104 



TID 



INDEX. 



TO B 



Thunberg, C. P., m.t>., descr. of the bread-fruit tree, xiv. 572 



— journal of a residence at Japan, xiv. 634 



Thunder, cause of, x. 287 Eeles 



Thunder and lightning, an accident by, at Oxford, i. 74; 



effects on the interior and exterior of a body deceased 



by it, ibid, Wallis 

 ->— accident by, in Hampshire, i. 84 



— effect of a thunder-clap at Stralsund, i. 526 



— effect of, on wheat and rye at Dantzick, ii. 8.9, • • Kirkby 



— extraordinary effect of, near Aberdeen, iv. 109, Garden 



— on the production of thunder, lightning, and hail, iv. 197, 



212, Wallis 



— effect of, on a ship, iv. 222, Mawgridge 



— storm of, at Everdon, iv. 226, Wallis 



— of a young man killed by, iv. 351, . . Thoresby 



— an accident by, at Leeds, iv. 500, Same 



— strange effects of a storm in Ireland, v. 39 >, Molyneux 



— effects of a storm at Ipswich, v. 431, Bridgman 



— same storm at Colchester, v. 432, Nelson 



— storm at Leeds, Nov. 1675, v. 642, Thoresby 



— storm in Devonshire, v. 702, Chamberlayne 



— of a person killed by, vii. 153, Beard 



* — effects of a storm in Wales, vii. 437, Davies 



■ — effects of, on trees, viii. 360, Clark 



June 1748, ix. 528, Miles 



■ a storm in Devonshire, x. 223, Palmer 



— analogy of electricity with, x. 289, Mazeas 



— effects of a storm in Cornwall, x. 335, Borlase 



on a hulk at Plymouth, x. 560, .... Huxham 



• church in London, x. 629, Brander 



i America, x. 633, .... Franklin 



at Dorking, x. 634, Child 



a storm in Cornwall, xi. 86, .... Dyer & Milles 



— — — • on a church and steeple, xi. 113, . . Smeaton 



" a storm at Norwich, xi. 327, Cooper 



Rickmansworth, xi. 392, Whitfield 



Tides, time of the highest near Bristol, i. 266, 290, Sturmy 



— tide table for quarters of hours, i. 291, Same 



— on the doctrine of tides, i. 5l6, Childreyj Wallis' s reply 



to, 520 



— irregular flux and reflux of the Euripns, i. 592, . . Babin 



— about the Orcades, ii. 106, Moray 



— on a corrected tide table, ii. 555, Flamsteed 



— another tide table, iii. 3, Same 



— at Cabo Corso, on the African Coast, iii. 32, Heathcot 



— at the bar Tonquin, iii. 67, iv. 148, Halley 



— course of at Dublin, iii. 333, Molyneux 



— time of high water on the French coasts, iii. 337 



— analogy between the motion of disease and tides, iii. 551, 



Paschal 



— beans from Jamaica floated to Scotland, iv. 103, . . Sloane 



— on the true theoiy of, iv. 142, Halley 



— a high tide in the Thames, 1726, vii. J 33 3 1736, viii. 59, 



Jones 



— observations of tides in the Thames, ibid, .... Saumarez 



— state of, in Orkney, ix. 667, Mackenzie 



— in the river Forth, irregular, x. 31, Wright 



— irregularities observed at Chatham, x. 693, .... Godden 

 Sheerness, ibid, Monarty 



Woolwich, x 694, .... Taylor 



— two violent storms in Cornwall, xi. 622, Borlase 



— effects on a church in Essex, xii. 126, Heberden 



— of the damage to St. Bride's steeple, 1764,xii. 131, Watson 



xii. 140, Delaval 



— effects of the same storm in Essex-st, xii. 144, Laurence 



at Martinique, xii. 149, Wilson 



— several cases of its effects on ships, xii. 157, .... Veicht 



— effects of, in Pembroke college, 1765, xii. 254, Griffith 



on Buckland Brewer church, xii. 6l0, Paxton 



St. Keverne church, xiii. 98, Williams 



Tottenham-court road chapel, xiii. 307, Henley 



at Leeds, xiii. 420, Kirkshaw 



Steeple Ashton and Holt, xiii. 435, . King 



on Lord Tilney's house at Naples, xiii. 455, 



Hamilton 



— fatal effects of a storm in Scotland, xvi. 186, . . Brydone 



— remarks on the storm in Scotland, xvi. 2 1 6, Earl Stanhope 



Thyme, on the camphor of, vii. 93, 631, Neuman 



Tiberiades, analysis of the hot spring near, viii. 556, . . Perry 

 Ticunas, experts, with the poison of, x. 144,. . . . Herissant 



xiv. 641, .... Fontana 



Tides, in the West Isles of Scotland, extraor , i. 21, Moray 



— hypothesis on the doctrine of, i. 89, Wallis 5 reply to 



some animadversions on it, i. 101, Same; Childrey's 

 animadversions, 51 6; Walliss reply, 520 



— inquiries concerning, i. 112, Wallis ; i. 113, .. . Moray 



— apparatus for observing the flowing of, i. 114, Same 



— tables proposed for the observation of, i. 118, Same 



— at the Bermudas, i. 206, Norwood ; 283, Stafford 



— observation of, at Plymouth, i. 227, Colepresse 



— cause of variety of the ann . tides of England, i. 239, Wallis 



— plan for calcu. ; and on the tides at London, i. 240, Philips 



— in the straits of Gibraltar, observations, xi. 607, . . More 



— St. Helena, observations of, xi. 647, Maskelyne 



— an unusual tide at Bristol 1764, xii. 109, Tucker 



— state of, at Suez, xii. 281, '. Montague 



- at Otaheite, xiii. 177, Green and Cook 



— observations of, in the South Sea, xiii. 323, xiv. 72, Same 



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

 — at Naples, xvii. 319, . . Blagden 



— see Sea, Currents. 

 Timber, proper season for felling, iii. 422, Plott 



— differ, of, felled at different seasons, iii. 672, Leuwenhoek 

 Time, rectified ace. of, by a luni-solar year,, ii. 497, Wood 



— to find the hour of the night at sea, ix. 664, Condamine 

 by equal altitudes, xiii. 734, Aubert 



— method of comput. the equation of, xii. 163, Maskelyne 



— see Clock, Watch. 



Timoni, Emanuel, biographical account of, vi. 88, . . Note 



— account of the plague at Constantinople, vi. 450 



— practice of inoculation at Constantinople, vi. 88, vii. 646 

 Tin, description of the Cornish mines, i. 565 ; art of digging 



up the ore, and instruments for, i. 568 ; manner of 

 dressing tin, 571 ; of blowing it, 573 



— account of the Cornish mines, ii. 424 Merret 



- vii. 249 Nicholls 



— method of making tin-plates, vii. 304, Rutty 



— of the mines of Schlachtenwald, ix. 690,. . . . Mounsey 



— specimens of native tin, xii. 278, 359, 597, .... Borlase 



— its effect on gold when mixed, xv. 622, Alchorne 



Tin-foil, detonation produced, by a contact with nitrous 



salt, xiii. 404, Higgins 



Tincal, a production of Thibet, account of, xvi. 54 8, Saunders 

 Tinctures, to give various tinct. to water, iv. 243, Southwell 



— effects of the opuntia and of indigo in colouring the juices 



of living animals, xi. 137, Baker 



— accidental tincture given to a stone, iii. 273, .... Reisel 

 Tissot, Andrew, m. d., biograph. notice of, xii 20S, Note 



— observations on the disease called ergot, ibid 

 Titmouse [parus] two species from Hudson's Bay, xiii. 342, 



Forster 

 Tithimalus hibernicus, see Mackenhoy. 



Toads, noxious quality of the fluid of, i. 147, Note 



Toad-stone, analysis of the, xv. 293, Withering 



Toaldo, Abbe Jos., of the tides in the Adriatic, xiv. 130 

 Tobacco, culture of in Ceylon, iv. 667, Strachaa 



