HEA 
other — forts of wattled work. See Coryius and 
FILBER 
Hazet-mould, a term applied to a yellowifh kind o 
rnould or Toil, which has an extremely friable quality, béiig : ; 
ry loamy defcription. a is conftantly pie wit 
where the ‘pind | is natlstt od fort 
dn wares and Uis MUS 
th and fouth cantons 13,296 each, ites trtatiea, 
on aterritory of 240 kiliometres, in 17 communes. N. lat. 
ry 4 ? 7 
Soa E. long. 2° 37’. 
ZERYHUTTY, a town of Bengal, 15 miles S. W. 
of Nattore. N. lat. 24° 14!. E. long. 84° 44’ 
HAZIR; a town of Curdiftan, on a river of the fame 
pri at its union with the Aras; 33 miles S. W. of 
rbi 
HAZIRA, a town of Arabia, in the province of Hedsjas ; 
25 miles S. of Hau 
Sez ae 
» in Mining, i is feds in Cumberland and fome other 
refs grit-ftone, free-ftone, and what is called 
ricts. 
fds in -abcinted Hi Hiftory, as alfo the trees, 
branche juli or catkins, chivers or hufks, and leaves of the 
ale 
alluvi 
es, wie Sa ees are very common in = siemens 
the filt and gravel. Dr. Woodward, in his « Ca talogue of 
Foffils,” vol. i, p. 21*, mentions nuts being found in eMiln- 
clofe mine, which doubtlefs fell or were wafhed into opens 
from the furface ; and on the whole it feems clear, that all 
thefe belong to the clafs of peat foffils, and are preferved i in 
the moft "Se of oe Spel’ depofits or accumulations ; and 
le wood, w truly afcertained to be fuch, muft 
of the Saale Dr. Grew figures what he calls a 
hazle etki — defcribes ity p. 267, of his * Rarities at 
G 
ithology, the name of a bird of the 
us kind, common in the woods of G Germany, and fp 
pofed | by many to be the attagen of the ancients. See T 
TRAO Bonafia. 
i, HAZ-OGHU- BAZA own of Earpean They. 
Geography, a commercial town o: urkey, in 
Bulgar, ; 38 miles S. 
of * hid inhahited by many rich Armenians ; 
HAZ SLANDS, a clufter of {mall iflands, in the North 
Pacific ocean. N, lat. 55° 55’. E. long. 225° 42’. 
HEA, a maritime prov of the kingdom of Morocco, 
bounded N. by the river Tanfif, E. by the province of 
Sherma, 0 rma, W. by the ocean, and S. by the pro- 
vince of Sus. The’ inhabitants of Hea are a trading peo 
ul 
but reftlefs and little civilized ; rpe 
oe by inteftine broils. The province of Shorea 
$ between this and that of Morocco, has been difmember- 
ed from: £ Hex 
. 0 
bay » caput, the st sige or foremoft ue! of the: 
HEA 
Pliny, and other of the ancient te by tig of anation 
of people without heads, called Biz. 
We have accounts, in modern preainiee and travellers, 
of people whofe heads are as flat as the hand; it bein 
aquas, on the river Amazons, in South America. 
For an account of the various fhapes of the head, and. 
of the methods ein Bs in producing them, among people 
ba site nations, fee CRANIUM 
p, in Anatomy, that divifion of the body, which is, 
‘laced at the upper extremity ofthe vertebral column. We 
may confider this in two differéht f view: rf, 
Asa ony ftructure, formed into which tain 
and prote 
the inftruments 
lefs heavy mafs, articulated with the ak. poe capable of 
eing moved on it in various direCtions 
he upper two-thirds of the head ‘id rm a large oval ca- 
es in which the brain is lodged, and towards the inferior 
ha : 
of pain fmelling, a tafting, as well as thofe of maf- 
fait and a part of fuch as are concerned in fwal- 
"The “ ofte eology of thefe parts is contidered under Cra~ 
» dime 
nium; together with the figure nfions, and relative 
proportions of the compon parts, the national differences 
in the form of the head, the ftructure and formation of the 
teeth, &c. The contents of the c re defcribed i 
the article Brain ; the o of hearing under Ear; 
cortents of the orbit and nafal cavities under Err and Nose; 
the organ of tafte under Toncvue; thofe o — and 
deglutition, excepting the gl and iri ngs Be e de- 
fcribed with the oiteology, un Tt 
The external furface of the head rari very reine 
ines i i ference. On 
fions, which are the attributes of Sete rical sions 
afj which we have now indica’ all parts 
oval cafe, i in which the brain is lodged. The int 
covered, except on the forehead, by hair; and t 
called altogether the hairy fealp. (See Inrzcuments.) In 
efcending from the forehead we eed to the face, of 
which the outline is very irre ut fo well known, that 
fhall be excufed from particularly defrbing i. “Phe 
parts of this divifion, which in com re termed 
the features, are connected with tna’ organs deidy alluded 
to; the pis eh and eye-lids are deferibed with the eye ; 
wis nofe with that organ 5 the lips. and cheeks, the bounds 
aries of - the cavity, in which matlication i is carried on, un-". 
der the article Decturition. The i inferior furface — 
head, whitle is its bro 
po 
occiput, 13 
of the front the lower jawbo 
3G 
