Mallard's original method was based on the measurement of the linear distance, as determined by an eyepiece-micrometer, between the optic axes in a section of the crystal at right angles to the acute biseetrix viewed in convergent light.
Professor F. Becke implored on this method by utilizing sections which were not at right angles to the acute hissetrix, but in which both optic axes were visible in the field. He projected both axes by means of an Abbe camera lucida on to a revolving drawing-table, and by means of the Mallard equation plotted the axes on a stereographic projection and thus obtained the optic axial angle, the angles of course being corrected for refraction to the true angles in the crystal section. Professor Becke subsequently, by utilizing the Biot-Fresnel law, formulated a graphic method of obtaining the optic axial angle from a section in which only one axis was visible.