22 A CENTURY OF SCIENCE 



The situation is somewhat similar as to independent 

 scientific journals. A list of the names of those started 

 only to find an early death would be a very long one, but 

 interesting only historically and as showing a spasmodic 

 but unsustained striving after scientific growth. 



It seems worth while, however, to give here the names 

 of the periodicals embracing one or more of the sub- 

 jects of the American Journal, which began at a very 

 early date and most of which have maintained an unin- 

 terrupted existence down to 1915. It should be added 

 that certain medical journals, not listed here, have also 

 had a long and continued existence. 1 



Early Scientific Journals. 



1771-1823. Journal de Physique, Paris ; title changed several 

 times. 



1787-. Botanical Magazine. (For a time known as Curtis 's 

 Journal.) 



1789-1816. Annales de Chimie, Paris. Continued from 1817 

 on as the Annales de Chimie et de Physique. 



1790. Journal der Physik, Halle (by Gren) ; from 1799 on 

 became the Annalen der Physik (und Chemie), Halle, Leipzig. 

 The title has been somewhat changed from time to time though 

 publication has been continuous. Often referred to by the name 

 of the editor-in-chief, as Gren, Gilbert, Poggendorff, Wiedemann, 

 etc. 



1795-1815. Journal des Mines, Paris, continued from 1816 

 as the Annales des Mines. 



1796-1815. Bibliotheque Britannique, Geneva. From 1816- 

 1840, Bibliotheque Universelle, etc. 1846-1857, Archives des 

 Sci. phys. nat. Since 1858 generally known as the Bibliotheque 

 Universelle. 



1797. Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry and the 

 Arts (Nicholson's Journal) London; united in 1814 with the 

 Philosophical Magazine (Tilloch's Journal). 



1798-. The Philosophical Magazine (originally by Tilloch). 

 This absorbed Nicholson's Journal (above) in 1814; also the 

 Annals of Philosophy (Thomson, Phillips) in 1827 and Brew- 

 sters' Edinburgh Journal of Science in 1832. 



1798-1803. Allgemeines Journal de Chemie (Scherer's 

 Journal). 1803-1806; continued as Neues Allg. J. etc. (Geh- 

 len's Journal.) Later title repeatedly changed and finally 

 (1834 et seq.) Journal fur praktische Chemie. 



1816-18. Journal of Science and the Arts, London. 1819- 



