OUTLINES OF PERIODICAL LITERATURE. 



177 



The Naturalist ; illustrative of the Animal, Vegetable, and Mineral Kingdoms ; 

 with portraits and memoirs of eminent naturalists, and engravings on 

 wood ; edited by Neville Wood, Esq. ; royal 8vo, London, 1839. 



No. XXXVII, May, 1839. 



1. T. B. Hall; Account of the Liver- 

 pool Botanic Garden. 



2. Sketches of European Ornithology, 

 taken from the Analyst. 



3. T. G. R. Rglands ; Varieties of 

 British Ferns, and Diagnostics of 

 allied species. 



4. Prof. Meyen ; the Digestive Ap- 

 paratus of Infusoria. 



5. T. B. Hall ; Habits of British 

 Plants, and Derivations of their 

 Latin names. 



6. J. L. Levison ; Comparative Phre- 

 nology. 



7. Correspondence, with two figures. 



8. Notes on Various Topics. 



9. Memoir of Professor Lindley, with 

 a portrait. 



10. Proceedings of Natural History 

 Societies. 



11. Extracts irom Foreign Publica- 

 tions. 



12. Reviews, intelligence, and miscel- 

 lanies. , 



No. XXXVIII, June, 1839. 



1 . H. Buist ; Report of Dr. Schom- 

 burgk's Expedition into British 

 Guiana. 



2. Dr. Poppig ; Remarks on Tropi- 

 cal Seas. 



3. Habits of the Rat ; from the Dub- 

 lin Medical Press. 



4. T. B. Hall; Botanical Notes, 

 chiefly referred to " Col. Velley's 

 M.S." 



5. Sketches of European Ornithology, 

 taken from the Analyst. 



6. T. B. Hall; Habits of British 



Plants, and the Derivations of their 

 Latin names. 



7. Correspondence ; the Black Scoter 

 and Crested Grebe, the Podalirius 

 a British butterfly, instance of 

 three Pupse in one cocoon. 



8. Proceedings of Natural-History 

 Societies. 



9. Extracts^rora foreign publications. 



10. Revieivs and Miscellanies. 



11. Biographical Notice of the late 

 Dr. Latham. This number com- 

 pletes the fourth volume. 



The Foreign Monthly Review and Continental Literary Journal . 

 1839. 



8vo, London, 



Whether the Foreign Monthly Review be appreciated by its intellectual 

 or machanical execution, the Journal certainly possesses extraordinary 

 merit : the subjects are selected with exemplary judgment, and the articles 

 composed with singular elegance, remarkable ability, and a wise as well as 

 just discrimination : we arrange their titles, in English, under the attention 

 of our readers. 



VOL. X., NO. XXVIII. 



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