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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 84834 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 illustration 4 roman 4 Mr. 4 Dr. 4 Age 3 find 3 british 3 St. 3 Scotland 3 Saxon 3 New 3 London 3 King 3 Europe 3 English 3 England 3 Egypt 3 Britain 2 stone 2 man 2 West 2 Welsh 2 Syria 2 Stone 2 Sir 2 Queen 2 Museum 2 Kent 2 John 2 Ireland 2 III 2 Greek 2 Great 2 Cave 2 Bronze 1 tomb 1 time 1 thing 1 scottish 1 pottery 1 plant 1 pictish 1 past 1 like 1 irish 1 great 1 figs 1 fig 1 european 1 egyptian Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1742 man 1499 stone 1222 time 1114 p. 1093 name 907 illustration 830 day 810 word 758 place 694 form 666 foot 663 year 641 century 640 fact 595 object 584 part 568 cave 549 bone 545 work 512 head 505 period 504 way 493 side 488 water 478 people 463 life 458 inch 454 animal 443 hand 442 site 430 country 425 fig 422 point 408 thing 407 end 400 age 399 child 393 kind 392 epoch 389 tree 380 history 378 horse 377 bronze 370 tomb 363 world 363 river 356 ground 350 island 344 number 335 fragment Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 19910 _ 1240 St. 472 Fig 466 Mr. 387 Dr. 381 M. 370 Egypt 361 King 344 England 327 Cave 319 Britain 318 Fleetfoot 306 London 306 FIG 286 English 281 Sir 275 Scotland 273 John 272 vol 267 . 242 Great 242 Age 224 Footnote 217 Europe 215 Munro 213 de 212 Stone 205 Welsh 204 illustr 203 Ireland 189 T.N. 189 Museum 183 New 182 Hill 180 God 179 British 174 R. 171 Saxon 171 J. 170 Virginia 170 Professor 164 pp 158 W. 157 Bronze 156 Queen 150 Mary 148 c. 147 Irish 147 Flaker 146 Greek Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6005 it 3018 they 2748 he 2144 we 1744 i 1524 them 766 him 727 you 524 us 465 she 314 me 286 himself 264 themselves 250 itself 247 one 124 her 49 myself 43 thee 37 ourselves 29 herself 14 yourself 10 thyself 7 mine 4 yours 4 ours 4 his 4 ay 4 ''s 3 ye 3 thy 3 oneself 2 ''em 1 wh 1 theirs 1 s 1 masonry.--p. 1 i·f 1 ian 1 hers 1 eva 1 divine)--when 1 cadlands"--there 1 au Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 29953 be 7507 have 2036 find 1695 make 1498 do 1238 know 1140 see 993 say 844 use 729 take 714 come 687 give 657 mean 609 call 547 seem 531 show 530 think 499 go 436 represent 426 stand 415 tell 415 form 398 exist 386 accord 382 suppose 369 become 353 follow 346 appear 341 hold 329 bring 328 describe 322 live 316 discover 311 look 305 leave 296 carry 291 bear 288 place 287 lie 285 begin 278 contain 277 speak 277 belong 276 write 275 remain 263 connote 258 learn 252 cut 251 build 246 name Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3113 not 1335 so 1306 more 1287 other 1145 very 1098 great 1012 also 996 only 981 same 917 now 847 first 821 most 782 many 778 old 765 still 744 up 723 ancient 719 early 700 then 683 long 670 such 668 well 662 out 662 little 653 as 631 large 628 small 555 much 549 thus 530 here 527 even 516 once 511 good 484 probably 470 far 442 however 441 down 416 certain 409 sometimes 389 perhaps 387 there 383 few 380 almost 378 own 377 present 368 human 365 high 361 new 342 about 337 modern Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 174 most 170 early 149 least 141 good 62 high 59 great 48 old 44 large 44 Most 29 late 24 near 18 low 18 fine 13 slight 10 rich 10 common 10 brave 9 wide 9 strong 9 small 8 deep 8 close 7 long 7 bad 6 wise 6 topmost 6 strange 6 manif 5 short 5 safe 5 rude 5 pure 5 poor 5 new 5 hard 5 farth 5 fair 4 southernmost 4 simple 4 rough 4 noble 4 narrow 4 mere 4 big 3 wild 3 warm 3 straight 3 soft 3 remote 3 loath Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 647 most 37 well 37 least 3 early 2 highest 1 wrest 1 widest 1 near 1 long 1 brightest 1 ana_--the Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 35 _ is _ 31 _ meant _ 16 _ means _ 16 _ was _ 12 _ is radically 6 _ was originally 5 _ are radically 5 _ is probably 5 men went out 4 _ has already 4 _ is also 4 _ was also 4 form was common 4 men did not 3 _ is evidently 3 _ is not 3 _ is still 3 _ is welsh 3 _ see _ 3 _ was no 3 _ was once 3 _ was seemingly 3 epoch did not 3 man does not 3 men were angry 3 name is _ 3 name means _ 3 people were glad 3 time went on 2 _ according _ 2 _ are almost 2 _ are still 2 _ becomes _ 2 _ being _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ is apparent 2 _ is apparently 2 _ is due 2 _ is equivalent 2 _ is here 2 _ is identical 2 _ is manifest 2 _ is now 2 _ is obvious 2 _ is possibly 2 _ is presumably 2 _ is seemingly 2 _ is suggestive 2 _ knew _ 2 _ make _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 _ was no doubt 2 place is no more 1 _ being no doubt 1 _ do not essentially 1 _ is not necessarily 1 _ means not only 1 _ meant not only 1 epoch is not yet 1 epoch make no attempts 1 head shows no evidence 1 man did not then 1 man had no existence 1 man had no idea 1 man has no more 1 man knew no weapon 1 men had no trouble 1 men were not afraid 1 name is not certainly 1 name was no longer 1 names are no doubt 1 objects are not often 1 objects have no business 1 part was not more 1 people had no books 1 period was no doubt 1 places are not older 1 stone has not too 1 stones are not now 1 stones is not defunct 1 stones was not at 1 stones was not inconsistent 1 time are not sufficient 1 time brings no such 1 time stood not only 1 times giving no signal 1 word is no doubt 1 word was no doubt 1 work is not monotonous 1 works were not fishermen A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 16325 author = Allen, Grant title = Science in Arcady date = keywords = Age; Britain; Bronze; Caer; Chichester; Chronicle; Eliza; England; English; Europe; Fiesole; Florence; Hastings; Kent; London; Lucy; Mr.; New; Saxon; South; St.; Sussex; Thanet; Wantsum; Weald; Welsh; West; american; british; celtic; european; great; like; plant; roman summary = life on every hand; a thousand different plants and flowers in the I had always had a great liking for the study of material plants and migrated, that comparatively little change took place in their forms or island after their long sea-voyage on bits of broken forest-trees--a Birds, I early noticed, are always great carriers of fruit-seeds, of kinds of flowering plants included in the modern flora of my little creatures are remote products of the Great Ice Age, and by this time, forms of life; in their case the power of producing fresh organisms present time of day, that such tints in the vegetable world act like great arm of the sea which stretched like a gulf far up towards the India--the Deccan, as we call it--formed a great island like Australia, The way the plant really eats is little known to gardeners, but very progressive forms, like the great pipe-fish himself, where the folds id = 41785 author = Bayley, Harold title = Archaic England An Essay in Deciphering Prehistory from Megalithic Monuments, Earthworks, Customs, Coins, Place-names, and Faerie Superstitions date = keywords = Age; Akerman; Alban; Ancient; Bride; Britain; Celtic; Christian; Church; Cornish; Cornwall; Crete; Cross; Day; Didron; Dr.; Druids; East; Egypt; England; English; Etruria; Europe; Eye; FIG; Fairy; Father; Fire; Folklore; French; George; God; Golden; Good; Great; Greek; Heaven; Hill; Holy; Horse; Iconography; Ireland; Irish; Janus; John; Jupiter; Kent; King; Lady; Latin; Life; London; Lord; Maiden; Man; Margaret; Mary; Michael; Mother; Mount; Mr.; New; Nicholas; Old; Park; Patrick; Peter; Queen; Saxon; Scotland; Sir; St.; Stone; Street; Sun; Troy; Wales; Welsh; West; White; british; figs; illustration; roman summary = bearing the emblem of the God. Later came stone circles and megalithic monuments in various forms, later generations forgot the original meanings of the ancient terms; and ancient: for Brandon was an abode of flint makers in the Old Stone Age. Not only the pits but even the tools show little change: the picks which why this term, even possibly in Old Stone times, meant _hill_. ancient places, hills, and rivers named, I am persuaded that the world In all probability the present-day church of St. John was built on the actual site of the original _Shen stone_ or rock; science, came probably the Greek word _gnosis_, meaning _knowledge_. According to Sir John Rhys, Elen the Fair of Britain figures like St. Ursula as the leader of the heavenly virgins; St. Levan''s cell is shown _trinidad_ is evidently a very old Iberian word, for its British form probability the word _virgin_ originally carried the same meaning as id = 13575 author = British Museum title = How to Observe in Archaeology Suggestions for Travellers in the Near and Middle East date = keywords = Age; Antiquities; B.C.; Egypt; Fig; Greek; III; Mesopotamia; Palestine; Period; Syria; antiquity; find; pottery; roman summary = Hand-made wares of light-coloured clay, with painted decoration, Hand-made wares of black or other dark clay, with painted decoration token of date not earlier than the end of the Bronze Age. The glazepainted wares of the Greek island-world occasionally wandered to the In the Later Iron Age or Historic Period, from the seventh century Monuments, mostly with inscriptions, are generally tombs in stone, Bronze Age, early period (before 2000 B.C.): polished red ware, Bronze Age, middle period (2000-1500 B.C.): polished red ware, and Bronze Age, late period (1500-1200 B.C.): degenerate polished red Early Iron Age: wheel-made pottery, either white or bright red, (a) Early period to about 1500 B.C. Cist-graves made of rough stone slabs, near crude brick houses. Age III: scarabs: figure-amulets), Rhodian (pottery), Attic (coins, Cyprus, 54 ff.; Law of Antiquities, 97; pottery from, in Palestine, Geometric bronze age ware in Greece, 36; period, 40. id = 26603 author = Dopp, Katharine Elizabeth title = The Later Cave-Men date = keywords = Antler; Bison; Cave; Chew; Flaker; Fleetfoot; Greybeard; illustration; thing summary = Do you think that the later Cave-men will hunt in just the same way This time Chew-chew began with a story of the early Cave-men. And so the Cave-men learned new ways of making and using spears. Can you think why the Cave-men used stone for their spear points What tools did the Cave-men need in making flint spear points? When the men worked on their flint points, Fleetfoot liked to play Ever since the reindeer went away the Cave-men had been looking for And now the great herd of bison had come, and the Cave-men were eager When the Cave-men first learned to boil water, do you think they Why did the bison go away from the Cave-men''s hunting grounds each _How the Cave-men Tested Fleetfoot and Flaker_ _How the Cave-men Tested Fleetfoot and Flaker_ _Tell a story of the way the Cave-men tested Fleetfoot and Flaker._ id = 42380 author = Figuier, Louis title = Primitive Man date = keywords = Age; Aurignac; Boucher; Bronze; Cave; Denmark; Desor; Dr.; Epoch; Europe; France; Germain; Habitations; Horn; Lacustrine; Lake; Museum; Neuchâtel; Reindeer; Saint; Stone; Switzerland; fig; find; illustration; man summary = The Man of the Great Bear and Mammoth Epoch lived in Caverns-shaped flints and other implements belonging to primitive man, existing If we place side by side the skull of a man belonging to the Stone Age, [Illustration: Fig. 2.--Skull of a Man belonging to the Stone Age (the [Illustration: Fig. 16.--Man in the Great Bear and Mammoth Epoch.] The Man of the Great Bear and Mammoth Epoch lived in Caverns--Bone caves belonging to the Stone Age. In the New World various bone-caverns have been explored. this head of a man belonging to the epoch of the great bear and mammoth, [Illustration: Fig. 39.--Man of the Reindeer Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 76.--Man of the Polished-stone Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 80.--Fishing during the Polished-stone Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 87.--Danish Axe of the Polished-stone Epoch.] [Illustration: Fig. 149--A Swiss Lake Village of the Bronze Epoch.] Everywhere, man must have had his Stone Age, his Bronze Epoch, and his id = 20902 author = Lang, Andrew title = The Clyde Mystery a Study in Forgeries and Folklore date = keywords = Arunta; Australia; Bruce; Clyde; Dr.; Dumbuck; Dunbuie; Langbank; Mr.; Munro; Scotland; stone summary = structures were throughout built of stone, as in Dr. Munro''s theory, objects of stone, bone, and shell are so remarkable and archaic in OBJECTS OF STONE.--Nine spear-heads, like arrow-points, of slate, six he writes, "are strongly indicative of a much earlier period than postRoman; they point to an occupation of a tribe in their Stone Age." any one, four objects of shell, stone, and bone, which he had up his "objects of slate and stone from Dumbuck." a crannog containing objects of the stone, bronze, and iron ages. Thus, on objects from Dumbuck (Munro, plate XV. like analogues of the disputed Clyde stones, but Dr. Munro, owing to the Two perforated stone plaques from Volosova, figured by Dr. Munro (pp. ." This is exactly what Dr. Munro says about the small stone objects from the three Clyde stations. On all this weighty mass of stone objects, Dr. Munro writes thus: id = 45741 author = Noël Hume, Ivor title = Smithsonian Institution - United States National Museum - Bulletin 249 Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology Papers 52-54 on Archeology date = keywords = Clay; Colonial; County; English; James; John; Jones; London; Museum; National; Neck; New; North; Pit; Porteus; Robert; Rogers; T.N.; Tutter; Virginia; Williamsburg; Yorktown; illustration summary = Excavations at Tutter''s Neck in James City County, Virginia, occasional fragments of pottery, glass, and tobacco-pipe stems. [Illustration: Figure 8.--FRAGMENTS OF ENGLISH DELFTWARE, stoneware, [Illustration: Figure 10.--AN ELABORATE STEM of English glass, London, [Illustration: Figure 16.--DRAWINGS OF TOBACCO-PIPE BOWL SHAPES 8. Tobacco-pipe bowl, white clay, form similar to no. Fragment of tobacco-pipe bowl and stem, clay, white surface and Tobacco-pipe bowl and stem fragment, white clay, the form very Tobacco-pipe bowl, fragment only, clay, white surface and grey James City County home site at Tutter''s Neck was excavated in 1961. included English white salt-glazed sherds as well as bottle fragments wine-bottle fragments dating about 1690-1710, brown stoneware, Yorktown Figure 4 illustrates a mug fragment from Williamsburg with a large, [Illustration: Figure 4.--YORKTOWN STONEWARE MUG FRAGMENT marred by [Illustration: Figure 5.--YORKTOWN STONEWARE MUG, found in James City 8. Bottle, brown salt-glazed stoneware, neck and handle fragment 19 illustrates two bottle-shaped vessels of Virginia earthenware id = 27354 author = Simpson, James Young title = Archæological Essays, Vol. 1 date = keywords = A.D.; Anglo; Archæology; Bede; Britain; Cat; Columba; Cubit; Dr.; Edinburgh; England; Footnote; Great; Hengist; Horsa; Inchcolm; Ireland; Isaac; King; Mr.; Newton; Picts; Professor; Pyramid; Sacred; Saxon; Scotland; Sir; Smyth; Society; St.; Vetta; british; irish; pictish; roman; scottish; stone summary = The paper on "An old Stone-roofed Cell or Oratory in the Island of A copy of this paper on Inchcolm having been sent to his friend Dr. Petrie of Dublin, author of the well-known essay on the "Early in which the writer ascribes the old small stone-roofed church at [Footnote 4: _The Sculptured Stones of Scotland_, vol. ON AN OLD STONE-ROOFED CELL OR ORATORY IN THE ISLAND OF INCHCOLM.[16] basalt stone, 2 feet long, forms a portion of the floor of the building Stone roofs are found in some old Irish buildings, formed on the [Footnote 38: See his great work on the _Sculptured Stones of Scotland_, [Footnote 65: Though Roman houses, temples, and other buildings of stone At the time at which Professor Smyth was living at the Pyramids, Mr. Inglis of Glasgow visited it, and, for correct measurement, laid bare in Professor Smyth''s _Life and Work at the Great Pyramid_; yet in that id = 16160 author = Weigall, Arthur E. P. Brome (Arthur Edward Pearse Brome) title = The Treasury of Ancient Egypt Miscellaneous Chapters on Ancient Egyptian History and Archaeology date = keywords = Akhnaton; Amon; Asia; Aton; Dynasty; Egypt; Horemheb; III; King; Nile; Pharaoh; Photo; Queen; Syria; Thebes; Tiy; Wenamon; egyptian; find; illustration; man; past; time; tomb summary = ancient Egyptian history brought the culture of that country to the our life and the centuries of time." Let us give history and archæology town of Damanhur in Lower Egypt is said to be the place at which a great the Egyptians held Syria for some years, though little is now known of attention of the Anglo-Egyptian officials, and placed Egypt before their you study history." These words hold good when we deal with Egyptian of Egypt may be read upon the walls of her ancient temples and tombs. "When Death comes," says a certain sage of ancient Egypt, "it seizes the countries, and in Egypt it exists at the present day in more than one great nobles: in Upper Egypt, Herhor, High Priest of Amon-Ra, was ''Life and Times of Akhnaton, Pharaoh of Egypt.'' The home of Egyptian antiquities is Egypt, a fact which will Egypt itself is the true museum for Egyptian antiquities.