51 
in quartz, discovered by M. Leschevin at Creuzot, 
in the department of the Saone and Loire. 
In the opposite compartment of this table-case 
are deposited (as appendix to the ores of iron) the 
substances called aero tithes, because they have 
fallen from the atmosphere, and meteoric stones , 
because they are by some supposed to be deposit¬ 
ed from meteors. The specimensof the former are, 
—native iron from Gross-kamsdorf in Saxony :— 
two small polished pieces of the mass found in 
Southern Africa, which weighed about 250 
pounds, and is now in the cabinet of Haarlem ;— 
fragment of the iron from Senegal ;—specimens 
of the native iron from Otumpa, in the Gran Chaco 
Gualamba, in South America, described by Don 
Rubin de Celis, who estimated the weight of the 
mass to be about 300 quintals, or 15 tons;—a 
large piece detached from the celebrated mass of 
Siberian native iron, which was discovered by 
Pallas on the summit of a hill between Abakansk 
and Belskoi Ostrog on the banks of the Jenisey, 
where it was considered by the Tartars as a sacred 
relic: the mass originally weighed about 1,680 
pounds ;—a piece of the large mass from Ellen- 
bogen, in Bohemia, and another of that found on 
Collina di Brianza, in Milan ;—a small piece of 
the large mass in the Capitania di Bahia, Brasil; 
—A specimen detached from the large mass of 
iron preserved at Aix-la-chapelle;—an Eskimaux 
knife and harpoon, (from Davis’s Straits, Lat. 76 
N. Long. 66 W.) the iron of which is meteoric. 
e 2 Of 
SALOON. 
Nat. Hist. 
