275
Ian. the 23. 1678/9
S
r. Ioseph Willamson tooke the chair. -
The minutes of the 16 in
stant being Read gaue occa
sion to
occa
sion to Inquire further of S
r. Ionas more concerning m
r. -
Flam
steads obseruations. To w
ch. he answered that a quantity of them
were ready for the Pre
sse but the Bookesellers were vnwilling to
vndertake the Printing of them. wherevpon m
r. Hooke was Desi
red to speak w
th. m
r. martin concerning it.
S
r. Ionas more also gaue a further account that m
r Flam
stead
and m
r. Hally had ^ /newly/ made some obseruations In order to find
out the Parallax of mars now acronicall and Retrograde
and that he had found from examining the obseruations by -
calculation, that the Parallax of the sun could not be
more the 30" nor le
sse the 10". which he conceiud was much
neerer than any had hitherto certainly obserued it.
vpon the mentioning the turning copper into gold by a liquor
m
r. Pouey Related that S
r. Thomas Williams had told him that he
had cutt a copper farthing in two and throwing it into the liquor
the same was di
ssolued by it & that vpon euaporating
& capelling the Liquor And coppelling the remainder he had found the
same weight of the farthing in good gold. - He further added
that m
r. slingsby suppo
sed it to ari
se from the coppers precipitating
the gold that had been formerly taken vp by
the liquor.
The President
. . . related that his mai
ty. had lately Receiud
a Letter from Vienna wherein were inclosed some curiositys concer
ning the way of making gold. conueyed by m
r. Schroter.
/
vpon an occa
sionall Di
scour
se about teeth m
r. Henshaw mentiond
a Relation he had met w
th. of ^ /artificially/ setting in new teeth in the place
of old ones plucked out, adding w
thall that it was obserued that
if the new ones were presently in
serted soe soon as the old ones
were drawn out the iaw bone and gumms would coalle
sce &
inclo
se the new planted tooth as firmely almost as if it
were the naturall. and added that one mons
r. du pont. vpon -
drawing out a wrong tooth & finding his mi
stake had pre
sently
clapd it in againe into its place and clo
sed the Gum which there
vpon remained as fixed as if it had not been drawn.
He gaue also further a Relation of a young Lady who
se teeth being
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_277 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters