The Internet Archive has a preservation copy of this work in our general collections.
II.—On Paracyanogen and the Paracyanic Acid
1839
Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
The history of the newer sciences presents many instructive examples of the progress of the human mind in developing the germs of natural knowledge, and building on a single observation entire departments of science. Few pursuits indeed are more interesting, even to the student of immaterial nature, than in the perusal of such a history to trace the footsteps of the several investigators, and to mark how far, and by what means,—whether by new methods or by greater patience of research,—each
doi:10.1017/s008045680002144x
fatcat:5ip3vxwk7ndrtjzfh7xsonl7uu