Abstract
VERY soon after the invention of the microscope, the value of that instrument in investigating the phenomena of crystallization began to be recognized.
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References
Bull. Géol. Soc. Paris, 2me sér., vol. viii. pp 610–13, 1851; Moigno, Cosmos, ii, 1853, pp. 454–56; Comt. rend., xxxvi., 1853, pp. 493–95.
Wien. Sitz. Ber xxxix., 1860, pp. 611–22; Erdmann, Journ. Prakt. Chem., lxxxi. Pp. 356–62; Wien. Geol. Verhandl., xii. pp. 212–13, &c.; Frankenheim, Pogg. Ann., cxiii 1861. Compare Fr. Scharff, Pagg. Ann. cix., 1860, pp. 529–38; Neues Jahrb. für Mim., &c, 1876, p. 24; and W. Sauber, Liebig Ann., cxxiv., 1862, pp. 78–82; also W. Ostwald, "Lehrbuch d. Allg. Chem.," 1885, Bd. i. p. 738; and O. Lehmann, "Molekular Physik.," 1888, Bd. i. p. 312.
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The Rejuvenescence of Crystals1. Nature 44, 83–86 (1891). https://doi.org/10.1038/044083c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/044083c0