–. 1973. Zemnoe ekho solnechnykh bur’ (“The Terrestrial Echo of Solar Storms”). Moscow: Mysl’ (in Russian).
–. 1995. Kosmicheskiy pul’s zhizni: Zemlia v obiatiyakh Solntsa. Geliotaraksiya (“Cos-mic Pulse of Life: The Earth in the Embrace of the Sun”). Moscow: Mysl’ (in Russian). Written in 1931, published in abridged form in 1973 as “The Terrestrial Echo of Solar Storms.”
Clemow, Frank Gerard. 19°3. The Geography of Disease, 3 vols. Cambridge: University Press.
Clouston, Thomas Smith. 1892. Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases. London: J. & A. Churchill. Page 647 on influenza.
–. 1893. “Eightieth Annual Report of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum for the Insane, 1892.” Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, new ser., 18(12): 831-32.
Creighton, Charles. 1894. “Influenza and Epidemic Agues.” In: Creighton, A History of Epidemics in Britain (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), vol. 2, pp. 300-433.
Crosby, Oscar T. and Louis Bell. 1892. The Electric Railway in Theory and Practice. New York: W. J. Johnston.
Dana, Charles Loomis. 1889. “Electrical Injuries.” Medical Record 36(18): 477-78.
–. 1890. “The Present Epidemic of Influenza.” Journal of the American Medical Association 14(12): 426-27.
Davenport, Fred M. 1961. “Pathogenesis of Influenza.” Bacteriological Reviews 25(3): 294-300.
D’Hercourt, Gillebert. 1867. Plan d’études simultanées de Nosologie et de Météorologie, ayant pour but de rechercher le rôle des agents cosmiques dans le production des maladies, chez l’homme et chez les animaux. Montpellier: Boehm et fils.
Dimmock, Nigel J. and Sandy B. Primrose. 1994. Introduction to Modern Virology, 4th ed. Oxford: Blackwell Science.
Dixey, Frederick Augustus. 1892. Epidemic Influenza. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Dominion Bureau of Statistics. 1958. Influenza in Canada: Some Statistics on its Characteristics and Trends. Ottawa: Queen’s Printer.
DuBoff, Richard B. 1979. Electric Power in American Manufacturing, 1889–1958. New York: Arno Press.
Dunsheath, Percy. 1962. A History of Electrical Power Engineering. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Eddy, John A. 1976. “The Maunder Minimum.” Science 192: 1189-12°2.
–. 1983. “The Maunder Minimum: A Reappraisal.” Solar Physics 89: 195-2°7.
Edison, Thomas Alva. 1891. “Vital Energy and Electricity.” Scientific American 65(23): 356.
Edström, Gunnar O. 1935. “Studies in National and Artificial Atmospheric Electric Ions.” Acta Medica Scandinavica. Supplementum 61: 1-83.
Electrical Review. 1889. “Proceedings of the Ninth Convention of the National Electric Light Association.” March 2, pp. 1–2.
–. 1890a. “Manufacturing and Central Station Companies.” August 30, p. 1.
–. 1890b. “The Cape May Convention.” August 30, pp. 1–2.
Electrical Review and Western Electrician. 1913. “Public Street Lighting in Chicago.” 63: 453-59.
Erlenmeyer, Albrecht. 1890. “Jackson’sche Epilepsie nach Influenza.” Berliner klinische Wochenschrift 27(13): 295-97.
Field, C. S. 1891. “Electric Railroad Construction and Operation.” Scientific American, 65(12): 176.
Firstenberg, Arthur. 1998. “Is Influenza an Electrical Disease?” No Place To Hide 1(4): 2–6.
Fisher-Hinnen, Jacques. 1899. Continuous-Current Dynamos in Theory and Practice. London: Biggs.
Fleming, D. M., M. Zambon, and A. I. M. Bartelds. 2000. “Population Estimates of Persons Presenting to General Practitioners with Influenza-like Illness, 1987-96: A Study of the Demography of Influenza-like Illness in Sentinel Practice Networks in England and Wales, and in the Netherlands.” Epidemiology & Infection 124: 245-63.
Friedlander, Amy. 1996. Power and Light: Electricity in the U.S. Energy Infrastructure, 1870–1940. Reston, VA: Corp. for National Research Initiatives.
Gill, Clifford Allchin. 1928. The Genesis of Epidemics and the Natural History of Disease. New York: William Wood.
Glezen, W. Paul and Lone Simonsen. 2006. “Commentary: Benefits of Influenza Vaccine in U.S. Elderly – New Studies Raise Questions.” International Journal of Epidemiology 35: 352-53.
Gordon, Charles Alexander. 1884. An Epitome of the Reports of the Medical Officers To the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs Service, from 1871 to 1882. London: Baillière, Tindall, and Cox.
Halley, Edmund. 1716. “An Account of the late surprizing Appearance of the Lights seen in the Air, on the sixth of March last; With an Attempt to explain the Principal Phaenomena thereof.” Philosophical Transactions 29: 4°6-28.
Hamer, William H. 1936. “Atmospheric Ionization and Influenza.” British Medical Journal 1: 493-94.
Harlow, Alvin F. 1936. Old Wires and New Waves: The History of the Telegraph, Telephone, and Wireless. New York: Appleton-Century.
Harries, H. 1892. “The Origin of Influenza Epidemics.” Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 18(82): 132-42.
Harrington, Arthur H. 1890. “Epidemic Influenza and Insanity.” Boston Medical and Surgical Journal 123: 126-29.
Hedges, Killingworth. 1892. Continental Electric Light Central Stations. London: E. & F. N. Spon.