Report of the Annual Meeting, 5. numberJ. Murray., 1836 |
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Page 211
... stomach merely indirectly . A wide range of appearances depends on this single cause . The blood may leave the vessels of the stomach , and its lining membrane may be nearly or quite white P 2 [ 211 ] On the Effects of Acrid Poisons By ...
... stomach merely indirectly . A wide range of appearances depends on this single cause . The blood may leave the vessels of the stomach , and its lining membrane may be nearly or quite white P 2 [ 211 ] On the Effects of Acrid Poisons By ...
Page 212
... stomach is also very liable to be modified by its contents , which act on the blood in its vessels by transudation after death . This and some other circumstances to be hereafter mentioned have probably been the means of turning aside ...
... stomach is also very liable to be modified by its contents , which act on the blood in its vessels by transudation after death . This and some other circumstances to be hereafter mentioned have probably been the means of turning aside ...
Page 213
... stomach , which not merely alter the colour of the fluids in the vessels , as I have before stated , but materially affect the form and texture of the membrane with which they are in contact . Extreme cases of this kind have long since ...
... stomach , which not merely alter the colour of the fluids in the vessels , as I have before stated , but materially affect the form and texture of the membrane with which they are in contact . Extreme cases of this kind have long since ...
Page 214
... stomach to which I am alluding bear a very close resemblance to the early attempts at organization which we may perceive in the recent false membranes upon the surface of inflamed serous membranes before they have lost the character of ...
... stomach to which I am alluding bear a very close resemblance to the early attempts at organization which we may perceive in the recent false membranes upon the surface of inflamed serous membranes before they have lost the character of ...
Page 215
... stomach . It may be compared to the di- gesting stomach of the ruminants . The resemblance is the most manifest when the animal has been recently killed whilst the process of digestion was going forward . This part of the stomach is ...
... stomach . It may be compared to the di- gesting stomach of the ruminants . The resemblance is the most manifest when the animal has been recently killed whilst the process of digestion was going forward . This part of the stomach is ...
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acid æther angle animal appears applied arteries ascertained Association axis ball Ballina beam Belmullet blood body branches calculated Cambridge cause centre Cetacea chord College colour Committee contained curve David Brewster deduced deflection determine disease distance Dublin earth easterly variation Edinburgh effect elastic electricity été experiments feet fluid force formulæ Fourier Hansteen heat horizontal hydrometer impact inches increase influence intensity intestines Ireland iron James John l'Académie latitude Limerick London mathematical mean temperature mémoire ment meridian Merrion Square metallic mucous membrane nearly needle observations obtained phænomena poison poles potash present produced Professor pyroxylic quantity Rathdrum Report Robert side solid angle solution sound Square sternum stomach Street sulphuric acid surface systole Taxodium Temp theory thermometer tion Trinity College tube typhus velocity ventricles vessels vibrations weight William wire zinc
Popular passages
Page v - To give a stronger impulse and a more systematic direction to scientific inquiry, — to promote the intercourse of those who cultivate Science in different parts of the British Empire, with one another, and with foreign philosophers, — to obtain a more general attention to the objects of Science, and a removal of any disadvantages of a public kind which impede its progress.
Page 48 - Id., tom. ii. de ces propositions un théorème fort élégant qui se trouve aujourd'hui dans plusieurs ouvrages élémentaires, et qui peut s'énoncer ainsi : un cône droit étant coupé par un plan, on peut en général concevoir deux sphères qui, touchant le cône dans son intérieur, touchent aussi le plan sécant : alors les deux points de contact du plan et des sphères sont les foyers de la section conique. M. Dandelin a donné une nouvelle extension à ce théorème dans un mémoire sur...
Page vi - The General Committee shall appoint, at each Meeting, Committees, consisting severally of the Members most conversant with the several branches of Science, to advise together for the advancement thereof. The...
Page vi - Committee two years in advance ; and the arrangements for it shall be entrusted to the Officers of the Association. General Committee. The General Committee shall sit during the week of the Meeting, or longer, to transact the business of the Association. It shall consist of the following persons : — CLASS...
Page 1 - His ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF SUSSEX, President of the Royal Society, having desired that no unnecessary delay should take place in the publication of the above mentioned Treatises, they will appear at short intervals, as they are ready for publication.
Page vii - PAPERS AND COMMUNICATIONS. The Author of any paper or communication shall be at liberty to reserve his right of property therein.
Page 52 - Sur la question: Déterminer le moyen le plus avantageux d'élever l'eau à des hauteurs de plus de cent mètres, par le moyen de l'air atmosphérique; par M.
Page 53 - Plateau publiait une dissertation sur quelques propriétés des impressions produites par la lumière sur l'organe de la vue...
Page xlvi - ... members the opinions, views, and discoveries of each other ; in calling upon eminent men to prepare reports upon the existing state of knowledge in the principal departments of science ; and in publishing only abstracts or notices of all those other contributions which it has not as a body called for ; in short, in attempting to induce men of science to •work more together than they do elsewhere, to establish a system of more Strict co.operation between the labourers in one common field, and...
Page 250 - Ephraim M'Dowell, MD, MRIA, Censor of the Royal College of Surgeons, one of the Surgeons to the House of Industry. Bruce Joy, MD, Fellow of the College of Physicians. John Nolan, MD, Demonstrator of Anatomy in the University of Dublin. Erory Kennedy, MD, Master of the Lying-in Hospital.