Tranf. 
138 D I S 
— — An account of the difTe£lion of a perfon who 
died of an ulcer in the right kidney Douglas, 
Ah account of what appeared on the diffe&ion 
of Mr. Dove - Cowper 
~ An account of the difle&ion of a child Blair 
— — Some obfervations made in the diiTedtion of three 
fub;e£ls - - Ranby 
Dissolution. Obfervations upon the diffolutions 
and fermentations which we may call cold, be- 
caufe they are accompanied with a coolnefs of 
the liquors into which they pafs Geoffrey 
Distances, inftance to Mr. Hook, for communi- 
cating a contrivance of making, with a glafs 
of a Iphere of 20 or 40 foot diameter, a tele- 
fcope drawing feveral hundred feet : and his 
offer of recompenfing that fecret with another, 
teaching to meafure with a telefcope the dif- 
tances of obje£ls upon the earth Auzout 
— - Of the correlpondence to be procured for the 
finding out the true diflance of the fun and 
moon from the earth by the parallax, obferved 
under or near the fame meridian Oldenburg 
— A true copy of a paper found in the hand-writ- 
ing of Sir Ifaac Newton among the papers of 
Dr. Halley, deferibing an inftrument for ob- 
ferving the moon’s diflance from the fixed flars 
at fea 
Some experiments in order to difeover the height 
to which rockets may be made to afeend, and 
to what diflance their light may be feen Ellkott 
A letter containing the refults of obfervations 
of the diflance of the moon from the fun and 
fixed flars, made in a voyage from England 
to the ifland of St. Helena, in order to deter- 
mine the longitude of the fhip from time to 
time ; together with the whole procefs of com- 
putation ufed on this occafion Majkelyne 
Of the moon’s diflance and parallax Murdock 
> — Concife rules for computing the effe£ls of re- 
fra&ion and parallax, in varying the apparent 
diflance of the moon from the fun or a flar : 
alfo an eafy rule of approximation for comput- 
ing the diflance of the moon from a flar ; the 
longitudes and latitudes of both being given, 
with demonflrations of the fame Majkelym 
— — — A method by whiefy a glafs of a fm all plano- 
convex fphere, may be made to refract the rays 
7 
XXVII 32 
— 5 12 
XXX 631 
XXXV 
4 l 3 
XXII 951 
I 123 
XLII 155 
XLVI 578 
LII 558 
LfV 29 
Abridg, 
V 257 
— 3 2 5 
2 IS 
VII 560 
V42I 
I 300 
VIII 129 
X 202 
