Jornais Acesso aberto

Medical Repository

0000; Gale Group; Linguagem: English

Autores

J. Priestley, J. Priestley, J. Priestley, James Tilton, James Tilton, G. Monro, John MacLean, Valentine Seaman, F. Blanchet, Mr. F. Blanchet, F. Blanchet, Samuel L. Mitchill, Benjamin Smith Barton, Benjamin Rush, Joseph Hamilton, James Woodhouse, Thomas Beddoes,

Resumo

Frontmatter: Medical Repository. Essay: A Letter from John MacLean, M. D. Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in the College of New-Jersey, in Answer to One Addressed to Him by James Woodhouse, M. D. Professor of Chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania, Chart of Lower-Canada, Midwifery, Facts and Remarks on the Antiseptic Powers of Lixivial and Oleaginous Substances: Communicated by Mr. F. Blanchet, to Dr. Mitchill Account of the Guanchios, or Ancient Inhabitants of the Island of Teneriffe, Given by a Judicious and …, An Account of Diseases Prevalent at Londonderry in the Years 1797 and 1798; Communicated in a Letter from Dr. William Patterson to Dr. Miller Intestinal Fever, Medical Advice from Marseilles, New Material for the Manufacture of Paper, Additional Experiments, by Dr. Ricketson, on the Cultivation of the Poppy-Plant, and the Method of Precuring Opium. (See Vol. I. No. 4. P. 420. Appendix), Speculations Concerning the Perspirable Fluids of Human Bodies, with the View of Ascertaining How They Are Sometimes Converted to Septic or Pestilential Matter. In a Letter from Dr. Mitchill to Andrew Duncan, M. D. &c. Professor of the Institutes of Medicine in the University of Edinburgh, Dated August 11, 1798, Adamantine Spar and Basaltes, Three Lectures upon Animal Life, Delivered in the University of Pennsylvania. By Benjamin Rush, M. D. &c. Philadelphia. Dobson. 1799.8vo. Pp. 84, Medical & Philosophical News Domestic, Fragments of the Natural History of Pennsylvania. By Benjamin Smith Barton, M. D. Correspondent Member of the Society of the Antiquaries of Scotland, &c. &c. Part First. Philadelphia. Printed for the Author by Way and Groff. 1799. Pp. 24. Folio. With an Introduction of 18 Pages, Foreign We Are Happy to Announce the Intelligence of a More Successful Method of Treating Pulmonary Consumption, …, Remarks of Mr. B. On the above Account, Chemical News; Communicated in a Letter to Samuel L. Mitchill, M. D. Professor of Chemistry in Columbia College, New-York, by James Woodhouse, M. D. Professor of Chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania, &c. Dated Philadelphia, August 22, 1799 Of the Non-Action of the Nitric Acid on Silver, Copper and Tin, Occasional Reflections on the Operation of the Small-Pox; or the Traveller's Pocket-Doctor. By Joseph Hamilton, Physician. Catskill. Croswell. Pp. 45.12mo. 1799, Of the Nitrous Fumigation, Case of the Deleterious Effects of Opium Remedied by the Excitement of Pain, Of the Difference in the Quantity of Ammoniac Obtained from Bones, by Distilling with and without a Lute, Multiple Essay Items, Two Cases of the Human Constitution Being Affected by the Contagion of Small-Pox and Measles, at the Same Time. In a Letter from Dr. Philemon Tracy to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Norwich (Connecticut), July 19, 1799, Observations on the Yellow Fever, as It Appeared at Wilmington (Delaware) in the Summer and Autumn of 1798: Communicated in a Letter from James Tilton, M. D. President of the Medical Society of Delaware, to Dr. Miller, Gren's Eudiometer, A Number of Literary Gentlemen in Connecticut, Have Lately Associated for the Purpose of Encouraging Philosophical Researches, and, Particularly, for Developing the Natural History of That State, Liberal Decree of the Trustees of Columbia College, in Respect to Chemistry, On the Vapour Which Rises from the Surface of the River St. Lawrence during the Severe Cold of Winter. In a Letter from Mr. F. Blanchet, of Quebec, to Mr. Mitchill, Dated Essex County (N. J.), July 9, 1799, In This Report, You Will Perceive, I Have Not Attended to the Critical Distinction between Contagion and Infection, but Have Rather Conformed to the Prevailing Impression at the Time; for Every Body, at Wilmington, Supposed the Disease to Be Specifically Contagious, Bread-Fruit Tree, Remarks on the Epidemic of the Summer and Autumn of 1798, at Wilmington: Communicated in a Letter from George Monro, M. D. to Dr. Miller. Letter to the editor: Dr. Priestley's Reply to His Antiphlogistian Opponents To the Editors of the Medical Repository, To the Editors of the Medical Repository Should the Following Observations, Made on a Small Tour through the Lower Parts of New-Jersey, Appear …. Editorial: The Reader Will Be Pleased to Correct the Following Erratum, Just Discovered, in a Former Communication of Dr. Priestley's, Errata. Review: Review De Culturâ Radicis Brazilicœ; De Curâ Boum in Braziliâ; Et De Culturâ Herbœ Nicotianœ in Braziliâ, Poemata ….

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