D. APPLETON & 00/S PUBUCATIGNS, 



SIR JOHN LUBBOCK'S (Bart.) WORKS. 



THE Oi?IGIN OF CIVILIZATION AND THE PRIMI- 

 TIVE CONDITION OF MAN, MENTAL AND SOCIAL 

 CONDI nON OF SAVAGES, Fourth edition, with numerous Ad- 

 ditions. With Illustrations. 8vo. Cloth, |;5.00. 



"The fir--«t edition of thin -work was published in the year 1870. The work 

 has been twice revised for the press in the iuteival. and now appears in i(s 

 fourtn edition enlarged to the extent of nearly two hundred vagttt, ihcluuiug a full 



index." 



'•This interestin;; work— for it is intensely so in its aim, scope, and the abil 

 ity of its author — treats of what tlie scientists cieiiouiiuate anttiropology, or tha 

 natural History of the liuaaan species ; the compleie tcieuce of man, bocy and 

 Boul, includiUji sex, temperament, race, civilization, eic.'—Proviaeuce Pie^s. 



PREHISTORIC TIMES, AS ILLUSTRATED BY ANCIENT 



REMAINS AND THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF MODERN 



SAVAGES. Illustrated. Entirely new revised edition. 8vo. Cloth, 



$5.00. 



The book ranks amon^ the noblest works of the interesting and important 

 class to which it belo.ig^. As a resume of our preseut knowledge of prenistoric 

 man, it loves norhing; to bo desired. It is not only a good book of reference but 

 the best on the subject. 



" This is. p'irhaps, the best auminary of evidence now In our possession con- 

 cerning^ the general charaoter of pieliistoric times, 'i he BroLze Aire, The Stone 

 Acre, The Tu.nuli, The Lake Inhatiitants of Switzerland, The Shell Mounds, The 

 Cave iian, and I'he Antiquity of Man, are the titles of tlie most important chap- 

 ters."— Z>r. (J. K. Adanis's Manual of Historical Literature. 



ANTS, BEES, AND WASPS. A Record of Observations on the 



Habits of the Social Hymeaoptera. With Colored Plates. 12ino. 



Cloth, $2.00. 



"This volume contains the record of various experiments made with ants, 

 bees, and wasp? durinir the last ten years, with a view to test their mental ccm- 

 dition and powers of sense. The principal point in which SirJohns mode of 

 es:periment differs from those of Huber. Forel, McCook, and others, is that he 

 has carefully watched and marked particular insects, and Las had iheir nests 

 under observa ion for l«>n<? periods— one of his ants' nests having been under 

 constant inspection ever since 1874. His observations are made principally upon 

 ants, because they show more power and flexibility of mind; and the value of 

 his studies is that they belong to the department of original research." 



" We have no hesit/^tion In savine that the author has presented us with the 

 most valuable series of observations on a special subject that has ever been pro- 

 duce I, charmingly written, full of logical deductions, and, when we consider hi8 

 multitudmon-* eniragements. a remarkable illustration of economy of lime. As a 

 contribution to i'lsiftct nsjcholo^y, it will be long before this book finds a par* 

 oWiiV^—Jjindon Athenceum. 



New York • D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 5 Bond Street 



