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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 96039 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Professor 4 Mr. 2 White 2 July 2 Gray 2 Glacier 2 Chamouni 2 Blanc 2 August 1 structure 1 snow 1 sidenote 1 page 1 motion 1 meter 1 light 1 illustration 1 ice 1 good 1 footnote 1 foot 1 Wopper 1 Winthrop 1 Willum 1 Washington 1 Van 1 United 1 Trélaporte 1 Trump 1 Tom 1 Talèfre 1 Takhoma 1 Tacoma 1 Susan 1 Stoutley 1 Stevens 1 States 1 Solomon 1 Sluiskin 1 Slingsby 1 Simond 1 September 1 Selborne 1 Saint 1 Rosa 1 Roby 1 River 1 Rhone 1 Randolph 1 Rainier Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2552 ice 1549 glacier 1078 snow 1058 foot 1018 mountain 806 rock 777 cave 770 side 715 time 680 water 652 air 638 slope 633 place 610 day 608 meter 549 man 524 point 489 page 481 way 428 summit 366 surface 366 line 362 part 355 sidenote 344 temperature 337 name 336 motion 328 portion 327 year 325 mass 323 case 319 mile 316 hand 312 winter 310 valley 308 end 307 light 297 fact 293 guide 285 summer 285 heat 281 stream 274 hour 262 wall 261 river 260 ° 257 ridge 257 eye 255 crevasse 252 night Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3396 _ 461 Mr. 450 Captain 439 Professor 378 Glacier 336 de 306 Lewis 296 Mount 269 Park 253 Rainier 225 Mrs 181 Lawrence 176 River 170 Tom 164 vol 163 Emma 160 du 160 Gillie 156 Wopper 154 Mer 154 Glace 150 M. 141 August 135 Stoutley 126 July 123 I. 122 C. 120 . 119 Nisqually 117 Mont 116 Forbes 111 Ice 109 Roby 108 E. 107 Dr. 102 Fig 101 Cowlitz 99 Part 99 Mountains 99 Chamouni 97 White 95 Fugger 94 Nita 94 Fred 94 Antoine 92 Eishöhlen 88 Blanc 85 Creek 84 Géant 83 Susan Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4986 it 3273 i 2837 he 2256 we 1547 they 1226 you 910 them 812 me 760 him 621 us 505 she 260 himself 222 itself 210 her 160 themselves 157 myself 106 one 66 ourselves 56 ''em 33 yourself 22 ''s 19 herself 7 hisself 6 mine 6 em 5 thee 4 yours 4 ye 4 theirs 4 his 3 ice 3 d''you 2 ours 2 oneself 1 you''re 1 yerself 1 windhole 1 pelf 1 je 1 i,--we 1 i''m 1 ground.= 1 elias 1 --ice Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16403 be 4689 have 1178 say 1167 do 961 find 932 see 797 make 658 go 603 come 570 take 524 form 512 know 503 give 500 look 462 reach 414 seem 388 fall 378 think 362 pass 360 call 355 leave 355 follow 350 get 345 lie 339 rise 326 become 301 show 300 stand 297 appear 282 descend 280 produce 249 cover 242 turn 238 cross 236 begin 235 break 228 move 224 observe 209 tell 200 hear 195 place 194 lead 194 cut 192 fill 190 freeze 190 draw 189 remain 187 bring 187 ask 186 let Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2308 not 943 more 881 so 848 up 681 other 679 great 669 now 650 little 643 down 595 long 579 very 571 first 557 here 540 out 539 only 495 small 493 high 490 also 480 then 461 well 459 much 430 low 427 about 413 same 411 as 401 most 394 thus 394 good 367 large 366 however 358 such 357 far 352 old 350 many 306 there 306 deep 297 once 290 just 288 last 285 few 279 still 276 again 272 cold 267 away 263 several 252 too 246 soon 242 white 240 even 240 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 94 least 85 most 75 good 71 high 56 great 31 large 30 low 21 near 21 fine 19 slight 19 Most 15 deep 12 small 11 grand 10 bad 9 early 8 big 7 strong 7 steep 7 long 7 hot 6 late 5 warm 5 southw 5 pure 5 manif 5 easy 5 cold 4 topmost 4 swift 4 rich 4 quick 4 lofty 4 hard 4 furth 3 young 3 wise 3 wide 3 short 3 old 3 gentle 3 fresh 3 farth 3 close 3 bright 3 able 2 white 2 tall 2 slow 2 noble Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 316 most 24 least 17 well 2 southernmost 2 highest 1 surest 1 shortest 1 long 1 hard 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42314/42314-h/42314-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42314/42314-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/mountrainierreco00meanuoft 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 ice does not 7 _ was _ 6 _ do n''t 6 _ is _ 4 glacier is not 4 ice is sometimes 3 _ do _ 3 _ have _ 3 air was still 3 cave is about 3 day was cool 3 days gone by 3 glacier does not 3 ice is due 3 ice is not 3 ice is probably 3 ice was due 3 ice was not 2 _ am _ 2 _ is necessary 2 air came forth 2 air does not 2 air is thin 2 air was so 2 cave does not 2 cave is so 2 cave was visible 2 caves are cold 2 day was already 2 day was far 2 day was hot 2 glacier has recently 2 glacier is always 2 glacier is here 2 glacier is nearly 2 glaciers is due 2 ice has never 2 ice is always 2 ice is viscous 2 ice was hard 2 ice was sloppy 2 ice was transparent 2 man had ever 2 point is exactly 2 rocks are continually 2 slope is very 2 snow fell heavily 2 snow was much 2 snow was very 1 _ are _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 air does not perhaps 1 captain had not yet 1 cave does not necessarily 1 cave has not yet 1 cave is not thoroughly 1 feet are not yet 1 glacier does not long 1 glacier is not always 1 glacier is not wholly 1 glacier was no easy 1 glacier was not difficult 1 ice is not great 1 ice was not able 1 line was no longer 1 lines are not always 1 lines does not however 1 men are not idlers 1 mountains was not indeed 1 professor made no reply 1 rock had no such 1 rock showed no appreciable 1 sides are not only 1 snow was not new 1 way was not only A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43374 author = Allen, Willis Boyd title = Gulf and Glacier; or, The Percivals in Alaska date = keywords = Alaska; Baranov; Bess; Bessie; CHAPTER; Fred; Juneau; Kittie; Mort; Mr.; Pacific; Percival; Pet; Queen; Randolph; Selborne; Solomon; Tom; Winthrop; good summary = Randolph Burton made his way into the car, followed by his cousin Tom "Where are the girls?" inquired Randolph, turning to Tom. The car was filled with passengers, all talking at once, and besieging "Not yet, father," said Tom, throwing his arm lovingly over the man''s Randolph and Tom, with the girls, left the hotel early and walked for a "And Four, for the gentlemen," added the irrepressible Tom. Kittie and Bess soon disappeared behind their curtains, and the rest "Now," said Selborne, "let''s hear the rest of the railroad story, Mr. Houghton." I wandered with a bright young girl in our party, Miss Bessie Percival, "Let''s give them a helping hand," said Mr. Percival, passing over a "Look here, old fellow," cried Tom, "is it going to be this way all don''t it look like a boy''s barefoot mark?" exclaimed Tom, "Good-by," said Winthrop, taking her little brown hand with mock 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 = 21698 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Rivers of Ice date = keywords = Antoine; Blanc; Captain; Chamouni; Count; Croix; Emma; Gillie; Gray; Lawrence; Lewis; London; Miss; Monsieur; Mont; Mrs; Nita; Professor; Roby; Slingsby; Stoutley; Susan; White; Willum; Wopper summary = "Good morning, sir," said the little old woman, returning the bow with "Captain Wopper," said Mrs Roby, putting her hand lightly on the "Mrs Roby," said the Captain, "a gold-digging seaman don''t want no Thinking it better to be out of the way, the Captain said good-bye again We couldn''t," said the Captain, looking round the room, Captain Wopper said all this in a dubious tone, looking at the defiant "Captain Wopper," said Lewis Stoutley, in a subdued voice, when Lawrence When the hour was past, the Captain rose and said, "Now, Lewis, you''ll "What I mean, young man," said the Captain, sternly, "is best known to "They look like giant mushrooms," said Captain Wopper. The party consisted of the Professor, Captain Wopper, Lewis, Lawrence, "Captain Wopper," said Mrs Stoutley one morning, towards the end of "You have been a kind friend, Captain Wopper," said Mrs Stoutley, id = 34192 author = Tyndall, John title = The Glaciers of the Alps Being a narrative of excursions and ascents, an account of the origin and phenomena of glaciers and an exposition of the physical principles to which they are related date = keywords = Agassiz; Aiguille; Alps; August; Blanc; Chamouni; Fig; Forbes; Glace; Glacier; Géant; Huxley; July; Lauener; Mer; Montanvert; Monte; Mr.; Professor; Rhone; Rosa; Simond; Talèfre; Trélaporte; footnote; ice; illustration; light; motion; sidenote; snow; structure summary = glacier, formed by the snow and shattered ice which fall from the was directed as a place noted for avalanches; on this rock snow or ice glacier to be a sheet of ice spread out upon the slope of a mountain; On this day we saw some fine glacier tables; flat masses of rock, raised In the ice near Trélaporte the blue veins of the glacier are beautifully hardly reach the surface until they pass the snow-line of the glacier, glacier; but long ago the blue ice gave place to blue water. blue ice rifts, the stratified snow-precipices, the glaciers issuing direct heat of the sun, the ice underneath the moraines of glaciers At its origin then a glacier is snow--at its lower extremity it is ice. the snow of the mountains is converted into the ice of the glacier by [Sidenote: THE ICE AND THE GLACIER.] [Sidenote: CONSTITUTION OF GLACIER-ICE.] id = 42314 author = nan title = Mount Rainier, a Record of Exploration date = keywords = Allen; Carbon; Cascade; Cowlitz; Creek; Family; Glacier; Gray; Greene; Hooker; Indians; Longmire; Mount; Mountains; Mr.; Nisqually; Paradise; Park; Piper; Professor; Rainier; River; Sluiskin; States; Stevens; Tacoma; Takhoma; Trump; United; Van; Washington; White; foot summary = snow on the summit of the mountain adjoining Rainier on western side Falls; the stream we named Glacier Creek, and the mass of ice whence and White River glaciers, falling in distinct ice cascades for about peak rising about 3000 feet above the glaciers at its foot, so steep formed little mountain ridges having peaks nearly 100 feet high. This glacier forks near the foot of the steeper mountain slope, and than 10,000 feet below the summit of the mountain, the place of its falling on the lower slope of Mount Rainier is the Paradise Glacier. Rainier is the Carbon Glacier, the great ice river on the north side, on the lower slopes of the mountain, the Carbon Glacier is not wholly To these extensive valley glaciers the ice flows of Mount Rainier In wet places at 7,000 feet altitude near Nisqually Glacier. Glaciers on the west-central slope of the mountain.