14 
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF YORKSHIRE GEOLOGY. 
Shropshire, Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Warwick- 
shire, Northamptonshire, Leicestershire and Nottingham- 
shire. Particularly those of Neville Holt, Cheltenham, 
Weatherslach, Hartlepool, Astrope, Cartmell, etc. 
[Harrogate Sulphur Well, p. 141 ; Dropping Well and 
Sweet Spaw, p. 148]. 4to. Sheffield. Being the second 
volume of the mineral Water of England. [Vol. L, 1734]. 
1742. 
1 Atkins, J. — A Dissertation on the Contents, Virtues, and 
Uses of Cold and Hot Mineral Springs. Being pp. 312-350 
of the Navy Surgeon ; or, Practical System of Surgery. 
[Alludes to Harrogate]. 8vo. London. 
1743. 
1 Hoffmann, F. — Experiments and Observations upon Mineral 
Waters. [See under 1731]. 
1744. 
1 Hearne, T. — The Itinerary of John Leland the Antiquary. 
[See under 1710]. Ed. 2. 
1749. 
1 Knowlton, J. — An Account of Two extraordinary Deer's 
Horns, found underground in different parts of Yorkshire. 
[In the Rye at Ness, near Malton, and at Cowthorpe]. 
Phil. Trans., vol. xliv., for 1746, No. 479, pp. 124-127. 
1752. 
1 Russel, R. — A Dissertation on the Use of Sea Water. . . . 
Translated from the Latin. 12mo. Oxford. Ed. 2. 
1753, 8vo. Oxford, Ed. 4, 1760, to which is added an 
Account of the Nature, Properties and Uses of all the 
remarkable Mineral Waters of Great Britain, by W. Owen. 
[Harrogate, pp. 272-273 ; Knaresborough, pp. 301, 302, 
misprinted 330]. 12mo. London. Ed. 5. 8vo. London, 
1769. 
1753. 
1 Russel, R.— [See under 1752]. 
1755. 
1 Wesley, John. — A Strange Phenomenon. [Account of 
the landslip on Black Hambledon by which Gormire was 
