[1991] De Laet, Novus Orbis, 1633. 215.—René de Laudonnière, Histoire notable de la Floride. 1586.
[1992] Pharm. Journ. v. (1876) 1023.
[1993] Colonial Papers, vol. i. No. 23 (MS. in the Record Office, London).
[1994] Colonial Papers, vol. ii. No. 4.
[1995] Opera medico-chymica, Francofurti, 1682, p. 83.
[1996] Flückiger, Documente (quoted at p. 404, note 7) 70.
[1997] Phil. Trans. R. Soc. of London, viii. (1809) 243.
[1998] The sassafras logs met with in English trade often include a considerable portion of trunk-wood, which, as well as the bark that covers it, is inert, and should be sawn off and rejected before the wood is rasped.
[1999] According to information obtained by Procter, 11 bushels of chips (the charge of a still) yields from 1 to 5 lb. of oil, the amount varying with the quality of the root and the proportion of bark it may contain.—Procter, Essay on Sassafras in the Proceedings of the American Pharm. Association, 1866. 217.
[2000] Poggendorff’s Annalen, clviii. (1876) 249, with figures of the crystals.