Page:Philosophical Transactions - Volume 013.djvu/160

 Num. 147.

1 LUMBRICUS TERES, or some Anatomical Observations on the Round Worm bred in human bodies. By Edward Tyson M. D. Col. Med. Lond. nec non Reg. Societ.Soc. 2, A remarkable relation of a Man bitten with a mad Dog, and dying of the Disease called Hydrophobia, sent in a Letter to the Royal Society by the learned Martin Lister Esquire, Dated from York March 26. 1683. 3. A Continuation of a discourse about Vision, with an Examination of some late objections against it. By William Briggs M.D. and Fellow of the Colledge of Physitians, 4. An account of the Dissection of a Bitch, whose Cornua Uteri being fill'd with the bones and flesh of a former conception, had after a second conception, the Ova affix't to several parts of the Abdomen. By an ingenious Physitian, a fellow of the Royal Society. 5. The Anatomy of a Monstrous Pig communicated to the Royal Society. By an ingenious Student in Physick, in the University of Oxford. An account of two Books, 1. FLETA MINOR, the Laws of Art and Nature, in knowing, judging, assaying, fining, refining, and inlarging the bodies of confined Metalls, in two parts, the First containing Assays of Lazarus Erckern chief Prover or Assay-Master general of the Empire of Germany, in Five Books, originally written by Him in the Teutonick languages and now translated into English. The Second containing Essays on Metallick words, as a Dictionary to the Work. By Sr. John Pettus of Suffolk Knight, of the Society for the Mines Royal. London 1683, in Fol.