﻿APPENDIX 
  I, 
  377 
  

  

  Appendix 
  I, 
  

  

  Bibliography 
  of 
  the 
  Earthquake, 
  

  

  So 
  great 
  an 
  earthquake 
  has 
  naturally 
  given 
  rise 
  to 
  a 
  large 
  volume 
  of 
  literature 
  

   not 
  only 
  in 
  the 
  shape 
  of 
  notices 
  in 
  the 
  daily 
  newspapers, 
  but 
  also 
  in 
  scientific 
  

   magazines. 
  Nearly 
  all 
  of 
  these 
  are, 
  however, 
  written 
  at 
  second 
  hand, 
  and, 
  so 
  far 
  

   as 
  I 
  know, 
  the 
  following 
  list 
  comprises 
  all 
  that 
  cap 
  be 
  quoted 
  as 
  original 
  author- 
  

   ities 
  : 
  — 
  

  

  1. 
  Thos. 
  Heath; 
  An 
  Edinburgh 
  Record 
  of 
  the 
  Indian 
  Earthquake: 
  Nature, 
  

  

  LVI, 
  174(1897). 
  

  

  A 
  letter 
  to 
  Nature, 
  giving 
  a 
  brief 
  account, 
  and 
  an 
  illustration 
  on 
  a 
  reduced 
  scale, 
  

   pf 
  the 
  record 
  of 
  the 
  earthquake 
  by 
  the 
  bifilar 
  pendulum 
  at 
  Edinburgh. 
  A 
  letter 
  

   to 
  the 
  same 
  effect 
  was 
  published 
  in 
  the 
  Calcutta 
  English 
  man 
  of 
  6th 
  July 
  1897. 
  

   Both 
  may 
  be 
  regarded 
  as 
  superseded 
  by 
  No. 
  8. 
  

  

  2. 
  T. 
  D. 
  LaTouche. 
  The 
  Calcutta 
  Earthquake; 
  Nature, 
  LVI, 
  273-274. 
  

   This 
  is 
  a 
  brief 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  earthquake 
  and 
  its 
  effects 
  in 
  Calcutta, 
  written 
  

  

  very 
  shortly 
  after 
  the 
  occurrence, 
  

  

  3. 
  The 
  Calcutta 
  Earthquake 
  : 
  Nature, 
  LVI, 
  346 
  (1897), 
  

  

  A 
  short 
  notice, 
  and 
  reproduction 
  of 
  part 
  of 
  the 
  record 
  of 
  the 
  horizontal 
  pendu- 
  

   lum 
  instrument 
  at 
  the 
  Royal 
  Geodynamic 
  Observatory 
  of 
  the 
  Rocca 
  di 
  Papa. 
  

  

  4. 
  T. 
  D. 
  LaTouche: 
  The 
  late 
  Earthquake 
  in 
  India: 
  Nature, 
  LVI, 
  444-44 
  

  

  (1897). 
  

  

  An 
  extract 
  from 
  a 
  private 
  letter 
  describing 
  the 
  effects 
  of 
  the 
  earthquake 
  in 
  

   Assam. 
  It 
  expresses 
  the 
  idea, 
  natural 
  at 
  first, 
  but 
  which 
  had 
  afterwards 
  to 
  be 
  

   abandoned, 
  that 
  the 
  origin 
  of 
  the 
  earthquake 
  was 
  connected 
  with 
  the 
  great 
  uni- 
  

   clinal 
  fold 
  or 
  flexure 
  which 
  bounds 
  the 
  southern 
  edge 
  of 
  the 
  Assam 
  hills. 
  

  

  5. 
  ]. 
  Milne: 
  The 
  Recent 
  Australian 
  and 
  Indian 
  earthquakes; 
  Symons* 
  

   Monthly 
  Meteorological 
  Magazine, 
  XXXII, 
  92-93,1897. 
  

  

  Contains 
  a 
  statement 
  of 
  the 
  times 
  at 
  which 
  the 
  effects 
  of 
  the 
  earthquake 
  were 
  

   registered 
  at 
  Edinburgh, 
  Shide 
  I. 
  W., 
  Strassburg 
  and 
  Grenoble. 
  

  

  6. 
  T. 
  Moureaux 
  : 
  Bulletin 
  du 
  Bureau 
  central 
  ; 
  quoted 
  in 
  Cosmos, 
  VI, 
  652 
  

  

  (1897). 
  

  

  Records 
  an 
  interruption 
  of 
  the 
  traces 
  of 
  the 
  magnetographs 
  in 
  the 
  observatory 
  

   of 
  Pare 
  St. 
  Maur. 
  I 
  have 
  not 
  been 
  able 
  to 
  refer 
  to 
  the 
  original. 
  

  

  7. 
  R. 
  D. 
  Oldham 
  : 
  The 
  Earthquake 
  of 
  12th 
  June: 
  Records 
  of 
  the 
  Geological 
  

   Survey 
  of 
  India, 
  XXX, 
  132-134 
  (1897). 
  

  

  A 
  brief 
  preliminary 
  notice, 
  written 
  about 
  a 
  month 
  after 
  the 
  earthquake, 
  giving 
  

   some 
  of 
  the 
  more 
  striking 
  facts 
  concerning 
  it. 
  

  

  8. 
  M. 
  Baratta 
  : 
  II 
  grande 
  terremoto 
  Indiano 
  del 
  12 
  giugno 
  1897: 
  Bolletino 
  

   Sella 
  Societa 
  geografica 
  Italiana, 
  3rd 
  series, 
  X, 
  1 
  — 
  8, 
  and 
  1 
  plate 
  (1897) 
  

  

  An 
  account 
  and 
  illustration 
  of 
  the 
  records 
  of 
  the 
  earthquake 
  on 
  the 
  micro- 
  

   seismograph 
  3 
  of 
  the 
  University 
  of 
  Padua, 
  designed 
  and 
  controlled 
  by 
  Prof. 
  G, 
  

   Vicentin». 
  

  

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  377 
  ) 
  

  

  