17 



17. HILL, J. P. f and J. FLORIAN f (edited by W. C. Osman Hill), 1963 — 

 The development of the primitive streak, head process and annular zone 

 in Tarsius, with comparative notes on Loris 



18. KLOSOVSKII. B. N., 1963 — The development of the brain and its 

 disturbance by harmful factors 



19. MORISON, J. E., 1963 — Foetal and neonatal pathology (2nd edit.) 



20. NARBEL-HOFSTETTER, M.. 1964 — Les alterations de la meiose chez 

 les animaux parthenogenetiques 



21. VAKAET, L., 1962 — Pregastrulatie en gastrulatie der vogelkiem, morfo- 

 logische en experimentele studie (Pregastrulation in the avian embryo, a 

 morphological and experimental study) 



22. WILKIE, D., 1964 — The cytoplasm in heredity 



23. WINTREBERT, P., 1963 — Le developpement du vivant par-lui-meme 



Symposium reports 



24. ENDERS, A. C. (Edit.), 1963— Delayed implantation 



25. FOGG, G. E. ( Edit. ) — Cell differentiation 



26. HARRIS, R. J. C. (Edit.), 1963 — Biological organization at the cellular 

 and supercellular level 



27. LOCKE, M. ( Edit. ) , 1 964 — Cellular membranes in development 



28. RUDNICK, D. (Edit.), 1962 — Regeneration 



29. SZANT6, Gy. (Edit. ) , 1 964 — Regeneration and wound healing 



30. WOLFF, Et. (Edit.), 1964 — L'origine de la lignee germinale chez les 

 Vertebres et chez quelques groupes d'Invertebres 



31 . European Society for the Study of Drug Toxicity, 1963 — Effects of drugs 

 on the fetus 



Plant morphogenesis 



32. MAHESH WARI, P., ( Edit. ) , 1 963 — Recent advances in the embryology 

 of Angiosperms 



33. REIJNDERS, A. F. M., 1963— Les problemes du developpement des 

 carpophores des Agaricales et de quelques groupes voisins 



1. INTRODUCTION TO DYNAMIC MORPHOLOGY 



1963 

 by E. Mayer Academic Press 



545 pp., 88 figs. New York and London 



Price: $ 16.— 



This book is not easy to review briefly, because it transcends the borders of 

 any strictly defined scholarly discipline. The author was induced to write it 

 by his long-standing personal experience that it is often very difficult to give 

 non-morphologists a real insight in morphological matters. The main reason 

 for this, in his view, is that morphological results are very seldom presented as 

 functions of procedures, which is the usual way of presentation in other 

 branches of science. Therefore, the organisation of the book is based on proce- 



