APA (7th ed.) Citation

Martin, B. (1750). Uraniscopium magnum, or The nature, construction, and use of the grand uraniscope: Being a new construction of an equatorial telescope, which, by clock-work, and a planetary pendulum, becomes an automaton, and renders all the heavenly bodies stationary to the view. By B. Martin. Printed for the author, and sold at his Shop in Fleet-Street, No. 171.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Martin, Benjamin. Uraniscopium Magnum, or The Nature, Construction, and Use of the Grand Uraniscope: Being a New Construction of an Equatorial Telescope, Which, by Clock-work, and a Planetary Pendulum, Becomes an Automaton, and Renders All the Heavenly Bodies Stationary to the View. By B. Martin. London: Printed for the author, and sold at his Shop in Fleet-Street, No. 171, 1750.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Martin, Benjamin. Uraniscopium Magnum, or The Nature, Construction, and Use of the Grand Uraniscope: Being a New Construction of an Equatorial Telescope, Which, by Clock-work, and a Planetary Pendulum, Becomes an Automaton, and Renders All the Heavenly Bodies Stationary to the View. By B. Martin. Printed for the author, and sold at his Shop in Fleet-Street, No. 171, 1750.

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