APP. VIl] BIBLIOGRAPHY 819 



Geographical Journal. There are papers of importance by Murray 

 and Irvine in the Proceedings, and in the Transactions of the Edinburgh 

 Royal Society. The Challenger Reports, of course ; especially the 

 Narrative and Summary Volumes, and the Report on Deep Sea 

 Deposits, and the volume on Physics and Chemistry. Cl eve's Phyto- 

 planhton of the Atlantic and its Tributaries, Upsala, 1897, should 

 certainly be seen if it is accessible. A very clear, though elementary, 

 account of the chief results of Oceanography is contained in H. R. Mill's 

 Realm of Nature (Murray, 1895). This is by far the best of the 

 physiography text-books. Krummel's Handhuch der Oceanographie, 

 Stuttgart, 1907, is the most recent book on the subject. 



Papers dealing with the life-histories of fishes are so numerous 

 that they cannot be summarised. But the reader should see 

 Cunningham's Marketable Marine Fishes (Macmillan, 1896); and 

 Macintosh and Masterman's Life Histories of British Marine Food 

 fshes. Both these books are founded on original observations. Mac- 

 intosh, Resources of the Sea is often quoted but the book is not impartial 

 and treats of a special subject. Zoological text-books devote, as a rule, 

 little space to the accounts of the habits or Bionomics of fishes or 

 other marine animals, but see the volumes of the Cambridge Natural 

 History. 



