10 Dr. Chladni’s Catalogue of Meteoric Stones, 
* 1794, 16th June. A well-known fall of many stones near 
Sienna. 
1795, 13th April. Stones in Ceylon. 
* 1795, 13th December. A stone near the Wold Cottage 
in Yorkshire. 
1796, 4th January. A large stone near Belaja-Zerkwa in 
Southern Russia. 
* 1798, 8th or 12th March. A stone near Sales, depart- 
ment of the Rhone. 
1798, 13th December. Stones near Krakhut in the vicinity 
of Benares, in Bengal. 
1801. On the Isle de Tonnelliers near the Mauritius. 
1802, inthe middleof September. Inthe Scotch Highlands+. 
* 1803, 26th April. The well-known great fall of stones 
near L’Aigle, in the department de Orne or Normandy. 
1803, 4th July. A fall of stones at East Norton in Eng- 
land, which did some damage. 
1803, 8th October. Stones near Apt, in the department of 
Vaucluse. 
* 1803, 13th December. Near Massing, district of Eggen- 
feld in Bavaria. 
1804, 5th April. At High-Possil, near Glasgow, a stone. 
1805, 25th March. Stones near Doroninsk in Siberia. 
1805, in June. At Constantinople. 
* 1806, 15th March. At Alais in the department du Gard, 
two stones differing from others by their friability, and also by 
containing 2°5 per cent of carbon, in addition to the usual 
constituents of meteoric stones. “ 
1806, 17th May. A stone near Basingstoke in Hampshire. 
* 1807, 13th March. A large stone near Timochin, in the 
government of Smolenskoi. i 
* 1807, 14th December. A fall of many stones near Weston 
in Connecticut. 
* 1808, 19th April. Stones near Borgo San Donino, and 
in the duchy of Parma. 
* 1808, 3rd September. Stones near Lissa in Bohemia. 
?1809, 17th June. Upon a ship, and in the sea, near the 
coast of North America. 
1810, 30th January. Fall of stones in the county of Cas- 
well in New Connecticut. 
1810, about the middle of July. A stone near Shahabad 
+ In a former catalogue of meteorites published in the Edin. Phil. Journ. 
vol. i. p.230, we find the following note on this passage: “ We have in- 
serted this notice from Chladni, though we believe that no stones fell in 
Scotland at the time here mentioned.” —Eprr. 
in 
