Cambridge Universi^^l^ 



THE CAMBRIDGE BR'^" ^^^^^ 



Bv C. E ^In^s! "n c -n. T r, ssisted by specialists in cer- 



Volume III, Port ''^''^* *° Fumariaceae 



Imperial 4to. With 191 .' "*■ ^" ^"^ ^ol^"^^ (P^^t^^ "^^^I'^pei's^^^ 

 with text) r ^^^' paper boards, £7 7s net ; quarter 



niorocco £11^^"^^"'^^' "^ "^^^'^ P^^'*^ (plate and text separately 

 bound) canva^"'^^' P^P^^* boards, £6 los net; quarter morocco, 

 £'12 net. 



•' The /-''^^"^^"^ University Press, Professor Moss and his collaborators 



% 



J congratulated on a work which will not only be the standard 



are 



F]o->"^^^' ^^^^ considerable period, but will be indispensable to all 

 ^^ -rested in geographical and ecological botany and in such problems as 

 .ue inheritance of the characters of British plants."— T/^e Spectator 



•■ Will be welcomed by all students of botany and collectors desiring an 

 authoritative and up-to-date account of the British flowering plants .... 

 The ' Cambridge Flora ' may already be regarded as a gi-eat standard work 

 on systematic botany, worthy of the University from which it issues." 



The Manchester Guardian 



WATER PLANTS 



A Studv of Aquatic Angiosperms. B}^ Agnes Aeber, D.Sc, F.L.S., 

 Fellow of Xewnham College, Cambridge. Koyal 8vo. With a 

 frontisj^iece and 171 text-ligures. 31s 6d net. 



" This work reflects no little credit on English botanical study as well 



as on Dr Arber One of the most valuable features of the book is 



the beautifully-drawn illustrations Dr Arber's book is a land-mark 



in the territory of the study of aquatic plants, and will remain a standard 

 Avork on which future research will very largely be based."' — The Bool-man 



" A most valuable contribution to the evolutionary history of aquatic 



agiosperms The solid work of research, and the clarity and charm 



of her expositions, supplemented as they are by a valuable bibliography 

 and by numerous illustration *, of which over fifty are from her own 

 original drawings, will be widely and thankfully recognised." 



TJte Scotsman 



PRACTICAL PLANT BIOCHEMISTRY 



By MuEiEL Wheldale Oxslow, formerly Fellow of Xewnham 

 College, Cambridge, and Research Student at the John Innes 

 Horticultural Institution. Royal 8vo. los net. 



" "We are not guilty of much exaggeration in saying that we ' read 

 it from cover to cover,' experienced ' breathless interest," and 'could not 

 put it down.' .... By taking for granted a certain knowledge of organic 

 chemistry, Mrs Onslow has been able to keep her book a reasonable 

 length, and to devise a thoroughly informative and realist series of 

 experimental illustrations to each section." — The Atheaseum 



FETTER LANE, LONDON, E.G. 4 ; C. F. CLAY, MANAGER 



