and Masses of Meteoric Iron, &c. 11 
in India. The meteor set five villages on fire, and injured se- 
veral persons. 
* 1810, in August. A stone in the county of Tipperary in 
Treland. 
* 1810, 23rd November. Three stones near Charsonville, 
near Orleans. 
1811, between the 12th and 13th March. A stone in the 
government of Poltawa in Russia. 
* 1811, 8th July. Some stones near Berlanguillas in Spain. 
* 1812, 10th April. Stones near Toulouse. 
* 1812, 15th April. A stone near Erxleben, between Magde- 
burg and Helmstadt. 
* 1812, 5th August. A large stone near Chantonay, de- 
partment de la Vendée, which differs from others in having 
no crust, and in a few other particulars. 
1813, 13th March. Meteoric stones near Cutro in Calabria, 
attended with a remarkable fall of red dust in several parts of 
Italy. 
1815, in the summer. Stones are said to have fallen near 
Malpas in Cheshire. : 
* 1813, 10th September. Stones in the county of Limerick 
in Ireland. 
1814, 3rd February. In the district of Bachmut in Russia, 
government of Ekaterinoslaw. 
1814, about the middle of March (or 1813, 13th Decem- 
ber). Stonesnear Sawotaipola or Sawitaipal in Finland.— Vide 
my work, and Schweigger’s Neues Journ. Band i. p. 160. 
* 1814, 5th September. Many stones near Agen, depart- 
ment du Lot et Garonne. ‘ 
1814, 5th November. Stones in the Doab in the East Indies. 
1815, 18th February. A stone near Duralla in India.—Phil. 
Mag., August 1820, p. 156. Gilbert’s Amn., vol. lxviil. p. 333. 
* 1815, $rd October (not the 30th). A fall of stones near 
Chassigny, not far from Langres in Champaigne, or depart- 
ment de la Haute Marne. ‘They belong to that class of mete- 
orites which contain no nickel, and are further distinguished 
by their greater friability, greenish-yellow colour, glimmering 
appearance, and a crust as if varnished. 
A stone is said to have fallen a few years ago, in the Isle of 
Man, very ‘light and of a scoriaceous texture.—Phil. Mag. 
July 1819, p. 39. 
1816. A stone near Glastonbury in Somersetshire. 
(I pass over several other accounts of pretended falls of 
stones, as being unfounded.) 
1818. 10th August. A stone near Slobotka, government of 
Smolenskoi in Russia. 
B2 21819. 
