Boyle, Robert
,
New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects
,
1660
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very great compreſſion, which the weight
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of the incumbent part of the Atmo
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ſphere is very ſufficient to give thoſe that
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be undermoſt and near the ſurface of the
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Earth. </
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>And if we recall to minde thoſe
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former Experiments, whereby we have
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manifeſted, That Air, much rarefied with
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out heat, may eaſily admit a further ra
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refaction from heat; and that the Air, even
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without being expanded by heat, is capa
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ble of being rarefied to above one hundred
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and fifty times the extent it uſually poſ
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ſeſſes here below; How can it be demon
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ſtrated that the Atmoſphere may not, for
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ought we know, or at leaſt for ought can
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be determin'd by our Statical and Mecha
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nical Experiments, riſe to the height of
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Five and twenty
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German
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Leagues, if not
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of ſome hundred of common Miles? </
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4.
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10.</
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>And this conjecture it ſelf may appear
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very injurious to the height whereunto
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Exhalations may aſcend, if we will allow
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that there was no miſtake in that ſtrange
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Obſervation made at
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Tolous
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in a clear
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Night in
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Auguſt,
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by the diligent Ma
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thematician
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Emanuel Magnan,
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and thus
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Recorded by
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Ricciolus,
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(for I have not at
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hand the Authors own Book)
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Vidit
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(ſays
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he)
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ab hor a undecima poſt meridiem uſ〈qué〉 ad
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