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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 15 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 39204 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 Yellowstone 10 Park 7 illustration 5 Mr. 4 water 4 Lake 4 Indians 3 foot 3 St. 3 Geyser 3 Creek 3 Cañon 2 old 2 mountain 2 man 2 look 2 like 2 great 2 day 2 Washburn 2 Underwood 2 River 2 President 2 New 2 Miss 2 Madison 2 John 2 Jim 2 Jack 2 Hayden 2 Grand 2 God 2 Captain 2 CHAPTER 2 Basin 1 trout 1 tree 1 time 1 stream 1 spring 1 s.--characteristic 1 run 1 night 1 nature 1 mile 1 little 1 good 1 french 1 fly 1 fish Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1411 foot 1227 water 1006 time 942 day 910 man 806 mile 803 spring 784 mountain 687 way 671 illustration 578 side 573 year 545 place 532 party 524 river 509 camp 496 geyser 490 lake 473 name 459 stream 445 thing 430 night 412 rock 411 point 406 country 391 hand 381 tree 375 region 374 one 367 fire 362 life 340 snow 333 hour 330 valley 309 head 308 part 298 eye 281 boy 280 ground 274 distance 273 steam 269 fact 265 height 262 road 253 work 242 line 239 forest 237 morning 235 world 233 nothing Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2923 _ 1049 Yellowstone 1039 Park 564 Dick 536 Mr. 518 Roger 494 | 479 S. 424 Lake 401 G. 393 Indians 359 River 311 Geyser 262 P. 254 President 233 N. 230 Y. 218 National 207 Captain 194 Mayhew 182 Creek 182 Cañon 179 States 179 St. 177 Springs 172 Hayden 171 Basin 170 Grand 169 Washburn 169 Falls 169 -1885 167 Upper 158 W. 156 United 153 U. 150 New 138 Montana 138 Madison 137 Hot 134 General 131 Lieutenant 129 Dr. 126 Firehole 124 Langford 123 Mammoth 123 Jim 122 Mountain 121 Missouri 119 E. 117 B. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5597 i 5492 it 4036 he 2751 we 2456 they 1432 them 1386 me 1365 you 1277 him 751 us 572 she 264 her 220 himself 167 myself 166 one 114 themselves 109 itself 83 ''em 38 ourselves 21 yourself 19 mine 14 herself 11 yours 11 ''s 9 theirs 8 ours 7 his 7 em 6 ay 4 hisself 3 hers 3 f''r 2 thee 2 on''t 1 zat 1 yu 1 twelf 1 keepin 1 hae 1 d''eau 1 30.--we Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18499 be 6159 have 1598 do 1565 see 1550 say 1305 make 990 come 943 go 865 take 863 find 829 know 703 give 670 seem 646 look 590 get 533 tell 529 think 453 pass 424 leave 408 call 380 reach 370 follow 366 hear 365 feel 341 become 340 stand 340 fall 296 rise 279 lie 279 keep 269 run 263 show 262 turn 253 ask 238 cover 232 believe 231 bring 229 begin 222 start 221 try 219 hold 216 break 208 form 199 use 196 meet 196 lose 196 build 192 flow 191 return 188 appear Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2741 not 1312 so 1136 up 994 more 872 great 783 other 764 now 760 then 752 out 694 as 679 only 673 here 666 most 632 down 626 very 599 long 598 little 598 first 593 good 566 many 560 well 536 much 470 large 453 old 447 back 435 never 429 few 427 just 423 high 416 about 400 away 396 far 393 small 386 even 374 ever 371 several 370 there 357 such 353 same 340 hot 331 almost 326 once 321 again 305 still 292 too 288 off 285 all 280 soon 275 on 273 last Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 140 good 127 most 95 least 55 great 46 high 40 large 35 fine 29 near 26 bad 21 grand 20 lofty 20 Most 18 slight 16 low 13 rich 9 early 8 small 8 long 8 late 8 faint 7 old 6 pure 6 lovely 6 full 5 strong 5 minute 5 bright 4 wild 4 l 4 hot 4 hard 4 deep 4 brief 4 big 3 weak 3 steep 3 short 3 rough 3 rare 3 keen 3 hardy 3 dear 3 broad 2 young 2 wise 2 thin 2 southw 2 soft 2 safe 2 plump Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 539 most 31 least 12 well 1 early 1 biggest 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/1/5/5/2/15526/15526-h/15526-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/5/2/15526/15526-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ is _ 5 time is not 3 dick did not 3 dick had not 3 springs are also 3 springs are constantly 3 thing is sure 3 water is hot 2 _ are names 2 _ was _ 2 day was raw 2 dick had so 2 dick was also 2 dick was no 2 lake is about 2 lake was at 2 man had not 2 man has ever 2 men are very 2 mountain was not 2 name was first 2 night was cold 2 night was fast 2 park has never 2 park is not 2 party did not 2 place is much 2 rivers are not 2 roger became aware 2 roger did not 2 roger was only 2 springs are abundant 2 stream becomes suddenly 2 time had never 2 time was limited 2 time was nearly 2 water are steam 2 water got hotter 2 water is constantly 2 water is not 2 water was again 2 water was still 2 water was warm 2 way was rough,--logs 2 yellowstone comes in 1 _ comes next 1 _ did _ 1 _ did not 1 _ do _ 1 _ done _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 time is not far 2 dick was no longer 2 rivers are not common 1 _ has not yet 1 day was not far 1 days have not only 1 dick did not instantly 1 dick had not quite 1 geysers have no underground 1 lake has no well 1 man had no more 1 man is not long 1 man was no prisoner 1 men are no strangers 1 men are not soldiers 1 mountain was not only 1 mountains are not so 1 names were not originals 1 night is not more 1 park has no rival 1 park is not as 1 park is not so 1 parties are not always 1 places are not accessible 1 roger had no means 1 roger had not quite 1 springs have no periodical 1 springs were no longer 1 thing is not always 1 things were no worse 1 time had not yet 1 water is not generally 1 water is not only 1 water was not larger 1 yellowstone gives no intimation A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 37278 author = Barnes, Orange Perry title = Fly Fishing in Wonderland date = keywords = Creek; Lake; Park; Yellowstone; fish; fly; illustration; stream; trout; water summary = [Illustration: FLY FISHING in WONDERLAND Cover] than a score of years ago many of these beautiful lakes and streams were The presence of the red-throat trout of the Snake river in the head [Footnote A: NOTE--"As already stated, the trout of Yellowstone Lake The name "black-spotted" trout describes this fish more accurately than sorts of mountain streams, lakes, ponds and rivers, and always giving among fish from the upper and lower courses of the same stream. trout fishing under the sun. may select the stream that shall furnish the trout he loves most to streams in the west just as prolific of fish and as pleasant to look [Illustration: _Following a Little River_] A small stream enters the lake at the northwest, and here the trout are this is not a trout after all, but a flying fish, for he went down streams he used to fish in of old." id = 29312 author = Burroughs, John title = Camping with President Roosevelt date = keywords = Park; President; Underwood; West; Yellowstone; camp; man summary = At the time I made the trip to Yellowstone Park with President The President said, "I will not fire a gun in the Park; said the delighted old fellow; "I''m the man, Mr. President." He was The President told of an Englishman on a hunting trip in the West, A crowd soon gathered, and the President went out to greet away, and in reaching it passed over much of the ground the President President said, "It was right here that I heard that strange bird "Let''s go run that bird down," said the President to me. "Why did we not think to bring the glasses?" said the President. "I went and sat down behind the stove," said the President, "as far This was the only game the President killed in the Park. A few days later I bade good-by to the President, who went on his way id = 33053 author = Burroughs, John title = Camping & Tramping with Roosevelt date = keywords = Edition; New; Park; President; Riverside; Roosevelt; Underwood; York; bird; illustration summary = THE PRESIDENT''S HOME ON SAGAMORE HILL, SHOWING ADDITION KNOWN At the time I made the trip to Yellowstone Park with President The President said, "I will not fire a gun in the Park; said the delighted old fellow; "I''m the man, Mr. President." He was away, and in reaching it passed over much of the ground the President President said, "It was right here that I heard that strange bird "Let''s go run that bird down," said the President to me. "I went and sat down behind the stove," said the President, "as far A few days later I bade good-by to the President, who went on his way under a locust tree, where the President had several times seen and There were young birds in it, and as the President had seen the When the President saw those eggs, he said: The President''s interest in birds, and in natural history generally, id = 42112 author = Chittenden, Hiram Martin title = The Yellowstone National Park: Historical and Descriptive date = keywords = -U.; Basin; Captain; Cañon; Creek; Falls; Geyser; Hayden; Indians; Lake; National; Park; River; Springs; States; United; Upper; Washburn; Yellowstone; s.--characteristic summary = law, and the Yellowstone National Park took its place in our country''s Chapter XVIII.--A Tour of the Park--Yellowstone Lake to visited the Yellowstone Lake and River portions of the Park, but very of the geysers, hot springs, Lake, Falls, Grand Cañon, Mammoth Hot Lower Basin; the mapping of the shore line of Yellowstone Lake, by Dr. Hayden; the mapping of the head waters of the Snake River, by Captain Yellowstone Lake, shows where the party entered the Park. Basin to the Yellowstone River, Lake, and Falls, and from Mammoth Hot Three great rivers receive the waters of the Yellowstone Park--the about fifteen miles south of Yellowstone Lake, just outside the Park. As the Yellowstone River is the most important stream in the Park, so beautiful quiescent springs in the Park; the _Lake Shore_ Geyser, Yellowstone National Park, Hot Springs and Geysers of, 3, 31, 48, 49, id = 41657 author = Colborn, Edward F. title = To Geyserland Union Pacific-Oregon Short Line Railroads to the Yellowstone National Park date = keywords = Agent; Park; St.; Yellowstone; illustration summary = [Illustration: The Great Falls of the Yellowstone] Yellowstone National Park is reached via the Union Pacific and its [Illustration: _Hayden Valley between Yellowstone Lake and the Falls_] Lake City, Ogden, or Pocatello to the station, Yellowstone, Montana, at Yellowstone Lake is a marvel of beauty; the dense forest comes down to [Illustration: _Upper Geyser Basin_] only knew how curious and beautiful geysers are, the National Park would [Illustration: YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK Oregon Short Line Railroad] Great Fountain 100 30 minutes 8 to 12 hours [Illustration: The Giant Geyser] [Illustration: _Old Faithful Inn_] Oregon Short Line terminus at the western entrance to the Park) is Old Faithful, Lake and Canyon Inns, $55.50 $46.25 locally in the Park, on stage lines and at hotels. Yellowstone (western entrance) and make the tour of the Park is BURLEY General Passenger Agent SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH [Illustration: Castle Geyser] id = 30924 author = Everts, Truman title = Thirty-Seven Days of Peril from Scribner''s Monthly Vol III Nov. 1871 date = keywords = Madison; Yellowstone; day; fire; illustration; night; tree summary = had dwelt too long amid the mountains not to know that such a thought, of another night alone in the wilderness, and this time without food night must be spent amid the prostrate trunks before my return could third day I rose early and started in the direction of a large group procure, I know that from this time onward to the day of my rescue, my Buoyed by the hope of finding food and counsel, and another night of the foot of the lake, with the hope, by constant travel, to reach it Days and nights came and went, and were waters, and sat beside it for a long time, waiting for the storm to thought over every foot of the day''s travel, and concluded that the In a day or two I took leave of my kind friends, with a feeling of id = 40824 author = Gillis, Charles J. title = Another Summer: The Yellowstone Park and Alaska date = keywords = CHAPTER; July; Mr.; P.M.; YELLOWSTONE; great; water summary = Our long trip to Alaska and return, nine thousand miles in all, great speed and ease, into the country for some miles, passing many the road and up the mountain we saw large masses of the same material. geysers, spouting hot water fifty feet high. After a good night''s sleep, we left the hotel at half-past eight this continued on our way, arriving at the hotel at the Upper Geyser Basin thirty elk was seen near this hotel on the morning before we arrived. day following we were passing through mountain scenery of wonderful bay some twenty miles in extent, surrounded by great mountains covered day we pass numerous islands, large and small, all covered with admiring the ice, the views, the numerous small streams of clear water time, when passing an opening of a dozen miles, we looked upon the springs are located two miles up among the mountains, the water being id = 40710 author = Harrison, Carter H. (Carter Henry) title = A Summer''s Outing, and The Old Man''s Story date = keywords = Alaska; Chicago; Felden; God; Jack; Jamison; Jim; John; Mars; Miss; Mr.; Pacific; Park; Rita; St.; Tacoma; Yellowstone; day; foot; good; great; man; mountain; old; run; water summary = opening, and run in great streams to the crystal river a little way beautiful little geyser about twenty feet high, a perfect spreading jet boiling pool is a large spring of pure cold water. is covered by several feet of water during the high tides, which come ground on a bay running some miles from the sea, with beautiful little tower mountains, say 3,000 feet high, rising from the water like great high, rising out of water several hundred feet deep. lifting from the water a half hundred feet away from where the to the head of the inlet nearly 300 feet high and over a mile long. precipice of ice 600 to 800 feet high and five miles long. three miles square and seven to eight hundred feet high above water, of the hotel in a tank a hundred feet long, in fresh cold water with id = 11145 author = Langford, Nathaniel Pitt title = The Discovery of Yellowstone Park Journal of the Washburn Expedition to the Yellowstone and Firehole Rivers in the Year 1870 date = keywords = August; Doane; Everts; General; Hauser; Hedges; Helena; Indians; Langford; Lieutenant; Montana; Mr.; Park; September; Washburn; Yellowstone; illustration summary = the mountain to the valley, a distance of about 800 feet, the trap rock In camp to-day several names were proposed for the creek and fall, and Five miles further on we camped near the "Mud geyser." Our course to-day Yellowstone lake, as seen from our camp to-night, seems to me to be the lake is receiving the water from the mountain streams that empty into it Following the trail of the advance party, we traveled along the lake beach for about six miles, passing a number of small hot sulphur springs direct line from our morning camp at half past two p.m. No sign of Mr. Everts has been seen to-day, and on our arrival in camp, Gillette and were camped the day he was lost down into the Snake river valley, he Last night, and also this morning in camp, the entire party had a rather id = 40587 author = Quick, Herbert title = Yellowstone Nights date = keywords = Aconite; Artist; Billy; Blunt; Bride; Colonel; Dorn; Elkins; Frayn; Groom; Hen; Hired; Imp; Jack; Jim; John; Judge; Lake; Man; Miss; Mr.; Park; Pete; Poet; Professor; Prunty; Smith; Van; like summary = "Is that all?" asked the Hired Man. The pipes went on glowing and dying like little volcanoes with ephemeral "For one thing," said Billy icily, "I think I could help some by taking "May I turn for just one look at my little wood nymph," said he, "when I "I didn''t like the little emissary," said Billy, "and so I told him that I asked Billy if I couldn''t do something in line work, and he said I semi-animated hat-racks, as the Old Man said, come through the cold "A boy like Chester," said I, "will have little influence with Mr. Middlekauff, the director." "Do you know," said he, "that this case old Middlekauff''s got plugged up "That makes me think," said the Hired Man, "of the darndest thing--" lawyers like Judge McKenzie; and Hen was so mad at me for what I said "I don''t like the looks of things," said he. id = 46798 author = Rathborne, St. George title = The Pioneer Boys of the Yellowstone; or, Lost in the Land of Wonders date = keywords = Blackfeet; Captain; Clark; Dick; Indians; Jasper; Lascelles; Lewis; Mayhew; Missouri; Roger; Sioux; Williams; boy; french; little; look; time summary = "MAKE sure work of him, Dick!" Roger said, in trembling tones, as he "You don''t think it feels much like snow, do you, Dick?" Roger asked, When Mayhew said this, Dick and Roger knew that a new trouble had TURNING to Dick and Roger, Captain Lewis told them to follow him to Dick was about to follow suit when he saw Roger suddenly start up from as this, do you think, Dick?" asked Roger, as though a new idea had "CHEER up, Roger!" said Dick, making an effort to look as though he "It seems to be a long way off, Dick," ventured Roger, who evidently boys observed, and Dick had counted the Indians many times to make sure The way Dick said that one word told Roger that he must have seen a "Mayhew is right, Roger," said Dick, "and the chances are as ten to one id = 46911 author = Richardson, James (Geologist) title = Wonders of the Yellowstone date = keywords = Basin; CHAPTER; Cañon; Creek; Dr.; Firehole; Gardiner; Geyser; Grand; Hayden; Lake; Madison; Mr.; River; Yellowstone; foot; spring; water summary = [Illustration: THE GREAT GEYSER BASIN OF THE UPPER YELLOWSTONE.] Hot Springs of Gardiner''s River--Third Cañon--Rapids--Valley Yellowstone--Wind River Mountains--Valley of Upper Ocean River"--A Companion lost--Lakes and Springs--Hot hot springs and geysers, whose description makes up so large a portion which is called on the maps Snowy Mountains, forms the great water-shed by the Yellowstone River, is 10,629 feet above tide-water, while the South of the hot springs is a round dome-like mountain, rising 2,100 springs, the water rising and falling in their orifices with great springs of clear hot water, from ten to fifty feet in diameter, their Of the beautiful transparency of the springs above described, Dr. Hayden says: "So clear was the water that the smallest object could Lake, a beautiful sheet of water set like a gem among the mountains, the geyser-basin, some ten miles below the lake, the river roars The water in the spring of the geyser is of a blue color and in id = 15526 author = Stoddard, John L. (John Lawson) title = John L. Stoddard''s Lectures, Vol. 10 (of 10) Southern California; Grand Cañon of the Colorado River; Yellowstone National Park date = keywords = Angeles; Arizona; California; Cañon; Diego; Indians; Los; Mexico; New; Park; San; Southern; Yellowstone; foot; illustration; like; look; mile; mountain; nature; old summary = [Illustration: LOOKING BACK AT THE MOUNTAINS.] [Illustration: LOOKING DOWN ON THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY.] eight thousand feet in height, rising abruptly from the plain like watered land will grow like interest, day and night, summer and lands like Southern California, however, where flowers fill the air The old town of San Diego, four miles north of the present city, is [Illustration: "A SEA-BIRD FASHIONED BY MAN''S HAND."] [Illustration: CHIEF OF A TRIBE OF MISSION INDIANS.] [Illustration: RAIN WATER BASIN, ÁCOMA.] thousand six hundred feet--not by a narrow gorge, like other cañons, ranges, thousands of feet in height, which the Grand Cañon''s walls [Illustration: MONSTER CLIFFS, AND A NOTCH IN THE CAÑON WALL.] [Illustration: MILES OF INTRA-CAÑONS.] water, precisely as it comes from active geysers in the Park to-day. [Illustration: MAN AND NATURE.] [Illustration: THE CAÑON FROM A DISTANCE.] [Illustration: THE CAÑON FROM GRAND POINT.] [Illustration: DOWN THE CAÑON FROM INSPIRATION POINT.] [Illustration: MILES OF COLORED CLIFFS.] id = 40658 author = White, Alma title = With God in the Yellowstone date = keywords = Canyon; Geyser; God; Grand; Haynes; Lord; Park; Paul; St.; Yellowstone; illustration summary = parted at the Old Faithful Camp at the Upper Geyser Basin. mud geyser was a boiling spring where the water, clear as crystal, [Illustration: YELLOWSTONE LAKE © _Haynes, St. Paul_] A few minutes later we arrived at YELLOWSTONE CAMP, near the Upper and [Illustration: WILLOW PARK CAMP, YELLOWSTONE PARK © _Haynes, St. Paul_] Faithful Camp near the Upper Geyser Basin, and therefore planned to [Illustration: UPPER YELLOWSTONE FALL © _Haynes, St. Paul_] The distance from Grand Canyon Camp to Mammoth Hot Springs, near Fort took the morning stage to Old Faithful Camp, at the Upper Geyser [Illustration: NORRIS GEYSER BASIN © _Haynes, St. Paul_] [Illustration: NATIONAL PARK MOUNTAIN © _Haynes, St. Paul_] GREAT FOUNTAIN expels the water to a height of 100 feet, playing for [Illustration: GIANTESS GEYSER IN ACTION © _Haynes, St. Paul_] Castle Geyser is CASTLE SPRING, a beautiful pool of water, highly going to Yellowstone National Park with a camping party of school