Jornais Acesso aberto

The Medical Repository

1799; Gale Group; Linguagem: English

Autores

E. H. Smith, Samuel Brown, James Woodhouse, Dr. John MacLean, Edward Miller, Benjamin Rush, Frederick William, Samuel L. Mitchill, Samuel L. Mitchill, John Oothout, Jacob Abramse, Richard Bayley, Gulian Verplanck, Cornelius Ray, Moses Rogers, John B. Coles, Gabriel Furman, William Bayard, Jonathan Dayton, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Timothy Pickering, Isaac Rand,

Resumo

Frontmatter: Advertisement, Medical Repository, The Copy-Right of Each Number of the Medical Repository Is Regularly Secured According to Law, The Medical Repository. Table of contents: Contents. Essay: In the Year 1792, the Legislature of New-York Appropriated the Sum of £750 Annually, for Several Years, for the Endowment of Additional Professorships in Columbia College, Cursory Observations on That Form of Pestilence Called Yellow Fever, Concerning the New Sort of Manure Found in the Town of Kent, in Lichfield County, Connecticut; Communicated in a Letter from Mr. Thomas Whitten, to the Committee of the American Mineralogical Society, Established in the City of New-York, Dated Kent, August 16, 1798, An Account of the Pestilential Disease Which Prevailed at Boston (Massachusetts) in the Summer and Autumn of 1798, Letter from His Prussian Majesty to the Academy of Sciences at Berlin Read in the Sitting of the 19th of April, 1798, Appendix Domestic, Section III, Extract of a Letter from Dr. Nooth, Superintendant-General of the Hospitals in British America, to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Quebec, Jan. 24, 1799, Sir Joseph Banks, President of the Royal Society of London, Has Forwarded to Dr. Mitchill Copies of Two Botanical Works, Edited by Himself, An Account of the Pestilential Disease Which Prevailed at New-London (Connecticut), in the Summer and Autumn of 1798; Communicated in a Letter from the Rev. Henry Channing to Dr. Mitchill, Physiology, Of the Epidemic Lately Prevalent in Boston. By Isaac Rand, Extract of a Letter from an Eminent Character in Montpellier, to Dr. Mitchill, Dated August 20, 1798, A Singular Phenomenon in Regard to Cream, Additional Account of the Pestilential Fever Which Prevailed at New-London, (Connecticut); Communicated in a Letter from Dr. Coit to Dr. Mitchill, Dated New-London, January 11, 1799, On the Same Subject; Communicated in an Eight Letter from Dr. Priestley to Dr. Mitchill, Medical & Philosophical News Domestic, Second Letter from the Rev. Mr. Channing, on the Same Subject, Dated New-London, February 19, 1799, An Abstract of a Paper (Read at a Former Meeting) Entitled Experiments to Determine the Density of the Earth, by Henry Cavendish, Esq. F. R. S. and A. S. Has Been Read to a Meeting of the Royal Society of London, An Act Respecting Quarantines and Health Laws Be It Enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress …, Foreign Magnetism, To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States, in Congress Assembled, Multiple Essay Items, A Paper by Mr. Home Was Also Read, Containing an Account of Some Experiments, Made in Order to Ascertain the Cause of the Light Seen in the Eyes of Cats and Some Other Animals in the Dark, At Their Second Meeting, on the 15th, a Paper by the Rev. Mr. Vince, on an Unusual Atmospherical Refraction, Was Read, Meteorological Observations, from Fahrenheit's Thermometer, in the Open Air, North Shade, New-London, 1798, Medical Inquiries and Observations, &c. Observations upon the Nature and Cure of the Hydrophobia. By Benjamin Rush, M. D. &c., On the Phlogistic Theory; Communicated in a Seventh Letter from Dr. Priestley to Dr. Mitchill, Section II, Extract of a Letter from a Learned Correspondent in Germany, to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Sept. 15, 1798, Medical Essays.—No. III On the Pestilential Diseases Which, at Different Times, Appeared in the Athenian, Carthaginian, … and …, A Letter to Dr. John MacLean, Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in Princeton College, New-Jersey, by James Woodhouse, M. D. Professor of Chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania, &c.. Review: Review Description of the Genesee Country, Its Rapidly Pregressive Population and Improvements; in a Series …, Facts and Observations Relative to the Nature and Origin of the Pestilential Fever Which Prevailed in This City (Philadelphia) in 1793, 1797, and 1798. By the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. Dobson. 1798. Pp. 52 8vo..

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