
An accompt of some books. I. Plantarum umbelliferarum distributio nova per tabulas cognationis & affinitatis ex libro natura observata & detecta; A. Rob. Morison Med. & Prof. Botan. Regio, &c. Oxonii è theatro sheldoxiano, 1672. To be sold by John Martyn at the Bell in St. Pauls Church-yard - II. Aoimoati'a five Pestis nuperæ Londini grassantis narratio historica. Auth. Nathan. Hodges M. D. &c. - III. A philosophical essay, declaring the probable causes of stones in the …
Author(s) -
John R. C. Martyn
Publication year - 1672
Publication title -
philosophical transactions of the royal society of london
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2053-9223
pISSN - 0261-0523
DOI - 10.1098/rstl.1672.0009
Subject(s) - majesty , theology , art , humanities , art history , philosophy , history , archaeology
An accompt of some books. I. Plantarum umbelliferarum distributio nova per tabulas cognationis & affinitatis ex libro natura observata & detecta; A. Rob. Morison Med. & Prof. Botan. Regio, &c. Oxonii è theatro sheldoxiano, 1672. To be sold by John Martyn at the Bell in St. Pauls Church-yard - II. Aoimoati'a five Pestis nuperæ Londini grassantis narratio historica. Auth. Nathan. Hodges M. D. &c. - III. A philosophical essay, declaring the probable causes of stones in the greater world, in order to find out the causes and cure of the stone in the kidneys and bladder of men: by D. Thomas Sherley, physician in ordinary to his Majesty, Londini in 80. IV. Caroli claromontii M. D. &c. de aere, solo, & aquis angliæ; deque morbis anglorum vernaculis dissertatio: Nec non observationes medicæ cambro-britannicæ. Londini impensis Joh. Martyn. sub signo Campana in Cæmeterio D. Pauli, 1672. in 120. This Excellent Botanist, having with indefatigable industry and uncommon sagacity observed and discovered out of the Book of Nature a general and genuine Method, reducing all Vegetables to certain infallible Classes or Heads, by Tables Affinity or Cognation; hath in this Book given an Essay of the same, by reducing that Family of Plants, commonly called Umbells, to their subaltern kinds, from the different Shape and Form of their Sceds.