Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
Every mineralogist is conversant with some of the facts relative to the subject of this paper. Some of the observations enumerated, are comparatively new, as the attention of naturalists has been only of late more particularly directed towards these facts. Others, which I have had an opportunity of collecting myself, I trust will not be considered uninteresting, as they tend materially to rectify certain ideas connected with the determination of the mineralogical species, the most important branch of natural-historical research.
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page 81 note * Traité de Minéralogie, p. 158.
page 82 note * Traité, 2de edit. t. iii. p. 503.
page 83 note * Philosophical Transactions for 1826, p. 55.
page 88 note * Treatise on Mineralogy, Transl. vol. i. p. 439.
page 93 note * Memoirs of the Wernerian Natural History Society, vol. iv. p. 508.
page 95 note * Leonhard's Handbuch der Oryktognosie, 2d edit. p. 293.
page 98 note * Cristallographie, vol. iii. p. 400.
page 98 note † Edinburgh Journal of Science, vol. iv. p, 41.
page 104 note * Beudant's Mineralogy, p. 333. & 363.
page 105 note * Edinburgh Journal of Science, vol. i. p. 380.
page 112 note * Denkschriften der Akademie der Wissenschuften zu München für 1818 und 1819.