Cambridge Biological Series 



Conditions of Life in the Sea. A short account of 

 Quantitative Marine Biological Research. By j JAMES JOHNSTONE, 

 Fisheries Laboratory, University of Liverpool. Demy 8vo. With a 

 chart and 31 illustrations. 9-r. net. 



Cotmtry Life. A welcome summary of the main results of modern 

 investigations into the conditions of marine life, and of the related branches 

 of hydrography aud oceanography We congratulate the author on the 

 admirable manner in which he has acquitted himself of his task, and feel 

 sure that this new instalment of the Cambridge Biological Series will have 

 a wide circulation. 



The Natural History of some Common Animals. 



By OSWALD H. LATTER, M.A. , Senior Science Master at Charter- 

 house. Crown 8vo. With 54 illustrations. 55. net. 



Nature. An excellent book, written by a man who is equally in his 

 element whether he writes as an outdoor naturalist or as a laboratory 

 student. This combination is by no means a common one, and it is just 

 the combination that is wanted for a book of this kind.... Altogether the 

 book is an admirable one. 



Athenceicm. A book that may be judiciously placed in the hands of 

 any boy who evinces a reasonable interest in the animal life around him. 



The Classification of Flowering Plants. By ALFRED 

 BARTON RENDLE, M.A. (Cantab.), D.Sc. (Lond.), F.L.S., Keeper 

 of the Department of Botany, British Museum. Vol. I. Gymno- 

 sperms and Monocotyledons. Demy 8vo. With 187 illustrations. 

 6d. net. 



Gardener's Chronicle. Numerous illustrations and an excellent index 

 add to the value of the work. We heartily congratulate the author on the 

 partial accomplishment of a difficult and laborious task. The part before 

 us does but whet our appetite for what is to follow. 



The Origin and Influence of the Thorough-bred 

 Horse. By W. RIDGEWAY, Sc.D., F.B.A., Disney Professor of 

 Archaeology and Fellow of Gonville and Caius College. Demy 8vo. 

 With 143 illustrations. iis. 6d. net. 



Westminster Gazette. There has never been a more learned contribution 

 to equine literature than Professor Ridgeway's comprehensive and exhaustive 

 book. 



Spectator. It would be difficult for Professor Ridgeway to write a book 

 which did not contain at least one wholly novel thesis, and the present work 

 is no exception to his practice. It is also an encyclopaedia of information 

 on the history of the Equidae^ collected from every source, from post- 

 Pleiocene deposits to modern sporting newspapers. No detail escapes the 

 author's industry, and... the result is a monument of sound learning, unique 

 of its kind. 



Manual of Practical Morbid Anatomy, being a Hand- 

 book for the Post-mortem Room. By H. D. ROLLESTON, M.A., 

 M.D., F.R.C.P., and A. A. KANTHACK, M.D., M.R.C.P. Crown 

 Svo. 6s. 



