M$ the Natural Biflory Part I W 



lconf,s.tcc. the Strata as it pafles through them M 

 fupra, Relations, obtained from feverair 



Hands, concerning the State of Metalls 

 and Minerals in Foreign Countries : irj 

 divers Parts of Afia^ Africa^ and Amek 

 rkay as well as in Hungary^ Germanf y 

 Sweden y and other Parts of Eur of e : and 

 particularly of thofe which are not 

 found in England}^ fhewing that thd 

 Condition of thefb Bodies in thofe re- 

 moter Regions is exaftlj conforraabld 

 to that of ours here: and that thej^ 

 were all put into this Condition by the 

 t conf. very fame means f . 

 ^'""f'^' 4. Obfervations concerning Englifh 

 ^p^3. ^fyiJy^Y : and Relations from abroad ^ 

 about the Amber of Pru//sa and otheif 

 diftant Places : with a Difcourfe found-- 

 ed upon them, proving that Amber il 

 not a gummom or refinous Subftanc^ 

 drawn out of Trees by the Sun's Heat ; 

 and coagulated and hardened by fall- 

 ing down into Rivers, or the Sea, as 

 the Ancients generally believed : but \% 

 R Natural Fcjjil^ as Pebles, Flints, P/^ 

 rit£^ and the like, are : formed at the 

 fame time, and by the fame means 

 that they were : and all of it original- 

 ly repoled in the Strata of Earth, 

 Sand, c^^r. together with them. That 



