48 HENRY SOTIIERAN & CO., 140, STRAND, W.C, and 37, PICCADILLY, W. 



925 CURIE (Pierre; discoverer of Puidium) Proprietes Magnetiques des CORPS a diverses Tem- 

 peratures (These) ; icith ivoodcufs, roy. 8vo. seivn {out of print), 5s 1S95 



' Hommage ainioal. P. Curie'. — Inscr. on title. 



926 DAGUERRE (Louis) Historique et Description des Procedes du Daguerreotype et du 

 Diorama ; 7cith 6 platen illustrating the Apparatus, etc. used, 8vo. seicn (very scarce), £3. 3s 1839 



First Edition of perhaps the most important work in the whole range of the history of photography, containing the 

 first account of the invention of the Daguerreotype. 



'The discovery of the Daguerreotype was announced in Jan., 1839, but the details of the pmcess were not made public 

 till August of the same year. It consists of exposing a metal plate covered with iodide of silver for a suitable time in 

 a photographic camera, tlie plate being afterwards transferred to a dark room, and exposed to the vapour of mercury, which 

 develops the latent image, it being afterwards fixed. Although this process has become almost obsolete, it was really the 

 first which was of any practical value, and experts all agree that no other known process renders some subjects— e. g. the 

 human face — with such tiJelity and beauty.'— T. C, Ilepirorth. 



927 DALE (John Borthwick) Logarithmic and Trigonometric Tables to Five Places of Decimals, 

 8vo. cl.. Is 6d 1905 

 DALEMBERT— V. ALEMBERT, ante. 



928 D[ALENCE(— )] Traite de I'Aiman. divise en 2 parties : les Experiences et les Raisons que 

 Ton en pent rendre ; with fine front, and numerous copperplates, 12nio. contemporary calf gilt 

 (RARE), £\. \s Amsterdam, 1687 



Containing a number of interesting experiments on the Magnet, and summing up all the knowledge then known on the 

 subject. 



929 [ ] Traittez des Barometres, Thermometres, et Notiometres, ou Hygrometres, 



premiere edition ; with front, by Schoonebeek, and numerous copperplates, 12nio. contemporary 

 calf gilt {wanting 1 plate) ; RARE, £\. Is ibidem, 1688 



the earliest account dealing exclusively with the subject, and especially valuable as the first work laying down rules 

 for the graduation of the thermometer. Botli the above works were unknown to Poggendorff. 



930 DALTON (John, f.r.s.) Meteorological Observations and Essays, first edition, tvith 

 diagrams, 8vo. fresh copy in boards, uncut, £3. 13.s Qd T. Ostell [1793] 



the author's first published work, and excessively rare in the above edition. 



'They contained, as the author remarked 40 years later, the gtrms of most of the ideas afterwards expanded by him 

 into discoveries. A prominent section comprised the result of six years' auroral observations. He had detected independ- 

 ently the magnetic relations of the phenomenon, and concluded thence auroral light to be of purely electric origin, and 

 auroral arches and streamers to be composed of an elastic fluid of a ferruginous nature existing above our atmosphere. 

 This hypothesis was further developed by Biot in 1820. From simultaneous observations at Kendal and Keswick 

 Dalton derived from the aurora of I'j Feb. 1793 a height of 150 miles. . . The essay in the same volume was remarkable for 

 the then no\-el assertion that aqueous vapour exists in the air as an independent elastic fluid, not chemically combined, 

 but mechanically mixed with the other atmospheric gases,' — Miss A. M. Cltrke. 



931 Second Edition, iviih woodcuts, Svo. boards, uncut {stamp on title) ; scarce, 15* 



Manchester, 1834 



932 Another Copy, hf calf {nice copy), lis Cvl 



' A second edition was published in 1834, with the addition of some notes collected into an appendix, but with no 

 alteration in the text.'— Eadera. 



933 Ne\v System of Chemical Philosophy, Parts I and II, and Vol. II Part I (all pub- 

 lished), with 8 copperplates, 3 vols. FINE copies in hf calf (excessively scarce complete), 

 £4. 45 ibidem, 1808-10-27 



A complete copy of the only edition of this important work, no reprint having ever been issued. 



' In this work he developed those primary laws of heat and chemical combination to which he had been gradually led 

 since 1801, and laid the foundation of chemical notation by rei^resenting graphically tlie supposed collocations of atoms 

 in compound bodies. Extended and revised bodies of atomic weights were added.' — Eadem. 



934 Part I only, with 4 copperplates, 8\ o. old hf calf £1. 5* ibidem, 1808 



This volume, complete in itself, contains the first exposition of the Atomic Theory. 



935 : Henry (William Ciiarles, f.r.s.) Memoirs of the Life and Scientip^ic Researches of 



John Dalton, f.r.s., with bust -portrait, 2 plates, andfs., Svo. cl., uncut, t. e. g., Ss 6rf 



Cavendish Soc, 1854 

 Together with R. A. Smith's biography (7. v. infra) the chief authority on Dalton. 



936 : Roscoe (Sir Henry Entield, f.r.s.) John D ALTON, and the Rise of Modern Chemistry, 



portrait and fs., post 8vo. cl., \s iSd 1895 



937 : Smith (Robert An^ns, f.r.s.) Memoir of John Dalton, and History of the Atomic 



Theory up to his Time, with steel portrait, 8vo. cl., with pres. inscr. to Robert Alfred Vaughan 

 {author of ' Hours with the Mystics '), \0s iSd 1856 



Containing a complete list of Dalton's publications. 



938 DAMBOURNEY (Louis Aug^uste) Recueil de Procedes et (I'Experiences sur les Tein- 

 TURES Solides que nos Ve^^etaux indigenes connnuniqnent aux Laines et aux Lainages, 4to. 

 (?) Large Paper ; old calf gilt {binding slightly damajed) ; rare, £1. 5s 1786 



- First Edition, printed by order of the French Government, with alphabetical List of Colours (pp. .S9) at end. 

 • Dambourney reussit a naturaliser la garance dans la Norniandie et a tirer un vert piimitif tres-solide des bales de la 

 bourdnine ou bourg^ne (rhamnusfrangula). 11 reconnut ensuite la possibilite d'extraire du voue<le ou pastel (imti.^ tinctoriu) 

 un l»leu comparable a I'indigo, et imagina que par lo moyen du feu on pourrait porter la fermentation a sa perfection.' — 

 liiog. Gen. 



DAMMEK (Otto) HANDBrcH der anorganischen Chemie— v. Handbuch, post. 



939 DANA (James D wight) Manual of Mineralogy, new Ed., enlarged, 260 illustrations, large 

 post Svo. cL, 3.§ QU 1857 or 1863 



940 , and Georg-e Jarvis BRUSH : System of Mineralogy, comprising the mo.st Recent 



Discoveries, 5tli Ed., rewritten, 2cith ever 600 i"''<'trations, thick roy. Svo. cl., Ss Gd 

 (p. £1. 166) 1868 



This has been considered the best text-book of mineralogy extant. 



911 , , and Edward SALISBURY: Text-Hook of Mineralogy, with extended 



Treatise on Crystallography and Physical Mineralogy, 4th Ed., coloured f ronf., and over 

 800 icoodcuts, large Svo. hf. roan, vith mimerous valuable MS. notes and additions, Qs iSd 



Ken- Yorl; 1882 



