10
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL o F Two Years, i 66 $ and 1666, beginning March 6. 166$. and ending with February 1666 abbreviated in an A lphabetical T able : And alfo afterwards Digefted into a more NATVRALMETHOD. In the T able , the firft Figure fignifies the Number of the T r a B s : the fecond, the Page , as it is re- marked in the fame. a . Griculture, Heads of Inquiries con- cerning it, ?. 91. A i r. The weight of it in all chan- ges, by wind, weather, or what- ever other influence obfetvabie by a Handing Mercurial B call’d a Barofcope»hinted in refe-ence to M. Micrography, n.2. p. 31. applied to parti- culars by Dr. Bealey 9*153. with additions, 10. 163. deferibed with obfetyables rela- ting to an Earth-quake about Oxford by Dr. Watlisy10. 167. Mr. remarks on the fame, 11. 181. The improved and delineated by M. Hoo^, 13. 218. Another Balance of the Air contriv'd by M. Boy ley and call’d statical by which the former may. be exatly Hated and ex- amin’d for many particular applications, 14. 231. Anatomc y fee Flefby Bloody A Petrificatioriy Tafie ; item, Stenoy Bellinusy Red/,-in the of ' A n i m a l s ; one may live by the blood of an- other, the whole mafs of his own blood be- ing drawn out, and the blood of another in- fus'd in the mean time, 20.3 5 3* See L loods Transfufion . The Generation andFun&k ons of Animals deduced by Mechanical principles, without recourfe to a formy 18.315. See & . 20. p. 365. See alfo Gua Artificial Inflruments or To weigh AirykcBarofcopey or rather rT ^ dis- cern drought or raoiflureofthe Air, lee Hy- grofeope.n. 2. p .31. appliable in the o fervation of Tydcsy 17.300. to meafure degrees of heat and cold, a. 31. deferibed, 10. 166. applied in the examina- tion of Tydes, 17.300. An Inflrument for graduating Thermometers , to make them Standards oi heat and cold, 2.31. A new Engine for grinding any OptickGlaflesof a Spherical figure, 2. 3 s. To meafure the Reflations of Liquois of all kinds, for cflablifhing the Laws of Reflation,2.32. To break the hardefl Rocks in Minesy^.Si. To try for fiefb waters at the bottom of the leas, 9. 147. To find the greatefl depths in the Sea, 9.147* T for fetching up frefh water defended by Explication, 13. 228. Huge iVheelS y and other Engins for Mincsy 2. 23. By the fall of water to blow wind, as with Bellows, 2. 25-. Afire-

PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

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Page 1: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

T H E

PHILOSOPHICALo F

Two Years, i 66$and 1666, beginning March 6. 166$. and ending with February 1666 abbreviated in an

A l p h a b e t i c a l T a b l e :

And alfo afterwards Digefted into a moreNATVRALMETHOD.

In the T a b l e , the firft Figure fignifies the Number of the TraBs: the fecond, the Page , as it is re­

marked in the fame. a .

Griculture, Heads of Inquiries con­cerning it, ?. 91.

Air. The weight of it in all chan­ges, by wind, weather, or what­ever other influence obfetvabie

by a Handing M e r c u r ia l B call’d aBarofcope» hinted in refe-ence to M.

Micrography, n. 2 . p. 31. applied to parti­culars by Dr. Bealey 9*153. with additions, 10. 163. deferibed with obfetyables rela­ting to an Earth-quake about Oxford by Dr.

Watlisy 10. 167. Mr. remarks onthe fame, 11. 181. The improved and delineated by M. Hoo^, 13.

218. Another Balance of the Air contriv'd by M. Boy ley and call’d sta tica l by which the former may. be exatly Hated and ex­amin’d for many particular applications, 14. 231.

Anatomc y fee Flefby Bloody APetrificatioriy Tafie ; item, Stenoy Bellinusy Red/,-in the of

' A n i m a l s ; one may live by the blood of an­other, the whole mafs of his own blood be­ing drawn out, and the blood of another in­fus'd in the mean time, 20.3 5 3* See L loods

Transfufion. T he Generation andFun& k ons of Animals deduced by Mechanical principles, without recourfe to a formy 1 8 .315 . See & .20. p. 365. See alfo Gua

Artificial Inflruments or T o weighAirykcBarofcopey or rather rT ^ dis­cern drought or raoiflureofthe Air, lee Hy-

grofeope. n. 2. p.31. appliable in the ob- fervation of Tydcsy 17.300. to meafure degrees of heat and cold, a. 31. deferibed, 10. 166. applied in the examina­tion of T y d e s , 17.300. An Inflrument for graduating Thermometers , to make them Standards oi heat and cold, 2 .31. A new Engine for grinding any OptickG laflesof a Spherical figure, 2. 3 s. T o meafure the R efla tions of Liquois of all kinds, for cflablifhing the Laws of R efla tio n ,2.32. T o break the hardefl Rocks in Minesy^.Si. T o try for fiefb waters at the bottom of the leas, 9. 147. To find the greatefl depths in the Sea, 9.147* T for fetching up frefh water defended by Explication, 13. 228. Huge iVheelS y and other Engins for Mincsy 2. 23. By the fall of water to blow wind, as with Bellows, 2. 25-.

Afire-

Page 2: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

jf.Y cn m icd Remarks of a reenby Hevelmin Pcclo which hefuppofeth to be the fame, which Kepler faw A . 1661. and continued until 1602. and was not feen again till 1661, and thenal- mofl alwayes hiding it felf till 24. .1666. That, feen by Kepler was of the third magnitude ; this now, of the f e l l or feventh. Whether it changes place and m agnitude, 19. 349- 21.372. A New Star in Collo , ob- ierv’d from 1 6 3 8 . to 1665,with its viciffitudes and periods, and caufes of change, open’d by Bullialdwi, who con­ceives the bigger part of that round body to be obfeure, and the whole to turn about its own Center, 21. 3 82. Another New Star call’d Ncbulofa in Andromeda,l'een when the Comet appear’d ob-ferv’d by the laid Bulli to appear and difappearby tu rn s , . 383. A methodfor obferving the £ co f the Moon, free from die common Inconveniences, by M Koofo 22. 387.

B .

X 5 Arofcopc. See Air and Artificial Inftrif- | 3 ments.

Blood. The new Operation o f blood into the veins, out of one Animal in - to another •, with congelations upon i t ,20. 353. The firft Rife of this Invention, 7.3 TheSu'ccels, 19. 352. Propofalsand Queries, for the improvement of this Expe­riment, by M. Boyle,22. 38?, 38

L ittle Blood-Jetting in China, 14. 249. Blood found in fome mens veins like Milk, or of the colour of M ilk , 6. ic o . again p. 117. 118. and again 8. 139.

A Boh5 in Hungary good as Bole1. 11.

T h e Bononian Stone, fee Light or Stone, 21. 375.

£01\sabbreviated, or recjted :

Laur. EcllinvA de GuftusO rgano neviflime deprehenfo, 20. 366. abbrev.

C ell. BlaffiAnatome Medulke Spinalis & Nervorum inde procedentium, abbrev. n.2 2 .

Mr. loyle of Themiometers and Hiftory of Gold,sbbiev, 1, 8. more 3. 46.

— - His By drojlrttical Paradoxes abbrev. 8<14$, more largely 10. 173.

------ “His Origin of Forms and Qualities,8. 14 j . abbreviated 11. 191.

Monfieur deBourges his Relation of theB i- Oiop of Eeryte his Voyages in Turly,

fia, India,abbrev. 18. 324.BullialdiMonita duo, abbrev. 21. 381. See fupia Aftronomy,

Ves Cartes Ids Third Volume of Letters, . 22.

Ve lachambre's Caufesof the inundation ofthe N ile , abbr. 14. 251.

Cordemoy of the difference of Bodies and Souls, or Spirits, and their operation upon one another, abbrev. 17. 306.

Fuclidis Elementa Geometrica novo ordine demonftrata, 15. 261.

Hon.. FabriS jc. Jc f . T ra tt . duo 1. de Plantis & Gener. Animalium. 2. de Homi­n e s abbreviated, 18. 3 25.

Felibien of the moft excellent Paintings, 21. 383.

Catalogue of Fermats W ritings, and his cha­racter, 1. 15.

Ve Graej}', de fucci Pancreatici natura & ufu, abbrev. 10. 178.

Guar ini Placita Philofophica, abbreviated, 20. 365.

HcvcliiWs Prodromus Cometicus, abbrev. 6, 104. His Vefcriptio

tifj'a,abbrev. 17. 301.Hobbes de Principiis & Ratione Geometra-

rum, deferibed , 14. 193. Animadverted upon by Dr. W allis, 16. 289.

Hoof^s Micipgraphical and Telefcopical O b - fervations, Philofophical Inftruments and Inventions, abbr. 2 .79 .

Kircher's Mundus Subterraneus , abbrev. . 109.

Lower's Vindication of D r. de Febri- bus, 4. 77.

Meret's Pinax R erum N aturalium Britanni- carum,continens Vegetabilia, Animalia & Foflilia , in hac infula reperta, inchoatus 5 abbr. 20, 3*64.

Parser's Tentamina PhyficoTheologica, ab­brev. 18. 324.

R cdi an Italian Philofopher, of Vipers, ab­brev. 9. 160.

Kicciclo's Adronomia Reformata, Volumen qua,rtum abbrev. n .n .

Smith of K. Solomon's PourtraicTure of O ld Age, 1 4 . 254. # .

S tenon is

Page 3: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

S ttttllff de Mufculii 6c GldhM is obifervatio- num Specimen $ cutii duabus Epiftolis A- nltomicisj abbrev. 10. i7d.

SjfdenhmiMethodus Curandi F ebns, ab- ~,brev. 12. n o . .Tbcvenot's Relation of curious Voyages,with

a Geographical defcription of China) abbr. 14. 248.

TheEnglilhFf##tfr4 vindicated, 15. 262. Ifaac Voflm de Origine Niii > abbreviated,

17. 304. . 1Vlug-Beig great Grand-child to the famous-

Tamcrlaneybis Catalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni­tudes, taken at samar cand A. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a PcrjianM. S. by M. Hyde, Keeper of the Bodlejan Library, 8. 14 f.

The Burning Concave of M* dc Vilctti in Lyons,burning and melting any matterfvery

few excepted.) What, and How, and at what dittany. The proportion* and compa­red with other rare burning Concaves > 6. $6.

C.

T N China very ancient Books found of the nature and vertues of Herbs, Trees and Stones, 14* *49*

The Root there called very refto-rative and cordial, recovering agonizing per- fons, fold there each pound for three pounds

> of filver, 14. 249*China Difhes how made there, ibid*A way found in Europe to makcCb/»<HDifhes,

"• 7* i* 7*Chymfts in China pretend to make Gold-, and

promife Immortality, 14* *49* t Colt) fee M* Eojles Hi ifory, abbrev. More

Inquiries, and fome anfwers touching CoW, 1* 19.344. How Cold may be produced in

hotteft Summers by Sal difeo-vered by M. BOyle,if . iff* Some fuggefti- onsfbt remedies agairift Gold) by D. Be ale y21.379* . -

Comets. The motions of- the Comet of D f- cemb.1664. predicted, 1.3. Cajjini con­cu rs ? 2. 17. Auoutwho firli predicted the motion, reflets upon Cajfini, 18. and pfedi*i&Mhe motions of the fecond Comet of March) April idd5. 3. 36. ‘

' Controverts add£)ifcOurfes,fome at Iarge,con ~ earning Corners) n. 1 . p. 3. 17, iten, 3. p, 3d, 1). d. p .1 0 4 . n. 9» p. i jo .

#* 17. p. 301. Many confiderables abbre*viated, n. 6.p. 104* ft. 17* • 301,

D . >

in Mines pernicious, 3 .4 4 . and1 J how killing, ibiDirections for Seamen bound fot far Voyages,

by M. Roofa 8 .140 . M r. Boyles Inquiries, 18. 31$.

Philolophical Directions or Inquiries for fuchas Travel into Turfyy 20. 3 do.

Virctfionsy or general Heads for 4 natural H i- Itery of a C oun trey , by M. Eoj/ley u . 186.

Directions or Inquiries concerning , by the fame, 19. 330.

Diamonds whei e , and how the faireft are dif- cover’d , x 8. 327.

E.

' ' “f ^ H e Earthquake about Oxford) Anno I 1665. defetibedby D .T T d//fc ,io .i8 i. by M. Eoylcy 11. 179. noting the Con­comitants thereof by Bar of cope and -meter.

The Earth's Diurnal motion prov’d by the motion of the Comets, 1. 7. efpeciallyby the flow motion of the fecond Comet, 3. 39. See M. Au\out, confirm’d by M. -

vilhi)6.10 confirm’d alfo by the Tydesat Sea, id . 16^.

T h e Eclipfcof $une 22. accuratelyobferv’d at London, 17. 245. at ,

ibid.at Paris, .17. 246. at Dxnt^icfi, drawn in accurate Cuts, 19. 347* *1*

36?-Elephants: How to efcapc, or to combat with

them, 18. 328. •Eeles difeover’d under Banks in Hoar-Frofts,

by th£ Greens of the Batiks appi caching, 18, 385.

« * 3 '* 9 *fc 1 dk ■» \ f ■ ■ -V.

q p H e Elefhyfarts of the Body which are J /; ufually repiited, and do feeht void of Yefiels, aVe argued tb be full of VelSis, by D. Eingy 18. 3 id . ’ 1 J

FriCtionand fometiniesToz/ch , how fanativc, by fcveral Examples, 12. 2od.

FriCtioiis much ufed by Phylitians in China With good fucccfss 14. 249.

G g g G

Page 4: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

G.M arshy what ftepsand degrees o f diligence

difeover’d to be turbinated, both in England. and Italy*. Compare n: iq . p. 158. anj

. E m c t r l c i a n s ce n tr ’d by M ,#d6L r,i4 * «. 14. 239, 14 2. fee the Schemes there, '.J 153. defended by D. iVallis, 16*May-dew examin'd by various Experiments;,

289. by M . 5 .5 3 .The method of teaching Geometry reform’d, Mechanical Principles in a Geometrical-me-

2 5 .2 6 1 .See E n d i d i s Element-anovo or-thod, explicating the nature or operation ofdine,among the Books.

I.

equities, fee DireCHons,fupra..Ice and Snow how to be prefery’d in Chafte,

Plants, Animals, 8. 325 .in China conlift for the moft part of

Simples, DecoCtions, Cauteries, Pridions, without the ufe of Blood-letting, 14.

l Inquiries,fee Directions, tupra. T he there, commended for fpee-Ice and Snow how to be preferv’d in Chafte, - dy Cures, and eafit, ibid.- and how Snow-houfes are made in Livorn, Mediterranean Sea, whether it may be join’d 8. 139. _ with the Ocean, debated, 3. 41.

Infefts,in fwarms pernicious in. fome C oun- epitomized, .2. 27.. tries? the caufeof them, and what Reme- Objections to a part of i t ; vid , the new

dies, 8. 139. fome I n [ e c f s , commonly be- way of grinding NSpherical Glades by a lieved poyfonous, not fo, by M. Fairfax,Turn-la th , 4* 57. M ; anfwer there-

n. i i . unto, 4 . 64. both at large.T o find the Julian period by a new and eafie Mercury-Mwes in and the way of

way, 18.3 24. getting it out of the earthr**__ » «!*/ • • r T\I, 2 . 21,yfupiter's Rotation by degrees .difcover’d in Mineral Inquiries, fee Directions, Engins,

ru /v lw ud <% «t a . 4* *9 * A _ : r • •** n ' . I _. t ; *England and Italy,n. 1. p* 3., 4 * p . 75* a,..8. p. 145* 9. p* *7$* «• • *09.». 14. p .245 .

K,

T T Ernies, how gather’d and ufed for. C o - loi ationjdefcrib’d with many confide-

rables, io . 362.

T , Ight,to examine what, figure .or celerity I / of motion begetteth or increafeth Light

Or Plame in fome Bodies, by D . , 13. p. 226. shining Worms found in Oyfters , 1 2 . 203. The Bononian Stone

Artificial In ft uments. Mineral at L iege yielding Brimftone and Vitriol ? and the way of extracting them, 3. 35. How Adits and Mines are wrought at Liege , j . 79 . A Stone in Sue den yielding Sulphur, V it-

. rioJ, Allum and M inium, and how,21.375'. See Kircher's Mundus Subteri3neus abbr. 6 , 109.

Monfters,^ C a lf deform’d, and a great ftone found in' a Cows womb, 1. xo. a Colt

, with a double eye in one place, 583.Moons Diameter how to be taken,and why in -

creafed in the Solar Eclipfe o f 'fun.22.1666* n.2. p. 373. fee Planets.What difeover-

able in the Moon,and what not. Moons £ - clipfes how to take .without, inconvenience* 457*

duly prepar’d continues light once imbibed Mulberry-Trees -how-to be cut lowland eafieaKhV^ fJtlV (llkftafirp VPf *_ tA Ka 1 r\C C.«lb «raabove any other fubftance yet known a- m ongftus, 21 .37^ . T helo fso f the way of preparing the fame for ihining, feared,

Longitudes at Sea, how to be afeertain’d by Pendulum-Watches, 1.13.,

Lungs and Windpipes in Sheep and O xen ftrangely ftopt with Hand-Balls of Grafs, & 100.

. M.

MX2S

Ay lies, that a liquor may be. made to colour them, piercing finto them, 7,

to be reach’d , for relief o f Silk-worms, in China, 14# 249. in Virginia, 12, 202. fee

1 Silk.N .

\ T lid s Inundations, the caufe attributed te X > N iter, by Vela Chambre > oppofed

hy Vojfm. See both in the Liftsf Foo s, 14. 2 $ i.an d 1 7 .3 0 4 .

The North-Countries of Poland, Sweden* Denmark &c. are warm’d by the influence of the <8.074/ Society, 19; 344*

O. Of(an>

Page 5: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

a Stone like a Bone of Ofteocolla, 6. io. O. : A of excellent veftues found in the

* * * head of a Serpent in the T heA^KCedn ,what Seas may be joined with ir, caufes o f Petrification inquired > 18.

$• 4 i* 3*q.Optic\s> Campani’s Glafles do excell Divini'ss fee a , «9w«,

'tis eafie by them to diftinguifh people at M oon ; which are tU'biriated, and Whichfour Leagues d iftance, 2. l*ji« and 12. not, 8. 143. T o find the true diftances of

,209. W hat theydifeover in Jupiter and the Sun and Moon from the earth, 9 .1 9 1 .•Saturn, uucand- 2. The proportions o f phyfitians commended,Apertures in PerfpeCtives reduced to a Ta* tins.bie by M, Au^oipt, 4. 55. Animadverted Prefervition, to prelerve fmall Birds takenupon by M. Hoofo 4 . &9> ' • : : 'r ,; out of the fhell, or other Fatuf’s, (or difeo-

How to illuminate ObjeCts to whatfoever pro- veries, i ; . 198.portion, piopofed by M . 4 . 7 5.

Hevcliut, Hugenim, and fome in England,en­deavour to improve Optick Glaffes, 6 , 98.

Seigneur Burattini'sadvance in the fame in-qu itedafte r, 19. 348. fome anfwer to it

from Paris, 21. 347*D ivini makes good Optick Glafles of Rock-

chryftal, that had veins ( i f he miftoofi not fomewhat clfe for veins ) 20 .362 .

T o meafure the diftances of QbjtCts on earth by a Telefcope, undertaken by M. and others of the Royal Soc 123.

How a Telefcope of a few feet in Diameter may draw fome hundreds of feet, 7 .1 2 7 .

H ow .aG lafsof afmall convex-fphere m aybe made to reflect the Rayes of Light to a Focus at a far greater diftance than is ufual,I 2 . 2 0 2 *

Pulfcs of the Sick how diligently, and to what good purpofes obferv’d in China, 14* 249*

R .

T ) Ainbows ftrangely pofited, 13 .219.£ \ _ R aining of Afhes, and how, 21.377* Kjce piofpersbeft in watery places, fee

fia jbes, 18. 328.

QtAlamander, how it exringuifhes fire , and 5 feeds by licking Indi earth, 21 .377 , Salt byexcefliveufoftiftens, and deftroys the

body, 8 .1 3 8 .Salt-Springs, fee Springs.Salt-Peeter how made in the Mogols Domi­

nions, 6 .1 0 3 .The piopoition of Salt in beft Salt-Springs;

and what grounds or fignsof beft 8.136.

P .

Arjley, to make it ftiooc out of the ground l in a few Lout s/ee Hon. Fdbri 18.325.

Pictures,a curious way in France of making S’c<t-i?wpc^,thecaufepropofedby way of a new lively Pidures in W ax, and Maps in a low Theo: y, by D r. 16. 3. fee Tydes.relieve, 6. 99. • Seas, whether they may be united, 3. 41.

The caufe why Pictures feem to look upon all Sil\-W orms and sil^-Trade follicited, 5.87. Beholders, on which fide foever they place and 2. 26. and 12. 201. themfelves, 18.3 26. Snakes, how they differ from Vipers, 8.

Ancient Paintings compar’d with the Mo- 138.dertband a judgment of the Paintings in how fometimes kill’d in Vir-feveral Ages, their perfections, and defoCts, 3 .43 . and 4 * 78.fee M . Felibien, 2 1 .3 8 3 . Snow-houfcs directed,and how to preferve Ice

Petrification, in the wombs of W omen, 18. and Snow in Chaffe, 8 .139.320. in a Calf in the Cows womb, 1.10. peculiar note, 7*127.Stones found in the heart of the Earl of 13 5. and 13 n. 18. 323.Belcarris, 5. 86. Part of an Elm by in- cifion, or otherwife, petrified a foot above the root and ground* 19.3 29. W/ood petri­fied in a fandy ground in England ; and of

C g g 2 T. Tafie

Page 6: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

?hte%ia and what $ and how exchanged T . - there for dried leaves of Sage by the Dutch*

14. 24rrt/J}ep the Organ and a$ure of it, 29. t W,

I ' l 6*- *Thunder and. Ligfoning,the \ X I T about y j

n} 13. 222. n. 14. 247. r„ V V and how it isTydeSi the caufes propofed* 16. 263. See a performed,^. 1. n . n . 3 .1 3 2 .

fort her examination by. a fever e Hiftpry, of W> how to be raifedby the fail o f water, Tydes* W inds, and other circumftances di- without any Bellows, 2. *£, ihewed in are§ ed ,» . 17* 18. 21. i% draught.

Trees o( Q ak how found under-ground. Wthat eat holes in t o e s feeding olHours or Ma iihesbiS. 3 ^ :< to e >18*321*

2 « * r

■' C - i J - -----------*- — — *5R

V T H E

‘ ✓ , 4 «

t

Page 7: PHILOSOPHICAL - The Royal Society · TamcrlaneybisCatalogue of fix’t Stars,with their Longitudes, Latitudes, and Magni tudes, taken at samar candA. 14 3 7-Tran- flated out of a

(405-r♦' Hf . ' ■ i# : v

’The more

V ^ J T V <R A L

X, A N atural Hiftory of all Countries and Places? is the foundation for

• folid Philofophy, See Directions ? Inqui­ries? and InftrudHons for a N atural Hiftory of a Countrey? n.n* 186.

See it in part exemplified in the ofEngland*begun by D r. in his P / -

7UtXj 2 0 .3 6 4 .See thecaufeof Tydes propofed by D . W d-

lk> 16.263.See the further Examination by a fevere H i ­

ftory of Tydes? W inds, and other Conco­mitants or AdJherems?.dire<fted, ft.17.-n.18? n . 21.

Sec the Inquiries concerning the Seas, and Sea-waters? m 18.3.15.

See Directions for Seamen bound for far Voy­ages? 8.140*

Kircher’s Account o f the Subterraneous W orld? 6 .1 0 9 .

M r. Boyle*% Directions and Inquiries touch­ing Mines, 19* 33°;

Philofophical Directions and Inquiries for fuchas T ravel into Turfy, n. 20. 300.

T he Relation of M . de 18. 324.M . Thevenots Relation of divers curious

V o y a g e s ,^ * more particularly of ? 1 4 . 248.

T h e caufes of the inundation of the ? difputed by Dela Chambre and Inthe Lift o f Boo\s.

See M r. Boyle's Mechanical Deductions ? and Chymical Demonftrations of the O- rigine of Forms and. •Qualities, 11. 191.

See the Application of tbefe Mechanical P rin­ciples more particularly to the N ature? Q - peration?and Generation of Plants and A - nimals? and to our humane Contexture? in a Geometrical method? by 3 2 5-

See M r. Boyle*s Hiftory of Cold and T her­mometers? 71. I* p. 8. 71. 3, 46.

^The Hiftory of W inds and Weather? and all changes of the A h ( efpecially in relation

M E T H O D .to the w eight) obfervable by the Barof- cope? 71. 9. io , *. 11.

Light,Come fpecial fearch into the caures ? and fome peculiar Examples. See above in Light.

Petrification follicited ? fee Petrification ? Stone.

The Earths Diurnal Rotation ? fee Earth, [up r a.

Adventurous Klfayes in N atural Philofophy, fee Guar in i, 20.

Earthquakes? and their Concomitants obfer- ved? 71.10. 71. 11.

T h e effects o f Thunder and Lightning ex­amin’d , fee Thunder, 13. 222. ft. 1 4 . -

2 4 7 # . .

T he raining of Allies and San 1 at great d i- ftance from the Mount Ft ?2r. 377.

Springs? and Waters of peculiar N ote? fee S p r i n g s ..

In 'etfts in Swarms how begotten ? pernicious?^. and how deftroyed? 8. I 37.

Monfters?of Irregularities in Nature^ - T h e Calf, Colt, (upra.

Four Suns at once? and two ftrange Raino -• bows, 13. 219.

See the ftatical pofition and tendency or grb^ - vitation of Liquids? in Mr. Boyle's Hydro- ftatical Paradoxes,8. 145.

See in M. Hoofo Micrography 3 Hiftory * of minute Bodies ? or rather of the minute^ and heretofore un-feen parts of Bodies > it being a main part of Philofophy? bv an ar­tificial redutftion of all grefs parts I f N a ­ture to a clofer irifpettion.

Medicinals, fee Medicine. Phyfitians ? -na. Fri&ion, Dr. Sydenham.Dr. Lower,

Fritftion? fuprd. n. 4. 77. ft. 12. 206.j4natome,Cce steno de Mii jculis& Glandu~ •

Its. Hew a juyee in the ftomack diilqlves the (hells of Cr: fifhes, ibid.

Gtaeff de Succo Pancratico\that Flelh hath.Vefteis? 71.18. 31^). Blood .degenerated to, jefemblemilk? n. 6> 117. The J ransfufion

of

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( 4 0 'S )of blood> 20.3 f 3; The organ and nature of 20 .366 .

too much iliftens and deftioyfc the Body*8. i j 8»

11, nkngul&rities of N ature feverely. ex*>5 aminM.

T he ordering cf Kernes for C olor.n.io. 3 #2.How the Salamander quencheth F ir e , and

lives by licking the Earth, rt.21.3 77.W hether Swallows do lie under water inW in-

ter, and revive in Summer ? >2.19.350.Whether the Hungarian like the Arme-

nos ? 1.1 x .R&ttle-Snabjs how kill’d in 3.

4 3 .and Vipers how they differ, fee

Snakes above.The Qualities arid Productions

3. i»Damps in Mines how they kill, 3. 44.Teeth growing in aged perfons, 21 .380.Steams and Expirations of the Body how

flopp’d > and the ftoppage dangerous or mortal, 8. 138.

shining Worms in O yfters, 12. 203.* \

M I . A Kts, or Aids for the difcovery or X j L ufe of things Natural.

See A'tificial Inftruments in the Table,Agriculture,/ee the Inquiries, 5. 91.Englifh Vineyards vindicated, fee in the Cata­

logue of Eoofis.Geometry, fee Euclid methodized for Facili­

ty, Fermat: in the Catalogue ofAftronomy,/eeAftiomonical Remarks.

iialdus, Hevelm, C, , S a ­turn, Jupiter, Mars, ,

>fes. AOpticks; fee that Head in the Table*

Pidure, fee that Head in P. and Felibien ia the Catalogue of Boos.

How to paint Marbles within , fee the Head Marble.

Pendulum Watches to afeertain Longitudes at Sea, 1 .4 3 .

Whale-fifhing about B e r m u d a s 1. i r . and 8 .1 3 2 .

Silk-trade follicited in France, V irg in ia , fee Still in the Table.

Eeles how to be found in Frofts, 17. 323. "W inds raifed to blow by the fall o f water

without Bellows, 2 .2 5 . fheW’d in a Catt.Elephants enraged, how to efcape or fubdue,

18. 328.Seas and vafl waters, whether they may be uni­

ted to the main Ocean, 3 .41 .To proportion the diftance neceffary to burn-* Bodies by the Sun * and fhewing, why the

Refle&ions from the Moon and other Pla­nets do not burn, 4 . 69.

The Art of making salt, a$ praCtifed in the Mogols Dominions, 6. ic(2.

T o make Cbina-DUhes, 14. 249. 'expeCted from Seigneur Sept alio to be made in Eu­rope) 7. 127.

T o convey blood of one Animal, or other L i­quors, into-the blood of another Animal, 20. 3 *3-

To preferve Ice and Snow by CJhaffe, 8.13 8.T o preferve Ships from being W orm eaten,,

11 .190 .T o preferve Birds taken out of the Eggs, or

other fmall Fatuf's,for Anatomical, or 0- ther Difcoveries, 12, 199.

T o allay the heat in hottefl Summer, for D iet or Delight, 15. 255.

Remedies againfi excream Cold fuggefted, 11.379 .

Trees of O ak as black as Ebony difeover’d , and taken up out of Moors and Marches in draughty weather, 11. 323..

N ote ,

i ’ T hat though in this laft Head there is iepeated the Transfufwn -of Blood, becaufe the Operation is an Art requiring diligence, and a pradtifed hand to perform it for all advantagious Difcoveries, and fo to be diftinguilh’d from the -Anatomical Account; yet drat .there is not affefted noife and number, may well appear by review­ing and comparing the particulars of Artificial Inftruments in the

'

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% *

Table y where fometimes one Engin or Inftrument may minifterAid to difcover a large branch of Philofophy, as the an

' Of tick Glafs, &C. 1And very particularly M. Rook's dire&ions forSeamen,which fpe-

cifies Inftruments, may hereunto belong. r JAnd fometimes in one of the Difcouries herein mention’d, and

abbreviated, there are almoft as many Artificial Inventions, as Experiments $ as in Mr. Boyles Hydtoftatical Experiments : Be-

fidesall the Chymical Operations, recited in the of the’gine of Forms, &c. .

E R R A T A. ]

Fag* $9io lin. 23. blot out* as, ibid. lin» m . r«ad t f the

J \ ; ij x

• y .

F I N I S .

«

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/ . ' v„ ; \ ) W > ‘ 7

V ‘. . v ' ■ .1i.'J 1\ ,x c-..

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In the SAVOr,Printed by T. JA(\ for fo%n Martjn, and

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