Annals of Philosophy; or, Magazine of Chemistry, Mineralology, Mechanics, Natural History, Agriculture and the Arts[1] was a learned journal founded in 1813 by the Scottish chemist Thomas Thomson.
[2] Contributors included John George Children,[3] Edward Daniel Clarke,[4] Philip Crampton,[5][6] Alexander Crichton,[7] James Cumming,[8] John Herapath,[9] William George Horner,[10] Thomas Dick Lauder,[11] John Miers,[12] Matthew Paul Moyle,[13] Robert Porrett,[14] James Thomson,[15] and Charles Wheatstone.
The journal was bought by Richard Taylor in 1827, and closed down for the benefit of the Philosophical Magazine.
Summaries followed: first of the proceedings of learned bodies (Royal Society, Linnean, French Institute -if available: the Napoleonic Wars made communications with the continent difficult at first,[18] etc.
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