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2. VIII. On the method of preparing inks that will withstand the action of the oxygenated muriatic acid.
3. XII. Description of a portable machine for loading and unloading goods.
4. XIII. Description of a cheap and efficacious ventilator for preserving corn on ship-board.
5. Intelligence, and miscellaneous articles.
6. II. Reflections on prussiats.
7. IV. On the distillation of ardent spirit from carrots.
8. VI. Experiments and observations on shell and bone.
9. XIII. On the various effects produced by the nature, compression, and velocity of the air used in the blast-furnace.
10. Intelligence, and miscellaneous articles.
11. I. Observations respecting oysters, and the places where found.
12. II. History of astronomy for the year 1799.
13. III. On the various effects produced by the nature, compression, and velocity of the air used in the blast-furnace.
14. VI. A cursory view of some of the late discoveries in science.
15. VII. On the combustion of the human body, produced by the long and immoderate use of spirituous liquors.
16. XII. On the question, whether the sun, the moon, and other heavenly bodies are surrounded by atmospheres.
17. XIII. On the advantages which result from substituting oak bark for gall nuts in dyeing black, especially in dyeing hats.
18. XIV. Some account of the late P eter C harles L e M onnier.
19. Intelligence, and miscellaneous articles.
20. IX. On the ammoniure of cobalt, and an acid contained in the grey oxyd of that metal known under the name of zaffar.
21. XIII. On the various remedies that have been recommended for the cure of the hydrophobia.
22. Intelligence, and miscellaneous articles.
23. II. Observations on preserving specimens of plants.
24. VI. Account of certain phenomena observed in the air-vault of the furnaces of the Devon iron-works; together with some practical remarks on the management of blast-furnaces, in a Letter to Sir J ames H all , Bart.
25. VIII. Memoir on azot, and on the question, whether it be a simple or a compound body.
26. X. Experiments and observations on shell and bone.
27. XI. Description of an air and a water-vault employed to equalize the discharge of air into a blast-furnace.
28. II. On a new fulminating mercury.
29. V. On a new fulminating mercury.
30. VI. Comparative analysis of human bones, and those of different animals.
31. New publications.
32. Intelligence, and miscellaneous articles.
33. VI. Description of an improved apparatus for distilling, by which a considerable saving may be made in the article of fuel; and of an apparatus for the rectification of spirit of wine.
34. IX. Observations on the transition of animal or absorbing earth to the state of calcareous earth.
35. X. Account of a new, easy, and more convenient process for resolving minerals by alkalies.
36. Intelligence, and miscellaneous articles.
37. Miscellaneous articles.
38. I. On the electricity excited by the mere contact of conducting substances of different kinds.
39. II. Investigation of the powers of the prismatic colours to heat and illuminate objects; with remarks that prove the different refrangibility of radiant heat: to which is added, an inquiry into the method of viewing the sun advantageously, with telescopes of large apertures and high magnifying powers
40. III. Account of a series of experiments, undertaken with the view of decomposing the muriatic acid.
41. IV. Experiments in galvanic electricity.
42. V. Letter from H enry M oyes , M. D. to M axwell G arthshore , M. D. containing an account of some interesting experiments in galvanic electricity.
43. VII. On a periodical variation of the barometer, apparently due to the influence of the sun and moon on the atmosphere.
44. I. Thoughts on colouring, and particularly with a retrospect to the method used by the Venetians in the mechanical part of the art, and to their method of arranging the tints.
45. II. Experiments on the refrangibility of the invisible rays of the sun.
46. III. Experiments on the solar and on the terrestrial rays that occasion heat; with a comparative view of the laws to which light and heat, or rather the rays which occasion them, are subject, in order to determine whether they are the same, or different.
47. IV. Account of some interesting experiments, performed at the London philosophical Society, respecting the effects of heat, excited by a stream of oxygen gas thrown upon ignited charcoal, on a number of gems and other refractory substances submitted to its action; with a description of the apparatus employed
48. A short view of the observations which have been made at different times on the luminous appearance of the sea. Read in the Physical Society of Gottingen.
49. VI. Experiments on the solar and on the terrestrial rays that occasion heat; with a comparative view of the laws to which light and heat, or rather the rays which occasion them, are subject, in order to determine whether they are the same, or different.
50. IX. On the cultivation and use of the syrian silk-plant.
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