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XII. On the conversion of animal muscle into a substance much resembling spermaceti
Publication year - 1794
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.1794.0015
Subject(s) - yard , curiosity , pike , environmental ethics , fish <actinopterygii> , philosophy , psychology , biology , neuroscience , fishery , physics , quantum mechanics
It is a matter of great curiosity to observe, after any fact has been well ascertained, how many things might have led to a much earlier investigation; particularly so, had the writings of many great men been equally examined, with those obser­vations which, though apparently very trifling, have often ex­cited general attention. The conversion of animal muscle into a fatty matter gives us a very striking example. The celebrated Sir Thomas Brown, in his very learned and curious treatise intituledHydriotaphia , assures us, that he has found a soap-like substance in an hydropical body. His words are as follows, viz. “In an hydropical body, ten years buried in “a church-yard, we met with a fat concretion, where the nitre “of the earth, and the salt and lixivoius liquor of the body, “had coagulated large lumps of fat into the consistence of “the hardest Castile soap; whereof part remaineth with us.ˮ

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