OUR 
different circumftances of difeafe, are confiderable, and the 
he 
was, however, purely hypothetical, and alto 
of ferious attention. Although, doubtlefs, ae indications 
are to be pecans from the appearances of the urine, both in 
acute and ch thefe are — more li- 
mited than was viene believed ; and thole w 
afcertain the nature of difeafes, by ‘infpeéting os urine of the 
patient alone, are, therefore, impoftors of the lowe‘ clafs ; 
andi _ : buiwd difcreditable to the general information of the 
age, he Meyerfbachs and Van Butchels ftill live upon 
the “eredulity of a Britifh people. 
The medical indications, as well as the chemical proper- 
retion, will be treated of under the proper 
e 
ties, of this exc 
ma obferve, that Dr. Black- 
head. 2 mean time, we 
See URINE. 
OUROVANG, in Ornithology. See Turpus Urovang, 
OURRED, in Sec ae a high hill of the county of 
Galway, Ireland, in the weftern diftri&, at the bottom of 
whichis alake of the farae 1 name. 
Y¥’s IsLaAnp, or New a an ifland in the 
South Pacific ocean, difcovered by Capt. Carteret, in Au- 
gaft 1767, being one of the clufter nied Queen Saeed 5 
iflands, about ten miles long and three broad. S. lat 
E. long. 165° 1 
OURS, in Zoology. See Urns 
OURSE, in Geography, a river vr of France, which runs 
into the Seine, at Bar fur Sei 
O TE, or OurTHE, one or eh 13 departments of 
the region a _France, called the Reunited country, formed 
and of Li 
Ourt a Roche, and run in 
the Meufe at Liege. This department is 42 French leagues 
kili metres, or 
long, and 12 broad, contains 40023 13 
A igs leagues, and 313,876 inhabitants, and is fituated 
of Sambre and Meufe, in N. lat. 50° 35/. It is divided 
into three circles or diftri€ts, 30 erie = 383 communes, 
1975, Malmedy, 
According to 
24,974 francs, and its 
expences to 295,573 Its capital is Li 
The firft of the circles abounds in mines of iron, coal, an 
alum ; in the fecond are Spa waters ; 7 al in the third are 
mines of iron, alum, fulphur, coal, 
RTHE, or Ourt, atowr a. France in the depart- 
ment of the Forefts , 4 miles N. of Lux : 
OURTON-POULAC, a town of Thee. 15 miles 
S.W. of Yol args nea 
URTS, in Agriculture, a provincial term applied to 
a paula of ee made by cattle. Sometimes written 
OURUCZE, in Geography, a town of Poland, in Vol- 
hynia; 68 mi'es N.N.E of Zytomiers. 
OURVILLE, a town of i dace, in the department of 
the Lower Seine, and chief place of acanton, in the diftri@ 
of Yvetot; 9 miles’: W. of Fécamp. The place contams 
OUS 
1257, and the canton 9553 ee on 4 territory of 
1177 kiliometres, in 19 co ne 
BY, atown of ae ’ in’ the province of Scho- 
nen; 23 miles N. of Chrifianftadt. 
OUSCOTTA, a town and fortrefs of Hindooftan, in 
nen aaa taken by earl tigen in April 1791; 15 miles 
N.E. of Bangalore.—Alfo, a town wa Sad dooftan, in the 
circar of Sanore ; 25 miles N. of San 
OUSE, or Grand River, a river of Canada, which rifes 
in the country;belonging iv the Chipnewa and Miflaffaga In- 
dians, and running foutherly through the weft riding of the 
county of York, croffes Dundas ftreet, and paffin between 
the counties of Lincoln and Norfolk, difcharges itfelf into 
lake Erie, about half-way between the | Foreland and fort 
Erie. lat. 42° on out 40 
miles up his river is the Mohawk bee ‘The Senecas, 
Onondagoes, Cayuga;, Augagas, mpi pie er 
have alfo villages on different parts of this 
Oussr, a large river of En leat eG “rifes in two 
nee ae far from Brackley and Towcefter, on the bor- 
ders of Northamptonfhire and Oxfordfhire, whence it flows 
eaftward, through Buckinghambhire, by "‘Newport- Pagnell 
and Olney, into Bedfordfhire. After flowing feveral miles 
in the fame dire€tion, it makes a rapid {weep to the fouth, 
defcending as far as Bedford, at which place it again bends 
to the north-eaft, pafling through the centre of the fens of 
Cambridgefhire, whee it is joined by the Cam, the Leffer 
Oufe, and the Larke, all of which are confiderable ftreams. It 
afterwards enters Norfolk, and traverfes the weftern divifion 
of that county, till it falls into The Wath, a gulf of the fea 
formed by the biel ieea coatts of Norfolk and Lincoln hire. 
_general Account of all the Rivers of Note in Great Bri- 
tain, &c.; by Henry Skrine, efq. L.L.B. 8vo. Lond. 1801. 
real of lesan and Wales, vol. xi. Northampton- 
a large river in Yorkfhire, England, is formed 
by the jundtion of the Ure and the Swale, two very confi- 
derable ftreams, which take their rife in the nonher moors 
of the Nid, to the city of York; after pafling which, it 
flows almoft dire€tly fouth to Cawoo -his place it is 
joined by the Wharfe, which has its fource a “* foot of the 
Craven- Hills, and changing its dire¢tion ayain to the fouth- 
eaft, runs pa't the town of Seiby. About five miles below 
that townit r- ceives the Derwent, sand two miles ftill lower 
down, the Aire Y 
Thus augmented, the Oufe becomes as wide as the Thames 
at London, and after making a circuit to the fouth near 
Swinefleet, takes a north-eafterly dire€tion to its confluence 
with the Trent from Lincolnfhire Thefe rivers united con- 
ftitute the Humber, which is the moft eg ae i) in 
the north of England. See HumBe A general Ac- 
count of all the Rivers of Note in Great Britain, oe by 
Henry Skrine, efq. L.L.B. 8vo. 
SEEL, Puri, in Biography, a learned German, 
who flourifhed in the eighteenth century, was at Dant- 
zic in the year 1671. He became minifter of the German 
church at Leyden, and was afterwards profeffor of divinity 
at Frankfort on the Oder. He died in 1724, at the age of 
Bity- three. His ae tinportant works are, ** IntroduGio in 
reorum Metricam;’’ * Introdutio in 
soeoneuarionelm een Profaicam y 3’ « De Lepra;”’ 
and fome ‘reatifes on the ‘en ens ents. 
OUSERAU, in ee eae a = of Hindooftan, in 
Bahar; 25 miles W.N.W. of Rotafgur. 
OUSOURYT, 
