CATALOGUE. — OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS. 



285 



On the phiintasmagoria. Montucla and La- 



lande. III. 551. 

 Nicholson on the phantasmagoria. Nich. 5. 



I. 147. 

 PhiHpsthal's patent phantasmagoria. Rep. 



XVI. 303. 



R. B.'s perspective instrument. Nich. IX. 



122. 

 Panorama. See Vision, Aerial perspective. 



Microscopes, Simple and Com- 

 pound. 



*//ooA:e's Mi crograp hi a. f. Lend. l6G5. R.I. 



Ace. Ph. tr. 1665. I. 27. 



On a microscope of Fabri. Ph. tr. 16G8. [II. 



842. 

 Leeuwenhoek's microscopes. Ph. tr. 1673. 



VIH. 6037. 



•f-Gray on microscopes of water. Ph. tr. 1696. 



XIX. 280, 353, 539. 



Some of the images thus seen are shadows. Y. 



Huygeus on a microscope. A. P. X. 427. 



Wilson's description of his pocket micro- 

 scopes. Ph.tr. 1702. XXin. 1241. 



Adams on microscopes. Ph. tr. 1710. 

 XXVII. 24. 

 Globules. 



Folkes on Leeuwenhoek's microscopes. Ph.tr. 

 1723. XXXII. n. 380. 



Baker's catoptric microscope. Ph. tr. 1736. 

 XXXIX. 442. 

 Like the Gregorian telescope. 



Baker on Leeuwenhoek's microscopes. Ph. 

 1r. 1740. XLI. 503. 



The deepest Jj of an inch focal length. A Wilson's micro- 

 scope made by Cuff for Folkes, had a lens of i^. Account 

 of Lieberkuhn's opaque and solar microscope, p. 518. 



Lieberkuhn's anatomical microscope. A. 



Berl. 1745. 14. 

 Euler's solar microscope. N. C. Petr. III. 



363. 

 Euler on microscopes. A. Berl. 1757. 283, 



323. 1761. 191, 201. 1764. 10.5, ll7. N. 



C. Petr. XII. 195, 224. 

 Wideburg de raicroscopio solari. Erlang. 



1755. 

 Widtburg Beschreibung eines sonnenmikro- 



scops. Nuremb. 1758. 

 Aepinus's solar microscope. N. C. Petr. IX. 



316. 



For opaque objects. 



Aepinus on an achromatic microscope. N. 

 A. Petr. II. 1784. H. 41. 



Aepinus Description des nouveaux micro- 

 scopes. 8. Petr. 



Zeiher's doul)ie solar microscope for opaque 

 objects. N. C. Petr. X. 299- 



Stiles on some microscopes made at Naples. 

 Ph. tr. 1765. 246. 



These globules were made by F&ther Latorre, one of them 

 was ^ of an inch in diameter, magnifying 2500 times. 

 Describe!, among many other objects, the globules of the. 

 blood, as articulated rings. 



Baker's report of Latorre's globules. Ph. tr. 



1766. 67. 



Found them uselesi. 

 Baker on microscopes, 2 v. 8. 1785. R. I. 

 D. de Chaulnes's dioptrical experiments. A. 



P. 1767.423. H. 162. 

 Selva's catoptric microscope. A. P. 1769. H.. 



129- 

 Dallebarre's microscope. A. P. 1771. H. 

 Datlebarre Memoire sur le microscope. 



R.S. 

 Gltichen vom sonnenmikroscop. 4. Nuremb. 



1781. 

 Beguelin's remark on Aepinus's microtele- 



scope. A. Berl. 1784. H. 46. 

 Ph. tr. 1785. See Telescopes. 



Ramsden applied to his pyrometer a microscope calcu- 

 lated for an equable enlargement of the image. The mi- 

 croscopes that he at first applied to Roy'$ theodolite were 

 afterwards much improved. 



