372 



INDEX. 



BAUDiMENT/his work, 125, n. 1 



BEAUMONT (Elie de), his works, 155, 

 n. 2; 157, n. 1; his investigations 

 upon the changes in the physical 

 conditions of the earth's surface 

 and the systems of mountains, 157 



BELL (Ch.), Bridgwater Treatise, 11 n. 



BELL (Th.), his paper with Owen, 

 145, n. 1 



BELLARDI, his work, 145, n. 1 



BENEDEN, see Van Beneden 



BERENDT, his work, 142, n. 4 



BERGHAUS, his work, 90, n. 



BERGMAN, his work, 38, n. 



BERNHARDT, his work, 125, n. 3 



BEWICK, 214 



BEYRICH, his papers, 142, n. 4; 145, 

 n. 1 



BEZOLD, his paper, 73, n. 



BIBRON, his work with Dumeril, 45, 

 n. 2 



BILLHARZ, his paper, 116, n. 1 



BINGLEY, his work, 97, n. 1 



Birds, their standing, 40; their deve- 

 lopment, 125 



BISCHOFF (Th. L. W.), his works, 101, 

 n. 1; 114, n. 2; 125, n. 3 



BLAINVILLE (DE), his works, 31, n. 

 1; 37, n. 1; 145, n. 1; his classifi- 

 cation, 316 



BLANCHARD (E.), his works, 92, n. 3; 

 114, n. 1; 121, n. 1; 163, n. 2 



Blind fish of the Mammoth Cave, 19 



BLUMENBACH, his work, 37, n. 2 



BOJANUS, his works, 11G, n.l; 125, n. 3 



BONAPARTE, his works, 46, n. 



BONNET, his works, 36, n. 2; 139, n. 2 



BOSSET (De), his paper, ] 10, n. 1 



BOSQUET, his papers, 145, n. 1 



Brachio2)ods, their affinity to Bryozoa, 

 108; their standing and succession, 

 163 



Branch Analogies, 274 



Branches of the animal kingdom, 5, 

 207-219 



BRAUN (Al.), his works, 24, n. 3; 103, ' 

 n; 113, n. 2 



Breathing, 20 



BREMSER, his work, 186 



Bridgewater Treatises, 1 1 



BRODIE, his paper, 145, n. ] 



BROCCHI, his work, 142, n. 4 



BUONGNIART (Ad.), his works, 141, 

 n. 1 



BRONGNIART (Al.), his works, 145, n. 



BRONN, his works, 141, n. 1; 142, n. 

 4; 144, n. 1; 145, n. 1 



BROWN (R.), his work, 19, n. 



BRUCH, his paper, 116, n. 2; 122, n. 1 



Bryozoa, their standing and succes- 

 sion, 162 



BUCH (L. Von), his works on fossils, 



144, n. 1; 145, n. 1; 157, n. 1 

 BUCKLAND, Bridgwater Treatise, 12, 



n.; his works on fossils, 142, n. 3; 



145, n. 1; 150, n. 3 



BUFFON, his views of classification, 2; 

 his works, 85, n. 1; 99, n. 1; his 

 descriptions of species, 213 



BURDACH, Ms work, 101, n. 1 



BURMEISTER, his works, 118, n. 2; 

 119, n. 1; 134, n. 4; 145, n. 1; 248, 

 n. 1 ; his classification, 324 



BURNETT, his work, 120, n. 1 



Btrscn, his work, 104, n. 



BUSK (Gr.), his paper, 163, n. 1 



CANINO, see BONAPARTE 



CARPENTER, his works, 111, n.; 113, 

 n. 2 



CARTER (H. T.), his paper, 113, n. 2 



CARUS (C. G.), his works, 24, n.; 37, 

 n. 2; 109, n.l; 110, n.l; 116, n.l; 

 121, n. 1 



CARUS ( J. V.), his works, 24, n. 2; 38, 

 n.; 116, n. 1; 136, n. 3 



Categories of Analogy, 271-281 



CAUTLEY, his work with Falconer, 

 145, n. 1 



Centres of distribution of animals, 57 



Cephalopoda, their standing, 40; can- 

 not be considered as a primary di- 

 vision of the animal kingdom, 288, 

 366; a class of rnollusks, 294; par- 

 tial segmentation of their yolk, 295 



Cestoids, 114 



CHALMERS, Bridgewater Treatise, 11, 

 n. 



CHAMISSO, his work, 109, n.; on al- 

 ternate generation, 136 



CHEMNITZ, see MARTINI 



CIENKOWSKY, his paper, 113, n. 2 



Cirripeds, 118, 129 



CLAPAREDE, his papers, 110, n. 2; 

 113, n. 2; 114, n. 2; 116, n. 4 



CLARK (Br.), his paper, 188 



Classes of animals, 6, 219-228; class- 

 analogies, 275; class-identity, 22 



Classification, of Aristotle, 301 ; of 

 Bauer, 359; of Blainville, 316; of 

 Burmeister, 324; of Cuvier, 310; of 



