12 Dr. Chladni’s Catalogue of Meteoric Stones, 
?1819. Towards the end of April a meteoric fall seems to 
have taken place near Massa Lubrense, in the Neapolitan 
duchy of Salerno, which appears not to have been sufficiently 
attended to. 
1819, 13th June. Stones near Jonzac, department de la 
Charente inferieure.—Journ. de Phys. Fev. 1821, p. 136. 
Mém. du Museum @ Hist. Nat. tom. vi. p. 233. Thomson’s 
Ann. of Phil. Sept. 1820, p. 234. Neues Journ. f. Chem. u. 
Phys. vol. xxix. No. 4, p. 508. 
* 1819, 13th October. A stone near Politz, not far from 
Gera or K6stritz, in the principality of Reuss in Germany (not 
in Russia, as was stated in Thomson’s Annals, and repeated 
in several French publications).—Neues Journ. fur Chem. u. 
Phys. vol. xxvi. No. 3, p. 243. Gilbert’s Ann. vol. Ixiii. 
pp- 217 and 451. 
21820. In the night between the 21st and 22d of May, a 
small stone is said to have fallen at Oedenburg in Hungary. 
Hesperus, vol. xxvii. No. 3, p. 94. 
* 1820, 12th (not 19th) July. A fall of stones in the circle of 
Dunaburg in Courland, of which an analytic account and a 
drawing Mes been given in Gilbert’s Ann. vol. Ixvii. No. 4, 
p- 337, by Baron Th. von Grotthuss; and I am indebted to 
the kindness of that gentleman for a fragment of this stone, 
which differs from others, in its possessing a larger proportion 
of iron. 
1821, 15th June. Fall ofone large and several small stones ~ 
near Juvenas, in the department de |’Ardéche, of which an 
account made up from those that had been given in the Ann. 
de Chim., together with Vauquelin’s and Laugier’s analyses, 
appeared in Gilbert’s Annals, vol. lxix. p. 407, &c., and vol. 
Ixxi. pp. 201 and 203. 
1822, 4th June. A fall of stones near Angers. 
[1822, 13th September. A stone fell in the vicinity of 
Epinal in the department of the Vosges, in France.—Ann. de 
Chim. et de Phys. tom. xxi. p. 324. 
1823, 7th August. Stones fell at Nobleborough in the state 
of Maine, U.S.—Phil. Mag. vol. lxiii. p. 16. 
1824, 15th January. Stones fell in the commune of Re- 
nalzo, province .of Ferrara, in Italy.x—Ferrussac’s Bulletin, 
sect. 1. Sept. 1825, p. 183. ; 
1824. Early in March, stones are said to have fallen near 
the village of Arenazo, in the legation of Bologna. Phil. Mag. 
vol. lxiii. p. 233.—Is this a mistaken notice of the preceding ? 
1825, 10th February. A stone weighing sixteen pounds 
seven ounces fell at Nanjemoy in Maryland, U. S.—Annals 
of Philosophy, N.S. vol. x. p. 186.] 
§ III. Masses 
