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LIST OF COMPLETED VOLUMES. 
ZooLoey, Botany, AND ARCHAOLOGY. 
Tue 215 Parts of Zoology, 25 of Botany, and 17 of Archaeology are divided into 
63 Volumes, of which a complete list, with their contents, is given in tabular form 
on pp. 55, 86. The analysis of the contents of each of these volumes supplies the 
names of the contributors and other particulars, and, in the case of the Zoology, 
a brief summary of the author's views on the nature of the Fauna, as stated in 
their Introduction. The 215* Parts of Zoology form 52 volumes—one devoted 
to Mammalia, four to Aves, one to Reptilia and Batrachia, one to Pisces, one to 
Mollusca, four to Arachnida, one to Chilopoda and Diplopoda, and thirty-eight to 
Insecta. The Crustacea, Protobracheata, Vermidea, &c., have not been studied, 
mainly for lack of material. Amongst the Insecta, too, no worker has been found for 
certain groups of Hymenoptera, Diptera, Rhynchota-Homoptera, and Neuroptera, and 
these omissions are specially noted in the analysis of the volumes dealing with the 
Orders in question. The 25 Parts of Botany form five volumes—four of text and one 
of plates. The 17 Parts of Archeology form four volumes of text, together binding 
into one volume, with an additional common titlepage, four volumes of folio plates, 
and an Appendix (text only), the whole subject thus extending to six volumes—two 
of text (quarto) and four of plates (folio). 
* Part 211 was issued in two sections: ‘ A” in Dec. 1911, “ B” in May 1912. 
Part 212 » ” » +: “A” in Feb, 1913,“ B” in April 1914, 
