APA (7th ed.) Citation

Newton, T. d. 1. (1794). A short treatise on the conic sections: In which the three curves are derived from a general description on a plane, and the most useful properties of each are deduced from a common principle. By the Rev. T. Newton, M.A. fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge. printed by John Archdeacon and John Burges, printers to the University; and sold by J. & J. Merrill, and W.H. Lunn, Cambridge; T. Cadell, and F. Wingrave, in the Strand, G. & T. Wilkie, Pater Noster Row, B. & J. White, Fleet Street, and J. Deighton, Holborn, London.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Newton, Thomas d. 1843. A Short Treatise on the Conic Sections: In Which the Three Curves Are Derived from a General Description on a Plane, and the Most Useful Properties of Each Are Deduced from a Common Principle. By the Rev. T. Newton, M.A. Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge. Cambridge: printed by John Archdeacon and John Burges, printers to the University; and sold by J. & J. Merrill, and W.H. Lunn, Cambridge; T. Cadell, and F. Wingrave, in the Strand, G. & T. Wilkie, Pater Noster Row, B. & J. White, Fleet Street, and J. Deighton, Holborn, London, 1794.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Newton, Thomas d. 1843. A Short Treatise on the Conic Sections: In Which the Three Curves Are Derived from a General Description on a Plane, and the Most Useful Properties of Each Are Deduced from a Common Principle. By the Rev. T. Newton, M.A. Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge. printed by John Archdeacon and John Burges, printers to the University; and sold by J. & J. Merrill, and W.H. Lunn, Cambridge; T. Cadell, and F. Wingrave, in the Strand, G. & T. Wilkie, Pater Noster Row, B. & J. White, Fleet Street, and J. Deighton, Holborn, London, 1794.

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