BOOKS ON NATURAL HISTORY 



THE VERTEBRATE FAUNA OF SCOTLAND Continued. 



FIRST VOLUME OUT OF PRINT 



A VERTEBRATE FAUNA OF SUTHERLAND, CAITHNESS, AND 



WEST CROMARTY. By J. A. HARVIE-BROWN and T. E. BUCKLEY. 

 One Volume. Small 4 to. With Maps and Plates. 



SECOND VOLUME OUT OF PRINT 



A VERTEBRATE FAUNA OF THE OUTER HEBRIDES. By J. A. 



HARVIE-BROWN, and T. E. BUCKLEY. One Volume. Small 4to, 

 with Maps and Plates. 



THIRD VOLUME 



THE BIRDS OF IONA AND MULL, and other Natural History Notes, 



1852-70. By the late HENRY DAVENPORT GRAHAM, and Edited 

 by J. A. HARVIE-BROWN. Illustrated from the Author's Sketch-hooks. 

 One Volume. Small 4to. Price 21s. net. 



" There is a freshness and originality about them which makes them extremely pleasant rend- 

 ing." Field. 



" In the seclusion of the ' sacred island,' even now invaded by the tourist for only a brief season, 

 Graham had not merely ample opportunities for studying natural history, but also leisure for 

 thinking. Consequently, the book is full of original suggestions, derivations of words, scraps of 

 folk-lore, etc." Athemewn. 



" If Captain Marryat, instead of devoting his time after leaving the service to writing novels, 

 had wandered off to a desolate island and turned wild-fowler and ornithologist, he might well have 

 written such a book as that which the literary executors of the late H. D. Graham have issued 

 under the sober title of ' The Birds of lona and Mull.' "Spectator. 



FOURTH VOLUME 



A VERTEBRATE FAUNA OF THE ORKNEY ISLANDS. By 



T. E. BUCKLEY, B.A., F.Z.S., and J. A. HARVIE-BROWN, F.R.S.E., 

 F.Z.S. One Volume. Small 4to. Illustrated with Photogravure 

 Plates from Drawings by J. G. MILLAIS, as well as from Photographs 

 taken specially for the Book. Price 30s. 



"We receive few books that are so grateful alike to the eye and sense as the sage-green octavos of So >t- 

 tish zoological geography which come to us, one after another, from Mr. Douglas. In welcoming this 

 delightful Vertebrate Fauna of the Orkney Islands, we feel but one regret, the worlds which are left I'm- 

 Messrs. Buckley and Harvie-Brown to conquer are growing very few. . . We know not how to approach 

 them. Are we to urge them on upon their splendid enterprise, or to hold them back, that our pleasure 

 may be drawn out the longer ? The same plan is pursued as in the previous volumes of this admiral ih- 

 series. A detailed physical geography of the islands precedes the catalogue raisonne of the species and 

 habitats. Even to those, therefore, who have little zoological curiosity or knowledge, this book must 

 be of unusual importance, if the reader has an interest in the provinces described." Saturday R 



EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS. 



