STO 



INDEX. 



STY 



99 



Stone (calculus) obstructing the biliary duct and causing 

 jaundice, v. 292, Musgrave 



— of a large size voided per urethram, v. 706', . . Thoresby 



— method of cutting for, vi. 580, Douglas 



— voided by drinking Pyrmont waters, vi. 656, .... Vater 



— dissection of a man dead of, vi. 657, Williams 



— — ibid, Hardisway 



— voided by stool, case of, vi. 676, Martineau 



— appearances on opening a body dead of, vii. 144, Vater 



— voided by the urinary passage of a woman, vii. 175, Beard 



— taken out of a horse, vii. 187, Dudley 



— found in the kidneys, viii. 238, Dobyns 



— voided from the urethra, vii. 335, Huxham 



vii. 447, Heister 



— cut from the blad., after death, viii. 240, Marq. de Caumont 



— account of the above case, viii. 241, Salien 



— observations on the above stone, viii. 242, Sloane 



— which made its way through the perinaeum, viii. 405, 



Hartley 

 m — — — — the scrotum, ibid, Sisley 



— voided by the anus, viii. 441, Mackarness 



— produced in the kidnies, &c. by earthy absorbents, viii. 



452, Breyne 



— found in the kidney, viii. 453, Same 



— taken from the kidnies, viii. 462, Sherwood 



— found in the coat of the bladder, viii. 545, .... Nourse 



— case of Wm. Payne, and dissection, viii. 557, Bell 



— voided by a woman with urine, viii. 653, .... Leprotti 



— from the bladder of a boy, figure of, ix. 87, • • Huxham 



— in the stomach of a horse, ix. 101, Watson 



— case of the lateral operation for, ix. 192, .... Cheselden 



— operation for, by the high apparatus, ix. 238, . . Le Cat 



— extracted from an aperture of the urethra, ix. 252, Howell 



— in the colon of a horse, ix. 278, Bailey 



— intestines of a mare, analysis of, ix. 279, Same 



— from the bladder of a dog, ix. 292, Fidge 



— in the kidney of a woman, ix. 340, Lucas 



— calculous concretion under the tongue, ix. 6l8, Freeman 



— improvement in the lateral operation for, ix. 625, Mudge 



— between the glans and prepuce, ix. 635, Clarke 



— operation on women, and instruments, ix. 650, Le Cat 

 — i a very large calculus from a human bladder, x. 103, 



Heberden 



— extracted with a bone from the bladder, x. 270, Warner 



— in the bodies of horses, x. 541, Watson 



— fixed in the urethra for six years, xi. 395, .... Warner 



— taken fiom the colon of a horse, xi. 484, Baker 



— of 6oz. voided through the perinaeum, xii. 571, Frewen 



— of another similar case, xi. 572, Warner 



— spontaneously voided from the bladder, xii. 219, Heberden 



— voided through a fistulous sore in the loins, xiii. 507, 



Simmons 



— chemical experts, on human calculi, xvii.6l, Lane 



— nature of gouty and urinary concret. jam. 213, Wollaston 



— expert, and observ. on urinary concret., xviii. 254,Pearson 

 Stone (remedies for) virtues of acmella for, iv. 548, Hotton 



— Pyrmont waters efficacious in, vi. 656, Vater 



— to extract small ones from the bladder, ix. 159,- . • . Hales 



— efficacy of the lixivium saponis in, ix. 193, . . Cheselden 



— Alicant soap and lime water, useful in, ix. 340, . . Lucas 



— cured by soap and lime water, x. 135, Walpole 



— soda water, useful for, x. 136, Note 



— virtues of the Carlsbad waters in dissolving, xi. 56, 



Springsfeld 



— relieved by soap and lime water ; further particulars of 



Lord Walpole's case, xi. 115, 122, Pringlej xi. 117, 

 160, Whytt 



— virtues of soap in dissolving, xi. 122, Pringle 



Stone (remedies for) virtues of the Carlsbad waters, lime 



water, and soap, xi. l6l , Whytt 



Stone, Edmund, biographical account of, viii. 392, . . Note 



— on two species of curve lines, ibid 



Stone, Rev. Edmund, efficacy of willow bark in agues, xii. 1 



Stool, of balls voided by, v. 135, 270 Thoresby 



Stoqueler, Mr., obs. on theearthqu. at Lisbon, 1755, x. 66*0 

 Storm, a violent, in Scotland, ii. 210, Mackenzy 



— of thunder, lightning, and hail at Oundle, iii. 530 



— effects of, on the rivers of N. America, iv. 198, Scarburgh 



— of thunder, lightning, &rain, Aug. 1708, v. 408,Thoresby 



— effects of a hurricane in Cumberland, x. 112, Thomlinson 



— see Hurricanes, Thunder, Hail, Rain, Sec. 



Stoves, description of the Chinese, xiii. 9^ Gramont 



— a stove for a green-house, iii. 659, Cullum 



Stovin, G., antique sandal, and human body preserved in a 



morass in Lincolnshire, ix. 364 

 Strachan,Mr., to take and tame elephants in Ceylon, iv. 641 



— of the natural history of Ceylon, iv. 6*50 



— culture of tobacco at Ceylon, iv. 666 



— further particulars of Ceylon, iv. 711 

 Strachey, John, strata of coal mines, vi. 401, vii. 118 

 Straight's mouth, see Currents. 



Strange, J. on a natural paper produced in Tuscany, xii. 59S 



— Roman sepulchral stones found at Bonn, xii. 633 



— of uncommon sponges on the coast of Italy, xiii. 32 



— account of Basaltic columns in Italy, xiii. 577, 677 



— account of the tides in the Adriatic, xiv. 130 



Strata, in digging for marie in Ireland, vii. 154, .... Kelly 



— of a well at Boston, xvi. 183, Limbird 



Strawberries, micros, obs. on the seeds of, iv. 90, Leuwenhoek 

 String, on the motion of a stretched string, vi. 14, . . Taylor 

 Strontites, physic. & chem. characters of, xvii. 446, Schmeisser 

 Struyck, Nicholas, parabolic paths of comets, ix. 648 

 Stuart, A., m. d., of water-spouts in the Mediterran., iv. 647 



— of a pagan temple at Cannara, v. 501 



— on the use of bile in the animal economy, vii. 407, 577 



— existence of a fluid in the nerves, vii. 550 



— of a white liquid separated from blood, viii. 79 



— observs.on an imposthumation of the gall-bladder, viii. 232 



— on the structure of the heart, viii. 483 

 StubbeH.,M.D., obser.onavoyagetotheCaribbees, i.173,258 

 Stukely, Rev. W., biographical account of, vi. 398, . . Note 



— impression of an animal on a stone, ibid 



— tessellated pavement at Grantham, vii. 227 



— a Roman inscription at Bath, ix. 534 



— account of the shrine of Croyland Abbey, ix. 590 



— ancient bas-relief of Mithras, ix. 687 



— theory and cause of earthquakes, x. 109, 115 



— of the eclipse predicted by Thales, x. 381 

 Stupefaction, from the smokeof sea-coal, xi. 608,. . . . Frewen 

 Sturdie, John, of the iron works in Lancashire, iii. 523 

 Sturges, Rev. Mr. observ. of 2 primary rainbows, xvii. 282 

 Sturgeon, descript. of, from Hudson's Bay, xiii. 410, Forster 

 Sturm, John Christ., biographical notice of, ii. 265, . . Note 



— variation of the needle, and Kunckel's phosphorus, ii. 488 

 Sturmy, Samuel, magnet, variat. & tides near Bristol, i. 265 



— tides near Bristol, and tide-table for ^ hours, i. 29 1 

 Style (astronomy) see Year, Calendar. 



Stylus, of the ancients, account of, vii. 490 ' Clerk 



Styptic, a newly invented, ii. 6*7, Denis; inefficacy, 68, Note 



— experiments on the above, ii. 71, Wiseman 



— experiments with, at Paris, and its healing nature, ii. 72 



— experiments with, in London, by order of the King, ii. 82 



— successful use of in the navy, ii. 95 



— experiments with Colbalch's, iii. 6l5, Cowper 



— experiments with Dr. Eaton's, vii. 29i Sprengel 



« M. Brossard's, x. 298, Fage 



N2 



