368
whereby it manife
stly appeard that tho
se liquors put
together tooke vp much le
sse Room than when they were
separated.
D
r. Croon was of Opinion
was of Opinion that the air
or water impregnated w
th Salts become only heavyer vpon
the account that they were kept floting together and a
compound of water w
th. a heauier body as salt, the com
pound taking vp as much Room as the same bodys did
apart, And there noe certaine obseruation yet to the con
trary of
tht. in tho
se bodys; the compound body not weighing
heauier than either of the compounding bodys.
m
r. Hooke alledged there were some In
stances whereby it appe[ar]
that bodys did really penetrate into the texture of each other
and did both together take vp Le
se Room than they did before
that were mixt and soe made abody that was not only as
heauy as it ought to be supposing tho
se bodys mixt together but
a body heauier than either of them, & consequently there mu
st
be a penetration of the texture or Dimen
sions of each
other. He alledged al
so that there was the like penetrati
on in the oyle of vitrioll & water & al
so in Diuers other
bodys, which he could make Euident.
It was Desired that an Exp
t. of this kind might be shewn
at the next meeting. /
mo
r. Pappin produced his windgun charged w
th. air which
he De
signed by a pipe fa
stned to it to Di
scharge into
a large gla
sse filled w
th. water & inuerted into a bucket
of water. but vpon making the Exp
t. the pipe being too
much pre
ssed by the mouth of the Gla
sse was crack &
soe much of
the air went not into the said Gla
sse & soe the
certainety of the Exp
t. could not be now Examined but de
sired
to be shewn the next Day.
But he chargd it againe and shot a plug through an
inch boord at yards Di
stance.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_370 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters