. O. Atwater and F. G. Benedict: A respiration calorimeter with
appliances for the direct determination of oxygen. Carnegie Institution
of Washington Publication No. 42, p. 56. (1905.)
[21] W. O. Atwater and F. G. Benedict: A respiration calorimeter with
appliances for the direct determination of oxygen. Carnegie Institution
of Washington Publication No. 42, p. 20. (1905.)
[22] Thorne M. Carpenter and Francis G. Benedict: Mercurial poisoning of
men in a respiration chamber. American Journal of Physiology, vol. 24,
p. 187. (1909.)
[23] Francis G. Benedict: A method of calibrating gas-meters. Physical
Review, vol. 22, p. 294. (1906.)
[24] Atwater and Benedict: _Loc. cit._, p. 38.
[25] Atwater and Benedict: Carnegie Institution of Washington
Publication No. 42, p. 77.
[26] In the use of logarithms space is saved by not employing
characteristics.
[27] Francis G. Benedict: An apparatus for studying the respiratory
exchange. American Journal of Physiology, vol. 24, p. 368. (1909.)
[28] Squibb: Journal of American Chemical Society, vol. 19, p. 111.
(1897.)
[29] Squibb: Ephemeris, 1884 to 1885, part 2, pp. 562-577.
[30] Morley: Journal of American Chemical Society, vol. 26, p. 1185.
(1904.)
[31] W. P. Lombard: A method of recording changes in body-weight which
occur within short intervals of time. The Journal of the American
Medical Association, vol. 47, p. 1790. (1906.)
[32] Atwater and Benedict: _Loc. cit._, p. 21.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Respiration Calorimeters for Studying
the Respiratory Exchange and Energy Transformations of Man, by Francis Gano Benedict and Thorne M. Carpenter
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