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1831.] (29. 31), when the membrane was covered by a plate of glass, is a necessary consequence of the arrangements there made, and tends to show how influential the action of the air or other including medium is in all the phenomena considered in this paper. No incompatible principles are assumed in the explication given of the arrangement of the forces producing the two classes of effects in question; and though by variation of the force of vibration and other circumstances, the one effect can be made, within certain limits, to pass into the other, no anomaly or contradiction is thus involved, nor any result produced, which, as it appears to me, cannot be immediately accounted for by reference to the principles laid down.

Royal Institution, March 21, 1831.

On the Forms and States assumed by Fluids in contact with vibrating Elastic Surfaces.

63. When the upper surface of a plate vibrating so as to produce sound (2. 6) is covered with a layer of water, the water usually presents a beautifully crispated appearance in the neighbourhood of the centres of vibration. This appearance has been observed by Oersted, Wheatstone , Weber , and probably others. It, like the former phenomena which I have endeavoured to explain, has led to false theory, and being either not understood or misunderstood, has proved an obstacle to the progress of acoustical philosophy.

64. On completing the preceding investigation, I was led to believe that the principles assumed would, in conjunction with the cohesion of fluids, account for these phenomena. Experimental investigation fully confirmed this expectation, but the results were obtained at too late a period to be presented to the Royal Society before the close of the Session; and it is only because the philosophy and the subject itself is a part of that received into the Philosophical Transactions in the preceding paper, that I am allowed, by the President and Council, the privilege of attaching the present paper in the form of an Appendix.