THE AMERICAN NATURE SERIES 



In tlie hope of doing sometliing toward fiirnishinjj a series where the 

 nature-lover can surely find a readable book of high authority, the pub- 

 lishers of the American Science Series have begun the publication of the 

 American Nature Series. It is the intention that in its own way, the new 

 series shall stand on a par with its famous predecessor. 



The primary object of the new series is to answer questions — those 



(outside of the domain of philosophy) which the contemplation of Nature 



is constantly arousing in the mind of the unscientific intelligent person. 



But a collateral object will be to give some intelligent notion of the 



causes of things." 



The books will be under the guarantee of American experts, and 

 from the American point of view ; and where material crowds space, pref- 

 erence will be given to American facts over others of not more than e(|ual 

 interest. 



The series will be in six divisions : 



I. CLASSIFICATION OF NATURE 



This division will consist of three sections. 



Section A. A large popular Natural History in several volumes, 

 with the topics treated in due proportion, by authors of unquestioned 

 authority. 



The books so far publisht in this section are : 

 FISHES, by David Starr Jordan, President of the Leland Stanford 



Junior University. $6.00 net; carriage, 50 cents. 

 AMERICAN INSECTS, by Vernon L. Kellogg, Professor in the Leland 



Stanford Junior University. $5.00 net; carriage, 50 cents. 

 NORTH AMERICAN TREES, by N. L. Britton, Director of the New 



York Botanical Garden. 



Arranged for are : 

 SEEDLESS PLANTS, by George T. Moore, Head of Department of 



Botany, Marine Biological Laboratory, assisted by other specialists. 



WILD MAMMALS OF NORTH AMERICA, by C. Hart Merriam, 



Chief of the United States Biological Survey. 



BIRDS OF THE WORLD. A popular account by Frank H. Knowlton, 

 M.S., Ph.D., Member American Ornithologists Union, President 

 Biological Society of Washington, etc., etc., with Chapter on Anat- 

 omy of Birds by Frederick A. Lucas, Chief Curator Brooklyn Ac.id- 

 emy Arts and Sciences, and edited by Robert Ridgway, Curator of 

 Birds, U. S. National Museum. 



Section B. A Shorter Natural History by the Authors of Sec- 

 tion A, preserving its popular character, its proportional treatment and 

 its authority so far as that can be preserved without its fullness. 



Section C. Identification Books—" How to Know," brief and in 

 portable shape. By the authors of the larger treatises. 



