Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author Contributions to the History of Explosive Agents,1869,159,,489-516,Abel Experimental Researches on the Strength of Pillars of Cast Iron and Other Materials,1840,130,,385-456,Eaton Hodgkinson On a New Principle of Constructing Ships in the Mercantile Navy,1820,110,,133-143,Seppings On the Phaenomena of Volcanoes,1828,118,,241-250,Davy Some Account of a New Volcano in the Mediterranean,1832,122,,237-249,Davy Some Remarks in Reply to Dr. Daubeny's Note on the Air Disengaged from the Sea Over the Site of the Recent Volcano in the Mediterranean,1834,124,,551-554,Davy On the Atmospheric Tides and Meteorology of Dukhun (Deccan) East Indies,1835,125,,161-220,Sykes An Account of the Great Earthquake Experienced in Chile on the 20th of February 1835; With a Map,1836,126,,21-26,Caldcleugh Account of Experiments on Iron-Built Ships Instituted for the Purpose of Discovering a Correction for the Deviation of the Compass Produced by the Iron of the Ships,1839,129,,167-213,Airy An Experimental Inquiry into the Strength of Wrought-Iron Plates and Their Riveted Joints as Applied to Ship-Building and Vessels Exposed to Severe Strains,1850,140,,677-725,Fairbairn On the Structure of Lavas Which Have Consolidated on Steep Slopes; With Remarks on the Mode of Origin of Mount Etna and on the Theory of "Craters of Elevation",1858,148,,703-904,Lyell On the Resistance of Glass Globes and Cylinders to Collapse from External Pressure; and on the Tensile and Compressive Strength of Various Kinds of Glass,1859,149,,213-247,Fairbairn First Analysis of One Hundred and Seventy-Seven Magnetic Storms Registered by the Magnetic Instruments in the Royal Observatory Greenwich from 1841 to 1857,1863,153,,617-648,Airy Contributions to the History of Explosive Agents. Second Memoir,1874,164,,337-395,Abel Magnetical Observations in the Britannia and Conway Tubular Iron Bridges,1873,163,,331-339,Airy On the Unequal Distribution of Weight and Support in Ships and Its Effects in Still Water in Waves and in Exceptional Positions on Shore,1871,161,,413-465,Reed Researches on Explosives. Fired Gunpowder,1875,165,,49-155,Abel Account of Experiments Made on the Strength of Materials,1818,108,,118-136,Rennie An Account of the Effect of Mercurial Vapours on the Crew of His Majesty's Ship Triumph in the Year 1810,1823,113,,402-408,Burnett On the Adaptation of Different Modes of Illuminating Lighthouses; As Depending on Their Situations and the Object Contemplated in Their Erection,1837,127,,211-225,Barlow On the Errors in the Course of Vessels Occasioned by Local Attraction; With Some Remarks on the Recent Loss of His Majesty's Ship Thetis,1831,121,,215-221,Barlow On the Fire-Damp of Coal Mines and on Methods of Lighting the Mines So as to Prevent Its Explosion,1816,106,,1-22,Davy An Account of an Invention for Giving Light in Explosive Mixtures of Fire-Damp in Coal Mines by Consuming the Fire-Damp,1816,106,,23-24,Davy On the illumination of light-houses,1830,120,,383-398,Drummond Proposals for the Recovery of People Apparently Drowned,1776,66,,412-425,Hunter An Account of a Very Extraordinary Effect of Lightning on a Bullock at Swanborow in the Parish of Iford Near Lewes in Sussex. In Sundry Letters from Mr. James Lambert Landscape-Painter at Lewes; And One from William Green Esquire at Lewes to Willi,1776,66,,463-503,Lambert Experiments and Observations in Electricity,1777,67,,85-143,Henly Sundry Papers Relative to an Accident from Lightning at Purfleet May 15 1777,1778,68,,232-317,Watson An Account of the Earthquake Which Was Felt at Manchester and Other Places on the 14th Day of September 1777,1778,68,,221-231,Henry The Force of Fired Gun-Powder and the Initial Velocities of Cannon Balls Determined by Experiments; From Which is Also Deduced the Relation of the Initial Velocity to the Weight of the Shot and the Quantity of Powder,1778,68,,50-85,Hutton New Experiments upon Gun-Powder with Occasional Observations and Practical Inferences; To Which are Added an Account of a New Method of Determining the Velocities of All Kinds of Military Projectiles and the Description of a Very Accurate Eprouvette fo,1781,71,,229-328,Thompson Proceedings Relative to the Accident by Lightning at Heckingham,1782,72,,355-378,Nairne An Attempt to Make a Thermometer for Measuring the Higher Degrees of Heat from a Red Heat up to the Strongest That Vessels Made of Clay can Support,1782,72,,305-326,Wedgwood An Account of the Earthquakes Which Happened in Italy from February to May 1783. By Sir William Hamilton Knight of the Bath F. R. S.; in a Letter to Sir Joseph Banks Bart. P. R. S,1783,73,,169-208,Hamilton An Attempt to Compare and Connect the Thermometer for Strong Fire Described in Vol. LXXII. of the Philosophical Transactions with the Common Mercurial Ones,1784,74,,358-384,Wedgwood Observations on Some Causes of the Excess of the Mortality of Males above That of Females,1786,76,,349-364,Price Of the Methods of Manifesting the Presence and Ascertaining the Quality of Small Quantities of Natural or Artificial Electricity,1788,78,,1-22,Cavallo Experiments and Observations on Electricity. By Mr. William Nicholson; Communicated by Sir Joseph Banks Bart. P. R. S,1789,79,,265-288,Banks An Account of the Remarkable Effects of a Shipwreck on the Mariners; With Experiments and Observations on the Influence of Immersion in Fresh and Salt Water Hot and Cold on the Powers of the Living Body,1792,82,,199-224,Currie Observations on a Current That Often Prevails to the Westward of Scilly; Endangering the Safety of Ships That Approach the British Channel,1793,83,,182-200,Rennell An Account of a Method of Measuring the Comparative Intensities of the Light Emitted by Luminous Bodies,1794,84,,67-106,Thompson An Account of the Late Eruption of Mount Vesuvius. In a Letter from the Right Honourable Sir William Hamilton K. B. F. R. S. to Sir Joseph Banks Bart. P. R. S,1795,85,,73-116,Hamilton Experiments to Determine the Force of Fired Gunpowder,1797,87,,222-292, A Disquisition on the Stability of Ships,1798,88,,vi-310,Atwood On the Decomposition of the Acid of Borax or Sedative Salt. By Lawrence de Crell M. D. F. R. S. Lond. and Edinb. and M. R. I. A. Translated from the German,1799,89,,56-73,de Crell Experiments on the Solar and on the Terrestrial Rays that Occasion Heat; With a Comparative View of the Laws to Which Light and Heat or Rather the Rays Which Occasion Them are Subject in Order to Determine Whether They are the Same or Different. Part,1800,90,,293-326,Herschel On a New Fulminating Mercury,1800,90,,204-238,Howard An account of persons who could not distinguish colours. By Mr. Joseph Huddart in a letter to the Rev. Joseph Priestley,1777,67,0,260-265,Huddart