Showing 1 to 3 of 3 items
1. Anon, Scientific Amusements. No. III[1] To Produce Coloured Flames, Which, in the Dark, Are Very Curiously Reflected by the Faces of the Spectators[2] A Metal Which Bursts into Flame when Thrown upon Cold Water[3] Spoons Which Melt in Hot Water[4] To Melt a Piece of Metal in a Nutshell[5] To Make Cinders, or Little Wicker-Baskets, Appear as if They Were Crystallized, Mirror of Literature, 3 (1824), 252.
2. Anon, To Distinguish a Solution of Epsom Salts from a Solution of Oxalic Acid, Mirror of Literature, 3 (1824), 288.
3. Anon, Scientific Amusements. No. V[1] Intoxicating Power of Nitrous Oxide Gas[2] To Cause Water to Boil on the Surface of Ice[3] A Metal which Bursts into Flame when Thrown upon Cold Water[4] To Make Waves of Fire on the Surface of Water[5] To Make Faces and Hands Luminous; so that, in the Dark, they Appear as if on Fire, Mirror of Literature, 3 (1824), 394–95.