LOVELL REEVE AND CO.’S PUBLICATIONS. 17 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
— — 
MANUAL OF CHEMICAL ANALYSIS, Qualitative and 
Quautitative ; for the Use of Students. By Dr. Henry M, Noap, F.R.S. 
Crown 8vo, pp. 663, 109 Wood Engravings, 16s. Or, separately, Part I., 
‘QUALITATIVE,’ 6s.; Part IL, ‘QUANTITATIVE,’ 10s. 6d. 
A Copiously-illustrated, Useful, Practical Manual of Chemical Analysis, pre- 
pared for the Use of Studeuts by the Lecturer on Chemistry at St. George’s 
Hospital. The illustrations consist of a series of highly-finished Wood-Engra- 
vings, chicfly of the most approved forms and varieties of apparatus, 
I 
DICTIONARY OF NATURAL HISTORY TERMS, with 
their Derivatives, including the various Orders, Genera, and Species. By 
Davin H. M‘Nicos1, M.D. Crown 8vo, 584 pp., 12s. 6d. 
An attempt to farnish what has long been a desideratum in natural history,— 
a dictionary of technical terms, with their meanings and derivatives. 
PHOSPHORESCENCE;; or, the Emission of Light by Mine- 
rals, Plants, and Animals. By Dr. T. L. Puirson, F.C.S. Small 8vo, 
225 pp., 80 Wood Engravings and Coloured Frontispiece, 5s. 
An interesting summary of the various phosphoric phenomena that have been 
observed in nature,—in the mineral, in the vegetable, and in the animal world. 
DNA NAA AANA AAR ARAN en 
A SURVEY OF THE EARLY GEOGRAPHY OF 
WESTERN EUROPE, as connected with the First Inhabitants of Britain, 
their Origin, Language, Religious Rites, and Edifices. By Henry Lawes 
Lone, Esq. 8vo, 6s. 
we Ae 
THE ZOOLOGY OF THE VOYAGE OF H.MS. SA- 
MARANG, under the command of Captain Sir Edward Belcher, C.B., during 
the Years 1843-46. By Professor Owen, Dr. J. E. Gray, Sir J. Ricuarp- 
son, A. ApaMs, L. Rerve, and A. Wurrs. Edited by ARTHUR ADAMS, 
F.1.S. Royal 4to, 257 pp., 55 Plates, mostly coloured, £3. 10s. 
is work, illustrative of the new species of animals collected during the 
Piven expedition of H.M.S. Samarang iu the Eastern Seas in the years 1843- 
1846. there are 7 Plates of Quadrupeds, 1 of Reptiles, 10 of Fishes, 24 of Mol- 
jusea and Shells, and 13 of Crustacea. The Mollusca, which are particularly in- 
omy of Spirula by Professor Owen, and a number of 
ting, include the anat 
beautiful fegares of the living animals by Mr. Arthur Adams. 
