Robinson, N. 1. (1734). A compleat treatise of the gravel and stone: Wherein all their symptoms, causes, and cures, are mechanically accounted for. With arguments in Defence of the Possibility of Dissolving the stone in the bladder: All drawn from reason, experiments, and anatomical observations. To which is added, A dissertation upon the Operation of Nephrotomy; or the Possibility of cutting into the Kidney, for the Extraction of the Stone, when it is too large to pass; too hard to be dissolved, and occasions Pains above the Strength of human Nature. By Nicholas Robinson, M.D. And a Member of the College of Physicians, London (The third edition, with additions.). printed for A. Bettesworth and C. Hitch, at the Red Lion in Pater-Noster-Row, and J. Clarke at the Bible, under the Royal Exchange.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationRobinson, Nicholas 1697?-1775. A Compleat Treatise of the Gravel and Stone: Wherein All Their Symptoms, Causes, and Cures, Are Mechanically Accounted for. With Arguments in Defence of the Possibility of Dissolving the Stone in the Bladder: All Drawn from Reason, Experiments, and Anatomical Observations. To Which Is Added, A Dissertation upon the Operation of Nephrotomy; or the Possibility of Cutting into the Kidney, for the Extraction of the Stone, When It Is Too Large to Pass; Too Hard to Be Dissolved, and Occasions Pains Above the Strength of Human Nature. By Nicholas Robinson, M.D. And a Member of the College of Physicians, London. The third edition, with additions. London: printed for A. Bettesworth and C. Hitch, at the Red Lion in Pater-Noster-Row, and J. Clarke at the Bible, under the Royal Exchange, 1734.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationRobinson, Nicholas 1697?-1775. A Compleat Treatise of the Gravel and Stone: Wherein All Their Symptoms, Causes, and Cures, Are Mechanically Accounted for. With Arguments in Defence of the Possibility of Dissolving the Stone in the Bladder: All Drawn from Reason, Experiments, and Anatomical Observations. To Which Is Added, A Dissertation upon the Operation of Nephrotomy; or the Possibility of Cutting into the Kidney, for the Extraction of the Stone, When It Is Too Large to Pass; Too Hard to Be Dissolved, and Occasions Pains Above the Strength of Human Nature. By Nicholas Robinson, M.D. And a Member of the College of Physicians, London. The third edition, with additions. printed for A. Bettesworth and C. Hitch, at the Red Lion in Pater-Noster-Row, and J. Clarke at the Bible, under the Royal Exchange, 1734.