APA (7th ed.) Citation

Hamilton, H. (1773). A geometrical treatise of the conic sections: In which the properties of the sections are derived from the nature of the cone, in an easy manner, and by a new method. By Hugh Hamilton, A. M. Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, and of the Royal Society, London, Now Dean of Armagh. Translated from the Latin original into English. printed for J. Nourse, in the Strand, Bookseller to His Majesty.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Hamilton, Hugh. A Geometrical Treatise of the Conic Sections: In Which the Properties of the Sections Are Derived from the Nature of the Cone, in an Easy Manner, and by a New Method. By Hugh Hamilton, A. M. Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, and of the Royal Society, London, Now Dean of Armagh. Translated from the Latin Original into English. London: printed for J. Nourse, in the Strand, Bookseller to His Majesty, 1773.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Hamilton, Hugh. A Geometrical Treatise of the Conic Sections: In Which the Properties of the Sections Are Derived from the Nature of the Cone, in an Easy Manner, and by a New Method. By Hugh Hamilton, A. M. Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, and of the Royal Society, London, Now Dean of Armagh. Translated from the Latin Original into English. printed for J. Nourse, in the Strand, Bookseller to His Majesty, 1773.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.