284 NOTES AND QUERIES. [No. 151. 



N EW WORK S. 



NEARLY READY, 



POPUL.\R HISTORY OF BRITISH ZOOPHYTES. By the Rev. Dr. LANDSBOROUGH. With 



coloured Plates. 



TALPA; or, THE CHRONICLE OF A CLAY FARM: an Agricultural Fragment. By C. W. H. 



With Illustrations by GEORGE CRUIKSHAISTK. 



NOW READY, 



PARKS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS; or. Practical] Notes on"'Country Residences, Villas, Public 



Parks, and Gardens. By CHARLES J. II. SMITH, Landscape Gardener. 8vo. cloth, 6s. 



WESTERN HIMALAYA AND TIBET ; the Narrative of a Journey through the Mountains of Northern 



India, during the Years 1847 and 18t8. By THOMAS THOMSON, JI.D., Assistant-Surgeon, Bengal Army. 8vo. with JIaps and Tinted 

 Lithoirraphs, price 155. 

 " To all those who desire id judge scientifically of what is possible in the cultivation of the Indo- Alpine Flora, which is so rapidly enriching our 



pardens, works of this description hare great interest Unlike gossiping books of travels, the record of researches such as Dr. Thomson's 



forms a subject of serious reference, which can only lose its value when men cease to regard physical facts as the foundation of all true knowledge. 



— Gardeners' Chronicle. 



FLORA OF NEW ZEALAND. By Dr. J. D. HOOKER. With coloured Plates. Part IL 4to. 21s. 



plain ; 31s. 6d. coloured. 



FLORA OF ESKIMAUX-LAND, including the Country between Norton Sound and Point Barrow, 



and the adjacent Islands. By BERTHOLD SEEMAN. Part II. with Plates. 4to. \0s. plain. 



INSECTA BRITANNICA, DIPTERA. By F. WALKER, F.L.S. Vol. L Plates. 8vo. 25«. 



plain. 



POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS, comprising all the Species. By THOMAS MOORE, 



F.L.S. Twenty Plates. Royal 16mo. lOs. 6rf. coloured. 

 "In the volume before us, Mr. Moore gives a clear account of British Ferns, with directions for their cultivation, accompanied by numcrcua 

 coloured plates, neatly illustrated, and preceded by a general introduction on the natural character of this graceful class of plants."— ^i)ccto(or. 

 " We have rarely, if ever, seen a publication relating to plants where the object aimed at is more fully accomplished than in this elegant volume." 



— Hooker's Journal. 



" A prettily got-up book, and fit for a drawing-room table."— 2^e Friend. 



POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH MOLLUSCA: or. Shells and their Animal Inhabitants. By 



MARY ROBERTS. Eighteen Plates. Royal 16mo. 10s. 6d. coloured. 

 " This little volume forms another of the excellent series of illustrated works on various departments of Natural History, for which the public 

 is indebted to Mr. Reeve. . . . When we add, tliat the plates contain no fewer than ninety figures of shells, with their animal inliabitants, 

 all of them well, and several admirably executed, and that the text is written throughout in a readable and even elegant style, with such digres- 

 sions in poetry and prose as serve to relieve its scientific details, we think that we have said enough to justify the favourable opinion we have 

 expressed." — British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical lieview. 



POPULAR MINERALOGY; a Familiar Account of Minerals and their Uses. By HENRY SOWERBY. 



Royal 16mo., with Plates of Figures. 10s. 6d. coloured. 

 " Mr. Sowerby has endeavoured to tlirow around his subject every attraction. His work is fully and carefully illustrated with coloured plates." 



— Spectator. 



POPULAR SCRIPTURE ZOOLOGY ; or, History of the Animals mentioned in the Bible. By MARIA 



E. CATLOW. With Sixteen Plates. Royal 16mo. cloth. IDs. 6d. coloured. 

 " Miss Catlow's abilities as a naturalist, and her tact in popularising any subject she undertakes, are too well known to need reiteration on 

 this occasion."— if o<<« and Queries. 



POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH SEA- WEEDS, comprising all the Marine Plants. By the Rev. 



DAVID LANDSBOROUGH, A.L.S. With twenty coloured Plates by FITCH. Second Edition. Royal 16mo. 10s. 6d. 

 " Those who wish to make themselves acquainted with British Sea- weeds, cannot do better than begin with this elegantly illustrated manual."— 

 Globe. 



VOICES FROM THE WOODLANDS ; or, History of Forest Trees, Lichens, Mosses, and Ferns. By 



MARY ROBERTS. Elegantly bound. With twenty coloured Plates of Forest Scenery, by FITCH. Royal IGmo. 10s. 6rf. 

 " This work includes a wide range of genera, from the lichen to the oak, and by way of giving variety to a subject so common-place, the several 

 plants are supposed to tell their own stories, and describe their own family peculiarities." — Atlas. 



DROPS OF WATER ; their marvellous and beautiful Inhabitants displayed by the Microscope. By 



AGNES CATLOW. Square 12mo., with coloured Plates, 7s. 6d. 

 "In this little book, illustrated with plates scarcely inferior to those of the well-known Ehrenberg, we have the wonders of the microscope 

 revealed in the history of a drop of water."— Liverpool Standard. 



SANDERS'S PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF THE VINE, as weU under Glass 



Cases as in the Open Air. With Plates. 8vo. 5s. 



" A clever, well-written, and nicely illustrated horticultural pamphlet, telling us all we want to know on the suhiect."— Guardian. 



THE ARTIFICIAL PRODUCTION OF FISH. By PISCARIUS. Second Edition. Price One 



Shilling. 



" This small publication details the method employed by MM. Gehin and Remy, in France, to increase the stock offish in rivers and "streams. 



The extensive practice and application of this system has produced an abundant supply of good and wholesome food ; and it is the 



laudable object of the little book to instruct our country gentlemen, and others who possess streams or lakes, how their waters may be made 

 useful and profitable, as well as ornamental."— vl<Aena!um. 



REEVE & Co., 5. Henrietta Street, Covcnt Garden. 



Printed by Thomas Clark Shaw, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of London ; and 

 published by Georoe Bell, of No. 185. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dmistan in the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 18b. 

 I'leet Street aforesaid.— Saturday, September 18. 1802. 



