APA (7th ed.) Citation

Bradley, A. (1801). A new theory of the earth, or, The present world created on the ruins of an old world: Wherein it is shewn from various phenomena, that the earth was first created at a period of the highest antiquity : that it was afterwards destroyed by a deluge : and, that after the deluge, it was re-peopled by a new creation of men, and other animals. Printed for Joseph Wright.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Bradley, Abraham. A New Theory of the Earth, or, The Present World Created on the Ruins of an Old World: Wherein It Is Shewn from Various Phenomena, That the Earth Was First Created at a Period of the Highest Antiquity : That It Was Afterwards Destroyed by a Deluge : And, That After the Deluge, It Was Re-peopled by a New Creation of Men, and Other Animals. Wilkesbarre, Pa.: Printed for Joseph Wright, 1801.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Bradley, Abraham. A New Theory of the Earth, or, The Present World Created on the Ruins of an Old World: Wherein It Is Shewn from Various Phenomena, That the Earth Was First Created at a Period of the Highest Antiquity : That It Was Afterwards Destroyed by a Deluge : And, That After the Deluge, It Was Re-peopled by a New Creation of Men, and Other Animals. Printed for Joseph Wright, 1801.

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