CATALOGUE. PROT>ERTIES OF MATTEU. 



377 



Lalande Histoire celeste. 



Modern Greek tetrastich on Lalande. Zach. 

 Eph. III. 



Bentley on the antiquity of the Hindoo as- 

 tronomy. As. res. VI. 537. 



Makes the principal tables, the Surya Siddhanta, about 

 731 years old. 



Piazzi's planet. Ph. M. X. 285. 



Note on the antiquity of the earth. Ph. M. 



XI. 280. 

 Piazzi on the new star. Ph. M. XII. 54. 



Dehic on the zodiacs found in Egypt. Ph. 

 M. XIII. 371. 

 V Henley on the zodiac at Dendera. Ph. M. 

 XIV. 107. 



History of astronomy, geography, and navi- 

 gation. Montucl. and Lai. IV. 



*Smatrs history of the discoveries of Kepler. 

 1803. R. I. 



Account of Gail's memoir onSynesius's astro- 

 labe. M. Inst. V. 34. 



Maps are attributed to Anaxiirander, 600 A. C. 



According to Plutarch, Heraclides and Ecphantus attri- 

 buted to the earth a diurnal motion only. 



Astronomy was introduced into Spain by the Moors, 

 1201. 



The Mexicans, when discovered by the Spaniards, had 

 years of 365 days, and added is days at the end of 52 

 years. Robison. 



PROPERTIES OF MATTER IN GENERAL. 



The opinions of the ancients are found in Aristotle and 

 Plato. 

 Descartes Princ. phil. II. x. 



On a vacuum. 

 Boyle on the principles of natural bodies. 

 *Hooke's lectures of spring. L. C. 1678. 



A curious theory of vibrations. 



Bernoulh de gravitate aetheris. 12. Amst. 



1683. Op. I. 4.5. 

 Bernoulli Nouvelle physique celeste. A. P. 



Prix. III. i. 



vot. II. 



Newtoni Principia. L. 2. 



On a vacuum. 



Newton's Optics. 

 Queries at the end. 



Desaguliers's experiment to prove a vacuum, 

 Ph.tr. 1717. XXX. 717. 



Woodward's natural history of the earth. 



Mazieres on the vortices of the subtle mat- 

 ter. A. P. Pr. I. vi. 



Iloldsworth and Aldridge's short hand. 

 Contains a hypothesis resembling that of Le Sage. 



Musschenbroek Elem. Phys. §. 61, 83, 383. 



Musschenbroek Introductio. I. iii. 

 Of a vacuum. 



On the cause of gravity. M. Berl. 1743. 

 VII. 360. 



Maupertuis on laws of nature supposed in- 

 compatible. A. P. 1744. 417. H. 53. 

 On Fermat and Leibnitz's minimum. 



On atoms. A. Berl. 1745. H. 28. 



Eller on elements. A. Berl. 1746. 1, 25. 

 1748. 3. 



Keill's introduction to natural philosophy. 

 Lect. viii. 



Cadwallader Golden on the primary cause 

 acting on matter. 1745. M, B. 



Euler de resistentia aetheris. Opuscul. I. 

 245. 



Euler on the origin of forces. A. Berl. 1750. 

 418. 



Knight on attraction and repulsion. 4. Lon- 

 don, 1748. R. I. 



Bossut sur la resistance de I'ether. 4. Charle- 

 ville, 1766. 



Chambers's cyclopaedia. Art. Element. 



Hiotzeberg on the cause of attraction. R02. 

 Jntr. 1. 527. 



On union. Roz. II. 173. 



Comus on motion, and on the elements of 

 matter. Roz. VI. 420. VII. l62. 



Higgins on light. 



3 c^ 



