22 SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



Besides a large coloured Geological Map of the district, the work 

 is illustrated by upwards of 260 cuts of sections, fossils, animals, 

 etc. " The book will doubtless find a place in the library, not only 

 of the scientific geologist, but also of all who are desirous of the in- 

 dustrial progress and commercial prosperity of the Acadian pro- 

 vinces." Mining Journal. "A style at once popular and scientific. 

 . . . A valuable addition to o ur store of geological knotvledge. " 

 Guardian. 



Flower (W. H.) AN INTRODUCTION TO THE OSTE- 

 OLOGY OF THE MAMMALIA. Being the substance of the 

 Course of Lectures delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons 

 of England in 1870. By W. H. FLOWER, F.R.S., F.R.C.S., 

 Hunterian Professor of Comparative Anatomy and Physiology. 

 With numerous Illustrations. Globe Svo. js. 6d. 



Although the present work contains the substance of a Course of Lecttires. 

 the form has been changed, so as the better to adapt it as a hand- 

 book for students. Theoretical views have been almost entirely ex- 

 cluded: and while it is impossible in a scientific treatise to avoid the 

 employment of technical terms, it has been the authors endeavour to 

 use no more than absolutely necessary, and to exercise due care in 

 selecting only those that seem most appropriate, or which have re- 

 ceived the sanction of general adoption. With a very few excep- 

 tions the illustrations have been drawn expressly for this work from 

 specimens in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons. 



Galton. Works by FRANCIS GALTON, F.R.S. :- 



METEOROGRAPHICA, or Methods of Mapping the Weather. 

 Illustrated by upwards of 600 Printed Lithographic Diagrams. 

 4to. 9.5-. 



As Mr. Galton entertains strong vieivs on the necessity of Meteorolo- 

 gical Charts and Maps, he determined, as a practical proof of %vhat 

 could be done, to chart the entire area of Europe, so far as meteorological 

 stations extend, during one month, viz. the month of December, 1861. 

 Mr. Galton got his data fro >n authorities in every part of Britain 

 and the Continent, and on the basis of these lias here drawn up 

 nearly a hundred different Maps and Charts, showing the state of 

 the weather all over Europe during the above period. " If the 

 various Governments and scientific bodies would perform for the 



