700 OPTICAL PROJECTION 



Langenheim, W. Catalogue of Langenheim's colored photographic magic 

 lantern pictures. W. Langenheim, 722 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, 1861. 

 First edition, 1850. The Langenheims were the first to make photographic 

 lantern slides. They used the albumen dry process, and exhibited their 

 slides at the London World's Fair in 1851. Art Journal of London, April, 

 1851, p. 106, Athenaeum, June, 1851, p. 631. 



Lenses, Their History, Theory and Manufacture. Bausch & Lomb Optical 

 Co., Rochester, N. Y., 1906. 47 p., 34 fig. 



Marey, E. J. Photo- chronographie. Comptes-Rendus Acad. de Sciences, 

 cvii, (1888), pp. 607, 643, 677. Description of camera with the band form 

 of sensitive surface for photography of moving objects. 



Marey, Etienne Jules. La Chronophotographie. Nouvelle methode pour 

 analyser le mouvements dans les sciences physiques et naturelles. Revue 

 generates des sciences pures et appliqu6es. Vol. II, 15 Nov., 1891, pp. 

 689-719. The text is accompanied by many figures including the way the 

 ribbons are actuated in the chronograph camera. There are given pictures 

 showing the movements of men and animals including insects and some 

 other invertebrates. Some microscopic objects with their changing shapes 

 are also shown. Important for the history of the moving picture. 



Marey, Etienne Jules. Director of the Physiological Station. Movement. 

 International Scientific Series (No. 73). 318 p., 200 fig. D. Appleton & 

 Co., New York, 1895. 



Marey, Etienne Jules. The history of Chronophotography. Annual Report 

 of the Smithsonian Institution for 1901. pp. 317-340; 42 .fig. IX pi. 

 vSee also his work. Movement, N. Y., 1895. 



Matas, Rudolph, M.D. The cinematograph as an aid to medical education 

 and research. A lecture illustrated by moving pictures of ultramicroscopic 

 life in the blood and tissues, and of surgical operations. Precedential ad- 

 dress. Transactions of the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Associa- 

 tion, 1912. 27 pages. 4 plates. A bibliography of 50 publications given, 

 with special reference to those in medicine and surgery. 



Mayall, John, Jr. Cantor Lectures on the Microscope delivered before the 

 Royal .Society for the encouragement of arts, manufactures and commerce, 

 Five lectures, Nov., Dec., 1885, 97 p., 103 fig., and two additional lectures 

 in 1888, 18 pp., 26 fig. Published by the Society at John Street, Adelphi, 

 London, W. C., England. Price, 2 shillings 6d, and i shilling. 



Melloni, M. Memoir on the free transmission of radiant heat through differ- 

 ent solid and liquid bodies. Scientific Memoirs, Vol. I. Longman, Brown, 

 Green and Longmans, 1837. 39 p. This paper shows the superior absorb- 

 ing power of water for radiant heat. See also Ernest Nichols. 



Milliet de Chales, Claude Francois. Cursus seu mundus mathematicus; mine 

 primum in lucem prodit. Ex officina Anissoniana, Lugduni, [Lyons], 1674. 

 3v., folio. The second edition is dated 1690 and has four folio volumes. 

 Fig. 403 is given on p. 666 of vol. ii in the first edition, and on p. 697 of vol. 

 iii of the second edition. 



Molyneux, William. Dioptrica nova, a treatise of Dioptricks, in two parts, 

 wherein the various effects and appearances of spheric glasses, both convex 

 and concave, single and combined in telescopes and microscopes, together 

 with the usefulness in many concerns of human life are explained. By 

 William Molyneux, of Dublin, Esq. Fellow of the Royal Society. Pre- 

 sented to the R. S., 1690, printed 1692. Much history and translations of 

 many Latin extracts. The first figure of a magic lantern with condenser 

 lens, see fig. 404. 



