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nometer, that, as no clieniical action took place, so no electric cur- rent was produced ; yet the apparatus thus arranged could transmit a very feeble thermo-electric current, excited by slightly raising the temperature of the wires at either of their points of contact. Hence, the inference may be drawn, that the contact of iron and platinum is of itself productive of no electromotive force. On the other hand, the author shows, that the interposition in the circuit of the smallest quantity of an electrolyte, which acts chemically on either of the metals, the arrangement remaining in all other respects the same, is imme- diately attended with the circulation of an electrical current far more powerful than the thermo-electric current above-mentioned. A great number of combinations of other metals were successively tried in various ways, and they uniformly gave the same results as that of iron and platina. Similar experiments were then made with various metallic compounds, and also with other chemical agents; and in all cases the same general fact was observed ; namely, that when no chemical action took place, no electrical current was excited ; thus furnishing, in the opinion of the author, unanswerable arguments against the truth of the theory of contact. The only way in which it is possible to explain these phenomena on that theory, would be by assuming, that the same law of compensation as to electro-motive power is observed by the sulphuret of potassium, and the other fluids of corresponding properties, as obtains in the case of the metals, al- though that law does not apply to the generality of chemical agents ; and in like manner, different assumptions must be made in order to suit the result in each particular combination, and this without any definite relation to the chemical character of the substances them- selves ; assumptions, which no ingenuity could ever render consistent with one another. At the conclusion of the paper, the author de- scribes some remarkable alternations in the phenomena which occur, when pieces of copper and silver, or two pieces of copper, or two of silver, form a circle with the yellow sulphuretted solution; and which lead to the same conclusion as the former experiments. If the metals be copper and silver, the copper is at first positive, and the silver remains untarnished ; in a short time the action ceases, and the silver becomes positive, at the same time combining with sulphur, and becoming coated with sulphuret of silver ; in the course of a few minutes, the copper again becomes positive ; and thus the action changes from one side to the other in succession, and is ac- companied by a corresponding alternation of the electric current.

February 20, 1840.

The MARQUIS of NORTHAMPTON, President, in the Chair.

John Caldecott, Esq., was balloted for, and duly elected into the Society,