HAL 
with a demonftration of the uncommon beighth 
thereof - - 
Halley, Edmund. An obfervation of the end of 
the total lunar eclipfe, March 3, 1718, ob- 
ferved near the Cape of Good Hope, ferving 
to determine the longitude thereof $ with re- 
marks thereon - 
n Account of an aurora borealis feen at London 
Nov. 10, 1719 
— Remarks of an effay of Mr. Caflini, wherein 
he propofes to find by obfervation the paral- 
lax and magnitude of Sirius 
— ■ Of the infinity of the fphere of fixed liars 
— Of the number, order, and light of the fixed liars 
— Remarks upon the method of obferving the 
differences of right afcenfion and declination, 
by crofs hairs in a telefcope 
— A propofal for meafuring the heights of places, 
by help of the barometer of Mr. Patrick, in 
which the fcale is greatly enlarged 
— Some allowances to be made in alfronomical ob- 
fervations, for the refradfion of the air, with 
an accurate table of refradfions 
■■■ —1 On the method of determining the places of 
the planets, by obferving their near appulfes 
to the fixed ftars 
— — Obfervations on a parhelion, 061 . 26, 1721 
An obfervation of an eclipfe of the Sun, Nov. 
27, 1722, at Greenwich 
— The longitude of Port Royal in Jamaica, deter- 
mined by the eclipfe of the Moon, June 18, 
1722 - 
And of Carthagena in America 
— Some confiderations about the caufe of the uni- 
verfal deluge 
• Some farther thoughts on the fame 
— — An account of the appearance of Mercury pair- 
ing over the Sun’s difk, on the 29th of Odto- 
~ber, 1723, determining the mean motion, 
and fixing the nodes of that planet’s orb 
Remarks upon fome differtations lately publilhed 
at Paris, by the Rev. P. Souciet, againft Sir 
Ifaac Newton’s Chronology 
— 11 Some farther remarks on P. Souciet’s differta- 
tions againft Sir Ifaac Newton’s chronology 
Mr. Harris’s aftronomical obfervations at Vera 
Cruz revifed ' * 
4 N 
Tran ft 
647 
Abridg. 
XXX 978 
IV 2 156 
— 992 
— 1099 
IV 45 i 
— 2 163 
XXXI 1 
— 22 
— 2 4 
vr 163 
— 147 
VI 148 
i ^ **3 
— 165 
| — 116 
VI 2 . 28 
— 169 
VI 167 
— 209 
— 211 
— 170 
VI 2 75 
XXXII 197 
VI 171 
— 235 
— 237 
— 190 
— 408 
XXXIII 1 18 
— 123 
VI 2 I 
— -4 
— 228 
VI 253 ! 
XXXIV 205 
VII 4 7 
XXXV 2\g6 
— - I I 
; - 388 
— - 102 
Halley, 
