annals of science

99
ANNALS OF SCIENCE AN INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY REVIEW OF THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY SINCE THE RENAISSANCE Index to Volumes i to 25 (1936-1969) Compiled by R. E. W. Maddison, Ph.D., F.S.A. M.IM lHAMUM TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD 10-14 MACKLIN STREET, LONDON WC2B5NF .£4-00 (f 10-00) plus packing and postage lOp (25 cents)

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Page 1: ANNALS OF SCIENCE

ANNALS OF SCIENCEAN INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY REVIEW OF THE HISTORY OF

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY SINCE THE RENAISSANCE

Index to

Volumes i to 25

(1936-1969)

Compiled by

R. E. W. Maddison, Ph.D., F.S.A.

M.IM lHAMUM

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD10-14 MACKLIN STREET, LONDON WC2B5NF

.£4-00 (f 10-00) plus packing and postage lOp (25 cents)

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PREFACE

The completion of the twenty-fifth volume of Annals of Scienceprovides an appropriate point at which to issue a comprehensive index.Professor Harcourt Brown, one of the original editors is still with us.So, advantage has been taken of the occasion to persuade him to recordhis recollections of the events leading to the founding of this journal.In a letter* he writes :

" It is not easy for me to establish a precise chronology of the eventsleading up to the appearance of the first number of Annals of Science.Much had been done towards the founding of this journal before I wasinvited to take part in its conduct, and if I was told what my colleagueshad already achieved, I made no note of it, mental or otherwise, sothat I cannot with full success respond to your request for a re-construction of those pioneering days. I shall therefore set downmerely what I know from what records I have, in memory or in oldletters.In the spring of 1934 I had been awarded a travelling fellowship by theAmerican Council of Learned Societies ; my wife and I spent ninemonths in Europe, working in some six countries in continuation of mystudies of the international communications of 17th-century scientistsand amateurs. The last two or three months of this Wanderjahr werepassed in England, part of the time in the friendly precincts of theRoyal Society of London, then sheltered in Burlington House. Wehad been frequent visitors to the library of the Society since the autumnof 1932, when we had begun a thorough search of the letters fromFrance received by Henry Oldenburg. Like all those who worked inthis library at that time, we were offered much help by Henry Robinsonand his predecessor A. Hastings White ; they had already perceived thevalue of the letters on which we were to work, and their combinedknowledge of persons and subject-matter was invaluable to us. WithHenry Robinson we entered on a friendship which lasted until his deathin 1960.The growing interest in the history of science at that time was bringingmany scholars from different disciplines into the libraries where thearchives of the sciences were preserved. The Royal Society with itsrich collection of 17th-century documents was a place towards whichwandering scholars converged, often establishing lasting and fruitfulrelationships there. Not the least of the attractions offered by therooms in Burlington House was the rich humanity of Henry Robinson,which lent warmth to his precise and comprehensive knowledge of thebooks and documents of which he was the effective custodian.Conversation about research led naturally to discussion of the resourcesavailable for publishing one's findings, and the observation that there

* To R. E. W. Maddison on 22 May 1970.

iij

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were really very few media of the kind we sought. There was, of course,Isis, at that time still printed and published in Belgium, althoughsponsored by the History of Science Society, which, so it was sometimessaid, had been founded specifically for the purpose of allowing GeorgeSarton to continue his work in the United States. Isis, eclecticallycomprehensive, and with its supplement, Osiris, accepted articles inseveral languages from all fields of science and from all periods. Theindividual numbers were substantial - more than they are in these moreaffluent and expensive days - but there still was a limit to what theeditor could accept, and very often a delay while an author awaitedpublication. The suggestion was soon made that a periodical could beedited and published in Britain, limited to the modern period and toarticles in English, and that this might well stimulate more writing inthe history of modern science, bringing to light new documents ofspecial interest, and illuminating new aspects of social and politicalhistory. All this would lead to informed discussion of the place sciencehas come to occupy in the modern world, and concentrate the attentionof scholars in many disciplines in a field rapidly evolving fromantiquarianism towards becoming an independent discipline in its ownright.Henry Robinson had been discussing the possibilities for a new periodicalwith Douglas McKie, of the Department of the History and Philosophyof Science in University College, London, and it was not long before Iwas invited to join them in an attempt to fill this much-felt gap in theworld of scholarly publications. Such an honour and opportunitycould not be refused, and in a meeting we three began to make plansfor the new quarterly. Robinson had been assured of the solid supportthat an old-established firm, Taylor and Francis of Red Lion Court,would give this venture ; I believe also that Robinson suggested thetitle, the sub-title being a joint product. McKie and Robinsoncomposed the paragraph that was to appear without fundamental changeuntil 1969 on the inside front cover ; and McKie wrote the openingeditorial. My own part was a reaction to the drab greys and pale blueson the table of periodicals in the Royal Society Library, the proposalthat Annals of Science should wear an orange cover in order to be morevisible. I was a little surprised that this appealed to my Britishcolleagues, whom I had thought to be more conservative in taste, but,except for a period of wartime stringencies, the orange cover, with minorchanges of nuance depending on the chemistry of dyes, has been usedever since.A rapid survey of the file of letters that passed between McKie andRobinson on the one hand and myself, has impressed me with thepatience and devotion with which my colleagues worked to get Annalsunder way. Communications made it difficult for an editor in SaintLouis, Missouri, to take much part in reading manuscripts and proofs,or in the constant negotiations with publishers and printers. HenryRobinson's letters reflect vividly the increasing burdens which thecrises of 1938 and 1939 imposed on him, and the effect of the subsequentwar on intellectual activity. His situation was not relieved by theill health of McKie and his family, and a partner who looks back onthose trying years can only wonder that Annals was produced at all.During the years of war, in particular from 1940 to 1945, there was a

IV

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question whether the journal could be kept alive, and an editor in theUnited States was frequently asked why the whole operation could notbe transferred to the New World, where printing presses were not inimmediate danger, and where a good deal of normal scholarly work wascontinuing.This journal has never been supported by the captive readership of alearned society. Annals of Science has been kept alive by the confidenceof a publishing house that the journal has a place in the scholarly world,a firm that has had faith in a small group of editors who have been givena free hand in the solicitation and selection of articles for publication.There have been moments of lively discussion, and disagreements havebeen resolved by persuasion and compromise ; but these have veryoften reflected economic conditions or restrictions imposed by externalfactors. There have been periods in which the publication of quarterlynumbers has been delayed, sometimes, it must be said, by many months.The original editors have now been mostly replaced by another generationbut the concept of a journal, international in scope, historical in outlook,seeking and accepting contributions from all the world, has remained,and one hopes will be more and more fully realized as time goes on.Providence, R.I. Harcourt Brown

Note : The complete file of letters which passed between the presentwriter and Henry Robinson and Douglas McKie, including originalsand carbon copies, has been deposited in the Library of BrownUniversity, where it will be available for consultation by scholars.With these documents there is a number of letters and carbons concerningthe contributions of American scholars and the circulation of Annalsin the United States."

The present index has been specially compiled ; it is not a consolidationof the indexes appended to the annual volumes. Indexes of author,subject, and. title of article are provided. The subject index, apart fromrecording key-words appearing in the titles, also includes lists of portraitsand of reviews, the latter being arranged alphabetically by author of thebook. Titles of articles are entered under the first word, after suppressionof the definite/indefinite article. Titles of books and periodicals are initalic type.

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ANNALS OF SCIENCE

EDITORS

Douglas McKie, D.Sc, Ph.D., F.R.I.C., F.S.A., F.R.S.E. 1936-1967

Harcourt Brown, M.A., Ph.D. 1936-

H. W. Robinson 1936-1960

N. H. de V. Heathoote, B.Sc, Ph.D. 1952-

W. A. Smeaton, D.Sc, Ph.D., A.R.C.S. 1960-1965

F. W. Gibbs, D.Sc, Ph.D. 1961-1965

Trevor I. Williams, M.A., D.Phil., F.R.I.C. 1966-

R. E. W. Maddison, B.Sc, Ph.D., F.S.A. 1966-

Harold J. Sharlin, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. 1969-

Hans Kangro, Dr. habil. nat. 1969-

VH

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ANNALS OF SCIENCE

DATES OF PUBLICATION

Volume

12345

678910

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

2021

Year

1936

1937

1938

1939-1940

1941-1947

1948-1950

1951

1952

1953

1954

1955

1956

1957

1958

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

1964

1965

N o . 3 published September 1956N o . 4 published March 1957Published 1957Nos. 1 & 2 published 1958Nos. 3 & 4 published 1959Nos. 1, 2 & 3 published 1960No. 4 published Februa ry 1961Nos. 1 & 2 published 1961Nos. 3 & 4 published March 1962Nos. 1, 2 & 3 published 1962No. 4 published 1963Nos. 1, 2 & 3 published 1963No. 4 published J a n u a r y 1964Published 1964No. 1 published 1964Nos. 2, 3 & 4 published 1965Published 1965Published 1966

9 9 ,QrR f Nos. 1 & 2 published 1966z z i y W ) \ Nos. 3 & 4 published 19670Q , „ „ „ / Nos. 1, 2 & 3 published 1967Z6 U b / \ No. 4 published 196824 196825 1969

I X

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ANNALS OF SCIENCE

CUMULATIVE INDEX

List of Contents

Author Index 1

Subject Index , 23

Portraits 57

Reviews 03

Title Index 77

X I

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Author Index

Âiton, E. J.Galileo's Theory of the Tides, illus. 10, 44-57.The Contribution of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of Tides,illus. 11, 206-223.Descartes's Theory of Tides, illus. 11, 337-348.The Vortex Theory of the Planetary Motions. - I. illus. 13, 249-264 ;- I I . illus. 14, 132-147 ; - III . 14, 157-172.The Cartesian Theory of Gravity, illus. 15, 27-49.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, illus. 16, 65-82.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism,illus. 18, 31-41.The Inverse Problem of Central Forces, illus. 20, 81-99.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz : A New Interpretation, illus. 20,111-123.An Imaginary Error in the Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, illus. 21,169-173.Newton's Aether-Stream Hypothesis and the Inverse Square Law ofGravitation. 25, 255-260.

Andrade, E. N. da C.The Real Character of Bishop Wilkins, illus. 1, 4-12.

Armitage, A.The Deviation of Falling Bodies. 5, 342-351.The Cosmology of Giordano Bruno. 6, 24-31." Borell's Hypothesis " and the Rise of Celestial Mechanics. 6, 268-282.Master Georg Dôrffel and the Rise of Cometary Astronomy, illus. 7,303-315.The Pilgrimage of Pingre. 9, 47-63.Chappe D'Auteroche : A Pathfinder for Astronomy. 10, 277-293.The Astronomical Work of Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille. 12, 163-191.A Naturalist's Vacation. The London Letters of J. C. Fabrioius. 14,116-131.

Armytage, W. H. G.Technology and Utopianism : J. A. Etzler in England 1840-44, illus.11, 129-136.•Joseph Priestley and Edmund Burke : An Unpublished Letter. 12,160-161.The Early Utopists and Science in England. 12, 247-254.Richard Watson and the Marquess of Rockingham : An Unpublishedexchange of 1771. 14, 155-156.

Atkinson, A. D.William Derham, F.R.S. (1657-1735). 8, 368-392.

Badcock, A. W.Physics at the Royal Society, 1660-1800. - I. Change of State. 16,95-115.

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2 Author Index

Baker, K. M.An Unpublished Essay of Condoroet on Technical Methods of Classification.18, 99-123.The Early History of the Term ' Social Science '. 20, 211-226.

Baker, K. M., and Smeaton, W. A.The Origins and Authorship of the Educational Proposals Published in1793 by the Bureau de Consultation des Arts et Métiers and generallyascribed to Lavoisier. 21, 33-46.

Barnett, Pamela R.Theodore Haak and the Early Years of the Royal Society. 13, 205-218.

Bayon, H. P.William Harvey, Physician and Biologist : His Precursors, Opponents andSuccessors. - Parts I & II, Mus. 3, 59-118 ; Part III, Mus. 3, 435-456 ;Part IV, Mus. 4, 65-106 ; Part V, illus. 4, 329-389.

Bentham, M. A.Some Seventeenth Century Views concerning the Nature of Heat and Cold.2, 431-540.

Best, A. E.The Discovery of the Mechanism of Colour-Changes in the Chameleon, illus.24, 147-167.

Biker man, J. J.A Book Humboldt gave to Schiller. 21, 131-134.

Bodenheimer, F. S.H. B. Tristram's Collections in Natural History, especially in Palestine.12, 278-287.

Brock, W. H.Studies in the History of Prout's Hypothesis. - I. Unity of Matter andUnity of Sensations : The Text of Prout's De Facultate Sentiendi, 1810.25, 49-80.; - II . Prout's Lectures of 1814. 25, 127-137.

Brook, MichaelDr. Warwick's Chemistry Lectures and the Scientific Audience in Sheffield(1799-1801). 11, 224-237.

Brown, HarcourtThe Utilitarian Motive in the Age of Descartes. 1, 182-192.

Brown, John R., and Thornton, John L.William James Russell (1830-1909) and Investigations on London Fog,illus. 11, 231-336.

Brush, S. G.The Development of the Kinetic Theory of Gases. - I. Herapath.13, 188-198 ; - II. Waterston. 13, 273-282 ; - III. Clausius. 14, 185-196 ; - IV. Maxwell. 14, 243-255.

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Author Index 3

Buchanan, C. and Patterson, T. S.Historical and other Considerations Regarding the Crystal Form ofSodium-Ammonium d- and Z-Tartrate, Potassium-Ammonium d- andZ-Tartrate, and Potassium Racemate - I, Mus. 5, 288-295 ; - II , Mus.5, 317-324.

Burstyn, Harold L.The Deflecting Force of the Earth's Rotation from Galileo to Newton,illus. 21, 47-80.

Calinger, Ronald S.Frederick the Great and the Berlin Academy of Sciences (1740-1766).24, 239-249.

Cameron, G. R.Rudolf Albert v. Koelliker (1817-1905). Mus. 9, 166-172.

Chaldecott, J. A.Bartolomeo Telioux and the Early History of the Thermometer, Mus.8, 195-201.The Zograscope or Optical Diagonal Machine. Mus. 9, 315-322.Scientific Activities in Paris in 1791, Mus. 24, 21-52.

Challinor, J.The Beginnings of Scientific Palaeontology in Britain. 6, 46-53.The Early Progress of British Geology. - I. From Leland to Woodward,1538-1728, Mus. 9, 124-153 ; - II . From Strachey to Mitchell, 1719-1788. 10, 1-19 ; - III . From Hutton to Playfair, 1788-1802, Mus.10, 107-148.Some Correspondence of Thomas Webster, Geologist, (1773-1844).- I. 17, 175-195 ; - II. 18, 147-175 ; - III . 19, 49-79 ; - IV. 19,285-297 ; - V. 20, 59-80 ; - VI. Mus. 20, 143-164.

Clow, ArchibaldFiscal Policy and the Development of Technology, Mus. 10, 342-358.A Re-examination of William Walker's "Distinguished Men of Science",Mus. 11, 183-193.

Clow, A. and Clow, N. L.The Natural and Economic History of Kelp, Mus. 5, 297-316.The Timber Famine and the Development of Technology. 12, 85-102.

Cochrane, Rexmond C.Francis Bacon and the Rise of the Mechanical Arts in Eighteenth-century England. 12, 137-156.

Cohen, I. BernardGuericke and Dufay. 7, 207-209.

Cohen, L. D.Descartes and Henry More on the Beast-Machine - A Translation of theircorrespondence pertaining to animal automatism. 1, 48-61.

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4 Author Index

Cole, F. J.Leeuwenhoek's Zoological Researches. Part I. 2,1-46 ; Part II. 2,185-235.Swammerdam's Home, Mus. 2, 236.

Cole, R. J.Friedrich Accum (1769-1838). A Biographical Study, Mus. 7, 128-143.Sir Anthony Carlisle, F.R.S. (1768-1840), Mus. 8, 255-270.Biographical Note on John Symmons, F.R.S. 10, 272-273.

Coleby, L. J. M.A History of Prussian Blue. 4, 206-211.John Francis Vigani. 8, 46-60.John Mickleburgh (1718-1756). 8, 165-174.John Hadley, 8, 293-301.Richard Watson. 9, 101-123.Isaac Milner and the Jacksonian Chair of Natural Philosophy. 10, 234-257.

Coley, N. G.The Physico-Chemical Studies of Amedeo Avogadro. 20, 195-210.

Cook, A. O. M., Patterson, T. S. and Loudon, J. D.Robertus Vallensis' De Veritate et Antiquitate Artis Chemicae. 6, 1-23.

Cornell, E. S.Early Studies in Radiant Heat. 1, 217-225.The Radiant Heat Spectrum from Herschel to Melloni. - I. The Work ofHerschel and his Contemporaries. 3, 119-137 ; II. The Work of Melloniand his Contemporaries, Mus. 3, 402-416.

Coutts, A.William Cruickshank of Woolwich. 15, 121-133.

Cranefield, Paul F.Clerk Maxwell's Corrections to the Page Proofs of " A Dynamical Theoryof the Electromagnetic Field". 10, 359-362.

Crellin, J. K.Airborne Particles and the Germ Theory : 1860-1880. 22, 49-60.

Crombie, A. C.Some Reflections on the History of Science and its Conception of Nature.6, 54-75.

Crosland, M. P.The Use of Diagrams as Chemical ' Equations ' in the Lecture Notes ofWilliam Cullen and Joseph Black, Mus. 15, 75-90.The Origins of Guy-Lussac's Law of Combining Volumes of Gases. 17,1-26.

Cushing, H. and Fulton, J. F.A Bibliographical Study of the Galvani and the Aldini Writings on AnimalElectricity, Mus. 1, 239-268.

David, Florence N.Mr. Newton, Mr. Pepys & Dyse : A Historical Note. 13, 137-147.

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Author Index 5

Davies, Gordon L.The Eighteenth-Century Denudation Dilemma and the Huttonian Theoryof the Earth. 22, 129-138.The Tour of the British Isles made by Louis Agassiz in 1840. 24, 131-146.

de Beer, Sir GavinSome Letters from Jakob Samuel Wyttenbach to Sir James Edward Mith.6, 105-114.Combe-Varin, illus. 6, 215-228.Johann Heinrioh Hottinger's Description of the Ice-Mountains ofSwitzerland, 1703. 6, 327-360.Haller's Historic/, Stirpium. 9, 1—&6.Bernard Friedrich Kuhn's Investigations on Glaciers. 9, 323-341.Jean Jacques Rousseau : Botanist, illus. 10, 189-223.The History of the Altimetry of Mont Blanc, illus. 12, 1-29.Gregory Watt's Tour on the Continent, 1801. 13, 127-136.Further Unpublished Letters of Charles Darwin. 14, 83-115.Alexander Moritzi. 16, 251-254.The Volcanoes of Auvergne, illus. 18, 49-61.Other Men's Shoulders. 20, 303-322.

Debus, Allen G.An Elizabethan History of Medical Chemistry, illus. 18, 1-29.Fire Analysis and the Elements in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.23, 127-147.

Dingle, H.Thomas Wright's Astronomical Heritage. 6, 404-415.

Dobbin, L.A Cullen Chemical Manuscript of 1753. 1, 138-156.,The History of the Discovery of Phosgene. 5, 270-287.

Dobbs, Betty Jo. and Siegfried, RobertComposition, a Neglected Aspect of the Chemical Revolution. 24, 275-293.

Donald, M. B.History of the Chile Nitrate Industry. - I. illus. 1, 29-47. II. illus. 1,193-216.Burchard Kranich (c. 1515-1578), Miner and Queen's Physician, CornishMining Stamps, Antimony and Frobisher's Gold, illus. 6, 308-322.A Further Note on Burchard Kranich. 7, 107-108.

Douglas, J. A. and Edmonds, J. M.John Phillips's Geological Maps of the British Isles, illus. 6, 361-375.

Drubba, H.On the First Echo-Sounding Experiment, illus. 10, 28-32.

Dubbey, J. M.The Introduction of the Differential Notation to Great Britain. 19, 37^8.Cauchy's Contribution to the Establishment"of the Calculus. 22, 61-67.

Ann. of S ci.—Ace. Index b

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6 Author Index

Duncan, A. M.Some Theoretical Aspects of Eighteenth-Century Tables of Affinity. - I.illus. 18, 177-194 ; - II. illus. 18, 217-232.William Keir's De Attractione Ghemica (1778) and the Concepts of ChemicalSaturation, Attraction and Repulsion. 23, 149-173.

Duveen, Denis I.An Unpublished Report on the Waterproofing of Shoe Leather byLavoisier and Hassenfratz. 8, 162-164.Augustin François Silvestre and the Société Philomatique. 10, 339-341.

Duveen, Denis I. and Klickstein, Herbert S.A Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating to the Experiments for aLarge-scale Synthesis of Water carried out by Lavoisier and Meusnier in1785. 10, 58-62.Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794) and Christopher Columbus(1446 ?-1506). 10, 63-68.A Bibliographical Study of the Introduction of Lavoisier's Traité Elémen-taire de Chimie into Great Britain and America, illus. 10, 321-338.Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794).- I. Franklin and the New Chemistry, illus. 11, 103-128 ; - II. JointInvestigations, illus. 11, 271-308 ; - III. Documentation. 13, 30-46.

Dyment, S. A.Some Eighteenth Century Ideas concerning Aqueous Vapour andEvaporation. 2, 465-473.

Earles, M. P.The Experimental Investigation of Viper Venom by Felice Fontana(1730-1805). 16, 255-268.Early Theories of the Mode of Action of Drugs and Poisons. 17, 97-110.Experiments with Drugs and Poisons in the Seventeenth and EighteenthCenturies. 19, 241-254.

Ebenstein, W.The Early Reception of the Doctrine of Evolution in the United States.4, 306-321.

Edmonds, J. M. and Douglas, J. A.John Phillips's Geological Maps of the British Isles, illus. 6, 361-375.

Egerton, M. C.William Strutt and the Application of Convection to the Heating ofBuildings, illus. 24, 73-87.

Eyles, Joan M.William Smith : The Sale of his Geological Collection to the BritishMuseum, illus. 23, 177-212.

Eyles, J. M. and Eyles, V. A.On the Different Issues of the First Geological Map of England and Wales,illus. 3, 190-212.Some Geological Correspondence of James Hutton. 7, 316-339.

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Author Index 1

Eyles, V. A.John Maooulloch, F.R.S., and his Geological Map : An Account of theFirst Geological Survey of Scotland, illus. 2, 114-129.Macculloch's Geological Map of Scotland : An Additional Note, illus.4, 107.The Evolution of a Chemist, Sir James Hall, Bt., F.R.S., P.R.S.B., illus.19, 153-182.

Eyles, V. A. and Eyles, J. M.On the Different Issues of the First Geological Map of England and Wales,illus. 3, 190-212.Some Geological Correspondence of James Hutton. 7, 316-339.

Farrar, Kathleen R. and Farrar, W. V.Thomas Allan, Mineralogist : An Autobiographical Fragment. 24,115-120.

Farrar, W. V.Richard Laming and the Coal-Gas Industry, with his Views on theStructure of Matter. 25, 243-253.

Farrar, W. V. and Farrar, Kathleen R.Thomas Allan, Mineralogist : An Autobiographical Fragment. 24,115-120.

Fisher, R. A.Has Mendel's Work been Rediscovered ? 1, 115-137.

Flinn, Michael W.Timber and the Advance of Technology : A Reconsideration. 15, 109-120.

Florescu, Radu R.The Origin and Development of Science in Rumania. 16, 43-58.

Foote, Edward T.Harvey : Spontaneous Generation and the Egg. 25, 139-16Ô.

Foote, George A.Mechanism, Materialism, and Science in England, 1800-1850. 8, 152-161.

Forbes, Eric GrayA History of the Solar Red Shift Problem. 17, 129-164.The Origin and Development of the Marine Chronometer. 22, 1-25.Tobias Mayer's Lunar Tables. 22, 105-116.

Foster, C.One Hundred Years of Science Teaching in Great Britain. 2, 335-344.

Franklin, K. J.A Short Sketch of the History of the Oxford Medical School, illus.1, 431-446.A Short History of the International Congresses of Physiologists, illus.3, 242-335.An Introduction to the Earlier History of Phlebitis, 4, 47-60.Some Textual Changes in Successive Editions of Richard Lower'sTractatus de Corde Item de Motu & Colore Sanguinis et Chyli in eum Transitu,illus. 4, 283-294.

b2

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8 Author Index

A Survey of the Growth of Knowledge about Certain Parts of the FoetalCardio-Vascular Apparatus, and about the Foetal Circulation, in Man andsome other Mammals. Part I : Galen to Harvey, illus. 5, 57-89.Jean Méry (1645-1722) and his Ideas on the Foetal Blood Flow, illus.5, 203-228.An Autograph Letter by Gilbert White. 5, 370-372.

Fullmer, J. Z.On Spontaneous Combustion, illus. 17, 65-80.Humphry Davy and the Gunpowder Manufactory, illus. 20, 165-194.

Fulton, J. F. and Cushing, H.A Bibliographical Study of the Galvani and the Aldini Writings on AnimalElectricity, illus. 1, 239-268.

Fussell, G. E.Crop Nutrition in the late Stuart Age (1660-1714) 14, 173-184.

Gautrey, Peter and Olby, RobertEleven Eeferences to Mendel before 1900. 24, 7-20.

George, A. J.A Seventeenth-Century Amateur of Science : Jean Chapelain. 3, 217-236.The Genesis of the Académie des Sciences. 3, 372-401.

George, PhilipThe Scientific Movement and the Development of Chemistry in England,as seen in the Papers published in the Philosophical Transactions from1664/5 until 1750. 8, 302-322.

Gibbs, F. W.On " Nitre " and " Natron ". 3, 213-216.The History of the Manufacture of Soap, illus. 4, 169-190.The Furnaces and Thermometers of Cornells Drebbel, illus. 6, 32-43.The Rise of the Tinplate Industry. - I. The Tinplate Workers, illus. 6,390-403; -II. Early Tinplate Manufacture to 1700, illus. 7, 25-42;-III. John Hanbury (1664-1734), illus. 7, 43-61; -IV. An EighteenthCentury Tinplate Mill, illus. 7, 113-127; -V. Cockshutt on Tinplate Manu-facture. 11, 145-153.Robert Dossie (1717-1777) and the Society of Arts, illus. 7, 149-172.Peter Shaw and the Revival of Chemistry, illus. 7, 211-237.Historical Survey of the Japanning Trade. - I . Eastern and WesternLacquer, illus. 7, 401-416; -II. Early British Japanning. 9, 88-95;-III. Pontypool and Usk. 9, 197-213; -IV. The Midlands. 9, 214-232.William Lewis, M.B., F.R.S. (1708-1781), illus. 8, 122-151.A Notebook of William Lewis and Alexander Chisholm, illus. 8, 202-220.Robert Dossie (1717-77). 9, 191-193.Boerhaave and the Botanists. 13, 47-61.

Gittens, L.The Manufacture of Alkali in Britain, 1779-1789. 22, 175-190.

Goodison, NicholasDaniel Quare and the Portable Barometer. 23, 287-293.

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Author Index 9

Grabo, C.Science and the Romantic Movement. 4, 191-205.

Green, J. H. S.Thomas Clark (1801-1867) : A Biographical Study. 13, 164-179.

Hall, A. RupertFurther Optical Experiments of Isaac Newton, Mus. 11, 27-43.Newton on the Calculation of Central Forces, Mus. 13, 62-71.

Hardin, Clyde L.The Scientific Work of the Reverend John Michell. 22, 27-47.

Harrison, John AnthonyBlind Henry Moyes, " An Excellent Lecturer in Philosophy ", Mus.13, 109-125.

Hannaway, Owen and Kent, AndrewSome New Considerations on Béguin and Libavius, Mus. 16, 241-250.

Harrison, Thomas P.Longolius on Birds. 14, 257-268.

Hartog, &V Philip J.The Newer Views of Priestley and Lavoisier. 5, 1-56.

Hawes, Joan L.Newton and the ' Electrical Attraction Unexcited '. 24, 121-130.

Hays.J.N.Science and Brougham's Society. 20, 227-241.

Heathcote, N. H. de V.Early Nautical Charts, Mus. 1, 13-28.Guericke's Sulphur Globe, Mus. 6, 293-305.The Early Meaning of Electricity : Some Pseudodoxia Epidemica. - I.23, 261-275.

Heathcote, N. H. de V. and McKie, D.William Cleghorn's De Igné (1779), Mus. 14, 1-82.

Heimann, P. M.Moseley and Celtium : The Search for a Missing Element, Mus. 23,249-260.Rutherford, Nagaoka and the Nuclear Atom. 23, 299-303.

Hesse, Mary B.Boole's Philosophy of Logic, Mus. 8, 61-81.

Higgins, KathleenThe Classification of Sundials, Mus. 9, 342-358.

Hoare, Cecil A.Erasmus Darwin in Russia. 11, 255-256.

Hoff, H. E.Galvani and the Pre-Galvanian Electrophysiologists. 1, 157-172.

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Hopley, I. B.Clerk Maxwell's Apparatus for the Measurement of Surface Tension, Mus.13, 180-187.Maxwell's Work on Electrical Resistance. - I. The Determination of theAbsolute Unit of Resistance, Mus. 13, 265-272 ; - II. Proposals for theRe-determination of the B.A. Unit of 1863, Mus. 14, 197-210 ; — III.Improvement on Mance's Method for the Measurement of BatteryResistance, Mus. 15, 51-55.Maxwell's Determination of the Number of Electrostatic Units in oneElectromagnetic Unit of Electricity, Mus. IS, 91-108.

Hughes, ArthurScience in English Encyclopaedias, 1704-1875. - I. 7, 340-370 ; - II.Theories of the Elementary Composition of Water. 8, 323-367 ; -III. Meteorology. 9, 233-264; - IV. Theories of the Earth. 11, 74-92.

Hughes, £.The Early Journal of Thomas Wright of Durham. 7, 1-24.

Humphreys, A. W.The Development of the Conception and Measurement of Electric Current.2, 164-178.

Jacquot, JeanSir Charles Cavendish and his Learned Friends. - I. Before the Civil War.8, 13-27; - II. The Years of Exile. 8, 175-191.

Jones, H, W.Some Reflections on the Beginnings of Experimental Science. 6, 283-292.

Jones, W. P.The Vogue of Natural History in England, 1750-1770. 2, 345-352.

Keevil,J.J.Sir Charles Scarburgh, Mus. 8, 113-121.

Kemsley, Douglas S.Religious Influences in the Rise of Modern Science : A Review andCriticism, particularly of the ' Protestant-Puritan Ethic ' Theory.24, 199-226.

Kennaway, Sir ErnestSome Recollections of Albrecht Kossel. 8, 393-397.

Kennedy, David and McKie, D.On Some Letters of Joseph Black and Others. 16, 129-170.

Kent, Andrew and Hannaway, OwenSome New Considerations on Béguin and Libavius, Mus. 16, 241-250.

Klickstein, Herbert S. and Duveen, Denis I.A Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating to the Experiments for aLarge-scale Synthesis of Water carried out by Lavoisier and Meusnier in1785. 10, 58-62.Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794).- I. Franklin and the New Chemistry, Mus. 11, 103-128 ; - II. JointInvestigations, Mus. 11, 271—308.

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Kretzmann, E. M. J.German Technological Utopias of the Pre-War Period. 3, 417-430.

Laboulle, M. J. J. and Levy, H.Some Questions of Scientific Method in the " Siècle des Lumières ".2, 153-163.

Larwood, H. J. C.Science and Education in India before the Mutiny. 17, 81-96.

Laudan, LaurensThe Clock Metaphor and Probabilism : The Impact of Descartes onEnglish Methodological Thought, 1650-65. 22, 73-104.

Levy, H. and Laboulle, M. J. J.Some Questions of Scientific Method in the " Siècle des Lumières ".2, 153-163.

Lilley, S." Nicholson's Journal" (1797-1813). 6, 78-101.

Lindeboom, G. A.Pitcairne's Leyden Interlude Described from Documents, illus. 19,273-284.

Linder, Bertil and Smeaton, W. A.Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes : Translators of Bergman andSeheele. 24, 259-273.

Lopez, Claude A.Saltpetre, Tin and Gunpowder : Addenda to the Correspondence ofLavoisier and Franklin. 16, 83-94. . Addenda and Corrigenda. 16,276.

Loudon, J. D., Patterson, T. S., and Cook, A. O. M.Robertas Vallensis' De Veritate et Antiquitate Artis Chemicae. 6, 1-23.

McColley, G.The Second Edition of The Discovery of a World in the Moone, illus.1, 330-334.The Seventeenth Century Doctrine of a Plurality of Worlds, 1, 385-430.A Facsimile of Salusbury's Translation of Didacus à Stunica's Commentaryupon Job. 2, 179—182.William Gilbert and the English Reputation of Giordano Bruno, 2,353-354.The Eighth Sphere of De Bevolutionibus, illus. 2, 354-356.The Ross-Wilkins Controversy, 3, 153-189.Indianapolis Meeting of the History of Science Society. 3, 237.The ' New Système of the Mathematicks '. 3, 238.The Debt of Bishop John Wilkins to the Apologia Pro Galileo of TommasoCampanella, 4, 150-168.J.H. and the Astronomia Grystallina. 4, 319-321.Nicholas Hill and the Philosophia Epicurea. 4, 390-405.

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McKie, D.On Thos. Cochrane's MS. Notes of Black's Chemical Lectures, 1767-8, illus.I, 101-110.Béraut's Theory of Calcination (1747). 1, 269-293.Society for the Study of Alchemy and Early Chemistry. 2, 238 ; 3, 149.Observationes Anatomicae Selectiores Amstelodamensium. 1667-73. 3, 149.Gift of the Whipple Collection to the University of Cambridge. 5, 295.The " Observations " of the Abbé François Rozier (1734-93). - I. illus.13, 73-89.On Some MS. Copies of Black's Chemical Lectures. - II. 15, 65-73 ;- III. 16, 1-9 ; - IV. 18, 87-97 ; - V. 21, 209-255 ; - VI. 23, 1-33.

McKie, D., and Heathcote, N. H. de V.William Cleghorn's De Igné (1779), illus. 14, 1-82.

McKie, D., and Kennedy, DavidOn Some Letters of Joseph Black and Others. 16, 129-170.

McKie D., and Partington, J. R.Historical Studies on the Phlogiston Theory. - I. The Levity of Phlogiston,illus. 2, 361-404. - II. The Negative Weight of Phlogiston, illus.3, 1-58. - III. Light and Heat in Combustion, illus. 3, 337-371.- IV. Last Phases of the Theory, illus. 4, 113-149.Sir John Eliot, Bart. (1736-86), and John Elliot (1747-87). 6, 262-267.

Maddison, R. E. W.Notes on some Members of the Hanckwitz Family in England, illus.II, 64-73.A Summary of Former Accounts of the Life and Work of Robert Boyle.13, 90-108.The Portraiture of the Honourable Robert Boyle, F.R.S., illus. 15,141-214.The Plagiary of Francis Boyle. 17, 111-120.The Earliest Published Writing of Robert Boyle. 17, 165-173.The First Edition of Robert Boyle's Medicinal Experiments. 18, 43-47.Boyle's Hell, illus. 20, 101-110.

Mason, S. F.The Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation. - I. Calvin andServetus in Relation to the New Astronomy and the Theory of theCirculation of the Blood. 9, 66-87; - II. Lutheranism in.Relation toIatrochemistry and the German Nature-Philosophy. 9, 154-175.

Matheson, ColinThomas Pennant and the Morris Brothers, illus. 10, 258-271.

Mauskopf, Seymour H.Thomson before Dalton : Thomas Thomson's Considerations of the Issueof Combining Weight Proportions Prior to his Acceptance of Dalton'sChemical Atomic Theory. 25, 220-242.

Meadows, A. J.The Discovery of an Atmosphere on Venus, illus. 22, 117-127.

Meiklejohn, M. F. M.The Birds of Dante. 10, 33-43.

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Melmore, SidneyNathaniel Pigott's Observatory 1781-1793. 9, 281-286.

Metzger, Charles R.ThoreauonSeien.ee. 12, 206-211.

Middleton, W. E. KnowlesChemistry and Meteorology, 1700-1825. 20, 125-141.

Millington, E. C.History of the Young-Helmholtz Theory of Colour Vision. 5, 167-176.Theories of Cohesion in the Seventeenth Century. 5, 253-269.Studies in Capillarity and Cohesion in the Eighteenth Century. 5, 352-369.

Milner, IsaacIsaac Milner and the Jacksonian Chair of Natural Philosophy. (L. J. M.Coleby). 10, 234-257.

Mohler, N, M. and Nicolson, M.The Scientific Background of Swift's Voyage to Laputa. 2, 299-334.Swift's "Flying Island " in the Voyage to Laputa, illus. 2, 405-430.

Morgan, J. R.The Search for a Safety-Lamp in Mines, illus. 1, 302-329.

Morgan, PaulGeorge Hartgill : An Elizabethan Parson-Astronomer and his Library,illus. 24, 295-311.

Neave, E. W. J.Chemistry in Rozier's Journal. - I. The Journal and its Editors, illus.6, 416-421 ; - II. The Phlogiston Theory, illus. 7, 101-106 ; - III. PierreBayen, illus. 7, 144-148 ; - IV. C. L. Berthollet, illus. 7, 284-292 ;- V. Fixed Air, illus. 7,293-299 ; - VI. Hepatic Air. 7, 393-396 ; - VII. TheDutch Chemists, illus. 7, 395-400 ; - VIII. Chemical Affinity. 8, 28-45.

Neugebauer, O., and Schmidt, O.Hindu Astronomy at Newminster in 1428. 8, 221-228.

Newbury, N. F.The History of the Common Salt Industry on Merseyside. 3, 138-148.

Newth, D. R.Lamarck in 1800. 8, 229-254.

Nicolson, M.English Almanacs and the " New Astronomy ". 4, 1-33.

Nicolson, M., and Mohler, N. M.The Scientific Background of Swift's Voyage to Laputa. 2, 299-334.Swift's " Flying Island " in the Voyage to Laputa. illus. 2, 405-430.

North, F.J.Paviland Cave, the " Red Lady ", the Deluge, and William Buckland,illus. 5, 91-128.

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O'Brien, John J.Samuel Hartlib's Influence on Robert Boyle's Scientific Development. -I. The Stalbridge Period. 21, 1-14 ; - II. Boyle in Oxford. 21, 257-276.

Ockenden, L. C.The Great Batteries of the London Institution. 2, 183-184.

Olby, Robert, and Gautrey, PeterEleven References to Mendel before 1900. 24, 7-20.

Oldfield, Lady KathleenHartley's ' Observations on Man '. 7, 371-381.

Oliver, J.William Borlase's Contribution to Eighteenth-Century Meteorology andClimatology. 25, 275-317.

Olson, Richard G.A Note on Leslie's Cube in the Study of Radiant Heat, illus. 25, 203-208.

Osman, W. A.Alessandro Volta and the Inflammable-Air Eudiometer, illus. 14, 215-242.

Owen, G. E.The Discovery of the Electron. 9, 173-182.

Partington, J. R.Joan Baptista van Helmont, 1, 359-384.The Origins of the Atomic Theory, illus. 4, 245-282.The Early History of Strontium, 5, 157-166 ; - II. 7, 95-100.Some Milestones in the Study of Hydrocarbon Flames. 5, 229-252.Thomas Thomson, 1773-1852. 6, 115-126.Jeremias Benjamin Richter and the Law of Reciprocal Proportions. —I. Illus. 7, 173-198 ; - II . 9, 289-314.Lavoisier's Memoir on the Composition of Nitric Acid. 9, 96-98.Mechanical Aids to the Use of Literature. 10, 274-275.Lignum Nephriticum. 11, 1-26.

Partington, J. R., and McKie, D.Historical Studies on the Phlogiston Theory. - I. The Levity of Phlogiston,illus. 2, 361-404. - II . The Negative Weight of Phlogiston, illus.3, 1-58. - III . Light and Heat in Combustion, illus. 3, 337-371.- IV. Last Phases of the Theory, illus. 4, 113-149.Sir John Eliot, Bart. (1736-86), and John Elliot (1747-87). 6, 262-267.

Passer, Harold C.Electrical Science and the Early Development of the Electrical Manu-facturing Industry in the United States. 7, 382—392.

Patterson, T. S.Richard Boyle, Esq., M.P., F.R.S., and - incidentally, - some of hisrelatives. 1, 62-65.Van Helmont's Ice and Water Experiments. 1, 462-467.Jean Béguin and his Tyrocinium Ghymicum, illus. 2, 243-298.The Discovery of the Optical Rotatory Power of Tartaric Acid. 3, 431-434.Note on Blaise de Vigenère, John Ferguson, and Benzoic Acid, illus.4, 61-64.

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Patterson, T. S., and Buchanan, C.Historical and other Considerations regarding the Crystal Form of Sodium-Ammonium d- and Z-Tartrate, Potassium-Ammonium d- and Z-Tartrate andPotassium Racemate. - I, Mus. 5, 288-295 ; - II, Mus, S, 317-324 ;- III. 6, 76-77.

Patterson, T. S., Loudon, J. D., and Cook, A. O. M.Robertas Vallensis' De Veritate et Antiquitate artis Chemicae. 6, 1-23.

Pelseneer, J.Notes on Some Unpublished Letters from Faraday to Quetelet. 1, 447-452.

Potter, OwenAuguste Laurent's Contributions to Chemistry. 9, 271-280.

Price, Derek J.The Early Observatory Instruments of Trinity College, Cambridge, Mus.8, 1-12.A Collection of Armillary Spheres and other Antique Scientific Instruments,Mus. 10, 172-187.

Prince, A.The Significance of the Early Work of Fredrik Rrtdberg on Alloy Con-stitution. 11, 58-63.

Quan, StanislausGalileo and the Problem of Concentric Circles, Mus. 24, 313-338.

Rancke-Madsen, E.A Painting of the Hon. Robert Boyle in Danish Possession, Mus. 19,147-148.

Ritterbush, Philip C.John Lindsay and the Sensitive Plant, Mus. 18, 233-254.

Robinson, EricThe Derby Philosophical Society, Mus. 9, 359-367.Matthew Boulton, Patron of the Arts, Mus. 9, 368-376.Thomas Love Peacock : Critic of Scientific Progress, Mus. 10, 69-77.Training Captains of Industry : The Education of Matthew RobinsonBoulton (1770-1842) and the younger James Watt (1769-1848), Mus.10, .301-313.Erasmus Darwin's Botanic Garden and the Contemporary Opinion, Mus.10, 314-320.Thomas Beddoes, M.D., and the Reform of Science Teaching in Oxford.11, 137-141.R. E. Raspe, Franklin's ' Club of Thirteen ', and the Lunar Society.11, 142-144.The Lunar Society and the Improvement of Scientific Instruments.- 1 . 12, 296-304 ; - II. 13, 1-8.The Profession of Civil Engineer in the Eighteenth Century : A Portraitof Thomas Yeoman, F.R.S., 1704(?)-1781. 18, 195-215.Benjamin Donn (1729—1798), Teacher of Mathematics and Navigation.19, 27-36.

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Robinson, H. W.Hooke's Pocket-Watch. 4, 322-323.Publication of Newton's Correspondence. 4, 324.

Ross, SidneyScientist : The Story of a Word, illus. 18, 65-85.

Rothery, E. J.Aeneas Coffey (1780-1852). 24, 53-71.

Rowbottom, M. E.The Earliest Published Writing of Robert Boyle, illus. 6, 376-389.

Rowe, J. S.The Life and Work of George Fownes, F.R.S. (1815-49), illus. 6, 422-435.

Russell, Colin A.The Electrochemical Theory of Sir Humphry Davy. - I . The VoltaicPile and Electrolysis, illus. 15, 1-13; - I I . Electrical Interpretations ofChemistry, illus. 15,15-25; - I I I . The Evidence of the Royal InstitutionManuscripts. 19,255-271.The Electrochemical Theory of Berzelius. - I . Origins of the Theory. 19,117-126; - I I . An Electrochemical View of Matter. 19,127-145.

Russell-Wood, J.A Biographical Note on William Brownrigg, M.D., F.R.S. (1711-1800).6, 186-196.The Scientific Work of William Brownrigg, M.D., F.R.S. (1711-1800). -I. illus. 6, 436-447 ; - II. illus. 7, 77-94 ; - III. 7, 199-206.

Rutenberg, D.The Early History of the Potentiometer System of Electrical Measurement,illus. 4, 212-243.

Sarno, Ronald A.A Sixteenth-Century War of Ideas : Science against the Church. 25,209-227.

Scheer, B. T.The Development of the Concept of Tissue Respiration. 4, 295-305.

Scheler, Lucien, and Smeaton, W. A.An Account of Lavoisier's Reconciliation with the Church a short timebefore his Death. 14, 148-153.

Schlueter, R. E.The First Aphorism of Hippocrates as Explained by Paracelsus. 1,453-461.

Schmidt, O. and Neugebauer, O.Hindu Astronomy at Newminster in 1428. 8, 221-228.

Schofield, Robert E.James Watt's Letter to Joseph Priestley, 26 April 1783. 10, 294-300.Membership of the Lunar Society of Birmingham. 12, 118-136.The Scientific Background of Joseph Priestley. 13, 148-163.

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Scott, J. F.John Wallis as a Historian of Mathematics. 1, 335-357.

Shugg, WallaceHumanitarian Attitudes in the Early Animal Experiments of the RoyalSociety. 24, 227-238.

Singer, D. W.Sir John Pringle and his Circle. Part I. Life. 6, 127-180 ; Part II . PublicHealth. 6, 229-247; Part III . Copley Discourses. 6, 248-261.

Siegfried, Robert and Dobbs, Betty Jo.Composition, a Neglected Aspect of the Chemical Revolution. 24, 275-293.

Simpkins, Diana M.Early Editions of Euclid in England. 22, 225-249.

Sleep, Mark C. W.Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803) : His Work and Influence in Geology,Mus. 25, 319-338.

Smeaton, W. A.The Contributions of P. J. Macquer, T. O. Bergman and L. B. Guyton deMorveau to the Reform of Chemical Nomenclature. 10, 88-106.The Early History of Laboratory Instruction in Chemistry at the ÉcolePolytechnique, Paris and Elsewhere. 10, 224-233.The Early Years of the Lycée and the Lycée des Arts. A Chapter in theLives of A. L. Lavoisier and A. F. de Fourcroy. - I. The Lycée of theRue de Valois. I l , 257-267 ; - II . The Lycée des Arts. 11, 309-319.Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozïer, The First Aeronaut, Mus. 11, 349-355.Two Unrecorded Publications of the Régie des Poudres et Salpêtresprobably written by Lavoisier. 12, 157-159.Lavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale de Médecine. 12, 228-244.Lavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale d'Agriculture and theComité d'Agriculture. 12, 267-277.L'Avant Coureur. The Journal in which some of Lavoisier's earliestResearch was reported. 13, 219-234.Lavoisier's Membership of the Assembly of Representatives of theCommune of Paris, 1789-1790. 13, 235-248.Some Unrecorded Editions of Fourcroy's Philosophie Chimique. 23,295-298.

Smeaton, W. A. and Baker, K. M.The Origins and Authorship of the Educational Proposals Published in 1793by the Bureau de Consultation des Arts et Métiers and generally ascribed toLavoisier. 21, 33-46.

Smeaton, W. A. and Linder, Bertil.Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes : Translators of Bergman andScheele. 24, 259-273.

Smeaton, W. A. and Scheler, LucienAn Account of Lavoisier's Reconciliation with the Church a short timebefore his Death. 14, 147-153.

Sparrow, W. J.Count Rumford as a Spy. 11, 320-330.

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Spiers, C. H.Sir Humphry Davy and the Leather Industry, illus. 24, 99-113.William Thomas Brande, Leather Expert. 25, 179-201.

Spriggs, E. A.John Hunter and his Approach to Pathology. 5, 177-184.

Stearns, R. P.The Production of Sugar in Barbados c. 1667. 1, 173-181.The Course of Capt. Edmond Halley in the Year 1700, illus. 1, 294-301.

Stecher, Robert M.The Darwin-Innes Letters. The Correspondence of an Evolutionist withhis Vicar, 1848-1884. 17, 201-258.The Darwin-Bates Letters. Correspondence between two Nineteenth-Century Travellers and Naturalists. - I. illus. 25, 1-47 ; - II. 25, 95-125.

Stimson, D.The Teaching of the History of Science in a Liberal Arts College for Women.2, 460-464.

Storrs, F. C.Lavoisier's Technical Reports : 1768-1794. - I. 1. Origin of the Reports.2. Fuel and Lighting. 22, 251-275 ; - II. 1. The Paris Water Supply.2. ' Corrupt ' Waters. 24, 179-197.

Street, H. E. and Trease, G. E.The Discovery of Asparagine, illus. 7, 70-76.

Sweet, Jessie M.Robert Jameson in London, 1793, illus. 19, 81—116.Matthew Guthrie (1743-1807) : An Eighteenth-Century Gemmologist,illus. 20, 245-302.Robert Jameson's Irish Journal, 1797, illus. 23, 97-126.

Sweet, Jessie M. and Waterston, Charles D.Robert Jameson's Approach to the Wernerian Theory of the Earth, 1796.23, 81-95.

Swinburne, R. G.The Presence-and-Absence Theory. 18, 131-145.Galton's Law - Formulation and Development. 21, 15-31.

Tanner, R. Cecilia H.Nathaniel Torporley and the Harriot Manuscripts. 25, 339-349.

Taylor, F. SherwoodThe Origin of the Thermometer, illus. 5, 129-156.The Evolution of the Still, illus. 5, 185-202.The Invention of the Hygroscope, illus. 6, 181-185.The Teaching of Science at Oxford in the Nineteenth Century. 8, 81-112.The Chemical Studies of John Evelyn, illus. 8, 285-292.

Terrey, H.Edward Turner, M.D., F.R.S., (1798-1837), illus. 2, 137^152.

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Thackray, Arnold W.Fragmentary Remains of John Dalton, — I. Letters. 22, 145-174.

Thomas, H. H.The Rise of Geology and its influence on Contemporary Thought, illus.5, 325-341.

Thompson, D.Queenswood College, Hampshire, illus. 11, 246-254.John Tyndall and the Royal Institution. 13, 9-22.

Thompson, H. R.The Geographical and Geological Observations of Bernard Palissy thePotter. 10, 149-165.

Thorndike, LynnAstronomical and Chronological Calculations at Newminster in 1428.7, 275-283.

Thornton, John L.The History of Physiology at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London.7, 238-247.Charles Hunnings Wilkinson (1763 or 64-1850), illus. 23, 277-286.

Thornton, John L. and Brown, John R.William James Russell (1830-1909) and Investigations on London Fog,illus. 11, 331-336.

Thornton, John L. and Wiles, Anna.William Odling, 1829-1921. 12, 288-295,

Trease, G. E. and Street, H. E.The Discovery of Asparagine, illus. 7, 70-76.

Trengove, L.Chemistry at the Royal Society of London in the Eighteenth Century. -I. 19, 183-237; - II. illus. 20, 1-57; - III (A). Metals. 21, 81-130;- Il l (B). Metals, illus. 21, 175-201.Newton's Theological Views. 22, 277-294.

Turnbull, G. H.Peter Stahl, the First Public Teacher of Chemistry at Oxford. 9, 265-270.

Turner, G. L'E.The Auction Sales of the Earl of Bute's Instruments, 1793, illus.23, 213-242.

Turner, JosephA Note on Maxwell's Interpretation of some Attempts at DynamicalExplanation. 11, 238-245.

Underwood, E. AshworthThe Early Teaching of Anatomy at Padua, with Special Reference to aModel of the Padua Anatomical Theatre, illus. 19, 1-26.Dumfries and the Early History of Surgical Anaesthesia, illus. 23, 35-75.

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Verney, E. B.Some Aspects of the Work of Ernest Henry Starling, Mus. 12, 30-47.

Walker, O. J.August Kekulé and the Benzene Problem, Mus. 4, 34-46.

Walker, W. C.The Detection and Estimation of Electric Charges in the EighteenthCentury, Mus. 1, 66-100.Animal Electricity before Galvani, Mus. 2, 84-113.

Waterston, Charles D. and Sweet, Jessie M.Robert Jameson's Approach to the Wernerian Theory of the Earth, 1796.23, 81-95.

Watt, Gregory (1777-1804)Gregory Watt's Tour on the Continent, 1801. (Sir G. de Beer). 13, 127-136.

Weil, E.Andreas Albrecht, A Seventeenth-Century Military Surveyor, Mus.6, 44-45.An Unpublished Letter by Davy on the Safety-Lamp. 6, 306-307.

Weisinger, HerbertEnglish Treatment of the Relationship between the Rise of Science and theRenaissance, 1740-1840. 7, 248-274.

Westfall, Richard S.Unpublished Boyle Papers Relating to Scientific Method. - 1. 12, 63-73;- II. 12, 103-117.

Whipple, R. S.John Yarwell or The Story of a Trade Card, Mus. 7, 62-69.

White, M. D.Early Observations on Chromosomes and Genes. 2, 237.

Whyte, L. L.On the History of Natural Lengths. 10, 20-27.

Wightman, William P. D.William Cullen and the Teaching of Chemistry. - I. 9, 154-165 ;- II. 12, 192-205.

Wiles, Anna and Thornton, John L.William Odling, 1829-1921. 12, 288-295.

Wilkie, J. S.Galton's Contribution to the Theory of Evolution with special Referenceto his Use of Models and Metaphors. 11, 194-205.The Idea of Evolution in the Writings of Buffon. - I. 12, 48-62 ; -II. 12, 212-227 ; - III. 12, 255-266.Nàgeli's Work on the Fine Structure of Living Matter. - I. illus. 16,11-41 ; - II. Mus. 16, 171-207 ; - Ilia. Mus. 16, 209-239 ; - IllbMus. 17, -27-62.

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Williams, E.Some Experiments on the Expansive Force of Freezing Water. 10,166-171.Two Metallurgical Discoveries, 11, 93-98.Hooke's Law and the Concept of the Elastic Limit. 12, 74-83.Some Observations of Leonardo, Galileo, Mariotte and others relative toSize Effect, Mus. 13, 23-29.Some Historical Notes on the " Fusible Metals ". 15, 57-62.Two Observations of Leonardo Da Vinci Concerning Ramifications andConcavities, Mus. 21, 135-138.

Williamson, RaymondThe Germ Theory of Disease. Neglected Precursors of Louis Pasteur,Mus. 11, 44-57.

Wilson, F. J.The Chemical Society of Glasgow : Minute Book of 1800-1801. 2, 451-459.

Winder, MarianneA Bibliography of German Astrological Works Printed between 1465 and1600, with Locations of those Extant in London Libraries. 22, 191-220.

Winter, H. J. J.The Work of G. T. Flechner on the Galvanic Circuit. 6, 197-205.

Woodbury, R. S.The Teaching of the History of Science in an Engineering School.1, 226-232.

Woolf, HarryEighteenth-Century Observations of the Transits of Venus, Mus.9, 176-190.

Young, Frank G.Claude Bernard and the Theory of the Glycogenic Function of the Liver.2, 47-83.

Ann. of Sci.—Ace. Index

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Subject Index

Académie des Sciences (Paris).The Genesis of the Académie des Sciences. (A. J. George). 3, 372-401.

Accum, Friedrich. (1769-1838).A Biographical Study, Mus. (R. J. Cole). 7, 128-143.

Aether-Stream HypothesisNewton's Aether-Stream Hypothesis and the Inverse Square Law ofGravitation. (B. J. Aiton). 25, 255-260.

AffinitySome Theoretical Aspects of Eighteenth-Century Tables of Affinity. (A.M. Duncan). -I, Mus. 18, 177-194; -II, Mus. 18, 217-232.William Keir's De Attractione Ghemica (1778) and the Concepts of ChemicalSaturation, Attraction and Repulsion. (A. M. Duncan). 23, 149-173.

Agassiz, Louis (1807-1873).The Tour of the British Isles made by Louis Agassiz in 1840. (G. L.Davies). 24, 131-146.

Albrecht, A. (1586-1628).A Seventeenth-Century Military Surveyor, Mus. (E. Weil). 6, 44-45.

Aldini, G. (1762-1834)A Bibliographical Study of the Galvani and the Aldini Writings on AnimalElectricity, Mus. 1, 239-268.

Alighieri, Dante (1265-1321).The Birds of Dante. (M. F. M. Meiklejohn). 10, 33-43.

Alkali ManufactureManufacture of Alkali in Britain, 1779-1789. (L. Gittins). 22, 175-190.

Allan, Thomas (1777-1833).Thomas Allan, Mineralogist: An Autobiographical Fragment. (W. V.Farrar and K. R. Farrar). 24, 115-120.

AnaesthesiaDumfries and the Early History of Surgical Anaesthesia, Mus. (W. A.Underwood). 23, 35-75.

AnalysisFire Analysis and the Elements in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.(A. G. Debus). 23,127-147.

AsparagineThe Discovery of Asparagine, Mus. (H. E. Street and G. E. Trease). 7,70-76.

AstrologyA Bibliography of German Astrological Works Printed between 1465 and1600, with Locations of those Extant in London Libraries. (M. Winder).22, 191-220.

c2

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Astronomia CrystallinaJ. H. and the Astronomia Crystallina. (G. McColley). 4, 319-321.

AstronomyHindu Astronomy at Newminster in 1428. (0. Neugebauer and 0.Schmidt). 8,221-228.Chappe D'Auteroche: A Pathfinder for Astronomy. (A. Armitage). 10,277-293.The Astronomical Work of Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille. (A. Armitage). 11,163-191.The Vortex Theory of the Planetary Motions. (E. J. Aiton). - I . illus.13, 249-264; - I I , illus. 14, 132-147; - I I I 14, 157-172.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 16, 65-82.A History of the Solar Red Shift Problem. (E. 6. Forbes). 17, 129-164.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 18, 31-41.Tobias Mayer's Lunar Tables. (E. G. Forbes). 22, 105-116.The Discovery of an Atmosphere on Venus, illus. (A. J. Meadows). 22,117-127.George Hartgill: An Elizabethan Parson-Astronomer and his Library,illus. (P. Morgan). 24,295-311.

AtomRutherford, Nagaoka and the Nuclear Atom. (P. M. Heimann). 23,299-303.

Atomic TheoryThe Origins of the Atomic Theory, illus. (J. R. Partington). 4, 245-282.Thomson before Dalton. (S. H. Mauskopf). 25, 229-242.

AuvergneThe Volcanoes of Auvergne, illus. (Sir G. de Beer). 18,49-61.

L'Avant CoureurL'Avant Coureur. The Journal in which some of Lavoisier's earliestResearch was reported. (W. A. Smeaton). 13, 219-234.

Avogadro, Amedeo (1776-1856).The Physico-Chemical Studies of Amedeo Avogadro. (N. G. Coley). 20,195-210.

Bacon, Francis (1561-1626).Francis Bacon and the Rise of the Mechanical Arts in Eighteenth-CenturyEngland. (R. C. Cochrane). 12, 136-156.

BarometerDaniel Quare and the Portable Barometer. (N. Goodison). 23, 287-293.

Bates, Henry Walter (1825-1892).The Darwin-Bates Letters. Correspondence between two Nineteenth-Century Travellers and Naturalists. (R. M. Stecher). - I , illus. 25, 1-47; -11.25,95-125.

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Bayen, Pierre. (1725-1798).Chemistry in Rozier's Journal. III. Pierre Bayen, illus. (E. W. J.Neave). 7, 144-148.

Beddoes, Thomas (1760-1808).Thomas Beddoes, M.D., and the Reform of Science Teaching in Oxford.(E. Robinson). 11, 137-141.Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes: Translators of Bergman and Scheele.(B. Liader and W. A. Smeaton). 24, 259-273.

Béguin, Jean (fl. early 17th cent.).Jean Béguin and his Tyrodnium Chymicum, illus. (T. S. Patterson). 2,243-298.Some New Considerations on Béguin and Libavius, illus. (A. Kent and0. Hannaway). 16, 241-250.

Bentham, Jeremy (1748-1832).Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes: Translators of Bergman and Scheele.(B. Linder and W. A. Smeaton). 24, 259-273.

Benzene ProblemAugust Kekulé and the Benzene Problem, illus. (O.J.Walker). 4,34-46.

Benzoic AcidNote on Blaise de Vigenère, John Ferguson, and Benzoic Acid, illus. (T.S. Patterson). 4, 61-64.

Bergman, Torbern Olof (1735-1784).The Contributions of P. J. Macquer, T. 0. Bergman and L. B. Guyton deMorveau to the Reform of Chemical Nomenclature. (W. A. Smeaton).10, 87-106.Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes: Translators of Bergman and Scheele.(B. Linder and W. A. Smeaton). 14, 259-273.

Berlin Academy of SciencesFrederick the Great and the Berlin Academy of Sciences (1740-1766).(R. S. Calinger). 24, 239-249.

Bernard, Claude (1813-1878).Claude Bernard and the Theory of the Glycogenic Function of the Liver.(F. G. Young). 2, 47-83.

Bernoulli, Daniel (1700-1782).The Contribution of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of Tides,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 11, 206-223.

Berthollet, Claude Louis (1748-1822).Chemistry in Rozier's Journal. (E. W. J. Neave). IV. C. L. Berthollet,illus. 7, 284-292.A Letter from Berthollet to Blagden relating to . . .Synthesis of Water . . .(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). 10, 58-62.

Berzelius, Jons Jacob (1779-1848).The Electrochemical Theory of Berzelius. (C. A. Russell). -I . Originsof the Theory, 19, 117-126; —II. An Electrochemical View of Matter.19, 127-145.

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Black, Joseph (1728-1799).On Thos. Gochrane's MS. Notes of Black's Chemical Lectures, 1767-8.(D. McKie). 1, 101-110.On Some MS. Copies of Black's Chemical Lectures. (D. McKie). - I I .15, 65-73; - I I I . 16, 1-9; -IV. 18, 87-97; -V. 21, 209-255; -VI. 23,1-33.The Use of Diagrams as Chemical ' Equations ' in the Lecture Notes ofWilliam Cullen and Joseph Black, illus. (M. W. Crosland). 15, 75-90.On Some Letters of Joseph Black and Others. (D. McKie and D. Kennedy)16, 129-170.

Blagden, Sir Charles (1748-1820).A Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating to . . . Synthesis of Water . . .(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). 10, 58-62.

Boerhaave, Hermann (1668-1738).Boerhaave and the Botanists. (P. W. Gibbs). 13, 47-61.

Boole, George (1815-1864).Boole's Philosophy of Logic, illus. (Mary B. Heese). 8,61-81.

Borelli, Giovanni Alfonso (1608-1679)." Borell's Hypothesis " and the Rise of Celestial Mechanics. (A. Armitage)6, 268-282.

Borlase, William (1695-1772).William Borlase's Contribution to Eighteenth-Century Meteorology andClimatology. (J. Oliver). 25, 275-317.

Botanic GardenErasmus Darwin's Botanic Garden and the Contemporary Opinion, illus.(E. Robinson). 10, 314-320.

Boulton, Matthew (1728-1809).Matthew Boulton, Patron of the Arts, illus. (E. Robinson). 9, 368-376.

Boulton, Matthew Robinson (1770-1842).Training Captains of Industry: The Education of Matthew RobinsonBoulton [1770-1842] and the younger James Watt [1769-1848], illus. (E.Robinson). 10, 301-313.

Boyle, Francis (1623-1699).The Plagiary of Francis Boyle. (R. E. W. Maddison). 17, 111-120.

Boyle, Richard (1641-1665).Richard Boyle, Esq., M.P., F.R.S., and—incidentally—some of hisrelatives. (T. S. Patterson). 1, 62-65.

Boyle, Robert (1627-1691).The Earliest Published Writing of Robert Boyle, illus. (M. E.Rowbottom). 6, 376-389.Unpublished Boyle Papers Relating to Scientific Method. (R. S. Westfall).- I . 12, 63-73; - I I . 12, 103-117.A Summary of Former Accounts of the Life and Work of Robert Boyle.(R. E. W. Maddison). 13, 90-108.

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The Portraiture of the Honourable Robert Boyle, F.R.S., Mus. (R. E . W.Maddison). 15, 141-214.The Earliest Published Writing of Robert Boyle. (R. E. W. Maddison).17, 165-173.The First Edition of Robert Boyle's Medicinal Experiments. (R. E. W.Maddison). 18,43-47.A Painting of the Hon. Robert Boyle in Danish Possession, Mus. (E.Ranoke-Madsen). 19, 147-148.Boyle's Hell, Mus. (R. E. W. Maddison). 20, 101-110.Samuel Hartlib's Influence on Robert Boyle's Scientific Development. (J.J. O'Brien). - I . The Stalbridge Period. 21,1-14; - I I . Boyle in Oxford.21, 257-276.

Brande, William Thomas (1788-1866).William Thomas Brande, Leather Expert. (C. H. Spiers). 25, 179-201.

British MuseumWilliam Smith : The Sale of his Geological Collection to the British Museum,Mus. (J. M. Eyles). 23, 177-212.

British Society for the History of Science.Bulletin of, 6, 206.

Brougham, Henry Peter (1778-1868).Science and Brougham's Society. (J. N. Hays). 20, 227-241.

Brownrigg, William (1711-1800).A Biographical Note on William Brownrigg, M.D., F.R.S. (1711-1800).(J. Russell-Wood). 6, 186-196.The Scientific Work of William Brownrigg, M.D., P.R.S. (1711-1800).(J. Russell-Wood). - I , Mus. 6, 436-447; - I I , Mus. 7, 77-94; - I I I . 7,199-206.

Bruno, Giordano (1548-1600).William Gilbert and the English Reputation of Giordano Bruno, (G.McColley). 2, 353-354.The Cosmology of Giordano Bruno. (A. Armitage). 6, 24-31.

Buckland, William (1784-1856).Paviland Cave, the " Red Lady ", the Deluge, and William Buckland,Mus. (F. J. North). 5, 91-128.

Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc de (1707-1788).The Idea of Evolution in the Writings of Buffon. (J. S. Wilkie). - I .12,48-62; -11.12,212-227; -HI . 12, 255-266.

Bureau de Consultation des Arts et MétiersThe Origins and Authorship of the Educational Proposals Published in1793 by the Bureau de Consultation des Arts et Métiers and generallyascribed to Lavoisier. (K. M. Baker and W. A. Smeaton). 21, 33-46.

Burke, Edmund (1729-1797).Joseph Priestley and Edmund Burke : An Unpublished Letter. (W. H.G. Armytage). 12, 160-161.

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CalcinationBérault's Theory of (1747). (D. McKie). 1, 269-293.

CalculusThe Introduction of the Differential Notation to Great Britain. (J. M.Dubbey), 19, 37-48.Cauchy's Contribution to the Establishment of the Calculus. (J. M.Dubbey). 22, 61-67.

Calvin, Jean (1509-1564).In The Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation. (S. F. Mason).- I . 9, 64-87.

Campanella, Tommaso (1568-1639).The Debt of Bishop John Wilkins to the Apologia Pro Galileo of TommasoCampanella. (G. McColley). 4, 150-168.

CapillarityStudies in Capillarity and Cohesion in the Eighteenth Century. (E. C.Millington). 5, 352-369.

Carlisle, Sir AnthonySir Anthony Carlisle, F.R.S. (1768-1840), Mus. (R. J. Cole). 8, 255-270.

Cauchy, Augustin Louis (1789-1857).Cauchy's Contribution to the Establishment of the Calculus. (J. M.Dubbey). 22, 61-67.

Cavendish, Sir Charles (1591-1645).Sir Charles Cavendish and his Learned Friends. (J. Jacquot). - I . Beforethe Civil War. 8, 13-27; - I I . The Years of Exile. 8, 175-191.

Celestial Mechanics" BorelPs Hypothesis " and the Rise of Celestial Mechanics. (A.Armitage). 6, 268-282.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 16, 65-82.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism,Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 18, 31-41.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz: A New Interpretation, Mus. (E. J.Aiton). 20, 111-123.An Imaginary Error in the Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, Mus. (E. J.Aiton). 21, 169-173.

CeltiumMoseley and Celtium: The Search for a Missing Element, Mus. (P. M.Heimann). 23, 249-260.

ChameleonThe Discovery of the Mechanics of Colour-Changes in the Chameleon, Mus.(A. E. Best). 24, 147-167.

Chapelain, Jean (1595-1674).A Seventeenth-Century Amateur of Science: Jean Chapelain. (A. J.George). 3, 217-236.

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Chemical NomenclatureThe Contributions of P. J. Macquer, T. 0. Bergman and L. B. Guyton deMorveau to the Reform of Chemical Nomenclature. (W. A. Smeaton). 10,87-106.

Chemical RevolutionComposition, a Neglected Aspect of the Chemical Revolution. (R.Siegfried and B. J. Dobbs). 24, 275-293.

Chemical Society, Glasgow.The Chemical Society of Glasgow: Minute Book of 1800-1801. (F. J.

Wilson). 2,451-459.

ChemistryChemistry at the Royal Society of London in the Eighteenth Century.(L. Trengove). -I . 19, 183-237; -II, Mus. 20, 1-57; -III (A). Metals.21, 81-130; III (B). Metals, Mus. 21, 175-201.Chemistry and Meteorology, 1700-1825. (W. E. Middleton). 20, 125-141.

Chile Nitrate.History of the Chile Nitrate Industry. -I , (M. B. Donald.), 1, 29-47; -II.1, 193-216.

Chisholm, AlexanderA Notebook of William Lewis and Alexander Chisholm, Mus. (F. W.Gibbs). 8,202-220.

ChronometerThe Origin and Development of the Marine Chronometer. (E.G. Forbes).22,1-25.

Clark, Thomas (1801-1867)A Biographical Study. (J. H. S. Green). 13, 164-179.

ClassificationAn Unpublished Essay of Condorcet on Technical Methods of Classifica-tion. (K. M. Baker). 18, 99-123.

Clausius, Rudolf (1822-1888)The Development of the Kinetic Theory of Gases. (S. G. Brush). -III.Clausius. 14, 185-196.

ClimatologyWilliam Borlase's Contribution to Eighteenth-Century Meteorology andClimatology. (J.Oliver). 25,275-317.

Clock MetaphorThe Clock Metaphor and Probabilism: The Impact of Descartes onEnglish Methodological Thought, 1650-65. (L. Laudan). 22, 73-104.

' Club of Thirteen 'R. E. Raspe, Franklin's ' Club of Thirteen ', and the Lunar Society.(E. Robinson). 11, 142-144.

Coal-GasRichard Laming and the Coal-Gas Industry, with his Views on the Struc-ture of Matter. (W. V. Farrar). 25, 243-253.

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Cochrane, Thomas.On Thos. Cochrane's MS. Notes of Black's Chemical Lectures, 1767-8(D. McKie), 1,101-110.

Coffey, AeneasAeneas Coffey (1780-1852). (E. J. Rothery). 24, 53-71.

CohesionTheories of Cohesion in the Seventeenth Century (E. C. Millington). 5,253-269.Studies in Capillarity and Cohesion in the Eighteenth Century (E. C.Millington). 5, 352-369.

Colour VisionHistory of the Young-Helmholtz Theory of Colour Vision (E. C.Millington). 5, 167-176.

Columbus, ChristopherAntoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794) and Christopher Columbus (1446 ?-1506). (D. I. Duveen and H. S. Kliekstein) 10, 63-68.

CombustionOn Spontaneous Combustion, illus. (J. Z. Fullmer). 17, 65-80.

CometsMaster Georg Dôrffel and the Rise of Cometary Astronomy, illus. (A.Armitage). 7,303-315.

Comité d'AgricultureLavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale d'Agriculture and theComité d'Agriculture. (W. A. Smeaton). 11, 267-277.

Commune of ParisLavoisier's Membership of the Assembly of Representatives of the Com-mune of Paris, 1789-1790. (W. A. Smeaton). 13, 235-248.

Concentric Circles ProblemGalileo and the Problem of Concentric Circles, illus. (S. Quan). 24,313-338.

Condorcet, M. J. Antoine N. C, Marquis de (1743-1794)An Unpublished Essay of Condorcet on Technical Methods of Classifica-tion. (K. M. Baker). 18, 99-123.

ConvectionWilliam Strutt and the Application of Convection to the Heating ofBuildings, illus. (M. C. Egerton). 24, 73-87.

CosmologyThe Cosmology of Giordano Bruno (A. Armitage). 6, 24-31.A Sixteenth-Century War of Ideas: Science against the Church. (R. A.Sarno). 25, 209-227.

Cruickshank, William (? - 1810 or 1811)William Cruickshank of Woolwich. (A. Coutts). 15,121-133.

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Cullen, William (1710-1790)A Cullen Chemical Manuscript of 1754 (L. Dobbin). 1, 138-156.William Cullen and the Teaching of Chemistry. (W. P. D. Wightinan).-I . 9, 154-165; -II. 12, 192-205.The Use of Diagrams as Chemical ' Equations ' in the Lecture Notes ofWilliam Cullen and Joseph Black, illus. (M. P. Crosland). 15, 75-90.

Dalton, John (1766-1844)Fragmentary Remains of John Dalton. (A. W. Thackray). -.1. Letters'.22, 145-174.Thomson before Dalton. (S. H. Mauskopf). 25, 220-242.

Darwin, Charles Robert (1809-1882)Further Unpublished Letters of Charles Darwin. (Sir G. de Beer). 14,83-115.The Darwin-Innes Letters. The Correspondence of an Evolutionist withhis Vicar, 1848-1884. (R. M. Stecher). 17, 201-258.

Darwin, Erasmus (1731-1802)Erasmus Darwin's Botanic Garden and the Contemporary Opinion, illus.(E. Robinson). 10, 314-320.Erasmus Darwin in Russia. (C. A. Hoare). 11, 255-256.

D'Auteroche, Jean Baptiste Chappe. (1728-1769)Chappe D'Auteroche : A Pathfinder for Astronomy. (A. Armitage). 10,277-293.

Da Vinci, Leonardo (1452-1519)Some Observations of Leonardo, Galileo, Mariotte and others relative toSize Effect, illus. (E. Williams). 13, 23-29.Two Observations of Leonardo Da Vinci Concerning Ramifications andConcavities, illus. (E. Williams). 21,135-138.

Davy, Sir Humphry (1778-1829)An Unpublished Letter by Davy on the Safety-Lamp. (E. Weil). 6,306-307.The Electrochemical Theory of Sir Humphry Davy. (C. A. Russell).-I . The Voltaic Pile and Electrolysis, iUus. 15, 1-13; -II. ElectricalInterpretations of Chemistry, illus. 15, 15-25; -III. The Evidence ofthe Royal Institution Manuscripts. 19, 255-271.Humphry Davy and the Gunpowder Manufactory, illus. (J. Z. Fullmer).20, 165-194.Sir Humphry Davy and the Leather Industry, illus. (C. H. Spiers). 24,99-113.

De Attractione Chemica (1778)William Keir's De Attractione Chemica (1778) and the Concepts of ChemicalSaturation, Attraction and Repulsion. (A. M. Duncan). 23, 149-173.

De IgnéWilliam Cleghom's De Igne (1779), illus. (D. McKie and H. N. de V.Heathcote). 14, 1-82.

DelugePaviland Cave, the "Red Lady", the Deluge, and William Buckland,illus. (F. J. North). 5, 91-128.

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Derby Philosophical SocietyThe Derby Philosophical Society, illus. (E. Robinson). 9, 359-367.

De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium Libri VIThe Eighth Sphere of De Revolutionibus, illus. (G. McColley). 2, 354-356.

Derham, WilliamWilliam Derham, F.R.S. (1657-1735). (A. D. Atkinson). 8, 368-392.

Descartes, René (1596-1650)Descartes's Theory of Tides, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 11, 337-348.The Cartesian Theory of Gravity, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 15, 27-49.The Clock Metaphor and Probabilism: The Impact of Descartes on EnglishMethodological Thought, 1660-65. (L. Laudan). 22, 73-104.

De Veritate et Antiquitate Artis ChemicaeRobertus Vallensis' De Veritate et Antiquitate Artis Chemicae. (T. S.Patterson, J. D. Loudon and A. O. M. Cook). 6, 1-23.

Dialogus de AvibusLongolius on Birds. (T. P. Harrison). 14, 257-268.

Didacus à Stunica.A Facsimile of Salusbury's Translation of Didacus à Stunica's Commentaryupon Job (McColley G.), 2, 179-182.

Distinguished Men of ScienceA Re-examination of William Walker's " Distinguished Men of Science ",illus. (A. Clow). 11, 183-193.

Donn, BenjaminBenjamin Donn (1729-1798), Teacher of Mathematics and Navigation.(E. Robinson). 19, 27-36.

Dôrffel, Georg (1643-1688)Master Georg Dôrffel and the Rise of Cometary Astronomy, illus. [A.Armitage]. 7, 303-315.

Dossie, Robert.Robert Dossie (1717-1777) and the Society of Arts, illus. (F. W. Gibbs).7, 149-172.Robert Dossie (1717-77). (F. W. Gibbs). 9, 191-193.

Drebbel, Cornelis (1572-1633)The Furnaces and Thermometers of Cornelis Drebbel, illus. (F. W. Gibbs).6, 32-43.

DrugsEarly Theories of the Mode of Action of Drugs and Poisons. (M. P. Earles).17, 97-110.Experiments with Drugs and Poisons in the Seventeenth and EighteenthCenturies. (M. P. Earles). 19,241-254.

Dufay, Charles François de Cisternay (1698-1739)Guericke and Dufay, (I. Bernard Cohen). 7, 207-209.

Dumfries and Galloway Royal Infirmary.Dumfries and the Early History of Surgical Anaesthesia, illus. (E. A.Underwood). 23, 35-75.

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Dutch ChemistsChemistry in Rozier's Journal. VII. The Dutch Chemists, illus. (E. W. J.Neave]. 7, 395-400.

Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic FieldClerk Maxwell's Corrections to the Page Proofs of " A Dynamical Theoryof the Electromagnetic Field". (P. F. Cranefield). 10,359-362.

Echo-Sounding.On the First Echo-Sounding Experiment, illus. (H. Drubba). 10, 28-32.

Ecole Polytechnique, Paris.The Early History of Laboratory Instruction in Chemistry at the EcolePolytechnique, Paris, and Elsewhere. (W. A. Smeaton). 10,224-233.

Electrical Attraction.Newton and the 'Electrical Attraction Unexcited'. (J. L. Hawes). 24,121-130.

Electrical Manufacture in U.S.A.Electrical Science and the Early Development of the Electrical Manufactur-ing Industry in the United States. (H. C. Passer). 7, 382-392.

Electricity.The Early Meaning of Electricity : Some Pseudodoxia Epidemica.(N.H. de V. Heathcote). 23, 261-275.

Electrochemistry.The Electrochemical Theory of Sir Humphry Davy. (Ç. A. Russell). -I . TheVoltaic Pile and Electrolysis, illus.. 15, 1-13 ; —II. Electrical Interpreta-tions of Chemistry, illus. 15, 15-25.

Electron.The Discovery of the Electron. (G. E. Owen). 9, 173-182.

Elements.Fire Analysis and the Elements in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.(A. G. Debus). 23, 127-147.

Moseley and Celtium : The search for a Missing Element, illus. (P. M.Heimann). 23,249-260.

Engineering Profession.The Profession of Civil Engineer in the Eighteenth Century : A Portrait ofThomas Yeoman, F.R.S., 1704(?)-1781. (E. Robinson). 18, 195-215.

English Encyclopaedias.Science in English Encyclopaedias, 1704-1875. (Arthur Hughes). -I. 7,340-370 ; -II. Theories of the Elementary Composition of Water. 8, 323-367 ; -III. Meteorology. 9, 233-264 ; -IV. Theories of the Earth. 11,74-92.

Etzler, John AdolphusTechnology and Utopianism: J. A. Etzler in England 1840—44, illus.(W. H. G. Armytage). 11, 129-136.

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EuclidEarly Editions of Euclid in England. (D. M. Simpkins). 22, 225-249.

Euler, Leonhard (1707-1783)The Contributions of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of Tides,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 11,206-223.

Evelyn, John (1620-1706)The Chemical Studies of John Evelyn, illus. (F. S. Taylor). 8, 285-292.

EvolutionThe Early Reception of the Doctrine of Evolution in the United States(W. Ebenstein) 4, 306-321.Galton's Contribution to the Theory of Evolution with special Referenceto his Use of Models and Metaphors. (J. S. Wilkie). 11, 194-205.The Idea of Evolution in the Writings of Buffon. (J. S. Wilkie). -I .11, 48-62; -II. 11, 212-227; -III. 11, 255-266.

Fabricius, Johann Christian (1745-1808)A Naturalist's Vacation. The London Letters of J. C. Fabricius. (A.Armitage). 14, 116-131.

Fall of bodiesThe Deviation of Falling Bodies. (A. Armitage). 5, 342-351.

Faraday, Michael (1791-1867)Notes on Some Unpublished Letters from Faraday to Quetelet (J.Pelseneer), 1, 447-452.

Fechner, Gustav Theodor (1801-1887)The Work of G. T. Fechner on the Galvanic Circuit. (H. J. J. Winter).6, 197-205.

Ferguson, JohnNote on Blaise de Vigenère, John Ferguson, and Benzoic Acid, illus.(T. S. Patterson). 4, 61-64.

Fixed AirChemistry in Rozier's Journal. V. Fixed Air, illus. (E. W. J. Neave).7, 293-299.

FlameSome Milestones in the Study of Hydrocarbon Flames. (J. R. Partington).5, 229-252.

Foetal cardio-vascular apparatus....Foetal Cardio Vascular Apparatus.... Part I: Galen to Harvey.(K. J. Franklin). 5, 57-89.Jean Méry (1645-1722) and his Ideas on the Foetal Blood Flow, illus.(K. J. Franklin). 5, 203-228.

FogWilliam James Russell (1830-1909) and Investigations of London Fog,illus. (J. R. Brown and J. L. Thornton). 11, 331-336.

Fontana, Felice (1730-1805)The Experimental Investigation of Viper Venom by Felice Fontana (1730-1805). (M. P. Earles). 16, 255-268.

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ForceThe Inverse Problem of Central Forces, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 20, 81-99.The Deflecting Force of the Earth's Rotation from Galileo to Newton,illus. (H. L. Burstyn). 21, 47-80.

Fourcroy, Antoine François de (1755-1809)The Early Years of the Lycée and the Lycée des Arts. A Chapter in theLives of A. L. Lavoisier and A. F. de Fourcroy. (W. A. Smeaton). -I .The Lycée of the Rue de Valois. Il , 257-267; -II. The Lycée des Arts.11, 309-319.Some Unrecorded Editions of Fourcroy's Philosophie Chimique. (W. A.Smeaton. 23,295-298.

Fownes, GeorgeThe Life and Work of George Fownes, F.R.S. (1815-49), illus, (J. S.Rowe). 6,422-435.

Franklin, BenjaminBenjamin Franklin (1706-1790) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794). (D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). -I . Franklin and the NewChemistry, illus. 11,103-128; -II. Joint Investigations, illus. 11, 271-308;-III. Documentation. 13, 30-46.Saltpetre, Tin and Gunpowder: Addenda to the Correspondence ofLavoisier and Franklin. (C. A. Lopez). 16, 83-94; —Addenda and Corri-genda. 16, 276.

Fusible MetalsSome Historical Notes on the "Fusible Metals". (E. Williams). 15,57-62.

Frederick II, the Great (1712-1786)Frederick the Great and the Berlin Academy of Sciences (1740-1766).(R. S. Calinger). 24, 239-249.

Fulton, John Farquhar (1899-1960)Obituary. 15,139-140.

FurnacesThe Furnaces and Thermometers of Cornelis Drebbel, illus. (F. W. Gibbs).6,32-43.

Galen (129-199?)....Foetal Cardio-vascular Apparatus.... Part I: Galen to Harvey,illus. (K. J. Franklin). 5, 57-89.

Galilei, Galileo (1564-1642)The Debt of Bishop John Wilkins to the Apologia Pro Galileo of TommasoCampanella (G. McColley), 4,150-168, • .Galileo's Theory of the Tides, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 10, 44-57.Some Observations of Leonardo, Galileo, Mariotte and others relative toSize Effect, illus. (E. Williams). 13, 23-29.The Deflecting Force of the Earth's Rotation from Galileo to Newton,illus. (H. L. Burstyn). 21, 47-80.Galileo and the Problem of Concentric Circles, illus. (S. Quan). 24,313-338.

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Galton, Francis (1822-1911 )Galton's Contribution to the Theory of Evolution with special Referenceto his Use of Models and Metaphors. (J. S. Wilkie). 11, 194-205.Galton's Law - Formulation and Development. (R. G. Swinburne). 21,15-31.

Galvani, Luigi (1737-1798)Galvani and the Pre-Galvanian Electrophysiologists (H. E. Hoff), 1,157-172.A Bibliographical Study of the Galvani and the Aldini Writings on AnimalElectricity, Mus. (J. F. Fulton and H. Cushing), 1, 239-268.Animal Electricity before Galvani, Mus. (W. C. Walker.) 2, 84-113.

GalvanismThe Work of G. T. Feehner on the Galvanic Circuit. (H. J. J. Winter). 6,197-205.

Gay-Lussac, Joseph Louis (1778-1850)The Origins of Gay-Lussac's Law of Combining Volumes of Gases. (M.P.Croslând). 17, 1-26.

GemmologyMatthew Guthrie (1743-1807) : An Eighteenth-Century Gemmologist,Mus. (J. M. Sweet). 20, 245-302.

GeologyThe Rise of Geology and its Influence on Contemporary Thought, Mus.(H.H.Thomas). 5,325-341.John Phillips's Geological Maps of the British Isles, Mus. (J. A. Douglasand J. M. Edmonds). 6, 361-375.The Early Progress of British Geology. (J. Challinor). -I . From Lelandto Woodward, 1538-1728. 9, 124-153; -II. From Strachey to Michell,1719-1788. 10, 1-19; -III. From Hutton to Playfair, 1788-1802, Mus.10, 147-148.William Smith: The Sale of his Geological Collection to the British Museum,Mus. (J. M. Eyles). 23, 177-212.Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803): His Work and Influence in Geology,Mus. (M. C. W. Sleep). 25, 319-338.

Germ TheoryThe Germ Theory of Disease. Neglected Precursors of Louis Pasteur,Mus. (R. Williamson), i l , 44-57:Airborne Particles and the Germ Theory: 1860-1880. (J. K. Crêllin).22, 46-60.

Gilbert, William (1544-1603)William Gilbert and the English Reputation of Giordano Bruno, (G.McColley). 2,353-354.

GlaciersJohann Heinrich Hottinger's Description of the Ice-Mountains ofSwitzerland, 1703. (G. R. de Beer). 6, 327-360.Bernard Friedrich Kuhn's Investigations on Glaciers. (G. R. de Beer).9, 323-341.

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GravityThe Cartesian Theory of Gravity, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 15, 27-49.Newton's Aether-Stream Hypothesis and the Inverse Square Law ofGravitation. (E. J. Aiton). 25, 255-260.

Guericke, Otto von, (1602-1686)Guerick's Sulphur Globe, illus. (N. H. de V. Heathcote). 6, 293-305.Guericke and Dufay. (I. Bernard Cohen). 7, 207-209.

Gunpowder.Saltpetre, Tin and Gunpowder: Addenda to the Correspondence ofLavoisier and Franklin. (C. A. Lopez). 16, 83-94;... .Addenda and Cor-rigenda. 16, 276.Humphry Davy and the Gunpowder Manufactory, illus. (J. Z. Fullmer).20, 165-194.

Guthrie, MatthewMatthew Guthrie (1743-1807) : An Eighteenth-Century Gemmologist,illus. (J. M. Sweet). 20, 245-302.

Haak, Theodore (1605-1690)Theodore Haak and the Early Years of the Royal Society. (P. R. Barnett).13, 205-218.

Hadley, John (1731-1764)John Hadley. Fourth Professor of Chemistry in the University of Cam-bridge. (L. J. M. Coleby). 8, 293-301.

Haller, Albrecht von (1708-1777)Haller's Historic/, Stirpium. (G. R. de Beer). 9, 1-46.

Hall, Sir James, (1761-1832)The Evolution of a Chemist. Sir James Hall, Bt., F.R.S., P.R.S.E.,illus. (V. A. Eyles). 19, 153-182.In Scientific Activities in Paris in 1791, illus. (J. A. Chaldecott). 24, 21-52.

Halley, Edmond (1656-1742)The Course of Capt. Edmond Halley in the Year 1700, illus. (R. P.Stearns). 1, 294-301.

Hamilton, Sir William (1730-1803)Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803) : His Work and Influence in Geology,illus. (M. C. W. Sleep). 25, 319-338.

Hanbury, JohnThe Rise of the Tinplate Industry. III. John Hanbury (1664-1734),illus. (F. W. Gibbs). 7, 43-61.

Hanckwitz FamilyNotes on Some Members of the Hanckwitz Family in England, illus.(R. E. W. Maddison). 11, 64-73.

Harriot, Thomas (ca. 1560-1621)Nathaniel Torporley and the Harriot Manuscripts. (R. C. H. Tanner).25, 339-349.

Ann. of Sri.—Ace. Index d

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Hartgill, George (16th cent.)George Hartgill: An Elizabethan Parson-Astronomer and his Library,Mus. (P. Morgan). 24, 295-311.

Hartley, David (1705-1757)Hartley's ' Observations on Man '. (Lady Kathleen Oldfield). 7, 371-381.

Hartlib, Samuel (?-1662)Samuel Hartlib's Influence on Robert Boyle's Scientific Development.(J. J. O'Brien). -I . The Stalbridge Period. 21,1-14; -II. Boyle in Oxford.21, 257-276.

Harvey, William (1578-1657)William Harvey, Physician and Biologist : His Precursors, Opponents andSuccessors. (H. P. Bayon). - Parts I & II, Mus. 3, 59-118; Part III,Mus. 3, 435-456; Part IV, Mus. 4, 65-106; Part V, Mus. 4, 329-389.....Foetal Cardio-Vascular Apparatus... .(K. J. Franklin). Part I :Galen to Harvey, Mus. 5, 57-89.Harvey: Spontaneous Generation and the Egg. (E. T. Foote) 25, 139-163.

Hassenfratz, Jean Henri (1755-1827)An Unpublished Report on the Waterproofing of Shoe Leather by Lavoisierand Hassenfratz. (D. Duveen). 8, 162-164.

Helmholtz, Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von (1821-1894)History of the Young-Helmholtz Theory of Colour Vision (E. C. Millington).5, 167-176.

Herschel, Sir William (1738-1822)The Radiant Heat Spectrum from Herschel to Melloni. -I . The Work ofHerschel and his Contemporaries. (E. S. Cornell). 3, 119-137.

Helmont, J. B. van. (1579-1644)Joan Baptista van Helmont (J. R. Partington), 1, 359-384.Van Helmont's Ice and Water Experiments (T. S. Patterson), 1, 462-467.

Hepatic AirChemistry in Rozier's Journal. VI. Hepatic Air. (E. W. J. Neave). 7,393-395.

Herapath, John (1790-1868)The Development of the Kinetic Theory of Gases. (S. G. Brush). -I .Herapath. 13, 188-198.

Hill, Nicholas (ca. 1570-1610)Nicholas Hill and the Philosophic/, Epicurea (G. McColley.) 4, 390-405.

Hippocrates (ca. 460 B.C.-cœ. 377 B.C.)The First Aphorism of Hippocrates as Explained by Paracelsus (R. E.Schlueter). 1,453-461.

Historia StirpiumHaller's Historia Stirpium. (G. R. de Beer). 9, 1-46.

History of Science Society.Report of the St. Louis Meeting 1936. 1, 233-234.Report of the Providence Meeting 1936. 2, 236-237.Report of the Indianapolis Meeting 1937. 3, 237.

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Hooke, Robert (1635-1703)Hooke's Pocket-Watch. (H. W. Robinson). 4, 322-323.Hooke's Law and the Concept of the Elastic Limit. (E. Williams). 12, 74-83.

Hottinger, J. H. (1680-1756)Johann Heinrich Hottinger's Description of the Ice-Mountains ofSwitzerland, 1703. (G. R. de Beer). 6, 327-360.

Humboldt, Friedrich Heinrich Alexander von (1769-1859)A Book Humboldt gave to Schiller. (J. J. Bikerman). 2-, 131-134.

Hunter, John (1728-1793)John Hunter and his Approach to Pathology (E. A. Spriggs). 5, 177-184.

Hutton, James (1726-1797)Some Geological Correspondence of James Hutton. (V. A. Eyles andJ. M. Eyles]. 7, 316-339.

Huttonian TheoryThe Eighteenth-Century Denudation Dilemma and the Huttonian Theoryof the Earth. (G. L. Davies). 22, 129-138.

HygroscopeThe Invention of the Hygroscope, Mus. (F. Sherwood Taylor). 6, 181-185.

International Congresses of Physiologists.A Short History of, Mus. (K., J. Franklin.). 3, 242-335.

Jameson, Robert (1774-1854)Robert Jameson in London, 1793, Mus. (J. M. Sweet). 19, 81-116.Robert Jameson's Approach to the Wernerian Theory of the Earth. (J. M.Sweet and C. D. Waterston). 23, 81-95.Robert Jameson's Irish Journal, 1797, Mus. (J. M. Sweet). 23, 97-126.

Japanning TradeHistorical Survey of the Japanning Trade. (F. W. Gibbs). -I . Easternand Western Lacquer, Mus. 7, 401—416; -II. Early British Japanning.9, 88-95; -III. Pontypool and Usk, 9, 197-213; -IV. The Midlands. 9,214-232.

Keir, William (?-1783)William Keir's De Attractions, Chemica (1778) and the Concepts of ChemicalSaturation, Attraction and Repulsion. (A. M. Duncan). 23, 149-173.

Kekulé, Friedrich August (1829-1896)August Kekulé and the Benzene Problem, Mus. (0. J. Walker), 4, 34-46.

Kinetic Theory of GasesThe Development of the Kinetic Theory of Gases. (S. G. Brush). -I .Herapath. 13, 188-198; -II. Waterston. 13, 273-282; -III. Clausius. 14,185-196; -IV. Maxwell. 14, 243-255.

Koelliker, R. A. vonRudolf Albert v. Koelliker (1817-1905), Mus. (G. R. Cameron). 9, 166-172.

dZ

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Kossel, Albrecht (1853-1927)Some Recollections of Albrecht Kossel. ( Sir Ernest Kennaway ). 8,393-397.

Kranich, B.Burchard Kranich (c. 1515-1578), Miner and Queen's Physician, CornishMining Stamps, Antimony and Frobisher's Gold, illus. (M. B. Donald).6, 308-322.A Further Note on Burchard Kranich. (M. B. Donald). 7, 107-108.

Kuhn, Bernhard Friedrich (1762-1825)Bernhard Friedrich Kuhn's Investigations on Glaciers. (G. R. de Beer).9, 323-341.

Lacaille, Nicolas Louis de (1713-1762)The Astronomical Work of Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille. (A. Armitage). 11,163-191.

Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet (1744-1829)Lamarck in 1800. (D. R. Newth). 8, 229-254.

Laming, Richard (1798 or 1799-1879)Richard Laming and the Coal-Gas Industry, with his Views on the Structureof Matter. (W. V. Farrar). 25, 243-253.

Laurent, Auguste (1807 or 1808-1853)Auguste Laurent's Contributions to Chemistry. (Owen Potter). 9, 271-280.

Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent (1743-1794)The Newer Views of Priestley and Lavoisier. (Sir Philip J. Hartog). 5,1-56.An Unpublished Report on the Waterproofing of Shoe Leather by Lavoisierand Hassenfratz. (D. Duveen). 8, 162-164.Lavoisier's Memoir on the Composition of Nitric Acid. (J. R. Partington).9, 96-98.A Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating t o . . . . Synthesis of Water. .(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). 10, 58-62.Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794) and Christopher Columbus (1446?-1506). (D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein) 10, 63-68.A Bibliographical Study of the Introduction of Lavoisier's Traité Elé-mentaire de Chimie into Great Britain and America, illus. (D. I. Duveenand H. S. Klickstein). 10, 321-338.Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794)(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). - I . Franklin and the New Chemistry,illus. 11, 103-128; - I I . Joint Investigations, illus. 11, 271-308; - I I I .Documentation. 13, 30-46.The Early Years of the Lycée and the Lycée des Arts. A Chapter in theLives of A. L. Lavoisier and A. F. de Fourcroy. (W. A. Smeaton). - I .The Lycée of the Rue de Valois. I l , 257-267; - I I . The Lycée des Arts.11, 309-319.Two Unrecorded Publications of the Régie des Poudres et Salpêtresprobably written by Lavoisier. (W. A. Smeaton). 12, 157-159.Lavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale de Médecine. (W. A.Smeaton). 12,228-244.Lavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale d'Agriculture and the Comitéd'Agriculture. (W. A. Smeaton). 12, 267-277.

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L'Avant Coureur. The Journal in which some of Lavoisier's earliestResearch was reported. (W. A. Smeaton). 13, 219-234.Lavoisier's Membership of the Assembly of Representatives of the Com-mune of Paris, 1789-1790. (W. A. Smeaton). 13, 235-248.An Account of Lavoisier's Reconciliation with the Church a short timebefore his Death. (L. Scheler and W. A. Smeaton). 14, 148-153.Saltpetre, Tin and Gunpowder: Addenda to the Correspondence ofLavoisier and Franklin. (C. A. Lopez). 16, 83-94; —Addenda and Cor-rigenda. 16, 276.The Origins and Authorship of the Educational Proposals Published in1793 by the Bureau de Consultation des Arts et Métiers and generally ascribedto Lavoisier. (K. M. Baker and W. A. Smeaton). 21, 33-46.Lavoisier's Technical Reports: 1768-1794. (F. C. Storrs). - I . 1. Origin ofthe Reports. 2. Fuel and Lighting. 22, 251-275; - I I . 1. The Paris WaterSupply. 2. ' Corrupt ' Waters. 24, 179-197.

Law of Combining Volumes of GasesThe Origins of Gay-Lussac's Law of Combining Volumes of Gases. (M. P.Crosland). 17, 1-26.

Law of Reciprocal ProportionsJeremias Benjamin Richter and the Law of Reciprocal Proportions, Mus.(J. R. Partington). - I . 7, 173-198.

LeatherAn Unpublished Report on the Waterproofing of Shoe Leather by Lavoisierand Hassenfratz. (D. Duveen). 8, 162-146.Sir Humphry Davy and the Leather Industry, illus. (C. H. Spiers). 24,99-113.William Thomas Brande, Leather Expert. (C. H. Spiers). 25, 179-201.

Leeuwenhoek, Antony van. (1632-1723)Leeuwenhoek's Zoological Researches. (Cole, F. J.). Part I. 2, 1-46;Part II . 2, 185-235.

Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm (1646-1716)The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 16, 65-82.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 18, 31-41.An Imaginary Error in the Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, illus. (E. J.Aiton). 21, 169-173.

Leslie, John (1766-1832)A Note on Leslie's Cube in the Study of Radiant Heat, illus. (R. G. Olson).25, 203-208.

Lewis, WilliamWilliam Lewis, M.B., F.R.S., (1708-1781), illus. (F. W. Gibbs). 8, 122-151.A Notebook of William Lewis and Alexander Chisholm, illus. (F. G.Gibbs). 8, 202-220.

Libavius, Andreas (1540/1550-1616)Some New Considerations on Béguin and Libavius, illus. (A. Kent and0. Hannaway). 16, 241-250.

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Lignum NephriticumLignum Nephriticum. (J. R. Partington). 11, 1-26.

Lindsay, JohnJohn Lindsay and the Sensitive Plant, illus. (P. C. Ritterbush). 18,233-254.

London InstitutionThe Great Batteries of the London Institution. (L. C. Ockenden). 2,183-184.

Longolius, Gybertus (1507-1543)Longolius on Birds. (T. P. Harrison). 14, 257-268.

Lower, Richard. (1631-1691)Some Textual Changes in Successive Editions of Richard Lower's Tractatusde Corde . . . illus. (K. J. Franklin). 4, 283-294.

Lunar SocietyR. E. Raspe, Franklin's ' Club of Thirteen ', and the Lunar Society. (E.Robinson). 11, 142-144.Membership of the Lunar Society of Birmingham. (R. E. Schofield). 12,118-136.The Lunar Society and the Improvement of Scientific Instruments. (E.Robinson). - I . 12,296-304.

Luther, Martin (1483-1546)In The Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation. (S. F. Mason).- I I . 9, 154-175.

Lycée des ArtsThe Early Years of the Lycée and the Lycée des Arts. A Chapter in theLives of A. L. Lavoisier and A. F. de Fourcroy. - I I . The Lycée desArts. (W. A. Smeaton). 11, 309-319.

Lycée of the Rue de ValoisThe Early Years of the Lycée and the Lycée des Arts. A Chapter in theLives of A. L. Lavoisier and A. F. de Fourcroy. - I . The Lycée of theRue de Valois. (W. A. Smeaton). 11, 257-267.

Macculloch, John (1773-1835)John Macculloch, F.R.S., and his Geological Maps: An Account of theFirst Geological Survey of Scotland, illus. (V. A. Eyles). 2, 114-129.Macculloch's Geological Map of Scotland : An Additional Note, illus. (V.A. Eyles). 4, 107.

Macquer, Pierre Joseph. (1718-1784)The Contributions of P. J. Macquer, T. 0. Bergman and L. B. Guyton deMorveau to the Reform of Chemical Nomenclature. (W. A. Smeaton).10, 87-106.

Mariotte, Edme (1620-1684)Some Observations of Leonardo, Galileo, Mariotte and others relative toSize Effect, illus. (E. Williams). 13, 23-29.

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Maxwell, James Clerk (1831-1879)Clerk Maxwell's Corrections to the Page Proofs of " A Dynamical Theory ofthe Electromagnetic Field ". (P. F. Cranefield). 10, 359-362.A Note on Maxwell's Interpretation of Some Attempts at DynamicalExplanation. (J. Turner). 11, 238-245.Clerk Maxwell's Apparatus for the Measurement of Surface Tension, illus.(I. B. Hopley). 13, 180-187.Maxwell's Work on Electrical Resistance. (I. B. Hopley). - I . TheDetermination of the Absolute Unit of Resistance, illus. 13,265-272 ; - I I .Proposals for the Re-determination of the B.A. Unit of 1863, illus. 14,197-210; —III. Improvement on Mance's Method for the Measurement ofBattery Resistance, illus. 15, 51-55.The Development of the Kinetic Theory of Gases. (S. G. Brush). -IV.Maxwell. 14, 243-255.Maxwell's Determination of the Number of Electrostatic Units in oneElectromagnetic Unit of Electricity, illus. (I. B. Hopley). 15, 91-108.

Mayer, Tobias Johann (1723-1762)Tobias Mayer's Lunar Tables. (E. G. Forbes). 22, 105-116.

Medicinal ExperimentsThe First Edition of Robert Boyle's Medicinal Experiments. (R. E. W.Maddison). 18,43-47.

Melloni, Macedonio (1798-1854)The Radiant Heat Spectrum from Herschel to Melloni. - I . The Work ofHerschel and his Contemporaries. 3, 119-137.

Mendel, Johann Gregor (1822-1884)Has Mendel's Work been Rediscovered ? (R. A. Fisher). 1, 115-137.Eleven References to Mendel before 1900. (R, Olby and P. Gautrey). 24,7-20.

Méry, JeanJean Méry (1645-1722) and his Ideas on the Foetal Blood Flow, illus.(K. J. Franklin). 5, 203-228.

MeteorologyChemistry and Meteorology, 1700-1825. (W. E. K. Middleton). 20,125-141.William Borlase's Contribution to Eighteenth-Century Meteorology andClimatology. (J. Oliver). 25, 275-317.

Meusnier de la Place, Jean Baptiste Marie Charles (1754-1793)A Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating to . . . Synthesis of Water . . .(D. I . Duveen and H . S. Klickstein). 10, 58-62.

Michell, John (1724-1793)The Scientific Work of the Reverend John Michell. (C. L. Hardin). 22,27-47.

Mickleburgh, JohnJohn Mickleburgh . . . 1718-56. (L. J. M. Coleby). 8, 165-174.

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Mont BlancThe History of the Altimetry of Mont Blanc, illus. (Sir G. de Beer). 12,1-29.

More, Henry (1614-1687)Descartes and Henry More on the Beast-Machine—A Translation of theircorrespondence pertaining to animal automatism. (L. D. Cohen). 1, 48-61.

Moritzi, Alexander (1806-1850)Alexander Moritzi. (Sir G. de Beer). 16, 251-254.

Moseley, Henry Gwyn Jeffreys (1887-1915)Moseley and Celtium: The Search for a Missing Element, illus. (P. M.Heimann). 23, 249-260.

Moyes, Henry (1749-1807)Blind Henry Moyes, " An Excellent Lecturer in Philosophy", illus. (J.A. Harrison). 13, 109-125.

Nagaoka, Hantaro (1865-1950)Rutherford, Nagaoka and the Nuclear Atom. (P. M. Heimann). 23,299-303.

Nageli, Karl Wilhelm von (1817-1891)Nâgeli's Work on the Fine Structure of Living Matter. (J. S. Wilkie). —I,illus. 16, 11-41; - I I , illus. 16, 171-207; -I l ia , illus. 16, 209-239;- I l lb , Mus. 17, 27-62.

NatronOn " Nitre " and " Natron ". (F. W. Gibbs). 3, 213-216.

Natural History in EnglandThe Vogue of Natural History in England, 1750-1770. (W. P. Jones). 2,345-352.

Newton, Isaac (1643-1727)Publication of Newton's Correspondence. (H. W. Robinson). 4, 324.Further Optical Experiments of Isaac Newton, illus. (A. R. Hall). 11,

27-43.The Contributions of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of Tides,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 11, 206-223.Newton on the Calculation of Central Forces, illus. (A. R. Hall). 13, 62-71.Mr Newton, Mr Pepys & Dyse: A Historical Note. (F. N. David). 13,137-147.The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 18, 31-41.The Deflecting Force of the Earth's Rotation from Galileo to Newton, illus.(H. L. Burstyn). 21, 47-80.Newton's Theological Views. (L. Trengove). 22, 277-294.Newton and the ' Electrical Attraction Unexcited '. (J. L. Hawes). 24,121-130.Newton's Aether-Stream Hypothesis and the Inverse Square Law ofGravitation. (E. J. Aiton). 25, 255-260.

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Nicholson's Journal"Nicholson's Journal" (1797-1813). (S. Lilley). 6,78-101.

NitreOn " Nitre " and " Natron ". (F. W. Gibbs). 3, 213-216.

ObituaryRobinson, Henry William (1888-1960). 14, 211-213.Pulton, John Farquhar (1899-1960). 15, 139-140.McKie, Douglas (1896-1967). 24, 1-5.

Observationes Anatomicae Selectiores Amstelodamensium1667-73. (D. McKie). 3, 149.

Observations sur la PhysiqueThe " Observations " of the Abbé François Rozier (1734-93). (D. McKie).- I . ill-us. 13, 73-89.

Oxford Medical SchoolA Short Sketch of the History of, Mus. (K. J. Franklin). 1, 431-446.

PaduaThe Early Teaching of Anatomy at Padua, with Special Reference to aModel of the Padua Anatomical Theatre, Mus. (E. A. Underwood). 19,1-26.

PalaeontologyThe Beginnings of Scientific Palaeontology in Britain. (J. Challinor). 6,46-53.

Palissy, Bernard (ca. 1510-1589)The Geographical and Geological Observations of Bernard Palissy thePotter. (H. R. Thompson). 10, 149-165.

Paracelsus, Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim (1493-1541)The First Aphorism of Hippocrates as Explained by Paracelsus. (R. E.Schlueter). 1,453-461.

Paviland CavePaviland Cave, the " Red Lady ", the Deluge, and William Buckland, Mus.(F. J. North). 5, 91-128.

Peacock, Thomas Love (1785-1866)Thomas Love Peacock: Critic of Scientific Progress, Mus. (E. Robinson).10, 69-77.

Pennant, Thomas (1726-1798)Thomas Pennant and the Morris Brothers, Mus. (C. Matheson). 10,258-271.

Pepys, Samuel (1633-1703)Mr Newton, Mr Pepys & Dyse: A Historical Note. (F. N. David). 13,137-147.

Philosophia EpicureaNicholas Hill and the Philosophia Epicurea. (G. McColley). 4, 390-405.

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Philosophical TransactionsThe Scientific Movement and the Development of Chemistry in England,as seen in the Papers published in the Philosophical Transactions from1664-5 until 1750. (P. George). 8, 302-322.

PhlebitisAn Introduction to the Earlier History of Phlebitis. (K. J. Franklin). 4,47-60.

Philosophie ChimiqueSome Unrecorded Editions of Foureroy's Philosophie Chimique. (W. A.Smeaton). 23,295-298.

Phlogiston Theory.Historical Studies on the Phlogiston Theory. (J. R. Partington and D.McKie). - I . The Levity of Phlogiston, illus. 2, 361-404; -II. TheNegative Weight of Phlogiston, Mus. 3,1-58; -III. Light and Heat inCombustion, illus. 3, 337-371; -IV. Last Phases of the Theory, illus.4, 113-149.Chemistry in Pvozier's Journal. -II. The Phlogiston Theory, illus. (E.W. J. Neave). 7, 101-106.

PhosgeneThe History of the Discovery of Phosgene. (L. Dobbin). 5, 270-287.

Pigott, Nathaniel (?-1804)Nathaniel Pigott's Observatory 1781-1793. (S. Melmore). 9, 281-286.

Pilâtre de Rozier, Jean François (1757-1785)The First Aeronaut, illus. (W. A. Smeaton). 11, 349-356.

Pingre, Alexandre Gui (1711-1796)The Pilgrimage of Pingre. (A. Armitage). 9,47-63.

Pitcairne, Archibald (1652-1713)Pitcairne's Leyden Interlude Described from Documents, illus. (G. A.Lindeboom). 19, 273-284.

Plurality of Worlds.The Seventeenth-Century Doctrine of the Plurality of Worlds. (G.McColley). 1,385-430.

PotentiometerThe Early History of the Potentiometer System of Electrical Measurement,illus. (D. Rutenberg). 4, 212-243.

Priestley, Joseph (1733-1804)The Newer Views of Priestley and Lavoisier. (Sir Philip J. Hartog). 4,1-56.James Watt's Letter to Joseph Priestley, 26 April 1783. (R. E. Schofield).10» 294-300.Joseph Priestley and Edmund Burke: An Unpublished Letter. (W. H. G.Armytage). 12, 160-161.The Scientific Background of Joseph Priestley. (R. E. Schofield). 13,148-163.

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Pringle, Sir John, Bt., (1707-1782)Sir John Pringle and Ms Circle. Part I. Life. (D. W. Singer). 6, 127-180; Part II. Public Health. 6,229-247; Part III. Copley Discourses.6, 248-261.

' Protestant-Puritan Ethic ' TheoryReligious Influences in the Rise of Modern Science: A Review and Criticism,particularly of the ' Protestant-Puritan Ethic ' Theory. (D. S. Kemsley).24, 199-226.

Prout, William (1785-1850)Studies in the History of Prout's Hypothesis. (W. H. Brock). -I . Unityof Matter and Unity of Sensations; The Text of Prout's De FacultateSentiendi, 1810. 25, 49-80; -II. Prout's Lectures of 1814. 25, 127-137.

Prussian Blue.A History of Prussian Blue. (L. J. M. Coleby). 4, 206-211.

Pseudodoxia EpidemicaThe Early Meaning of Electricity: Some Pseudodoxia Epidemica. (N. H. deV. Heathcote). 23, 261-275.

Quare, Daniel (1649-1724)Daniel Quare and the Portable Barometer. (N. Goodison). 23, 287-293.

Quetelet, Adolphe (1796-1874)Notes on Some Unpublished Letters from Faraday to Quetelet. (J.Pelseneer). 1, 447-452.

Radiant HeatA Note on Leslie's cube in the Study of Radiant Heat, illus. (R. C. Olson).25, 203-208.

Raspe, Rudolph Erich (1737-1794)R. E. Raspe, Franklin's 'Club of Thirteen', and the Lunar Society. (E.Robinson). 11, 142-144.

" Red Lady "Paviland Cave, the " Red Lady ", the Deluge, and William Buckland, illus.(F. J. North). 5, 91-128.

Red ShiftA History of the Solar Red Shift Problem. (E. G. Forbes). 17, 129-164.

Régie des Poudres et SalpêtresTwo Unrecorded Publications of the Régie des Poudres et Salpêtresprobably written by Lavoisier.. (W. A. Smeaton). 12, 157-159.

Resistance, (electrical)Maxwell's Work on Electrical Resistance. (I. B. Hopley). - I . TheDetermination of the Absolute Unit of Resistance, illus. 13, 265-272 ; -II.Proposals for the Re-determination of the B.A. Unit of 1863, illus. 14,197-210; -III. Improvement on Mance's Method for the Measurement ofBattery Resistance, illus. 15, 51-55.

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Richter, Jeremias Benjamin. (1762-1807)Jeremias Benjamin Richter and. the Law of Reciprocal Proportions. (J. R.Partington). -I . illus. 7, 173-198; -II. 9, 289-314.

Robinson, Henry William (1888-1960)Obituary. 14,211-213.

Rockingham, 2nd Marquess of (1730-1782)Richard Watson and the Marquess of Rockingham: An UnpublishedExchange in 1771. (W. H. G. Armytage). 14, 155-156.

Ross, Alexander (1591-1654)The Ross-Wilkins Controversy. (G. McColley). 3, 153-189.

Rousseau, Jean Jacques (1712-1778)Jean Jacques Rousseau: Botanist, illus. (Sir Gavin de Beer). 10, 189-223.

Royal InstitutionJohn Tyndall and the Royal Institution. (D. Thompson). 13, 9-22.

Royal SocietyTheodore Haak and the Early Years of the Royal Society. (P. R. Barnett).13, 205-218.Physics at the Royal Society, 1660-1800. (W. A. Badcock). -I . Changeof State. 16,95-115.Chemistry at the Royal Society of London in the Eighteenth Century. (L.Trengove). -I. 19, 183-237; -II, illus. 20, 1-57; -III(A). Metals.21, 81-130; -III(B). Metals, illus. 21, 175-201.Humanitarian Attitudes in the Early Animal Experiments of the RoyalSociety. (W. Shugg). 24,227-238.

Rozier, Jean François (1734-1793)The " Observations " of the Abbé François Rozier (1734-93). (D. McKie).-I , illus. 13, 73-89.

Rozier's JournalChemistry in Rozier's Journal. (E. W. J. Neave). -I . The Journal andits Pounders, illus. 6, 416^21; -II. The Phlogiston Theory, Mus. 7,101-106; -III. Pierre Bayen, illus. 7, 144-148; -IV. C. L. Berthollet,illus. 7, 284-292; -V. Fixed Air, illus. 7, 293-299; -VI. Hepatic Air.7, 393-396; -VII. The Dutch Chemists, illus. 7, 395-400; -VIII. Chemi-cal Affinity. 8, 28-45.

Rudberg, Fredrik (1800-1839)The Significance of the Early Work of Fredrik Rudberg on Alloy Constitu-tion. (A. Prince). 11, 58-63.

RumaniaThe Origin and Development of Science in Rumania. (R. R. Florescu).16, 43-58.

Rumford, Count von. Sir Benjamin ThompsonCount Rumford as a Spy. (W. J. Sparrow). 11, 320-330.

Rutherford, Ernest (1871-1937)Rutherford, Nagaoka and the Nuclear Atom. (P. M. Heimann). 23, 299-303.

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Safety-LampSearch for, in Mines, illus. (J. R. Morgan). 1, 302-329.An Unpublished Letter by Davy on the Safety-Lamp. (E.Weil). 6,306-307.

St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London.The History of Physiology at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London. (JohnL. Thornton). 7, 238-247.

SalesWilliam Smith: The Sale of his Geological Collection to the British Museum,illus. (J. M. Eyles). 23, 177-212.The Auction Sales of the Earl of Bute's Instruments, 1793. illus. 23, 213-242.

Salt Industry.The History of the Common Salt Industry on. Merseyside. (N. F.Newbury). 3, 138-148.

SaltpetreSalpêtre, Tin and Gunpowder: Addenda to the Correspondence of Lavoisierand Franklin. (C. A. Lopez). 16, 83-94; . . . Addenda and Corrigenda.16, 276.

Scarburgh, Sir Charles (1616-1694)Sir Charles Scarburgh, illus. (J. J. Keevil). 8,113-121.

Scheele, Carl Wilhelm (1742-1786)Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes: Translators of Bergman and Scheele.(B. Linder and W. A. Smeaton). 24, 259-273.

Schiller, Friedrich von (1759-1805)A Book Humboldt gave to Schiller. (J. J. Bikerman). 21, 131-134.

Schwediauer, Franz Xaver (1748-1824)Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes: Translators of Bergman and Scheele.(B. Linder and W. A. Smeaton). 24, 259-273.

Science Teaching.One Hundred Years of Science Teaching in Great Britain. (D. Foster).2, 335-344.The Early History of Laboratory Instruction in Chemistry at the ÉcolePolytechnique, Paris, and Elsewhere. (W. A. Smeaton). 10, 224-233.Thomas Beddoes, M.D., and the Reform of Science Teaching in Oxford.(E. Robinson). 11, 137-141.Queenwood College, Hampshire. A Mid-19th Century Experiment inScience Teaching, illus. (D. Thompson). 11, 246-254.Science and Education in India before the Mutiny. (H. J. C. Larwood).17, 81-96.

Scientific InstrumentsThe Early Observatory Instruments of Trinity College, Cambridge, illus.(D. J. Price). 8, 1-12.The Classification of Sundials, illus. (K. Higgins). 9, 342-358.A Collection of Armillary Spheres and other Antique Scientific Instruments,illus. (D. J. Price). 10, 172-187.

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The Lunar Society and the Improvement of Scientific Instruments. (E.Robinson). - I . 12,296-304; - I I . 13, 1-8.Clerk Maxwell's Apparatus for the Measurement of Surface Tension, illus.(I. B. Hopley). 13, 180-187.The Auction Sales of the Earl of Bute's Instruments, 1793. illus. (G.L'E. Turner). 23, 213-242.Daniel Quare and the Portable Barometer. (N. Goodison). 23, 287-293.

ScientistScientist; The Story of a Word, illus. (S. Ross). 18, 65-85.

Sensitive PlantJohn Lindsay and the Sensitive Plant, illus. (P. C. Ritterbush). 18,233-254.

Servetus (Serveto), Miguel (1511-1553)In The Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation. (S. F. Mason).9, 64-87.

Shaw, Peter (1694-1763)Peter Shaw and the Revival of Chemistry, illus. (F. W. Gibbs). 7, 211—237.

" Siècle des Lumières "Some Questions of Scientific Method in the "Siècle des Lumières". (M.J. J. Laboulle and H. Levy). 2, 153-163.

Silvestre, Augustin François (1762-1851)Augustin François Silvestre and the Société Philomatique. (D. I. Duveen).10, 339-341.

Smith, Sir James Edward (1759-1828)Some Letters from Jakob Samuel Wyttenbach to Sir James Edward Smith.(G. R. de Beer). 6, 105-114.

Smith, William (1769-1839)William Smith: The Sale of his Geological Collection to the British Musem,illus. (J. M. Eyles). 23, 177-212.

SoapThe History of the Manufacture of Soap, illus. (F. W. Gibbs). 4, 169-190.

Social ScienceThe Early History of the Term ' Social Science '. (K. M. Baker). 20, 211-226.

Société PhilomatiqueAugustin François Silvestre and the Société Philomatique. (D. I. Duveen).10, 339-341.

Société Royale d'AgricultureLavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale d'Agriculture and theComité d'Agriculture. (W. A. Smeaton). 11, 267-277.

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Société Royale de MedicineLavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale do Médecine, (W. A.Smeaton). 11, 228-244.

Society of Arts.Robert Dossie (1717-1777) and the Society of Arts, Mus. (F. W. Gibbs).7, 149-172.

Spontaneous GenerationHarvey: Spontaneous Generation and the Egg. (E. T. Foote). 25, 139-163.

Stahl, Peter (?-ca.l675).Peter Stahl, the First Public Teacher of Chemistry at Oxford. (G. H.Turnbull). 9, 265-270.

Starling, Ernest Henry (1866-1927).Some Aspects of the Work of Ernest Henry Starling, Mus. (E. B. Verny).12, 30-47.

StillThe Evolution of the Still, Mus. (F. Sherwood Taylor). 5, 185-202.

StrontiumThe Early History of Strontium. (J. R. Partington). 5, 157-166; -IT.7, 95-100.

Strutt, William (1756-1830)William Strutt and the Application of Convection to the Heating ofBuildings, Mus. (M. C. Egerton). 24, 73-87.

Stuart, John. 3rd Earl of Bute. (1713-1792)The Auction Sales of the Earl of Bute's Instruments, 1793, Mus. (G.L'E. Turner). 23, 213-242.

SugarThe Production of Sugar in Barbados c. 1667. (R. P. Stearns). 1, 173-181.

Surface TensionClerk Maxwell's Apparatus for the Measurement of Surface Tension, Mus.(I. B. Hopley). 13, 180-187.

Swammerdam, Jan (1637-1680).Swammerdam's Home, Mus. (F. J. Cole). 2, 236.

Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745).The Scientific Background of Swift's Voyage to Laputa. (M. Nicolson andN. M. Mohler). 2, 299-334.Swift's " Flying Island " in the Voyage to Laputa, Mus. (M. Nicolson andN. M. Mohlor). 2, 405-430.

Symmons, John (?-ca.-1832).Biographical Note on John Symmons, F.R.S. {R. J. Cole). 10, 272-273.

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Tartaric Acid.The Discovery of the Optical Rotatory Power of Tartaric Acid. 3, 431-434.

TartratesHistorical and other Considerations Regarding the Crystal Form of Sodium-Ammonium d" and Z-Tartrate, Potassium-Ammonium d- and ^-Tartrate,and Potassium-Racemate (T. S. Patterson and C. Buchanan). - I , illus.5, 288-295; - I I , illus. 5, 317-324; - I I I . 6, 76-77.

Teaching of AnatomyThe Early Teaching of Anatomy at Padua, with Special Reference to aModel of the Padua Anatomical Theatre, illus. (E. A. Underwood). 19,1-26.

Telioux, BartolomeoBartolomeo Telioux and the Early History of the Thermometer, iUus. ( J.A. Chaldecott). 8, 195-201.

ThermometerThe Origin of the Thermometer, illus. (F. Sherwood Taylor). 5,129-156.The Furnaces and Thermometers of Cornelis Drebbel, illus. (F. W. Gibbs).6, 32-43.Bartolomeo Telioux and the Early History of the Thermometer, illus. (J.A. Chaldecott). 8, 195-201.

Thomson, ThomasThomas Thomson, 1773-1852. (J. R. Partington). 6, 115-126.Thomson before Dalton. (S. H. Mauskopf). 25, 220-242.

Thoreau, Henry David (1817-1862).Thoreau on Science. (C. R. Metzger). 12, 206-211.

TidesGalileo's Theory of the Tides, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 10, 44-57.The Contributions of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of Tides,illus. (E. J. Aiton). 11, 206-223.Descartes's Theory of Tides, illus. (E. J. Aiton). 11, 336-348.

TimberTimber Famine and the Development of Technology. (A. Clow and N. L.Clow). 12, 85-102.Timber and the Advance of Technology : A Reconsideration. (M. W.Flinn). 15, 109-120.

TinSaltpetre, Tin and Gunpowder: Addenda to the Correspondence ofLavoisier and Franklin. (C. A. Lopez). 16, 83-94; . . . . Addenda andCorrigenda. 16, 276.

TinplateThe Rise of the Tinplate Industry. (F. W. Gibbs). - I . The TinplateWorkers, illus. 6,390-403 ; - I I . Early Tinplate Manufacture to 1700, illus.7, 25-61; - I I I . John Hanbury (1664-1734), illus. 7, 43-61; -IV. AnEighteenth Century Tinplate Mill, illus. 7, 113-127; -V. Coekshutt onTinplate Manufacture. 11, 145-153.

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Torporley, Nathaniel (1564-1632)Nathaniel Torporley and the Harriot Manuscripts. (R. C. H. Tanner).25,339-349.

Tractatus de Corde ...Some Textual Changes in Successive Editions of Richard Lower's Tractatusde Corde . . . Mus. (K. J. Franklin). 4, 283-294.

Trade CardJohn Yarwell or the Story of a Trade Card, Mus. (R. S. Whipple). 7,62-69.

Traité Elémentaire de ChimieA Bibliographical Study of the Introduction of Lavoisier's Traité Élémen-taire de Chimie into Great Britain and America, Mus. (D. I. Duveen andH. S. Klickstein). 10, 321-338.

Transits of VenusEighteenth-Century Observations of the Transits of Venus, Mus. (H.Woolf). 9, 176-190.

Trinity College, CambridgeThe Early Observatory Instruments of Trinity College, Cambridge, Mus.(D. J. Price). 8, 1-12.

Tristram, Henry Baker (1820-1906)H. B. Tristram's Collections in Natural History, especially of Palestine.(F. S. Bodenheimer). 12, 278-287.

Turner, EdwardEdward Turner, M.D., F.R.S., (1798-1837), Mus. (E. Terrey). 2, 137-152.

Tyrocinium ChymicumJean Béguin and his Tyrocinium Chymicum, Mus. (T. S. Patterson). 2, 243-

298.

Units (electrical)Maxwell's Work on Electrical Resistance. (I. B. Hopley). -I . TheDetermination of the Absolute Unit of Resistance, Mus. 13, 265-272; -II.Proposals for the Re-determination of the B.A. Unit of 1863, Mus. 14,197-210.Maxwell's Determination of the Number of Electrostatic Units in oneElectromagnetic Unit of Electricity, Mus. (I. B. Hopley). 15, 91-108.

UtopistsThe Early Utopists and Science in England. (W. H. G. Armytage). 11,247-254.

Vallensis, RobertusRobertas Vallensis' De Veritate et Antiquitate Artis Chemicae. (T. S.Patterson, J. D. Loudon and A. O. M. Cook): 6, 1-23.

VenusThe Discovery of an Atmosphere on Venus, Mus. (A. J. Meadows). 22,117-127.

Ann. of Sci.—Ace. Index e

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Vigani, John Francis (1650 ?-1712)John.Francis Vigani. (L. J. M. Coleby). 8, 46-80.

Vigenère, Blaise deNote on Blaise de Vigenère, John Ferguson, and Benzoic Acid, illus. (T.S. Patterson). 4, 61-64.

VolcanoThe Volcanoes of Auvergne, illus. (Sir G. de Beer). 18, 49-61.

Viper VenomThe Experimental Investigation of Viper Venom by Felice Fontana (1730-1805). (M. P. Earles). 16, 255-268.

Volta, Alessandro (1745-1827)Alessandro Volta and the Inflammable-Air Eudiometer, illus. (W. A.Osman). 14,215-242.

Vortex TheoryThe Vortex Theory of the Planetary Motions. (E. J . Aiton). - I , illus.13, 249-264; - I I , illus. 14, 132-147; - I I I . 14, 157-172.

Voyage to LaputaThe Scientific Background to Swift's Voyage to Laputa. (M. Nicolson andN. M. Mohler). 2, 299-334.Swift's " Flying Island " in the Voyage to Laputa, illus. (M. Nicolson andN. M. Mohler). 2, 405-430.

Walker, William (1791-1867)A Re-examination of William Walker's " Distinguished Men of Science ",illus. (A. Clow). 11, 183-193.

Wallis, John (1616-1703)John Wallis as a Historian of Mathematics. (J. F. Scott). 1, 335-357.

Warwick, Thomas Olivers (1771- ?)Dr Warwick's Chemistry Lectures and the Scientific Audience in Sheffield(1799-1801). (M. Brook). 11, 224-237.

WaterA Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating to . . . Synthesis of Water . . .(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). 10, 58-62.Some Experiments on the Expansive Force of Freezing Water. (E.Williams). 10, 166-171.

Watson, Richard (1737-1816)Richard Watson. (L. J. M. Coleby). 9, 101-123.Richard Watson and the Marquess of Rockingham: An UnpublishedExchange in 1771. (W. H. G. Armytage). 14, 155-156.

Watt, James (1736-1819)James Watt's Letter to Joseph Priestley, 26 April 1783. (R. E. Schofield).10, 294-300.

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Watt, James (the younger) (1769-1848)Training Captains of Industry: The Education of Matthew RobinsonBoulton (1770-1842) and the younger James Watt (1769-1848), illus. (E.Robinson). 10, 301-313.

Webster, ThomasSome Correspondence of Thomas Webster, Geologist, (1773-1844). (J.Challinor). -I . 17, 175-195; -II. 18, 147-175; -III. 19, 49-79; -IV.19, 285-297; -V. 20, 59-80; -VI, illus. 20, 143-164.

Wernerian TheoryRobert Jameson's Approach to the Wernerian Theory of the Earth, 1796.(J. M. Sweet and C. D. Waterston). 23, 81-95.

Whipple CollectionGift of the Whipple Collection to the University of Cambridge. (D.McKie). 5, 295.

White, Gilbert (1720-1793)An Autograph Letter by Gilbert White. (K. J. Franklin). 5, 370-372.

Wilkins, John (1614-1672)The Real Character of Bishop Wilkins. (E. N. da C. Andrade). 1, 4-12.In The Second Edition of The Discovery of a World in the Moone, illus.(G. McColley). 1, 330-334.The Ross-Wilkins Controversy. (G. McColley). 3, 153—189.The Debt of Bishop John Wilkins to the Apologia Pro Galileo of TommasoCampanella. (G. McColley). 4, 150-168.

Wilkinson, Charles HunningsCharles Hunnings Wilkinson (1763 or 64-1850), illus. (J. L. Thornton).23, 277-286.

Wright, ThomasThomas Wright's Astronomical Heritage. (H. Dingle). 6, 404-415.The Early Journal of Thomas Wright of Durham. (E. Hughes). 7, 1-24.

Wyttenbach, Jakob Samuel (1748-1830)Some Letters from Jakob Samuel Wyttenbach to Sir James Edward Smith.(G. R. de Beer). 6, 105-114.

Yarwell, JohnJohn Yarwell or The Story of a Trade Card, illus. (R. S. Whipple). 7,62-69.

Yeoman, ThomasThe Profession of Civil Engineer in the Eighteenth Century : A Portrait ofThomas Yeoman, F.R.S., 1704(?)-1781. (E. Robinson). 18, 195-215.

Young, Thomas (1773-1829)History of the Young-Helmholtz Theory of Colour Vision. (E. C.Millington). 5, 167-176.

ZograscopeThe Zograscope or Optical Diagonal Machine, illus, (J. A. Chaldecott).9, 315-322.

e2

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Portraits

Accum, Friedrich (1769-1838)Engraving. [R. J. Cole]. 7, 128. Plate XVI.Aquatint. Chemical Lecture (Surrey Institution). Ibid. Plate XVIII.

Albrecht, Andreas (1586-1628)Portrait. [E. Weil]. 6, 44. Plate I.

Allen, F. J. (1854-?)Photograph. [K.J.Franklin]. 3,241. Plate XIX.

Bates, Henry Walter (1825-1892)Portrait by T. A. Sims. [R. M. Stecher]. 25, 1. Plate I.

Bayen, Pierre (1725-1798)Lithograph. [E. W. J. Neave]. 7, 144. Plate XIX.

Benedetti, Alessandro (1450?-1525)Portrait. [E. A. Underwood]. 19, 1. Plate I.

Bennet, Rev. Abraham, F.R.S. (1750-1799).Portrait. [W. C. Walker]. 1, 66. Plate V.

Berthollet, Claude Louis (1748-1822)Engraving. [E. W. J. Neave]. 7, 284. Plate XXVI.

Black, Joseph (1728-1799)Drawings. [D. McKie]. 1, 101. Plate XLEngravings. [E. W. J. Neave]. 7, 284. Plate XXVII.

Bottazzi, F. (1867-1941)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XVII.

Boulton, Matthew (1728-1809)Statue by W. Bloye. [E. Robinson]. 9, 368. Plate X.

Boyle, Robert (1627-1691)Portraits, engravings, statues, medals. [R. E. W. Maddison]. 15, 141.Plates I-LII.Portrait. [E. Raneke-Madsen]. 19, 147. Plate X.

Burdon-Sanderson, Sir John Scott, Bt. (1828-1905)Photograph. [K.J.Franklin]. 1,431. Plate XXXIII.

Carlisle, Sir Anthony (1768-1840)Engraving. 8, 255. Plate XIII.

Cavallo, Tiberius (1749-1809)Engraving. [W.C.Walker]. 1,66. Plate V.

Deiman, Johann Rudolph (1743-1808)Engraving. [E. W. J. Neave]. 7,393. Plate XXVIII.

De La Métherie, Jean Claude (1743-1817).Engraving. [E. W. J. Neave]. 7, 101. Plate XV.

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58 List of Portraits

Desor, EdouardDrawing by A. Bachelin. [G. R. de Beer]. 6, 215. Plate III.

Exner, Sigmund (1846-1926)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XIV.

Fabricius ab Aquapendente, Hieronymus (c. 1533-1619)Engraving. [È. A. Underwood]. 19, 1. Plate I.

Foster, Michael (1836-1907)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate IX.

Fourcroy, Antoine François de (1755-1809)Engraving. [J. R. Partington and D. McKie]. 4, 113. Plate VI.

Fownes, George (1815-1849)Engraving. [J. S. Rowe]. 6, 422. Plate Vlll.

Franklin, Benjamin (1706-1790)Portrait by Madame Lavoisier. [D. I. Duveen and H. S. Kliokstein].11, 103. Plate VI.

Frederioq, Léon (1851-1935)Photograph (with 0. S. Sherrington and P. Grùtzner). [K. J. Franklin].3, 241. Plate XL

Gaule, Justus (1849-?)Portrait by A. Bosshardt. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241, Plate XIX.

Gren, Friedrich Albert (1760-1798)Engraving. [J. R. Partington and D. McKie]. 3, 1. Plate I.

Grùtzner, P. ( ? - ? )Photograph (with C. S. Sherrington and L. Fredericq). [K. J. Franklin].3, 241. Plate XL

Guthrie, Harie (1709-1794)Miniature from portrait by Sir H. Raeburn. [J. M. Sweet]. 20, 245.Plate III.

Guthrie, Matthew (1743-1807)Silhouette. [J. M. Sweet]. 20, 245. Plate III.

Hall, Fitzedward (1825-1901)Photograph. [S. Ross]. 18, 66. Plate IV.

Hall, Sir James, 4th Bt. (1761-1832)Portrait by Sir J. Reynolds. [V. A. Eyles]. 19, 153. Plate XLMarble bust by Patrie Park. [J. A. Chaldecott]. 24, 21. Plate I.

Hamburger, H. J. (1859-1924).Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XV.

Hamilton, Sir William (1730-1803)Engraving. [M. C. W. Sleep]. 25, 319. Plate II.

Hanbury, John (1664-1734)Portraits. [F. W. Gibbs]. 7,43. Plates VI-VII.

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Hanckwitz, Ambrose Godfrey (?-1756)Engraving by Van der Gucht. [R. E. W. Maddison].

Harvey, William (1578-1657)Portrait. [H. P. Bayon]. 3,59. Plate II.Portrait by J. de Reyn. [H. P. Bayon]. 3, 435. Plate XXV.Portrait. [H. P. Bayon]. 4, 330. Plate VIII.

Head, Sir Henry (1861-1940)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XIX.

Heger, Paul (1846-1925)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XIII.

Hess, W. R. (1881-?)Photograph. [K.J.Franklin]. 3,241. Plate XVIII.

Hohngren, Frithiof (1831-1897)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate IX.

Howell, W. H. (1860-1945)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XVII.

Hiirthle, K. (1860-1)Drawing. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XIX.

Jameson, Robert (1774-1854)Miniature. [J. M. Sweet]. 19, 81. Plate VIII.

Johansson, J. E. (1862-1938)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin].

Kirwan, Richard (1733-1812)Engraving. [J. M. Sweet]. 23, 97. Plate VI.Portrait by H. D. Hamilton. Ibid. Plate VII.

Koelliker, Rudolf Albert von. (1817-1905)Photograph. [G. R. Cameron]. 11, 166. Plate X.

Kossel, Albreeht (1853-1927)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin].

11, 64. Plate II.

3, 241. Plate XVI.

3, 241. Plate XIII.

3,241. Plate IX.

3, 241. Plate IX.

Kronecker, Hugo (1839-1914)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin].

Kuhne, Willy (1837-1900)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin].

Lapicque, Louis (1866-?)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XX.

Leske, Nathanael Gottfried (1752-1786)Engraving. [J. M. Sweet]. 23, 97. Plate V.

Lombard, Warren P. (1855-?)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XX.

Lubbock, Richard (1759-1808)Portrait by Crome. [J. R. Partington and T>. McKie].XXIV.

3, 337. Plate

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60 List of Portraits

Macculloch, John (1773-1835)Portrait. [V. A. Eyles]. 2, 114. Prate VI.

Maggiora-Vergano, Arnaldo (1862-?)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XX.

Miescher, F. (1844-1895)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate X.

Morris, Lewis (1700-1765)Portrait. [C. Matheson]. 10, 258. Plate X.

Morveau, Louis Bernard Guyton de (1737-1815)Engraving. [J. R. Partington and D. McKie]. 2, 361. Plate XXII.

Mosso, Angelo (1846-1910)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XII.

Moyes, Henry (1749-1807)Portrait (1796). [J. A. Harrison]. 13, 109. Plate V.Portrait with his nephew, William Nicol, by J. R. Smith. Ibid. Plate VII.

Novi, Ivo (1862-?)Photograph. [K. J, Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XX.

Pavlov, I. P. (1840-1936)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XVIII.

Pennant, Thomas (1726-1798)Portrait by Gainsborough. [C. Matheson]. 10, 258. Plate X.

Piria, Raffaele (1814-1865)Drawing by A. Piutti. [H. E. Street and G. E. Treane], 7, 70. PlateXIV.

Pitcairne, Archibald (1652-1713)Portrait. [G. A. Lindeboom]. 19, 273. Plate XII.

Richet, Charles (1850-1935)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XV.

Richter, Jeremias Benjamin (1762-1807)Engraving. [J. R. Partington]. 7, 173. Plate XXIII.

Ritchie, James (1864-1923)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 1, 431. Plate XXXIII.

Robiquet, Pierre Jean (1780-1840)Portrait by Devouge. [H. E. Street and G. E. Treane]. 7, 70. PlateXIII.

Roger, H. (I860-?)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XXI.

Rolleston, George (1829-1881)Drawing. [K. J. Franklin]. 1, 431. Plate XXXI.

Rozier, Jean Baptiste François (1734-1793)Bust. [E. W. J. Neave]. 6, 416. Plate VII.

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Rozier, Jean François Pilâtre de (1754-1785)Engraving by A. Pujos. [W. A. Smeaton]. 11, 349. Plate XVIII.

Russell, William James (1830-1909)Photograph. [J. R. Brown and J. L. Thornton]. 11, 331. Plate XVII.

Scarburgh, Sir Charles (1615-1694)Portrait. [J. J. Keevil]. 8, 1. Plate VI.

Sharpey-Schafer, Sir Edward (1850-1935)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XVI.

Shaw, George (1751-1813)Engraving by W. Holl. [J. M. Sweet]. 19, 81. Plate VIII.

Shaw, Peter (1694-1763)Portraits. [F. W. Gibbs]. 7,211. Plates XXIV-XXV.

Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott (1857-1907)Photograph (with L. Fredericq and P. Grûtzner). [K. J. Franklin]. 3,241. Plate XI.

Smith, William (1769-1839)Portrait by Fourau. [J. M. Eyles]. 3, 190. Plate IV.

Starling, Ernest Henry (1866-1927)Photograph by H. S. Raper. [E. B. Verney]. 12, 30. Plate I.

Steinaoh, E. (1862-?)Portrait by Ferrari. [K.J.Franklin]. 3,241. Plate XXI.

Thomson, Arthur (1858-1935)Photograph. [J.K.Franklin]. 1,431. Plate XXXII.

Turner, Edward (1798-1837)Bust by Butler. [H. Terrey]. 2, 137. Plate X.

Watt, James (Jr) (1769-1848)Portrait. [E. Robinson]. 10,301. Plate XI.

Whewell, William (1794-1866)Photograph. [S. Ross]. 18, 66. Plate III.

Wilkinson, Charles Hunnings (1763 or 1764-1850)Drawing. [J. L. Thornton]. 23, 277. Plate XVIII.

Yeo, Gerald Francis (1845-1909)Photograph. [K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate VIII.

Groups

Members of International Congresses of Zoologists and Physiologists,Cambridge 1898. [K.J.Franklin]. 3,241. Plate XII.

International Congress of Physiologists, Members of Committee, 1907.[K. J. Franklin]. 3, 241. Plate XIV.

Physiological Laboratory, Oxford, 1894. [K. J. Franklin]. 1, 431. PlateXXXII.

William Walker's " Distinguished Men of Science ". Sketches and engraving.[A. Clow]. 11,183. Plates XI-XV.

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Reviews

Ada historiae rerum naturalium necnon technicarum. Special Issue. No. 1(1965); No. 2 (1966); No. 3 (1967). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 24,176.

Adelmann, H. B. Marcello Malpighi and the Evolution of Embryology. (1966).[G. de Beer]. 22,221.

Agassi, J. Towards an Historiography of Science. (1963). [W. A. Smeaton].18, 125; [S. Finlay]. 18, 127.

Albertus Magnus: Book of Minerals. Translated by D. Wyckoff. (1967).[A. G. Debus]. 23, 306.

Ambix: The Journal of the Society for the Study of Alchemy and EarlyChemistry. Vol. I, No. 1. (1937). [H. Brown]. 2, 359.

Anthony, H. D. Science and its Background. (1948). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]6, 211.

Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences. Vol. I. (1947-1948). [D.McKie]. 6, 449. Vol. I I . (1948-1949]. [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 7,110.

Armitage, A.Sun, Stand Thou Still. (1948). [H. Dingle]. 6, 213.William Herschel. (1962). [D. O. Wood]. 17, 124.Edmond Halley. (1966). [H. D. Howse]. 22, 299.John Kepler. (1966). [E. G. Forbes]. 23, 80.

Armstrong D. W. A Materialist Theory of the Mind. (1968). [J. 0. Urmson].25, 83.

Bailey, Sir Edward. Geological Survey of Great Britain. (1952). [V. A.Eyles]. 11, 101.

Barclay, A. Pure Chemistry. A Brief Outline of its History and Development*Part I-Historical Review. (1937). [D. McKie]. 3, 459.

Handbook of the Collections illustrating Pure Chemistry. Part II-DescriptiveCatalogue. (1937). [D. McKie]. 3,459.

Barnett, P. R. Theodore Haak. (1962). [A. Whiteman]. 18, 64.

Bates, R. S. Scientific Societies in the United States. (1965). [H. L. Burstyn],21, 208.

Bedini, S. A. Early American Scientific Instruments and their Makers. (1964).[A. J. Meadows]. 22, 295.

Bedini, S. A. and Maddison, F. R. Mechanical Universe, The Astrarium ofGiovanni De' Dondi. (1966). [C. F. C. Beeson]. 24, 173.

Bell, A. E. Christian Huygens and the Development of Science in the SeventeenthCentury. (1947). [A. Armitage]. 6, 103.

Bennett, A. A. John Fryer : The Introduction of Western Science and Techno-logy into Nineteenth Century China. (1967). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 25,171.

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64 Reviews

Bergman, Torbern. Dissertation on Elective Attractions. Translated with anIntroduction by J. A. Schufle. (1968). [W. A. Smeaton]. 25, 267.

Bernai, J. D. Science in History. 3rd edition. (1965). [S. Lilley]. 22, 142.

Bishop, M. Pascal : The Life of Genius. (1937). [H. Brown]. 2, 358.

Boas, M. The Scientific Renaissance : 1450-1630. (1962). [A. Armitage].16, 272.

Bodenheimer, F. S. The History of Biology : an Introduction. (1958). [J. S.Wilkie]. 14, 154.

Bradbury, S. The Evolution of the Microscope. (1967). [J. R. Levene]. 24,342.

The Microscope, Past and Present. (1968). [D. J. Bryden]. 25, 271.

Bradbury, S. and Turner, G. L'E. Historical Aspects of Microscopy. (1967).[C. A. Ronan]. 24, 257.

Braffort, P. L'Intelligence Artificielle. (1968). [R. Leolercq]. 25, 91.

Brown, G. H. Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians of London,1826-1925. (1955). [E. A. Underwood]. 16,59.

Brown, H. L'Académie de Physique de Caen (1666-1675) d'après les lettresd'André de Graindorge. (1938). [L. Tolmer]. 4, 325.

Brown, I. V. (Editor). Joseph Priestley. Selections from his Writings. (1962)[P. W. Gibbs]. 17, 127.

Brown, S. C. Men of Physics. Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford. (1967).[W. A. Smeaton]. 24, 175.

Brugmans, H. L. Le Séjour de Christian Huygens à Paris et ses relations avecles milieux scientifiques français suivi de son journal de voyage à Paris et àLondres. (1935). [H. Brown]. 1,235.

Brydon, D. J. James Short and his Telescopes. (1968). [A. J. Meadows].25, 92.

Bulletin de la Société Française d'Histoire de la Médecine. Tome 1er, 1902.(Reprint 1967). [E. A. Underwood]. 24, 96.

Burke, J. G. Origins of the Science of Crystals, (1966). [G. B. Brown]. 23,248.

Burmeister, K. H. Georg Joachim Rhetikus 1514-1574. Eine Bio-Biblio-graphie. Vol. I. Humanist und Wegbereiter der modernen Naturwissen-schaften. (1967). [J. D. North]. 24, 254; Vol. II. Quellen und Biblio-graphie. (1968). [J. D. North]. 24, 253; Vol. III . Briefwechsel.(1968). [ J .D. North]. 25,266.

Bush, D. Science and English Poetry. A Historical Sketch 1590-1950. (1967).[C. A. Ronan]. 25, 90.

Calder, N. Violent Universe. An Eye-witness Account of the Commotion inAstronomy, 1968—1969. (1969). [A. J. Meadows]. 25, 261.

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Carlid, G. and Nordstrom, J. (Editors). Torbern Bergman's Foreign Corres-pondence. Vol. I. Letters from Foreigners to Torbern Bergman. (1965).[W. A. Smeaton]. 24, 169.

Carmody, F. J. The Astronomical Works of Thabit B. Qurra. (1960). [A.Armitage]. 16, 127.

Oheckland, 8. G. The Mines of Tharsis. (1967). [R. Leclercq]. 23, 313.

Chorley, R, Dunn, A. J., and Beckinsale, R. P. The History of the Study ofLandform's : or the Development of Geomorphology. Vol. 1. (1964). [V.A. Byles]. 21, 139.

Clagett, M. The Science of Mechanics in the Middle Ages. (1959). [A.Armitage]. 16, 62.

Clark, G. N. Science and Social Welfare in the Age of Newton. (1937). [D.McKie]. 4, 108.

Clarke, E., and O'Malley, C. D. The Human Brain and Spinal Cord. AHistorical Study illustrated by Writings from Antiquity to the TwentiethCentury. (1968). [E. A. Underwood]. 25, 351.

Coffin, C. M. John Donne and the New Philosophy. (1937). [G. McColley].2, 475.

Cohen, E., and Cohen-De-Meester, W. A. T. Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit. (1936)[N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 2, 133.

Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, geb. zu Danzig 24. Mai 1686, gest. im Haag 16.Sept. 1736. Zweite Mitteilung. (1937). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 4, 326.

Cohen, I. B. Franklin and Newton. (1956). [G. B. Brown]. 13, 201.

Cohen, M. R., and Drabkin, I. E. A Science Book in Greek Science. (1948).[J. R. Partington]. 6, 207.

Conn, G. K. T., and Turner, H. D. The Evolution of the Nuclear Atom. (1965).[C. A. Russell]. 22,69.

Cord, M. S. et al. Microwave Spectral Tables : Polyatomic Molecules WithoutInternal Rotation. Vol. IV. (1968). [B. Pagel]. 25, 269.

Costa, A. B. Michel Eugène Chevreul. Pioneer of Organic Chemistry. (1962).[C, A. Russell]. 16, 273.

Crombie, A. C. Augustine to Galileo. The History of Science A.D. 400-1650.(1952). [J. R. Partington]. 9, 194.

Crosland, M. P. Historical Studies in the Language of Chemistry. (1962). [W.P. D. Wightman]. 17, 259.

Daumas, M. Les Instruments Scientifiques aux XVIIe et XVIIIe Siècles.(1953). [E. N. da C. Andrade]. 10, 78.

Davies, G. L. The Earth in Decay : A History of British Geomorphology 1578-1878. (1969). [A. J. Meadows]. 25,362.

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66 Reviews

Debus, A. G. The English Paracelsians. (1965). [W. P. D. Wightman]. 21,205.

Debus, A. G., et al. (Editors). World Who's Who in Science. A BiographicalDictionary of Notable Scientists from Antiquity to the Present. (1968). [R.E. W. Maddison]. 25, 171.

De Morgan, A. Arithmetical Books from the Invention of Printing to the PresentTime. Introduction by A. R. Hall. (1966). [A. Armitage]. 23,311.

Dijksterhuis, E. J. The Mechanization of the World Picture. (1961). [A.Armitage]. 16, 126.

Dingle, H. The Scientific Adventure. Essays in the History and Philosophy ofScience. (1952). [W. P. D. Wightman]. 8, 398.

A Hundred Tears of Spectroscopy, being the Fifty Third Robert BoyleLecture. (1952). [J. R. Partington]. 10, 83.

Dingwall, E. J. (Editor). Abnormal Hypnotic Phenomena : a Survey ofNineteenth-Century Cases. Vol. I. France. Vol. II . Belgium and theNetherlands: Germany: Scandinavia. (1967). [R. Hunter]. 24, 344.Vol. III . Russia and Poland: Italy: Spain, Portugal and Latin America.Vol. IV. The United States of America: Great Britain. (1968). [R.Hunter]. 25,270.

Donald, M. B. Elizabethan Copper. The History of the Company of MinesRoyal 1568-1605. (1955). [F. W. Gibbs]. 12, 84.

Dubos, Rene J. Louis Pasteur. Free Lance of Science. (1951). [A. C.Crombie]. 9, 98.

Dunn, L. C. (Editor). Genetics in the 20th Century : Essays on the Progress ofGenetics during its first fifty years. (1951). [H. Kalmus]. 10,79.

Dunsheath, P. A History of Electrical Engineering. (1962). [D. McKie].17, 122.

Edelstein, L. Ancient Medicine. Selected Papers of Ludwig Edelstein.Edited by O. Temkin and C. L. Temkin. (1967). [E. A. Underwood].25, 165.

Edward, Lord Herbert of Cherbury. De Veritate. Translated by M. H. Carré.(1937). [A. F. Titley]. 3, 459.

Ercker, Lazarus. Treatise on Ores and Assaying, translated from the GermanEdition of 1580. By A. G. Sisco and C. S. Smith. (1951). [D. McKie].9, 287.

Ernie, Lord. English Farming, Past and Present. (1961). [D. McKie]. 17,123.

Ernst, Br., and Vries, Tj. E. de. Atlas of the Universe. (1961). [D. McKie].17, 197,

Farrington, B. The Philosophy of Francis Bacon. (1964). [L. Laudan}. 21,206.

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Findlay, A. The Teaching of Chemistry in the Universities of Aberdeen. (1935).[D. McKie]. 1, 111.

A Hundred Years of Chemistry. (1937). [T.S.Patterson]. 3,457.

Findley, A.,andMil\s, W. H. British Chemists. (1947). [D. McKie]. 6,214.

Flohn, H. Climate and Weather. (1969). [D. J. Schovc]. 25, 174.

Forbes, R. J. Short History of the Art of Distillation from the Beginnings up tothe Death of Cellier Blumenthal. (1948). [J. R. Partington]. 6,323.

Man the Maker : A History of Technology and Engineering. (1950). [S. B.Hamilton]. 7, 210.

Fox, S. J. Science and Justice, The Massachusetts Witchcraft Trials. (1968).[R. E. Maddison]. 25, 355.

Frantz, R. W. The English Traveller and the Movement of Ideas 1660-1732.(1934). [G. B. Parks]. 2, 135.

Freeman, R. B. The Works of Charles Darwin. An Annotated BibliographicalHandlist. (1965). [G. de Beer]. 20, 243.

Friend, J. Newton. Man and the Chemical Elements. (1951). [F. W. Gibbs].8, 283.

Man and the Chemical Elements. 2nd. edition. (1961). [D. McKio]. 16,274.

Frisch, K. von. A Biologist Rembers. (1967). [E. A. Underwood]. 24, 256.

Fulton, J. F., and Stanton, M. E. The Centennial of Surgical Anaesthesia. AnAnnotated Catalogue of Books and Pamphlets Bearing on the Early Historyof Surgical Anaesthesia. (1946). [E. A. Underwood]. 5,376.

Galilée; Aspects de sa vie de son oeuvre. (1968). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 25,88.

Gillespio, C. The Edge of Objectivity. (1967). [C. A. Ronan]. 24, 340.

Goodison, N. English Barometers, 1680-1860. A History of Domestic Baro-meters and their Makers. (1969). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 25, 360.

Greenaway, F. Science Museum Illustrated Booklet. Chemistry, I : ChemicalLaboratories and Apparatus to 1850. (1966). [E. McDonald]. 22,224.

Chemistry, 2 : Chemical Laboratories and Apparatus from 1850. (1966). [E.McDonald]. 23,78.

Grene, M. (Editor). The Anatomy of Knowledge. Papers Presented to theStudy Group on Foundations of Cultural Unity. (1969). [R. Harré].25, 364.

Gruner, O. C. Commentary on the Canon of Medicine of Avicenna. (1967).[E. A. Underwood]. 25, 170.

Guorlac, H. Lavoisier—The Crucial Tear. (1962). [F. W. Gibbs]. 16, 270.

Gunther, A. E. Robert T. Ounther, 1869-1940. A Pioneer in the History ofScience. (1967). [C. A. Ronan], 24,341.

Hahn, R. Laplace as a Newtonian Scientist. (1967). [G. J. Whitrow]. 25,175.

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Hall, A. R. Ballistics in the Seventeenth Century : A Study in the Relations ofScience and War with Reference Principally to England, (1952). [A.Armitage]. 9, 99.

The Scientific Revolution 1500-1800. The Formation of the Modern ScientificAttitude. (1954). [A. Armitage]. 11,99.

From Galileo to Newton : 1630-1720. (1963). [A. Armitage]. 17,270.

Hall, A. R., and Hall, M. B. Unpublished Scientific Papers of Isaac Newton.(1962). [G. B. Brown]. 17, 269.

Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg. Vol. I. (1641-1662). (1965). [R. S.Wilkinson]. 21, 142.

Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg. Vol. II. (1663-1665). (1966). Vol.III. (1666-1667). (1966). [R.S.Wilkinson]. 23,78.

Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg. Vol. IV. (1667-1668). (1968). [R.S. Wilkinson]. 25, 365.

Hall, M. B. Robert Boyle on Natural Philosophy : An Essay with Sélectionsfrom his Writing. (1965). [R. S. Wilkinson]. 22, 70.

Hartley, Sir Harold (Editor). The Royal Society : Its Origins and Founders.(1960). [A. Whiteman]. 16, 125.

Harvey, William. Prelectiones Anatomiae Universalis. (Lectures on theWhole of Anatomy). Annotated translation by C. D. O'Malley, F. N. L.Poynter and K. F. Russell. (1961). [J. S. Wilkie]. 18,225.

Prelectiones and De Musculis. (Anatomical Lectures of William Harvey).Translation edited by G. Whitteridge. (1964). [Z. Cope]. 19, 149.

Higham, N. A Very Scientific Gentleman : The Major Achievements of HenryClifton Sorby. (1963). [J. M. Eyles]. 19, 239.

History of Science. An Annual Review of Literature, Research and Teaching.Vol. I. (1962); Vol. 2. (1963); Vol. 3. (1964); Vol. 4. (1965). [D.McKie]. 23, 77. Vol. 6. (1967). [R. E. W. Maddison].2S, 266.

Hoskin, M. A. William Herschel and the Construction of the Heavens. (1963).[A. Armitage]. 18, 130.

(Editor). Thomas Wright of Durham : Second or Singular Thoughts upon theUniverse. (1968). [A. Armitage]. 25, 173.

Howard, J. N. (Editor). The Rayleigh Archives Dedication, (n.d.). [R. E.W. Maddison]. 24, 171.

Huard, P., and Grmek, M. D. Mille Ans de Chirurgie en Occident : Ve-XVe

Siècles. (1966). [E. A. Underwood]. 23, 175.

Ibn Qutayba. Uyun at Alchbar. (1949). [F. J. Cole]. 6, 448.

Ihde, A. J. The Development of Modem Chemistry. (1964). [D. McKie].20, 243.

Itard, J. Les Livres arithmétiques d'Euclide. (1961). [A. Armitage]. 17,64.

Jaki, S. L. The Relevance of Physics. (1967). [G. B. Brown]. 25,270.

Jeans, S. The Growth of Physical Science. (1947). [J. R. Partington]. 6,102.

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Jeffreys, A. E. Michael Faraday : A List of his Lectures and PublishedWritings. (1960). [N. H. de V. Heathoote]. 16, 269.

Jenkin, A. K. Hamilton. Mines and Miners of Cornwall. Parts I-IX.(1961-1964). [D. MeKie]. 19, 150.

Jesson, K. F. W. BotanikderGegenwartundVorzeit. (1948). [A. C. Crombie]6, 210.

Johnson, Jr., T. C. Scientific Interests in the Old South. (1936). [D. Stimson].2, 357.

Jones, R. F. Ancients and Moderns, a Study of the Background of ' The Battleof the Books'. (1936). [H. Brown]. 2,130.

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. (1946). [D. McKie].5, 377.

Kargon, R. H. Atomism in England from Hariot to Newton. (1966). [A.Thackray]. 23, 312.

Keele, K. D. William Harvey : the Man, the Physician and the Scientist. (1965).[Z. Cope]. 20, 323.

Keeler, A. G. A Theatre of Machines. (1964). [A. R. Hall]. 21, 203.

Kellner, L. Alexander von Humboldt. (1963). [D. O. Wood]. 17, 121.

Kelly, E. C. (Compiler). Medical Classics. Vol. I, No. 1. (1936). [H.Rolleston]. 2, 240.

Kepler, J. Somnium : The Dream, or Posthumous Work on Lunar Astronomy.Translated with a commentary by E. Rosen. (1967). [A. Armitage].23, 245.

Kilmister, C. W. Sir Arthur Eddington. (1966). [G. B. Brown]. 23, 246.

King, H. C. The History of the Telescope. (1955). [A. Armitage]. 11, 268.

King-Hele, D. The Essential Writings of Erasmus Darwin. (1968). [C. A.Ronan]. 25,262.

Koyré. A, La Révolution Astronomique : Copernic, Kepler, Borelli. (1961).[A. Armitage]. 16, 271.

Newtonian Studies. (1965). [E. J. Aiton]. 21, 204.Etude d'Histoire de la Pensée Scientifique. (1966). [W. P. D. Wightman].

24, 94.Metaphysics and Measurement : Essays in the Scientific Revolution. (1968).

[E. G. Forbes]. 24, 252.From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe. (1968). [E. G. Forbes]. 25,

357.

La Mettrie, J. O. de. L'Homme-Plante. (1936). [L. D. Cohen]. 1, 238.

Lawrence, G. H. M. Adanson, The Bicentennial of Michel Adanson's ' Famillesdes Plantes '. (1963-4). [R. C. Olby]. 22, 300.

Ann. of Sri.—Ace. Index f

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LeFanu, W. E. A Bio-Bibliography of Edward Jenner, 1749-1823. (1951).[E. A. Underwood]. 7, 301.

Leicester, Henry M. The Historical Background of Chemistry. (1956). [F.W. Gibbs]. 12, 162.

Source Book in Chemistry, 1900-1950. (1968). [B. E. W. Maddison]. 25,81.

Leicester, H. M., and Klickstein, H. S. A Source Book in Chemistry 1400-1900.(1952). [D. McKie]. 9, 288. 3rd. printing. (1965). [R. E. W. Maddi-son]. 25, 81.

Li Ch'iao-P'ing. The Chemical Arts of Old China. (1948). [J. R. Partington].6, 208.

Lindeboom, G. A. Herman Boerhaave. The Man and his Work. (1968).[R. E. W. Maddison]. 25, 263.

Lychnos : (1936). [D. McKie]. 1, 468.(1937). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 3, 151.(1938). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 4, 327.(1939-1945). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 5, 373.(1947). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 6, 209.(1948-1949). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 7, 111.(1950-1951). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 8, 193.(1952 & 1953). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 10, 276.(1954-1955). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 13, 199.(1956). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 15, 63.(1957 & 1958). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 15, 63.(1959). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 15, 64.(1960-1961). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 18, 63.(1962). [N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 18, 63.

McCloy, Shelby T. French Inventions of the Eighteenth Century. (1952). fj.A. Chaldecott]. 9, 195.

McKie, D. Antoine Lavoisier: The Father of Modern Chemistry. (1935).[O. L. Brady]. 1, 112.

Antoine Lavoisier. Scientist, Economist, Social Reformer. (1952). [J. R.Partington]. 8, 399.

McLaughlin, P. J. Nicholas Callan, Priest-Scientist (1799-1864). (1965).[N. H. de V. Heathcote]. 21, 145.

MacPike, E. F. Hevelius, Flamsteed and Halley. (1938). [J. F. Scott]. 4,110.

Magie, W. F. Source Book in Physics. (1963). [D. McKie]. 19, 152.

Malebranche, Nicolas. Oeuvres Complètes de Malebranche. Vol. XVII-2.Mathematica. Edited by P. Costabel. (1968). [R. Leclercq]. 25, 267.

Mani, N. Die historischen Grundlagen der Leberforschung. Vol. II . DieGfeschichte der Leberforschung von Galen bis Claude Bernard. (1967). [E.A. Underwood]. 25, 353.

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Manning, T. G. Government in Science. The U.S. Geological Survey, 1867-1894. (1967). [J. Stubblefield]. 25, 86.

Manson-Bahr, Sir P. Patrick Manson : The Father of Tropical Medicine.(1962). [J. S. Wilkie]. 17, 127.

Marci, I. M. Thaumantias. Liber de arcu coelesti deque colorum apparentiumnatura, ortu et causis . . . (1648. Reprinted 1968). [E. J. Aiton]. 25,83.

Martin, T. Faraday's Discovery of Electro-Magnetic Induction. (1949). [J.A. Chaldecott]. 6, 325.

Mason, S. F. A History of the Sciences : Main Currents of Scientific Thought.(1953). [A. Armitage]. 10, 79.

Maurice, K. Die franzosische Pendule des 18. Jahrhunderts. Ein Beitrag zuihrer Ikonologie. (1967). [C. F. C. Beeson]. 23, 309.

Meadows, A. J. The High Firmament. A Survey of Astronomy in EnglishLiterature. (1969). [J. L. White]. 25, 361.

Medawar, P. B. The Art of the Soluble. (1967). [G. B. Brown]. 24, 174.

Mendelsohn, E. Heat and Life. The Development of the Theory of AnimalHeat. (1964). [E. McDonald]. 22, 71.

Menshutkin, B. N. Khimiya i pytii eye razvitiya. (1937). [T. L. Davis].4, 109.

Metzger, H. La Philosophie de la Matière chez Lavoisier. (1935). [J. R.Partington]. 2, 134.

Michel, P. H. La Cosmologie de Giordano Bruno. (1962). [A. Armitage]. 17,63.

Miller, G. William Beaumont's Formative Years : Two Early Notebooks, 1811—1821. (1946). [E. A. Underwood]. 5, 375.

Miller, G. (Editor). Bibliography of the History of Medicine of the UnitedStates and Canada, 1939-1960. (1964). [E. A. Underwood]. 24, 177.

Moorat, S. A. J. Catalogue of Western Manuscripts on Medicine and Science inthe Wellcome Historical Museum. (1962). [W. P. D. Wightman]. 17,197.

Morton, W. T. G. A Memoir to the Academy of Sciences at Paris on a New Useof Sulphuric Ether. (1946). [E. A. Underwood]. 5, 376.

Musée de Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers. Histoire et Prestige de l'Académiedes Sciences, 1666-1966. (1966). [W. A. Smeaton]. 24, 170.

National Library of Medicine. Bibliography of the History of Medicine. No. 1,1965. (1966). [E. A. Underwood]. 24,97.

Neugebauer, O., and Parker R. A., Egyptian Astronomical Texts; I. TheEarly Decans. (1960). [A. Armitage]. 15, 135.

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Newton, Isaac. The Correspondence of Isaac Newton. Edited by H. W.Turnbull. Vol. I, 1661-1675. (1959); Vol. II, 1676-1687. (1960). [G.B. Brown]. 16, 117 ; Vol. I l l , 1688-1694. (1961). [G. B. Brown]. 19,299; Edited by J. E. Scott. Vol. IV, 1694-1709. [G. B. Brown]. 25, 82.

The New Universe. (1968). [A. J. Meadows]. 1969. 25, 89.

Nicolson, M. H. Pepys' " Diary " and the New Science. (1965). [J. O'Brien]22, 140.

Nordenmark, N. V. E. Anders Celsius, Professor i Uppsala, 1701-1744.(1936). [H. N. de V. Heathcote]. 2, 474.

North, J. D. The Measure of the Universe. (1965). [G. B. Brown]. 23, 79.

Novak, Emil. Autobiography of Dr Robert Meyer (1864-1947). (1949). [E.A. Underwood]. 7, 300.

Obsenationes Anatomicae Selectiores Amstelodamensium 1667, 1673. Edited byE. J. Cole, 1938. [D. McKie]. 4, 109.

Odishaw, H. (Editor). The Earth in Space. (1968). [A. J. Meadows]. 25,89.

Olby, R. C. Origins of Mendelism. (1966). [R. G. Swinburne]. 22, 72.

Olby, R. C. (Editor). Early Nineteenth Century European Scientists. (1967).[C. A. Ronan]. 23, 311.

Oresme, N. De Proportionibus proportionum and Ad pauca respicientes.Edited with introduction, English translations and critical notes by E.Grant. (1966). [A. G. Molland]. 22, 296.

Le Livre du Ciel et du Monde. Edited by A. D. Menut and A. J. Denomy.(1968). [J. D. North]. 25, 88.

Organon. (1936). [M.Roberts]. 1,469.(1937). [M. Roberts]. 3,458.

Ouvris. Vol. I. (1936). [H. Brown]. 1,235.

Pagel, W. William Harvey's Biological Ideas, Selected Aspects and HistoricalBackground. (1967). [A. G. Debus]. 24, 89.

Pannekoek, A. A History of Astronomy. (1961). [E. G. Forbes]. 19, 151.

Partington, J. R. A Short History of Chemistry. (1937). [L. Dobbin]. 3,150.

Pelseneer, J. L'Évolution de la Notion de Phénomène Physique des Primitifsà Bohr et Louis de Broglie. (1947). [J. R. Partington]. 6, 103.

Pennant, T. Tour of the Continent 17'65. (1948). [A. C. Crombie]. 6,211.

Philosophie et Méthodologie Scientifiques de Claude Bernard. Colloque Inter-national, Paris, 1965. (1967). [R. Leclercq]. 23,310.

Powell, A. John Aubrey and his Friends. (1948). [D. McKie]. 6, 208.

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Power, Sir D'Arcy and Le Fanu, W. R. Lives of the Fellows of the RoyalCollege of Surgeons of England, 1930-1931. (1953). [E. A. Underwood].10, 81.

Read, J. Prelude to Chemistry: An Outline of Alchemy, its Literature andRelationship. (1936). [F. Sherwood Taylor]. 2, 136.

Records of the Australian Academy of Sciences. Vol. I, No. 1. (1966); Vol. I,No. 2. (1967). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 25, 85.

Reed, H. S. Jan Ingehousz, Plant Physiologist with a History of the Discoveryof Photosynthesis. (1949). [J. R. Partington]. 7,110.

Rey, Jean. The Essays of. A facsimile reprint. . . (1951). [F. S. Taylor].8,193.

Robinson, V. Victory over Pain. A History of Anaesthesia. (1946). [E. A.Underwood]. 5, 376.

Ronan, C. A. Their Majesties' Astronomers. A Survey of Astronomy inBritain between the two Elizabeths. (1967). [D. Howse]. 24, 341.

Rosen, E. The Naming of the Telescope. (1947). [A. Armitage]. 6, 209.

Roddis, Louis H. James Lind, Founder of Nautical Medicine. (1950). [E. A.Underwood]. 7,300.

Sabra, A. I. Theories of Light. (1967). [H.C.King]. 24,251.

Santillana, Giorgio de. The Crime of Galileo. (1958). [G. B. Brown]. 13,200.

Sarton, G. The Study of the History of Science. (1936). [R. S. Woodbury].3, 239.

The Study of the History of Mathematics. (1936). [R. S. Woodbury]. 3,239.

Introduction to the History of Science. Vol. III. (1947). [E. A. Underwood].6, 212.

A Guide to the History of Science. (1952). [D. McKie]. 9,377.Sarton on the History of Science Essays by George Sarton selected and

edited by D. Stimson. (1962). [A. Armitage]. 18, 129.

Savage, S. Catalogue of the Mansuscripts in the Library of the Linnean Societyof London, Part IV. Calendar of the Ellis Manuscripts. (1948). [D.McKie]. 6, 214.

Schatzman, E. L. The Structure of the Universe. Translated by P. Moore.(1968). [G. J. Whitrow]. 25, 364.

Schonland, Sir Basil. The Atomists (1805-1933). (1968). [C. A. Ronan].25, 360.

Scott, J. F. The Mathematical Work of John Wallis, D.D., F.R.S. (1616-1703).[H. W. Turnbull]. 4, 244.

The Scientific Work of René Descartes (1596-1650). (1952). [A. Armitage].8, 282.

A History of Mathematics from Antiquity to the Beginning of the NineteenthCentury. (1958). [F. N. David]. 13, 199.

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Seeger, R. J. Galileo Galilei, his Life and his Works. (1966). [A. Armitage].23, 175.

Shryock, R. H. The Development of Modern Medicine : An Interpretation ofthe Social and Scientific Factors Involved. (1936). [H. R. Viets]. 2, 357.

Sinclair, H. M., and Robb-Smith, A. H. T. A Short History of AnatomicalTeaching in Oxford. (1950). [F. J . Cole]. 7, 109.

Singer, Dorothea Waley. Giordano Bruno, His Life and Thought with AnnotatedTranslation of his Work on the Infinite Universe and Worlds. (1950). [F.S. Taylor]. 8, 192.

Small, R. An Account of the Astronomical Discoveries of Kepler. (1963). [A.Armitage]. 17, 271.

Smart, R. N., and Hill, E. J. (Compilers). An Index to the Correspondenceand Papers of James David Forbes (1809-1868). And also to some papersof his son, George Forbes. (1968). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 25,173.

Smeaton, W. A. Fourcroy—Chemist and Revolutionary, 1755-1809. (1962).[W. P. D. Wightman]. 17, 125.

Smith, A. John Dalton, 1766-1844. A Bibliography of Works by and abouthim. (1966). [F. Greenaway]. 22, 141.

Stejneger, L. Georg Wilhelm : The Pioneer of Alaskan Natural History. (1936)[D. Stimson]. 2, 239.

Sticker, B. Bau und Bildung des Weltalls. (1967). [R. E. W. Maddison].24, 169.

Stier, E. W. Drug Adulteration : Detection and Control in Nineteenth-CenturyBritain. (1966). [M. P. Earles]. 23,308.

Stukeley, W. Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton's Life. (1936). [E. N. da C.Andrade]. 1,468.

Swinburne, R. Space and Time. (1968). [G. J. Whitrow]. 25, 363.

Szabadvary, F. History of Analytical Chemistry. Translated by G. Svehla.(1966). [F. Greenaway]. 23, 305.

Talbot, C. H. Medicine in Medieval England. (1967). [E. A. Underwood].25, 167.

Talbot, C. H., and Hammond, E. A. The Medical Practitioners in MedievalEngland. A Biographical Register, (1965). [E. A. Underwood]. 25,168.

Taton, R. (Editor). Science in the Nineteenth Century. Translated by A. J.Pomerans. (1965). [D. McKie]. 20,244.

Histoire Générale des Sciences, Tome I I I : La Science Contemporaine (Vol. II :Le I l e Siècle). (1964). [E.G.Forbes]. 22,139.

Science in the Twentieth Century. Translated by A. J. Pomerans. (1966).[D. McKie]. 22, 298.

Taylor, F. Sherwood. Science Past and Present. (1945). [D. McKie]. 5, 377.

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Thompson, Sir Benjamin; Count von Rumford. The Collected Works of CountRumford. Edited by S. C. Brown. Vol.1. The Nature of Heat. (1968).[W. H. Brock]. 25, 268.

Thôrarinsson, S. The Eruptions of Hekla in Historical Times. (1967). [R.E. W. Maddison]. 25, 85.

Thornton, J. L. Medical Books, Libraries and Collectors. 2nd edition. (1966).[E. A. Underwood]. 24, 254.

Thornton, J. L., and Tully, R. I. J. Scientific Hooks and Collectors. A Studyof Bibliography and the Book Trade in Relation to Science. (1954). [J. R.Partington]. 11,99.

Scientific Books and Collectors. 2nd edition. (1962). [D. MoKie]. 16,275.

The Times. The Royal Society Tercentenary. (1960). (N. H. de V.Heathcote]. 16, 128.

Timotheus of Gaza. On animals. (1949). [F. J. Cole]. 6, 325.

Trail, R. R. (Editor). Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Physiciansof London, continued to 1965. (1968). [E. A. Underwood]. 25, 264.

Transactions of the Newcomen Society. Vol. XXXI, (1957-58 and 1958-59).(1961). [D. McKie]. 16, 274.

Treneer, A. The Mercurial Chemist. A Life of Sir Humphry Davy. (1963).[H. Hartley]. 17, 200.

Tricker, R. A. R. The Contributions of Faraday and Maxwell to ElectricalScience. (1966). [G. B. Brown]. 23, 246.

Underwood, E. Ashworth (ed). Science Medicine and History. Essays . . . inhonour of Charles Singer. (1953). [J. R. Partington]. 10,83.

University of Birmingham Historical Journal. Vol. II, No. 1. The LunarSociety of Birmingham. (1967). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 24, 175.

Velluz, L. Vie de Bertholot. (1964). [M. P. Crosland]. 23, 77.

Walker, J. Lectures on Geology : including hydrography, mineralogy andmeteorology with an introduction to biology. Edited by H. W. Scott. (1966).[J. M. Eyles]. 23, 243.

Warner, D. J. Alvan Clark cfe Sons, Artists in Optics. (1968). [H. C. King],25, 366.

Weiner, D. B. Raspail : Scientist and Reformer. (1968). [H. Brown]. 25,82.

Wellcome Historical Medical Library. A Catalogue of Printed Books in theWellcome Historical Medical Library. (1966). [W. A. Smeaton]. 24,171.

Whitrow, G. J. (Editor). Einstein : The Man and his Achievement. (1967).[J. W. Herival]. 24, 339.

Williams, L. Pearce. Michael Faraday. (1965). [G. B. Brown]. 21, 141.

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Williams, R. J. You Are Extraordinary. (1967). [E. A. Underwood]. 24,257.

Williams, T. I., and Withins, S. (Editors). A Biographical Dictionary ofScientists. (1969). [R. E. W. Maddison]. 25, 172.

Wilson, L. G. (Compiler). Selected Readings in the History of Physiology.(1966). [E. Clarke]. 24, 98.

Wright, Helen. The, Great Palomar Telescope. (1953). [C. A. Ronan]. 10,80.

Essay Reviews

Clow, Archibald and Clow, Nan L. The Chemical Revolution. (1952). F. W.Gibbs]. 8, 271.

Harvey's Lectures on Anatomy. [J. S. Wilkie]. 18, 255-270.

The Language of Chemistry. [W. P. D. Wightman]. 17, 259-267.

The Newton Letters. (Vols. I and II). [G. B. Brown]. 16, 117-124.

N. J. Callan, Inventor of the Induction Coil. [N. H. de V. Heathcote].21, 145-167.

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Account of Lavoisier's Reconciliation with the Church a short time before hisDeath. (L. Scheler and W. A. Smeaton). 14, 148-153.

Aeneas Coffey (1780-1852). (E. J. Rothery). 24, 53-71.

Airborne Particles and the Germ Theory: 1860-1880. (J. K. Crellin). 22,47-60.

Alessandro Volta and the Inflammable-Air Eidiometer, illus. (W. A. Osman).14, 215-242.

Alexander Moritzi. (Sir G. de Beer). 16, 251-254.

Andreas Albrecht, a Seventeenth-Century Military Surveyor, illus. (E. Weil).6, 44-45.

Animal Electricity before Galvani. (W. C. Walker). 2, 84-113, illus.

Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794) and Christopher Columbus (1446?-1506).(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). 10, 63-68.

Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences. 6, 206.

Astronomical and Chronological Calculations at Newminster in 1428. (L.Thorndike). 7, 275-283

Astronomical Work of Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille. (A. Armitage). 12,163-191.

Auction Sales of the Earl of Bute's Instruments, 1793, illus. (G. L'E. Turner).23, 213-242.

August Kekulé and the Benzene Problem, illus. (0. J. Walker). 4, 34-46.

Auguste Laurent's Contributions to Chemistry. (0. Potter). 9, 271-280.

Augustin François Silvestre and the Société Philomathique. (D. I. Duveen).10, 339-341.

Autograph Letter by Gilbert White. (K. J. Franklin). 5, 370-372.

Avant-Coureur. The Journal in which some of Lavoisier's Earliest Researchwas reported. (W. A. Smeaton). 13, 219-234.

Bartolomeo Telioux and the Early History of the Thermometer, illus. (J. A.Chaldecott). 8, 195-201.

Beginnings of Scientific Palaeontology in Britain. (J. Challinor). 6,46-53.

Benjamin Donri (1729-1798), Teacher of Mathematics and Navigation. (E.Robinson). 19, 27-36.

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Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794).(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Kliokstein). Part I. Franklin and the NewChemistry, Mus. 11, 103-128; Part II. Joint Investigations. 11,271-308; Part III . Documentation. 13, 30-46.

Béraut's Theory of Calcination (1747). (D. McKie). 1, 269-293.

Bernard Friedrich Kuhn's Investigations on Glaciers. (G. R. de Beer). 9,323-341.

Bibliographical Study of the Galvani and the Aldini Writings on AnimalElectricity (J. F. Fulton and H. Cushing). 1, 239-268.

Bibliographical Study of the Introduction of Lavoisier's Traité Elémentaire deChimie into Great Britain and America, Mus. (D. I. Duveen and H. S.Klickstein). 10, 321-338.

Bibliography of German Astrological Works Printed between 1465 and 1600,with Locations of those Extant in London Libraries. (M. Winder). 22,191-220.

Biographical Note on John Symmons, F. R. S. (R. J. Cole). 10, 272-273.

Biographical Note on William Brownrigg, M.D., F.R.S. (1711-1800). (J.Russell-Wood). 6, 186-196.

Birds of Dante. (M. F. M. Meiklejohn). 10, 33-43.

Blind Henry Moyes, "An Excellent Lecturer in Philosophy", Mus. (J. A.Harrison). 13, 109-125.

Boerhaave and the Botanists. (F. W. Gibbs). 13, 47-61.

Book Humboldt gave to Schiller. (J. J. Bikerman). 21, 131-134.

Boole's Philosophy of Logic, Mus. (M. B. Hesse). 8, 61-81.

" Borell's Hypothesis" and the Rise of Celestial Mechanics. (A. Armitage).6, 268-282.

Boyle's Hell, Mus. (R. E. W. Maddison). 20, 101-110.

Bulletin of the British Society for the History of Science. 6, 206.

Burehard Kranich (c. 1515-1578), Miner and Queen's Physician, Cornish MiningStamps, Antimony, and Frobisher's Gold, Mus. (M. B. Donald). 6,308-322.

Cartesian Theory of Gravity, Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 15, 27-49.

Cauchy's Contribution to the Establishment of the Calculus. (J. M. Dubbey).22,61-67.

Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 16,65-82.

Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz: A New Interpretation, Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 20,111-123.

Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism, Mus. (E.J. Aiton). 18, 31-41.

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Chappe d'Auteroehe: A Pathfinder for Astronomy. (A. Armitage). 10,277-293.

Charles Hunnings Wilkinson (1763 or 64-1850), Mus. (J. L. Thornton). 23,227-286.

Chemical Society of Glasgow: Minute Book of 1800-1801. (F. J. Wilson).2, 451-459.

Chemical Studies of John Evelyn, Mus. (F. S. Taylor). 8, 285-292.

Chemistry and Meteorology, 1700-1825. (W. E. K. Middleton). 20, 125-141.

Chemistry at the Royal Society of London in the Eighteenth Century. (L.Trengove). - I . 19, 183-237; - I I . 20, 1-57. -III(A). Metals. 21,81-130: -III(B). Metals, Mus. 21, 175-201.

Chemistry in Rozier's Journal. (E. W. J. Heave). - I . The Journal and itsEditors, Mus. 6, 416-421; - I I . The Phlogiston Theory, Mus. 7,101-106 ; - I I I . Pierre Bayen, Mus. 7, 144-148 ; -IV and V, Mus. 7,284-299; -VI and VII, Mus. 7, 393-400; -VIII and IX. 8, 28-45.

Classification of Sundials, Mus. (K. Higgins). 9, 342-358.

Claude Bernard and the Theory of the Glycogenic Function of the Liver.(F. G. Young). 2, 47-83.

Clerk Maxwell's Apparatus for the Measurement of Surface Tension, Mus.(I. B. Hopley). 13, 180-187.

Clerk Maxwell's Corrections to the Page Proofs of "A Dynamical Theory ofthe Electromagnetic Field". (P. F. Cranefield). 10, 359-362.

Clock Metaphor and Probabilism : The Impact of Descartes on English Methodo-logical Thought, 1650-65. (L. Laudan). 22, 73-104.

Collection of Armillary Spheres and other Antique Scientific Instruments, Mus.(D. J. Price). 10, 172-188.

Combe-Varin, Mus. (G. R. de Beer). 6, 215-228.

Composition, a Neglected Aspect of the Chemical Revolution. (R. Siegfriedand B. J. Dobbs). 24, 275-293.

Contributions of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of Tides, Mus.(E. J. Aiton). 11, 206-223.

Contributions of P. J. Macquer, T. 0. Bergman and L. B. Guyton de Morveauto the Reform of Chemical Nomenclature. (W. A. Smeaton). 10, 87-106.

Cosmology of Giordano Bruno. (A. Armitage). 6, 24-31.

Count Rumford as a Spy. (W. J. Sparrow). 11. 320-330.

Course of Capt. Edmond Halley in the Year 1700, Mus. (R. P. Stearns). 1,294-301.

Crop Nutrition in the late Stuart Age (1660-1714). (G. E. Fussell). 14, 173-184.

Cullen Chemical Manuscript of 1753. (L. Dobbin). 1, 138-156.

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Daniel Quare and the Portable Barometer. (N. Goodison). 23, 287-293.

Darwin-Bates Letters. Correspondence between two Nineteenth-CenturyTravellers and Naturalists. (R. M. Stecher). - I , illus. 25, 1-47 ; - I I .25, 95-125.

Darwin-Innes Letters. The Correspondence of an Evolutionist with his Vicar,1848-1884. (R. M. Stecher). 17, 201-258.

Debt of Bishop John Wilkins to the Apologia pro Galileo of Tommaso Camp-anella. (G. McColley). 4, 150-168.

Deflecting Force of the Earth's Rotation from Galileo to Newton, illus. (H.L. Burstyn). 21, 47-80.

Derby Philosophical Society, illus, (E. Robinson). 9, 359-367.

Descartes and Henry More on the Beast-Machine—A Translation of theircorrespondence pertaining to animal automatism. (L. D. Cohen). 1,48-61.

Desoartes's Theory of Tides. (E. J. Aiton). 11, 337-348.

Detection and Estimation of Electric Charges in the Eighteenth Century. (W.C. Walker). 1, 66-100.

Development of the Concept of Tissue Respiration. (B. T. Scheer). 4,295-305.

Development of the Conception and Measurement of Electric Current. (A. W.Humphreys). 2, 164-178.

Development of the Kinetic Theory of Gases. (S. G. Brush). - I . Herapeth-13, 188-198 ; - I I . Waterston. 13, 273-282 ; - I I I . Clausius. 14,185-196 ;-IV. Maxwell. 14, 243-255.

Deviation of Falling Bodies. (A. Armitage). 5,342-351.

Discovery of an Atmosphere on Venus, illus. (A. J. Meadows). 22, 117-127.

Discovery of Asparagine, illus. (H. E. Street and G. E. Trease). 7, 70-76.

Discovery of the Electron. (G. E. Owen). 11, 173-182.

Discovery of the Mechanism of Colour-Changes in the Chameleon, illus. (A.E. Best). 24, 147-167.

Discovery of the Optical Rotatory Power of Tartaric Acid. (T. S. Patterson).3, 431-434.

Douglas McKie — Obituary, illus. 24, 1-5.

Dr. Warwick's Chemistry Lectures and the Scientific Audience in Sheffield(1799-1801). (M. Brook). 11, 224-237.

Dumfries and the Early History of Surgical Anaesthesia, illus. (E. A.Underwood). 23,35-75.

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Earlier Theories of the Mode of Action of Drugs and poisons. (M. P. Earles).17, 97-110.

Earliest Published Writing of Robert Boyle, Mus. (M. E. Rowbottom). 6,376-389.

— (R. E. W. Maddison). 17, 165-173.

Early Editions of Euclid in England. (D. M. Simpkins). 22, 225-249.

Early History of Laboratory Instruction in Chemistry at the Ecole Poly-technique, Paris, and Elsewhere. (W. A. Smeaton). 10, 224-233.

Early History of Strontium. (J. R. Partington). 5, 157-166.

Early History of the Potentiometer System of Electrical Measurement, Mus.(D. Rutenberg). 4, 212-243.

Early History of the Term ' Social Science '. (K. M. Baker). 20, 211-226.

Early Journal of Thomas Wright of Durham. (E. Hughes). 7, 1-24.

Early Meaning of Electricity : Some Pseudodoxia Epidemica. (N. H. de V.Heathcote). -I . 23, 261-275.

Early Nautical Charts. (N. H. de V. Heathcote). 1, 13-28.

Early Observations on Chromosomes and Genes. (M. D. White). 2, 237.

Early Observatory Instruments of Trinity College, Cambridge, Mus. (D. J.Price). 8, 1-12.

Early Progress of British Geology. (J. Challinor). -I . From Leland to Wood-ward, 1538-1728. 9,124-153 ; -II. From Strachey to Michell, 1719-1788.10, 1-19 ; -III. From Hutton to Playfair, 1788-1802, Mus. 10, 107-148.

Early Reception of the Doctrine of Evolution in. the United States. (W.Eberstein). 4, 306-318.

Early Studies in Radiant Heat. (E. S. Cornell). 1, 217-225.

Early Teaching of Anatomy at Padua, with Special Reference to a Model of thePadua Anatomical Theatre, Mus. (E. A. Underwood). 19, 1-26.

Early Theories of the Mode of Action of Drugs and Poisons. (M. P. Earles).17, 97-110.

Early Utopists and Science in England. (W. H. G. Armytage). 12, 248-254.

Early Years of the Lycée and the Lycée des Arts. A Chapter in the Lives ofA. L. Lavoisier and A. F. de Fourcroy. (W. A. Smeaton). -I . The Lycéeof the Rue de Valois. I l , 257-267 ; -II. The Lycée des Arts. 11, 309-319.

Edward Turner, M.D., F.R.S. (1798-1837), (H. Terrey). 2, 137-152. Mus.

Eighteenth-Century Denudation Dilemma and the Huttonian Theory of theEarth. (G. L. Davies). 22, 129-138.

Eighteenth-Century Observations of the Transit of Venu». (H. Woolf). 9,176-190.

Eighth Sphere of De Revolutionibus. (G. McColley). 2, 354.

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Electrical Science and the Early Development of the Electrical ManufacturingIndustry in the United States. (H. C. Passer). 7,382-391.

Electrochemical Theory of Berzelius. (C. A. Russell). -I . Origins of the Theory.19, 117-126; -II. An Electrochemical View of Matter. 19, 127-145.

Electrochemical Theory of Sir Humphry Davy. (C. A. Russell). -I . TheVoltaic Pile and Electrolysis, Mus. 15,1-13; —II. Electrical Interpretationsof Chemistry, Mus. 15,15-25 ; -III. The Evidence of the Royal InstitutionManuscripts. 19, 255-272.

Eleven References to Mendel before 1900. (R. Olby and P. Gautrey). 24, 7-20.

Elizabethan History of Medical Chemistry, Mus. (A. G. Debus). 18, 1-29.

English Almanacs and the " New Astronomy '. (M. Nicolson). 4, 1-34.English Treatment of the Relationship between the Rise of Science and the

Renaissance, 1740-1840. (H. Weisinger). 7, 248-274.Erasmus Darwin in Russia. (C. A. Hoare). 11, 255-256.

Erasmus Darwin's Botanic Garden and the Contemporary Opinion, Mus.(E. Robinson). 10, 314-320.

Evolution of the Still. (F. S. Taylor). 5, 185-202.

Evolution of a Chemist, Sir James Hall, Bt., F.R.S., P.R.S.E., Mus. (V. A.Eyles). 19, 153-182.

Experimental Investigation of Viper Venom by Felice Fontana (1730-1805).(M. P. Earles). 16, 255-268.

Experiments with Drugs and Poisons in the Seventeenth and EighteenthCenturies. (M. P. Earles). 19, 241-254.

Facsimile of Salusburys's Translation of Didacus à Stunica's Commentary uponJob. (G. McColley). 2,179-182.

Fire Analysis and the Elements in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.(A. G. Debus). 23, 127-147.

First Aphorism of Hippocrates as Explained by Paracelsus. (R. E. Schlueter).1, 453-461.

First Edition of Robert Boyle's Medicinal Experiments. (R. E. W. Maddison).18, 43-47.

Fiscal Policy and the Development of Technology, Mus. (A. Clow). 10, 342-358.

Fragmentary Remains of John Dalton. (A. W. Thackray). -I . Letters. 22,145-174.

Francis Bacon and the Rise of the Mechanical Arts in Eighteenth-centuryEngland. (R. C. Cochrane). 12, 137-156.

Frederick the Great and the Berlin Academy of Sciences (1740-1766). (R. S.Calinger). 24,239-249.

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Friedrich Accum, (1769-1838). A Biographical Study, illus. (R. J. Cole).7, 128-143.

Furnaces and Thermometers of Cornells Drebbel. (F. W. Gibbs). 6,32-43.

Further Note on Burchard Kranich. (M. B. Donald). 7, 107-108.

Further Optical Experiments of Isaac Newton. (A. E. Hall). 11,27-43.

Further Unpublished Letters of Charles Darwin. (Sir G. de Beer). 14, 83-115.

Galileo and the Problem of Concentric Circles, illus. (S. Quan). 24, 313-338.

Galileo's Theory of Tides. (B. J. Aiton). 10, 44-57.

Galton's Contribution to the Theory of Evolution with Special Reference tohis Use of Models and Metaphors. (J. S. Willde). 11, 194-205.

Galton's Law—Formulation and Development. (R. G. Swinburne). 21, 15-31.

Galvani and the Pre-Galvanian Electrophysiologists. (H. E. Hoff). 1,157-172.

Genesis of the Académie des Sciences. (A.J.George). 3,372-401.

Geographical and Geological Observations of Bernard Palissy the Potter.(H. R. Thompson). 10, 149-165.

George Hartgill: An Elizabethan Parson-Astronomer and his Library, illus.(P. Morgan). 24, 295-311.

German Technological Utopias of the Pre-War Period. (E. M. J. Kretzmann).3, 417-430.

Germ Theory of Disease. Neglected Precursors of Louis Pasteur, illus.(R. Williamson). 11, 44-57.

Gift of the Whipple Collection to the University of Cambridge. (D. McKie).5, 295-296.

Great Batteries of the London Institution. (L. C. Ockenden). 2, 183-184.

Gregory Watt's Tour on the Continent, 1801. (Sir G. de Beer)/ 13,127-136.Guericke and Dufay. (I. B. Cohen). 7, 207-209.

Guericke's Sulphur Globe. (N. H. de V. Heathcote). 6, 293-305.

Haller's Historic/, Stirpium. (G. R. de Beer). 9, 1-46.

Hartley's 'Observations on Man'. (R. C. Oldfield and Lady K. Oldfield). 7,371-381.

Harvey's Lectures on Anatomy. (J. S. Wilkie). 18, 255-270.

Harvey: Spontaneous Generation and the Egg. (E. T. Foote). 25, 139-163.

Has Mendel's Work been Rediscovered ? (R. A. Fisher). 1, 115-137.

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H. B. Tristram's Collections in Natural History, especially in Palestine. (P. S.Bodenheimer). 12, 278-287.

Helmont's Ice and Water Experiments. (T. S. Patterson). 1, 462^67.

Henry William Robinson 1888-1900. 14, 211-214.

Hindu Astronomy at Newminster in 1428. (0. Neugebauer and O. Schmidt).8, 221-228.

Historical and other considerations regarding the Crystal Form of Sodium-Ammonium d- and Z-Tartrate, Potassium d- and Z-Tartrate, Potassium-Ammonium d- and Z-Tartrate, and Potassium Racemate, (T. S. Pattersonand C.Buchanan). -I. illus, 5,288-294; -II. illus. 5, 317-324;-Adden-dum on the Isomorphism of Potassium- and Potassium-AmmoniumTartrate. 6, 76-77.

Historical Studies on the Phlogiston Theory. (J. R. Partington and D. McKie).-I . The Levity of Phlogiston, Mus. 2, 361-404; -II. The NegativeWeight of Phlogiston, Mus. 3,1-58 ; -III. Light and Heat in Combustion,illus. 3, 337-371.

Historical Survey of the Japanning Trade. (F. W. Gibbs). -I . Eastern andWestern Lacquer. 7, 401-416;-II. Early British Japanning. 9,88-95;-III. PontypoolandUsk. 9,197-213;-IV. The Midlands. 9,214-232.

History of Natural Lengths. (L. L. Whyte). 10, 20-27.

History of Physiology at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London. ( J. L. Thornton)7, 238-247.

History of Prussian Blue. (L. J. M. Coleby). 4, 206-212.

History of Science Society. Report of the St. Louis Meeting 1936. (H. Brown).1, 233-234. Report of the Providence Meeting 1936. (R. S. Woodbury).2,236. Report of Indianapolis Meeting 1937. (G. McColley). 3,237.

History of the Altimetry of Mont Blanc, illus. (Sir G. de Beer). 12, 1-29.

History of the Chile Nitrate Industry. (M. B. Donald), - I . 1, 29-47; -II. 1,193-216.

History of the Common Salt Industry on Merseyside. (N. F. Newbury). 3,138-148.

History of the Discovery of Phosgene. (L.Dobbin). 5,270-287.

History of the Manufacture of Soap. (F. W. Gibbs). 4, 169-190.

History of the Solar Red Shift Problem. (E. G. Forbes). 17, 129-164.

History of the Young-Helmholtz Theory of Colour Vision. (E. C. Millington).5, 167-176.

Hooke's Law and the Concept of the Elastic Limit. (E. Williams). 12, 74-83.Hooke's Pocket-watch. (H. W. Robinson). 4, 322.Humanitarian Attitudes in the Early Animal Experiments of the Royal Society.

(W. Shugg). 24, 227-238.

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Humphry Davy and the Gunpowder Manufactory, Mus. (J. Z. Fullmer). 20,165-194.

Humphry Davy and the Leather Industry, Mus. (G. H. Spiers). 24, 99-113.

Idea of Evolution in the Writings of Buffon. (J. S. Wilkie). -I . 12, 48-62 ;-II. 12, 212-227; -III. 12, 255-266.

Imaginary Error in the Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz, Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 21,169-173.

Introduction of the Differential Notation to Great Britain. (J. M. Dubbey).19, 37-48.

Introduction to the Earlier History of Phlebitis. (K. J. Franklin). 4,47-60.

Invention of the Hygroscope, (F.S.Taylor). 6,181-185. Mus.

Inverse Problem of Central Forces, Mus. (E. J. Aiton). 20, 81-99.

Isaac Milner and the Jacksonian Chair of Natural Philosophv. (L. J. M. Cole by)10, 234-257.

James Watt's Letter to Joseph Priestley, 26 April 1783. (R. E. Sohofield).10, 294-300.

Jean Béguin and His Tyrocinium Chymicum, Mus. (T. S. Patterson). 2,243-298.

Jean François Pilâtre de Rozier, Mus. (W. A. Smeaton). 11, 349-355.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Botanist, Mus. (Sir G. de Beer). 10, 189-223.

Jean Méry (1645-1722) and his Ideas on the Foetal Blood Flow. (K. J.Franklin). 5, 203-228.

Jcremias Benjamin Richter and the Law of Reciprocal Proportions. (J. R.Partington). -I . Mus. 7, 173-198, -II. 9, 289-314.

J. H. and the Astronomia Grystallina. (G. McColley). 4, 319-321.

Joan Baptista van Helmont. (J. R. Partington). 1, 359-384.

Johann Heinrich Hottinger's Description of the Ice-Mountains of Switzerland,1703. (G. R. de Beer). 6, 327-360.

John Farquhar Fulton 1899-1960. (D. McKie). 15, 139-140.

John Francis Vigani. (L. J. M. Coleby). 8, 46-60.

John Hadley, Fourth Professor of Chemistry in the University of Cambridge.(L. J. M. Coleby). 8, 293-301.

John Hunter and his Approach to Pathology. (E. A. Spriggs). 5, 177-184.

John Lindsay and the Sensitive Plant, Mus. (P. C. R.itterbush). 18, 233-254.

John Macculloch, F.R.S., and his Geological Map : an Account of the FirstGeological Survey of Scotland. (V. A. Eyles). 2,114-129. Mus.

Ann. of Sci.—Ace. Index g

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John Mickleburgh. (L. J. M. Coleby). 8, 165-174.

John Phillip's Geological Maps of the British Isles, illus. (J. A. Douglas). 6,361-375.

John Tyndall and the Royal Institution. (D. Thompson). 13, 9-22.

John Wallis as a Historian of Mathematics. (J. F. Scott). 1, 335-358.

John Yarwell or the Story of a Trade Card. (R. S. Whipple). 7, 62-69. Mus.

Joseph Priestley and Edmund Burke: an Unpublished Letter. (W. H. G.Armytage). 12, 160-161.

Lamarck in 1800. -A lecture on the Invertebrate Animals and a note onFossils taken from the Système des Animaux sans Vertèbres, by J. B.Lamarck. (D. R. Newth). 8, 229-254.

Language of Chemistry. (W. P. D. Wightman). 17, 259-268.

Lavoisier's Membership of the Assembly of Representatives of the Commune ofParis, 1789-1790. (W. A. Smeaton). 13, 235-248.

Lavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale de Médecine. (W. A. Smeaton).12, 228-244.

Lavoisier's Membership of the Société Royale d'Agriculture and the Comitéd'Agriculture. (W. A. Smeaton). 12, 267-277.

Lavoisier's Memoir on the Composition of Nitric Acid. (J. R. Partington).9, 96-98.

Lavoisier's Technical Reports: 1768-1794. (F. C. Storrs). —I. 1. Origin of theReports. 2. Fuel and Lighting. 22, 251-275; - I I . 1. The Paris WaterSupply. ' Corrupt ' Waters. 24, 179-197.

Leeuwenhoek's Zoological Researches. (F. J. Cole). Part I. 2, 1-46;Part II. Bibliography and Analytical Index. 2, 185-235.

Letter from Berthollet to Blagden Relating to the Experiments for a Large-Scale Synthesis of Water carried out by Lavoisier and Meusnier in 1785.(D. I. Duveen and H. S. Klickstein). 10, 58-62.

Life and Work of George Fownes, F.R.S., (1815-49), illus. (J. S. Rowe).6, 422-435

Lignum Nephriticum. (J. R. Partington). 11, 1-26.

Longolius on Birds. (T. P. Harrison). 14, 257-268.

Lunar Society and the Improvement of Scientific Instruments. (E. Robinson).- I . 11,296-304.

Maeculloch's Geological Map of Scotland: An Additional Note, illus. (V. A.Eyles). 4, 107.

Manufacture of Alkali in Britain, 1779-1789. (L. Gittins). 22, 175-190.

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Master Georg Dôrffel and the Rise of Cometary Astronomy. (A. Armitage).7, 303-315.

Matthew Boulton. Patron of Arts, Mus. (E. Robinson). 9, 368-376.

Matthew Guthrie (1743-1807): An Eighteenth-Century Gemmologist, Mus.(J. M. Sweet). 20, 245-302.

Maxwell's Determination of the Number of Electrostatic Units in one Electro-magnetic Unit of Electricity, Mus. (I. B. Hopley). 15,91-108.

Maxwell's Work on Electrical Resistance. (I. B. Hopley). - I . The Determina-tion of the Absolute Unit of Resistance, Mus. 13, 265-272; -II. Proposalsfor the Re-determination of the B.A. Unit of 1863, Mus. 14, 197-210;-III. Improvement on Mance's Method for the Measurement of BatteryResistance, Mus. 15, 51-55.

Mechanical Aids to the Use of Literature. (J. R. Partington). 10,274-5.

Mechanism, Materialism, and Science in England, 1800-1850. (G. A. Foote).8, 152-161.

Mr Newton, Mr Pepys & Dyse: A Historical Note. (F. N. David). 13, 137-147.

Membership of the Lunar Society of Birmingham. (R. E. Schofield). 12, 118—136.

Moseley and Celtium : The Search for a Missing Element, Mus. (P. H.Heimann). 23, 249-260.

Nâgeli's Work on the Fine Structure of Living Matter. (J. S. Wilkie). -I,Mus. 16, 11-41; -II, Mus. 16, 171-207; -Ilia, Mus. 16, 209-239;-Illb, Mus. 17, 27-62.

Nathaniel Pigott's Observatory 1781-1793. (S. Melmore). 9, 281-286.

Nathaniel Torporley and the Harriot Manuscripts. (R. C. H. Tanner). 25,339-349.

Natural and Economic History of Kelp, Mus. (A. Clow and N. L. Clow).5,297-316.

Naturalist's Vacation. The London Letters of J. C. Fabricius. (A. Armitage).14, 116-131.

Newer Views of Priestley and Lavoisier. (Sir P. J. Hartog). 5, 1-56.

New Système of the Mathematicks. (G. McColley). 3, 238.

Newton and the ' Electrical Attraction Unexcited '. (J. L. Hawes). 24, 121-130.

Newton on the Calculation of Central Forces, Mus. (A. R. Hall). 13, 62-71.

Newton's Aether-Stream Hypothesis and the Inverse Square Law of Gravitation.(E. J. Aiton). 25, 255-260.

Newton's Theological Views. (L. Trengove). 22,277-294.

Ann. of 3d.—Ace. Index h

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Nicholas Hill and the Philosophic/* Epicurea. (G. MoColley). 4, 390-405.

"Nicholson's Journal" (1797-1813). (S. Lilley). 6, 78-101.

N. J. Callan: Inventor of the Induction Coil. (N. H. de V. Heathcote). 21,145-168.

Notebook of William Lewis and Alexander Chisholm, illus. (F. W. Gibbs).8, 202-220.

Note on Blaise de Vigenère, John Ferguson, and Benzoic Acid, illus. (T. S.Patterson). 4, 61-64.

Note on Leslie's Cube in the Study of Radiant Heat, illus. (R. C. Olson). 25,203-208.

Note on Maxwell's Interpretation of some Attempts at Dynamical Explanation.(J. Turner). 11, 238-245.

Notes on some Members of the Hanckwitz Family in England, illus. (R. E. W.Maddison). 11, 64-73.

Notes on Some Unpublished Letters from Faraday to Quetelet (J. Pelseneer).1, 447-452.

Observationes Analomicae Selections Amstelodamensium, 1667-73. (D. McKie).3, 149.

" Observations " of the Abbé François Rozier (1734-93). (D. Mckie). - I , illus.13, 73-89.

On "Nitre" and "Natron". (F. W. Gibbs). 3, 213-216.

On Some MS. Copies of Black's Chemical Lectures. (D. McKie). - I I . IS, 65-73; - I I I . 16, 1-9; -IV. 18, 87-97; -V. 21, 209-255; -VI. 23, 1-33.

On Some Letters of Joseph Black and Others. (D. McKie and D. Kennedy).16,129-170.

On Spontaneous Combustion, illus. (J. Z. Fullmer). 17, 65-80.

On the Different Issues of the First Geological Map of England and Wales,illus. (V. A. Eyles and J. M. Eyles). 3, 190-212.

On the First Echo-Sounding Experiment, illus. (H. Drubba and H. H. Rust).10, 28-32.

On the History of Natural Lengths. (L. L. Whyte). 10, 20-27.

On Thos. Cochrane's MS. Notes of Black's Chemical Lectures, 1767-8. illus.(D. McKie). 1, 101-110.

One Hundred Years of Science Teaching in Great Britain. (C. Foster). 2,335-344.

Origin and Development of the Marine Chronometer. (E. G. Forbes). 22, 1-25.

Origin and Development of Science in Rumania. (R. R. Florescu). 16, 43-58.

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Origin of the Thermometer. (F, S. Taylor). 5, 129-156.

Origins and Authorship of the Educational Proposals Published in 1793 by theBureau de Consultation des Arts et Métiers and generally ascribed toLavoisier. (K. M. Baker and W. A. Smeaton). 21, 33-46.

Origins of Gay-Lussac's Law of Combining Volumes of Gases. (M. P. Crosland).17, 1-26.

Origins of the Atomic Theory. (J. R. Partington). 4, 245-282.

Other Men's Shoulders. (Sir G. de Beer). 20, 303-322.

Painting of the Hon. Robert Boyle in Danish Possession, Mus. (E. Rancke-Madsen). 19, 147-148.

Paviland Cave, the "Red Lady", the Deluge, and William Buckland. (F. J.North). 5, 91-128.

Peter Shaw and the Revival of Chemistry, illus. (F. W. Gibbs). 7,211-237.

Peter Stahl, The First Public Teacher of Chemistry at Oxford. (G. H. Turn-bull). 9, 265-270.

Physico-Chemical Studies of Amedeo Avogadro. (N. G. Coley). 20, 195-210.

Physics at the Royal Society, 1660-1800. (A. W. Badcock). - I . Change ofState. 16, 95-115.

Pilgrimage of Pingre: An Astronomer-monk of the Eighteenth-century France.(A. Armitage). 9, 47-63.

Pitcairne's Leyden Interlude Described from Documents, illus. (G. A.Lindeboom). 19, 273-284.

Plagiary of Francis Boyle. (R. E. W. Maddison). 17, 111-120.

Portraiture of the Honourable Robert Boyle, F.R.S., illus. (R. E. W.Maddison). IS, 141-214.

Presence-and-Absence Theory. (R. G. Swinburne). 18, 131-145.

Production of Sugar in Barbados c. 1667. (R. P. Stearns). 1, 173-181.

Profession of Civil Engineer in the Eighteenth Century: A Portrait of ThomasYeoman, F.R.S., 1704(?)-1781. (E. Robinson). 18, 195-215.

Publication of Newton's Correspondence. (H.W.Robinson). 4,324.

Queenwood College, Hampshire, illus. (D. Thompson). 11, 246-254.

Radiant Heat Spectrum from Herschel to Melloni. (E. S. Cornell). - I . TheWork of Herschel and his Contemporaries, 3, 119-137; - I I . The Work ofMelloni and his Contemporaries, illus. 3, 402-416.

Real Character of Bishop Wilkins. (E. N. da C. Andrade). 1, 4-12.

Re-examination of William Walker's " Distingsuished Men of Science ", illus.(A. Clow). 11, 183-193.

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Religious Influences in the Rise of Modern Sciences : A Review and Criticism,particularly of the ' Protestant-Puritan Ethic ' Theory. (D. S. Kemsley).24, 199-226.

Richard Boyle, Esq., M.P., F.R.S., and—incidentally—some of his Relatives.(T. S. Patterson). 1, 62-65.

Richard Laming and the Coal-Gas Industry, with his Views on the Structure ofMatter. (W. V. Farrar). 25, 243-253.

Richard Watson and the Marquess of Rockingham: An Unpublished Exchangein 1771. (W. H. G. Armytage). 14,155-156.

Richard Watson, Professor of Chemistry in the University of Cambridge,1764-71. (L. J. M. Coleby). 9, 101-123.

Rise of Geology and its Influence on Contemporary Thought. (H. H. Thomas).5, 325-341.

Rise of the Tinplate Industry. (F. W. Gibbs). -I . The Tinplate Workers. 6,390-403; -II. Early Tinplate Manufacture to 1700, Mus. 7, 25-42; -III.John Hanbury (1664-1734), Mus. 7, 43-61; -IV. An EighteenthCentury Tinplate Mill. 7, 113-127; -V. Cockshutt on Tinplate Man-ufacture. 11, 145-153.

Robert Dossie (1717-1777) and the Society of Arts, Mus. (F. W. Gibbs).7, 149-172.

Robert Dossie (1717-77). A further Bibliographical Note. (F. W. Gibbs).9, 191-193.

Robert Jameson in London, 1793, Mus. (J. M. Sweet). 19, 81-116.

Robert Jameson's Approach to the Wernerian Theory of the Earth, 1796. (J.M. Sweet and C. D. Waterston). 23, 81-95.

Robert Jameson's Irish Journal, 1797, Mus. (J. M. Sweet). 23, 97-126.

Robertus Vallensis' de Veritate et Antiquitate Artis Chemicae. (T. S. Patterson,J. D. Loudon, and A. O. M. Cook). 6, 1-23.

Ross-Wilkins Controversy. (G. McColley). 3, 153-189.

Rudolf Albert v. Koelliker (1817-1905), Mus. (G. R. Cameron). 11, 166-172.

Rutherford, Nagaoka and the Nuclear Atom. (P. M. Heimann). 23,299-303.

Saltpetre, Tin and Gunpowder: Addenda to the Correspondence of Lavoisierand Franklin. (C. A. Lopez). 16, 83-94; Addenda and Corrigenda. 16,276.

Samuel Hartlib's Influence on Robert Boyle's Scientific Development. (J. J.O'Brien). -I . The Stalbridge Period. 21, 1-14; -II. Boyle in Oxford.21, 257-276.

Schwediauer, Bentham and Beddoes: Translators of Bergman and Scheele.(B. Linder and W. A. Smeaton). 24, 259-273.

Soience and Brougham's Society. (J. N. Hays). 20, 227-241.

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Science and Education in India before the Mutiny. (H. J. C. Larwood). 17,81-96.

Science and the Romantic Movement. (C. Grabo). 4, 191-205.Science in English Encyclopedias, 1704-1875. (A. Hughes). -I . 7, 340-370;

-II. Theories of the Elementary Composition of Matter. 8, 323-367 ; -III.Meteorology. 9, 233-264; -IV. Theories of the Earth. 11, 74-92.

Scientific Activities in Paris in 1791, Mus. (J. A. Chaldecott). 24, 21-52.

Scientific Background of Joseph Priestley. (R. E. Schofield). 13, 148-163.

Scientific Background of Swift's Voyage to Lapida. (M Nicolson and N. M.Mohler). 2,299-334.

Scientific Movement and the Development of Chemistry in England, as seen inthe Papers published in the Philosophical Transactions from 1664/5 until1750. (P. George). 8, 302-322.

Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation. (S. F. Mason). -I .Calvin and Servetus in Relation to the New Astronomy and the Theory ofthe Circulation of the Blood. 9, 64-87 ; -II. Lutheranism in Relation toIatrochemistry and the German Nature-Philosophy. 9, 154-175.

Scientific Work of the Reverend John Michell. (C. L. Hardin). 22,27-47.

Scientific Work of William Brownrigg, M.D., F.R.S. (1711-1800) (J. Russell-Wood). -I . 6, 436-447; -II. 7, 77-94; -III. 7, 199-206.

Scientist : The Story of a Word, Mus. (S. Ross). 18, 65-85.

Search for a Safety-Lamp in Mines, Mus. (J. R. Morgan). 1, 302-329.

Second Edition of The Discovery of a World in the Moone, Mus. (G. McColley),1, 330-334.

Seventeenth-Century Amateur of Science: Jean Chapelain. (A. J. George).3, 217-236.

Seventeenth-Century Doctrine of a Plurality of Worlds. (G. McColley). 1,385-430.

Short History of the International Congresses of Physiologists, Mus. (K. J.Franklin). 3, 241-336.

Short Sketch of the History of the Oxford Medical School, Mus. (K. J.Franklin). 1,431-446.

Significance of the Early Work of Fredrik Rudberg on Alloy Constitution.(A. Prince). 11, 58-63.

Sir Anthony Carlisle, F.R.S. (1768-1840), Mus. (R. J. Cole). 8, 255-270.

Sir Charles Cavendish and his Learned Friends. (J. Jacquot). -I . 8, 13-27;-II. 8, 175-191.

Sir Charles Scarburgh, Mus. (J. J. Keevil). 8, 113-121.

Sir John Eliot, Bart. (1736-86), and John Elliot (1747-87). (J. R. Partingtonand D. MoKie). 6, 262-267.

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Sir John Pringle and his Circle. (D. W. Singer). Part I. Life. 6, 115-126;Part II. Public Health. 6, 229-247; Part III . Copely Discourses. 6,248-261.

Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803): His Work and Influence in Geology, illus.(M. C. W. Sleep). 25, 319-338.

Sixteenth-Century War of Ideas : Science against the Church. (R. A. Sarno).25, 209-227.

Society for the Study of Alchemy and Early Chemistry. (D. McKie). 2, 238;3, 149.

Some Aspects of the Work of Ernest Henry Starling, illus. (E. B. Verney).12, 30-47.

Some Correspondence of Thomas Webster, Geologist, (1773-1844). (J.Challinor). - I . 17, 175-195; - I I . 18, 147-175; - I I I . 19, 49-79; -IV.19, 285-297; -V. 20, 59-80; -VI, illus. 20, 143-164.

Some Eighteenth Century Ideas concerning Aqueous Vapour and Evaporation.(S. A. Dyment). 2,465^73.

Some Experiments on the Expansive Force of Freezing Water. (E. Williams).10,166-171.

Some Geological Correspondence of James Hutton. (V. A. Eyles and J. M.Eyles). 7,316-339.

Some Historical Notes on the " Fusible Metals ". (E. Williams). 15, 57-62.

Some Letters from Jakob Samuel Wyttenbach to Sir James Edward Smith.(G. R. de Beer). 6, 105-114.

Some Milestones in the Study of Hydrocarbon Flames. (J. R. Partington).5, 229-252.

Some New Considerations on Béguin and Libavius, illus. (A. Kent and 0.Hannaway). 16, 241-250.

Some Observations of Leonardo, Galileo, Mariotte and others relative to SizeEffect, illus. (E. Williams). 13, 23-29.

Some Questions of Scientific Method in the "Siècle des Lumières". (M. J. J.Laboulle and H. Levy). 2, 153-163.

Some Recollections of Albrecht Kossel, Professor of Physiology in Heidelberg,1901-1924. (Sir E. Kennaway). 8, 393-397.

Some Reflections on the Beginnings of Experimental Science. (H. W. Jones).6, 283-292.

Some Reflections on the History of Science and its Conception of Nature.(A. C. Crombie). 6, 54-75.

Some Seventeenth Century Views concerning the Nature of Heat and Cold.(M. A. Bentham). 2, 431-450.

Some Textual Changes in Successive Editions of Richard Lower's Tractatus deGorde Item de Motu & Colore Sanguinis et Chyli in eum Transitu. (K. J.Franklin). 4, 283-294.

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Some Theoretical Aspects of Eighteenth-Century Tables of Affinity. (A. M.Duncan). - I , illus. 18, 177-194; - I I , illus. 18, 217-232.

Some Unrecorded Editions of Fourcroy's Philosophie Chimique. (W. A.Smeaton). 23, 295-298.

Studies in Capillarity and Cohesion in the Eighteenth Century. (E. C. Milling-ton). 5, 352-369.

Studies in the History of Prout's Hypothesis. (W. H. Brock). - I . Unity ofMatter and Unity of Sensations ; The Text of Prout's De Facultate Sentiendi,1810. 25, 49-80 ; - I I . Prout's Lectures of 1814. 25,127-137.

Summary of Former Accounts of the Life and Work of Robert Boyle. (R. E.W. Maddison). 13, 90-108.

Survey of the Growth of Knowledge about certain parts of the Foetal Cardio-Vascular Apparatus, and about the Foetal Circulation, in Man and someother Mammals. (K. J. Franklin). Part I. Galen to Harvey. 5, 57-90.

Swammerdam's Home, illus. (F. J. Cole). 2, 236.

Swift's "Flying Island" in the Voyage to Laputa, illus. (M. Nicolson andN". M. Mohler). 2, 405-430.

Teaching of the History of Science in a Liberal Arts College for Women. (D.Stimson). 2,460-464.

Teaching of the History of Science in an Engineering School. (R. S. Woodbury).1, 226-232.

Teaching of Science at Oxford in the Nineteenth Century. (F. SherwoodTaylor). 8, 82-112.

Technology and Utopianism: J. A. Etzler in England 1840-1844, illus. (W.H. G. Armytage). 11, 129-136.

Television and the Teaching of Surgery. 6, 206.

Theodore Haak and the Early Years of the Royal Society. (P. R. Barnett).13, 205-218.

Theories of Cohesion in the Seventeenth Century. (E. C. Millington). 5,253-269.

Thomas Allan, Mineralogist: An Autobiographical Fragment. (W. V. Farrarand K. R. Farrar). 24, 115-120.

Thomas Beddoes, M.D., and the Reform of Science Teaching in Oxford. (E.Robinson). 11, 137-142.

Thomas Clark (1801-1867): A Biographical Study. (J. H. S. Green). 13,164-179.

Thomas Love Peacock: Critic of Scientific Progress. (E. Robinson). 10,69-77.

Thomas Pennant and the Morris Brothers, illus. (C. Matheson). 10, 258-271.

Thomas Thomson, 1773-1852. (J. R. Partington). 6,115-126.

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Thomas Wright's Astronomical Heritage. (H. Dingle). 6, 404-415.

Thomson before Dalton. (S. H. Mauskopf). 25, 220-242.

Thoreau on Science. (C. R. Metzger). 12, 206-211.

Timber and the Advance of Technology: A Reconsideration. (M. W. Flinn).15, 109-120.

Timber Famine and the Development of Technology. (A. Clow and N. L.Clow). 12, 85-102.

Tobias Mayer's Lunar Tables. (E. G. Forbes). 22, 105-116.

Tour of the British Isles made by Louis Agassiz in 1840. (G. L.Davies). 24,131-146.

Training Captains of Industry: The Education of Matthew Robinson Boulton(1770-1842) and the Younger James Watt (1769-1848), illus. (E. Robin-son). 10, 310-313.

Two Metallurgical Discoveries. (E. Williams). 11, 93-98.

Two Observations of Leonardo Da Vinci Concerning Ramifications and Con-cavities, illus. (E. Williams). 21, 135-138.

Two Unrecorded Publications of the Régie des Poudres et Salpêtres probablywritten by Lavoisier. (W. A. Smeaton). 12, 157-159.

Unpublished Boyle Papers relating to Scientific Method. (R. S. Westfall).- I . 12, 63-73; - I I . 12, 103-117.

Unpublished Essay of Condorcet on Technical Methods of Classification. (K.M. Baker). 18, 99-123.

Unpublished Letter by Davy on the Safety-Lamp. (E. Weil). 6, 306-307.

Unpublished Report on the Waterproofing of Shoe Leather by Lavoisier andHassenfratz. (D. Duveen). 8, 162-164.

Use of Diagrams as Chemical ' Equations ' in the Lecture Notes of WilliamCullen and Joseph Black, illus. (M. P. Crosland). 15, 75-90.

Utilitarian Motive in the Age of Descartes. (H. Brown). 1, 182-192.

Vogue of Natural History in England, 1750-1770. (W. P. Jones). 2, 345-352.

Volcanoes of Auvergne, illus. (Sir G. de Deer). 18,49-61.

Vortex Theory of the Planetary Motions. (E. J. Aiton). - I , illus. 13, 249-264; - I I , illus. 14, 132-147; - I I I . 14, 157-172.

William Borlase's Contribution to Eighteenth-Century Meteorology andClimatology. (J. Oliver). 25,275-317.

William Cleghorn's De Igne (1779), illus. (D. McKie and N. H. de V.Heathcote). 14, 1-82.

William Cruickshank of Woolwich. (A. Coutts). 15, 121-134.

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William Cullea and the Teaching of Chemistry. (W. P. D. VVightman). - I . 9,154-165; - I I . 12, 192-205.

William Derham, F.R.S. (1657-1735). (A. D. Atkinson). 8, 368-392.

William Gilbert and the English Reputation of Giordano Bruno. (G. MeColley).2,353.

William. Harvey, Physician and Biologist: His Precursors, Opponents andSuccessors.' (H. P. Bayon). Parts I & II, illus. 3, 59-118; Part III,illus. 3,435-456; Part IV, illus. 4,65-106; Part V, illus. 4,329-389.

William James Russell, (1830-1909) and Investigations on London Fog, illus.(J. R. Brown and J. L. Thornton). 11, 331-336.

William Keir's De Attractione Chemica (1778) and the Concepts of ChemicalSaturation, Attraction and Repulsion. (A. M. Duncan). 23,149-173.

William Lewis, M.B., F.R.S. (1708-1781), illus. (F. W. Gibbs). 8, 122-151.

William Odling, 1829-1921. (J. L. Thornton and A. Wiles). 12, 288-295.

William Smith: The Sale of his Geological Collection to the British Museum,illus. (J. M. Eyles). 23,177-212.

William Strutt and the Application of Convection to the Heating of Buildings,illus. (M. C. Egerton). 24, 73-87.

William Thomas Brande, Leather Expert. (C. H. Spiers). 25, 179-201.

Work of G. T. Feclmer on the Galvanic Circuit. (H. J. J. Winter). 6,197-206.

Zograscope or Optical Diagonal Machine, illus. (J. A. Chaldecott). 9, 315—322.