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Stukeley's account on the Royal Society's Web site joins notes from Newton's 17th-century scientific rival Robert Hooke
-- documents that were lost for several hundred years before their recent discovery in a house in England. Users can flip through both documents using the same page-turning software used to browse Leonardo's sketches and Jane Austen's early work on the British Library's site. The Royal Society, an academy of scientists founded in 1660 to discuss and spread scientific knowledge, is marking its 350th anniversary this year by putting more than 60 of its most important scientific papers online. ___ On the Net:
[Associated
Press;
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