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152. XXXI. Curious particulars respecting bees.
153. XXXIII. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
154. XXXIV. Intelligence and miscellaneous articles.
155. XXXVII. Memoir on the anatomy of vegetables. Read before the Physical Class of the Institute.
156. XL. An essay on longevity.
157. XLV. Description of the different methods of blowing up rocks under water.
158. XLIX. Notices respecting new books.
159. L. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
160. LI. Intelligence and miscellaneous articles.
161. LIII. Messrs . C ollard and F raser's Process for preparing the weld yellow.
162. LIV. Experiments and observations on certain stony and metalline substances which at different times are said to have fallen on the Earth; also on various kinds of native iron.
163. XI. General considerations on vegetable extracts.
164. XII. Description of a three-blast fusing furnace, constructed in the Chemical Laboratory of the French School of Mines.
165. XIII. On a metallic solution, which forms a yellow ink, that appears and disappears like that of Hellot. Read before the French National Institute.
166. XIV. A short view of the craniognomic system of Dr. Gall of Vienna.
167. XVIII. Observations on the zodiac at Dendera.
168. XIX. Memorandums, hints, precepts, and recipes, for the use of artists, manufacturers, and others; including various short processes either new or little known.
169. XXVIII. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
170. XXIX. Intelligence and miscellaneous articles.
171. XXX. On capillary action.
172. XXXIII. On painting.
173. XXXV. On the hydrometer.
174. XXXIX. Of the state of vapour subsisting in the atmosphere.
175. XL. Report, read before the conference of mines, on the specific gravity of the coals of several mines of France; and on the difference in the increase of volume which they acquire by humectation.
176. XLII. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
177. XLIII. Intelligence and miscellaneous articles.
178. XLVII. Memoir on the supply and application of the blowpipe.
179. XLVIII. On the double refraction of rock crystal, and another dioptric property of that mineral substance.
180. LVI. Remarks on the present state of aërostation.
181. LX. Observations on the law of the expansion of water at temperatures below 42°; extracted from a paper on the power of fluids to conduct heat.
182. LXIII. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
183. LXIV. Intelligence and miscellaneous articles.
184. II. An account of a new method of supplying diving-bells with fresh air.
185. VII. Report presented to the class of the exact Sciences of the Academy of Turin , 15 th August 1802, in regard to the Galvanic experiments made by C. V assali -E andi , G iulio , and R ossi , on the 10 th and 14 th of the same month, on the head and trunk of three men a short time after their decapitation
186. XII. Reply to a charge of plagiarism, brought by Mr. H enry C larke against W. D ickson , LL. D. Communicated in a letter from Dr. D ickson to Mr. T illoch.
187. XV. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
188. XXVI. Memoir on the chemical nature of ants, and the simultaneous existence of two vegetable acids in these insects.
189. XXX. On the conversion of grass land into tillage, &c.
190. XXXIII. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
191. XXXV. Letter from Dr. B arton to Professor Z immermann on the fascinating faculty which has been ascribed to the rattlesnake, and other American serpents.
192. XXXVI. Observations on the different theories of philosophers to explain the phænomena of combustion.
193. XLIV. Observations on the freezing of water and the nature of snow: in a letter from Professor D riessen to Dr. V an M arum.
194. XLVI. Memoir on some peculiarities in the anatomy and physiology of the shark, particularly respecting the production of its young.
195. XLVII. On the management and improvement, by Tillage, of old grass lands on a direct clay, such as is found in the wilds of Surrey and Sussex.
196. LVI. On winds.
197. LVII. Report presented to the class of the exact sciences of the academy of Turin, January 12, 1803, on the action of Galvanism, and the application of this fluid and of electricity to medicine.
198. LXIII. Conjectures on the stones which have fallen from the atmosphere.
199. LXV. Proceedings of Learned Societies.
200. III. Observations and experiments on the light emitted by rotten wood in the different kinds of gas, and in fluids.
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