“Animal Secretions” Presented at Royal Society of London, 1716.
“An Account of the Climate and Diseases of New York,” written in early 1720s American Medical and Philosophical Register, I (1811): 304–310.
“A MAP of the Countrey of the FIVE Nations belonging to the province of NEW-YORK and of the LAKES near which the Nations of FAR INDIANS live with part of CANADA taken from the Map of LOUISIANE done by Mr De LISLE in 1718,” William Bradford, New York. First published separately and in 1724 in Colden's Papers Relating to an Act of New York for Encouragement of the Indian Trade.
The Two Interests Reconciled: occasioned by two late Pamphlets, called The Interest of the Country and The Interest of City and Country, William Bradford, New York, 1726.
The History of the Five Nations, William Bradford, New York, 1727.
“Iliac Passion,” Benjamin Franklin, Philadelphia, 1741.
“Observations on the Fever which prevailed in the City of New-York in 1741 and 2” Originally appeared in New-York Weekly Post Boy, American Medical and Philosophical Register, 1 (1811), p. 311.
An Explication of the First Causes of Action in Matter; and of the Cause of Gravitation, James Parker, New York, 1745.
An Explication of the First Causes of Action in Matter; and of the Cause of Gravitation, J. Brindley, London, 1745 (Pirated edition).
TRANSLATIONS
Erklärung der ersten wirkenden Ursache in der Materie, Hamburg, 1748.
Explication des premières causes de l'action dans la matière, Paris, 1751.
“An Abstract from Dr. Berkeley's Treatise on Tar-Water with Some Reflexions Thereon, Adapted to Diseases Frequent in America,” New York, 1745.
“An Essay on Yellow Fever,” New York, 1745.
The History of the Five Nations/Papers Relating to the Indian Trade, Thomas Osborn, London, 1747.
“Plantae Coldenghamiae in provincial Novaboracensi Americes sponte crescents, quas ad Methodem Cl, Linnaei sexulem. Anno 1742 etc. Observavit Cadwallader Colden” Acta Societatis Regiae Scientiarum Upsalensis, for 1743, 1749, pp. 47–82.
The Principles of Action in Matter, the Gravitation of Bodies and the Motion of Planets, explained those Principles, Robert Dodsley, London, 1751.
“The Cure of Cancer” (Pokeweed), Gentleman's Magazine, 21 (1751), pp. 305–308 and 22; (1752), p. 302.
Letter to Dr. John Fothergill “Concerning the Throat-Distemper,” Medical Observations and Inquiries, London, 1753.
Treatise on Wounds and Fevers, New York, 1765.