasha 74 Nature 73 Hills 69 des 69 Cavern 68 Mount 68 II 68 Alpine Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6157 it 3230 we 2338 they 2138 he 1835 i 968 them 598 us 457 him 429 me 267 you 225 itself 168 himself 162 she 112 themselves 108 one 82 ourselves 60 myself 35 her 13 herself 4 yourself 4 thee 4 mine 3 theirs 3 oneself 2 ours 2 his 1 £600 1 windhole 1 wane 1 vp 1 vnto 1 treateth 1 thyself 1 jenolan"--that 1 je 1 ib 1 highlander,--they 1 ce 1 --ice 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24458 be 6282 have 1601 find 1173 see 1162 make 1022 do 970 take 941 form 863 come 702 say 692 go 669 give 637 know 525 seem 494 call 474 fall 473 show 473 bring 466 become 427 lie 426 pass 421 appear 397 reach 395 cover 356 leave 334 lead 331 follow 325 rise 321 look 311 get 305 contain 304 stand 286 produce 282 begin 280 descend 272 remain 269 cut 267 flow 267 enter 262 describe 255 tell 251 note 246 carry 243 break 233 run 230 turn 230 fill 229 think 221 occur 220 move Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2665 not 1684 great 1512 so 1380 more 1198 very 1159 other 1078 up 963 only 953 down 897 large 857 long 831 about 823 many 816 most 810 small 800 high 768 now 751 out 748 much 689 then 683 such 674 little 674 first 657 well 643 as 626 low 603 same 560 far 534 also 526 away 513 here 450 thus 444 even 425 still 412 old 410 few 407 cold 397 however 393 deep 370 there 363 less 352 almost 345 good 333 often 328 on 326 probably 320 several 313 again 308 off 305 considerable Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 203 most 142 least 102 great 92 high 81 low 79 good 70 large 33 near 26 fine 23 early 22 farth 17 slight 17 long 16 bad 14 old 13 Most 12 late 12 deep 11 strong 11 hot 11 big 10 small 10 grand 9 simple 9 pure 9 cold 7 short 7 common 6 narrow 6 heavy 5 wide 5 rich 5 lovely 5 lofty 5 furth 5 easy 4 warm 4 manif 4 fit 4 fair 4 eld 4 dry 3 thick 3 innermost 2 wild 2 thin 2 southernmost 2 soft 2 rare 2 noble Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 613 most 32 well 30 least 2 fast 1 worst 1 shortest 1 long 1 hard 1 fittest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/3/5/17354/17354-h/17354-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/7/3/5/17354/17354-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 cave is about 7 ice does not 4 cave is not 4 ice is not 4 ice is sometimes 3 air is not 3 cave was visible 3 day was clear 3 day was cool 3 earth is so 3 ice is due 3 ice is probably 3 ice was not 3 ice was visible 3 mountains were made 3 water does not 3 water is so 2 _ came in 2 _ is not 2 air came forth 2 air does not 2 air has nothing 2 air is cold 2 air is greatest 2 air is hottest 2 air was perfectly 2 air was still 2 cave does not 2 cave is so 2 cave was about 2 cave was rather 2 cave was so 2 cave was still 2 caves are cold 2 caves is due 2 caves is not 2 day was hot 2 earth is about 2 earth is mainly 2 earth is round 2 earth was once 2 floor was about 2 ice had not 2 ice has greater 2 ice has never 2 ice is abundantly 2 ice is more 2 ice is once 2 ice was due 2 ice was hard Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not rare 1 air does not perhaps 1 air is not much 1 cave does not necessarily 1 cave had no greater 1 cave has not yet 1 cave have no great 1 cave is not so 1 cave is not thoroughly 1 cave showed no signs 1 cave was not worth 1 caves is not particularly 1 earth were not round 1 fact is not so 1 feet is not mere 1 floor shows no spot 1 floor were not exactly 1 ice are not due 1 ice does no cutting 1 ice is not fluid 1 ice is not great 1 ice was not very 1 man are not offensively 1 man was not long 1 man was not pleasant 1 mountain been no such 1 mountains is not thoroughly 1 rock is not firmly 1 rocks are not easily 1 rocks have not greatly 1 seas is not rigid 1 stream has not once 1 stream is not much 1 temperature was not abnormally 1 temperature was not at 1 time is no longer 1 time is not very 1 walls are not smoothly 1 water has no capacity 1 water has not only 1 water is no sooner 1 water is not too 1 way was not ordinary A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 53063 author = Baker, Ernest A. (Ernest Albert) title = The Netherworld of Mendip Explorations in the great caverns of Somerset, Yorkshire, Derbyshire, and elsewhere date = keywords = Balch; Cavern; Cheddar; Hill; Hole; Holmfirth; Limestone; Mendip; Mr.; Photo; Wells; Wookey; cave; great; illustration summary = Near the entrance in Gough''s Cave a fairly deep hole The great Limestone cavern formed by the action of the swallet streams The Long Hole at Cheddar, high in the cliffs above Gough''s Cave, of the caves in the Peak, in Wookey Hole, and in the cavern of Marble [Illustration: IN THE FIRST CHAMBER, WOOKEY HOLE CAVERN. [Illustration: STALACTITE GROTTO: NEW CHAMBERS, WOOKEY HOLE CAVE. he reached a point nearly 500 feet below the cave mouth, and distant the cave, and a few feet above it is a flood-way, a short, low tunnel, From this chamber the stream quickly descends into the great Water Gough''s, or the Great Cavern, a large body of water wells up at the Cheddar Water than about the stream flowing out of Wookey Hole. steep hole into a large cavern through which the stream runs from the presently into an open passage, 25 or 30 feet high, with the stream id = 52216 author = Balch, Edwin Swift title = Glacières; or, Freezing Caverns date = keywords = August; Cave; Dr.; Eishöhlen; Fugger; Georges; Glacière; III; Ice; July; June; Mr.; New; Philadelphia; Professor; Saint; September; meter; page summary = rock walls is sufficiently high to prevent ice from forming in winter rocks, caves without apparent draughts in summer and containing ice, a small cave or hole containing ice near Mapleton, Pennsylvania, but the Farrandsville Cave as near as is possible, as the ice forms in the caves where the temperatures sink so low, that ice forms. the entrance snow and ice slopes of some of the open pit caves such as neighborhood of glacière caves generally believe that the ice of glacière caves, almost always suggest that to form the ice there must caves where the heavy cold air preserves the ice by remaining pent that ice begins to form in a cave as soon as the temperature of the _Ice Caves_, etc., page 1.)--Mr. Browne observed in 1864 a temperature temperature in the cave so much that the water freezes into ice. Ice near entrance of caves, 152 id = 14012 author = Browne, G. F. (George Forrest) title = Ice-Caves of France and Switzerland date = keywords = August; Besançon; CHAPTER; Christian; Footnote; France; Geneva; Georges; Glacière; July; Jura; Livres; P.M.; Professor; Thury; cave; foot; form; french; ice; large; rock; temperature; time; water summary = 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 id = 39621 author = Cook, Samuel title = The Jenolan Caves: An Excursion in Australian Wonderland date = keywords = Arch; CHAPTER; Casket; Cave; Coach; Devil; Grand; House; Imperial; Jenolan; Lot; New; South; Sydney; foot; formation; illustration; like; rock; stalactite summary = THE FOSSIL BONE CAVE, THE SPARKLING ROCK, AND THE CRYSTAL of a village and a mountain nine miles north of the caves, and, like the arch are caves running obliquely into the mountain 10, 15, and 20 feet, the roof and small stalagmites on ledges near the floor of the cave, and the floor to the roof of the cave; and seeing that it is about 30 feet At the far end of the cave the floor is covered with little The roof is about 100 feet high, and the sides of the cave are the roof above the Fossil Bone Cave is a rare stalactite about 20 feet The Helena Cave is about 60 yards long, 15 to 20 feet high, and varies Another beautiful feature in the Helena Cave is a formation under a mass the rock floor there was in these caves what looked exactly like a id = 58361 author = Curzon, Robert title = Armenia: A year at Erzeroom, and on the frontiers of Russia, Turkey, and Persia date = keywords = Armenia; CHAPTER; Church; Constantinople; Emperor; England; Erzeroom; Hossein; King; Mohammedan; Pasha; Persia; Sea; Shah; St.; Sultan; Trebizond; Turkey; Turks; christian; great; man; place; russian; time; turkish summary = Koords, headed in our days by the great chieftains Beder Khan Bey, round towers, with conical roofs, like old-fashioned pigeon-houses, What the Pasha looked like, and what manner of man he was, it was like every body else in this country, and a long nose and a black best places, over round stones as big as a man''s head, with larger a rich man''s house is prodigious, the turfed roof forming a small "One day passes much like another at Erzeroom, and though there Now it came to pass, once upon a time, that the great of the good old times, I one day proceeded to the citadel to see young bears one day, who lived in our house for some time. A curious episode in the history of Armenia took place in the time The country which was called Armenia in ancient times is now divided id = 43826 author = Hutchinson, H. N. (Henry Neville) title = The Story of the Hills: A Book About Mountains for General Readers. date = keywords = Alpine; Alps; Britain; England; Europe; Great; Highlands; North; Scotland; Switzerland; Wales; earth; find; foot; form; high; illustration; mountain; place; rock; sea; time; water summary = a little observation goes a long way to help them to read mountain In old times people looked with awe upon the mountains, and of the rocks of which mountain chains are composed, in observing higher parts of mountain-ranges the cold is so great that the water that valleys were rents in the rocks of the earth''s crust formed forced their way up from subterranean regions into the rocks forming among the rocks of mountains far away. rock-forming materials brought down to the seas at the present day. for mountains _are_ formed of hard rocks; but at the same time we frequently does, buried in mountain rocks the fossil remains of not all; for in every mountain region we find that the rocks have steep valley, and great masses of hard rock stand out as bold hills crumpling of the rocks of mountains produced, is not at present id = 17354 author = Owen, Luella Agnes title = Cave Regions of the Ozarks and Black Hills date = keywords = Black; Cave; Chamber; County; Crystal; Hills; Limestone; Marble; Missouri; Mr.; Ozark; River; Room; Spring; Wind; foot; illustration; water summary = forming the descent into Mammoth Cave is two hundred and thirty-two feet "The entrance to the cave, being thirty-eight feet lower than this bed of the crystals, show that the cave was completely filled with water passage of seventy feet length, we saw a narrow ledge of fine crystals, Unfortunately the quantity of water in the cave at the time of the The entrance to the cave is through a hole about two feet high by three Where the great spring forces its way to the surface, the water is a water now standing in the cave, and is not more than ten feet long by cave''s first beauty, the Red Room. Lake Room, where is Crystal Lake, the largest body of water in the cave. present natural entrance to the cave were the only way into this room deposits of still water as in other portions of the cave, but the id = 14999 author = Pemble, William title = A Briefe Introduction to Geography date = keywords = Earth; North; South; Sunne summary = 1 _The earth and the water doe make one globe, i.e., one round or The naturall place of the water is to bee aboue the earth, and water, and let them both fall downe together vpon the earth from not bee, if the earth and water were two seuerall round bodies globes and let (_a_) bee the Center of the earth and (_b_) the center of the water; fr[~o] (_c_) some high place aboue the earth shadow of the earth and water cast vpon the Moone is round, and let (_X.O.R._) the inward Circle bee the earth, (_Q.S.P._) the Let (_X.O._) bee the Circle of the earth, and the greater the earth stand Eastwards in (_A_) the shadow of any body vpon the Heauens moue in one day, till the same point come to the place place wee aymed at, but let the earth moue, the stone will not id = 18562 author = Shaler, Nathaniel Southgate title = Outlines of the Earth''s History: A Popular Study in Physiography date = keywords = America; Atlantic; Europe; Greenland; Gulf; Mississippi; Mountains; Nature; New; North; Vesuvius; air; earth; find; form; great; illustration; rock; sea; surface; time; water; way summary = we can readily note very great changes in its form since the land forms and falls in the air, as the streams flow to the sea, and as the Meanwhile the sea, because of the great heat-storing power of water, The great water store of the earth is contained in two distinct water in the beds, which in time is returned to the earth''s surface by land, where a great body of water journeys like an alternating river water tends, of course, to fall downward toward the earth''s surface, their heat through the water, and thus form ice on their surfaces, The crevice water of the earth, although forming at no time more than penetrates far below the earth''s surface or the open-air streams which material at the time when the rocks were formed in the sea. the surface to very great depths, so that not only is the rock water id = 33760 author = Udden, Johan August title = Fossil Ice Crystals: An Instance of the Practical Value of "Pure Science" date = keywords = PLATE; Texas; illustration summary = Recently I have found that these ice crystal marks are quite common at one horizon in the Eagle Ford beds of Brewster County, in Texas. that the formation of ice crystals in wet mud has been observed in the in the discovery of the layer which carries ice crystal markings in Photographs of fossil imprints of ice crystals on flags of the Cuesta Blanca in Brewster County, Texas, and shows casts of crystals Photograph of fossil casts of a close tangle of ice crystals than any of the recent ice crystal marks figured here, but equally Photograph of fossil casts of ice crystals seen on some stony Photograph of fossil casts of ice crystals seen on the under of mud in which ice crystals had recently formed, in Rock Island, mud in which ice crystals had formed, in Rock Island, Illinois, soon mud in which ice crystals had recently formed, in Rock Island, Ill., and