[971] 
^'isti:/^ uncovered npoa my Table, for three days and 
eights, I perceived in it, a great number of fmall parti- 
cles, feme wheteof hung by one another, and lookc 
like the dry Branches, of a Tree : others moved confuf- 
edly in the Wine, fo as I could not at firft determine 
their fliapesy but afterwards they leemd, to be like the 
Salt particles above defcribed, having among them, 
many flat y^/^w, with their fides turned up; their fize 
was fo fmall, that 1 judged a Thoufand Millions, would 
not make up thequantity of a Sand. In contemplating 
lome Grols flat particles, as aUo fome fliarp ones, v/hich 
were imperfect, I was confirmed in the make of thofc 
hodys, namely, that all the fharpiS^/^ particles in the 
Wine, and Vine^ai\ how little foever they are, had at 
firft flat thin bodys, which by being roUd up at the four 
Corners, make the Salts^ I have above defcribed. As 
for example I fee in the Sach^, Numb. 4. Fi^, ABCD^ 
£ind EFGH. The fides of the one^^z^r^ roundifli and ir- 
regular, and of the other ftrait, {"which I here draw grea- 
ter then they appear, that their make may the better be 
feen,) the Corners 3c B are bent orroUd up as i^?^, 
J IQL, whereby the Corners and B become a fharp An- 
gle, as is to be feen at /. If the other two Corners Cand D 
were alfo roUd up in the fame manner, we fliouldfee the 
perieit figure of a Sah. When the flat figures are but 
fhort, and only two Corners are rolled up, they appear 
as ^ or 7^, which are like the figures f and D in Orleans 
Wine. The appearance of IK^L and MNO P, was as 
difl:md:, asif Ihad takenhalf aflieetofPaper, and rolld 
it up at the four Corners, to make two fliarp Angles, and 
leave the full breadth in the middle; I could alfo perfec- 
tly fee a Hollownefs within the figures, as much as can be 
reprelenced in the Paper. 
I fet lome Mo/el Wine, for a few hours uncovered up- 
on my Table,aud then faw fwimmiug in it,divers figures 
of Sa^lt, lueh ^^s I iiad formerly feeu in Wuie, Vinegar, 
X. J ' and 
