IMPORTANT WORKS ON NATURAL HISTORY. 



In the course of Publicatio7i, 



JiLLUSTRATIONS OF THE FOSSIL CONCHOLOGY 

 OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. 



BY CAPTAIN THOMAS BROWN, F.L.S., &c. 



1. Each Number will contain Four Coloured Plates, engraved on Steel by the first Artists, with Four Pages of 

 Descriptive Letter-press; together with the Localities in which they occur, &c., price Three Shillings Coloured, or 

 Two Shillings Plain. A Fasciculus will appear regularly on the first day of every month. 



2. The Work will extend to Twenty-five Numbers, containing in all One Hundred Plates. The Species will be 

 systematically arranged, agreeably to the classification of Lamarck, with the recently formed Genera of Deshayes, 

 Sowcrby, Parkinson, &c., introduced into their respective places. Every Number will comprise at least Forty Shells. 



3. At the end of the Work will appear a Stratigraphical Index, on an entirely new plan, exhibiting at one view 

 the whole British Species of Fossil Shells, with their Geological positions. 



II. 



ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE CONCHOLOGY 

 OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. 



BY CAPTAIN THOMAS BRO^VN, F.L.S., &c. 



SECOND EDITION, WITH ADDITIONS. 



1. Each Number will contain Four Coloured Plates, with complete Descriptions, Localities, &c. A Fasciculus 

 ^•ill appear regularly every month. Price Three Shillings Coloured, or Two Shillings Plain. 



2. The Work will extend to Fifteen Numbers, containing in all Fifty-eight Plates, with about Twelve Hundred 

 Figures of Shells, being Representatives of ALL the Species discovered up to the present time, including Marine, 

 Land, and Fresh Water; together with Illustrations of the Animals of nearly the wiiole Genera. Tiie Plates are all 

 already engraved by Mr. W. H. Lizars, so that the Work will appear with the utmost regularity. 



3. This is the only Work which contains Representations of ALL the Species, and the only British Concho- 

 logy, in which the Animals have been introduced, and is sold at a price not a third of others wliich do not contain a 

 half of the Species, while the Engravings are executed in a much liigher style of art. 



Opinions of the Press on the First Edition. 



' ' The Work i» now completed, and fonns a \ery handsome volume, alike creditable to the facile pencil of Captain Brown, and the matchleM burin 

 of LizarB. The volume containit no less tlun S3 plates, embracing 135 new species, and in all 11 5() fiffures. Of the exquisite manner in which the 

 Shell* are 6nished, we feel it impossible to convey an adequate idea; could we transport one of these splendid delineations lo our columns, we should 

 require no words to enhance its value." — Oliserver. 



" Whili' there arc talent and accuracy in the Drawings, we need hardly say that Mr. Lizars has executed the engraving department in a tasteful 

 and able manner. The colouring is here so much elaborated, and so judiciously managed, that the specimens have many ol the beauties of painting; 

 and this work, we imagine, will go far to make the public think more highly of the Shells of the British Isles." — Scotsman, 



" A slight glance at other works on the same subject, will be the best mode of showing the superior claims to attention which the present volume 

 poaaae*. 



" The two beit works which we have on our native Conchology are, first, ' Montagu's Testacea Britannica,' quarto, published in 1803. It only 

 contains 205 »pecii», drawn and etched by a lady, and very indifferently executed ; the price of this work is £S. 6s. The Shells represented are mostly 

 minute specie*. The serond work i.s, ' Donovan's British Shells,' in octavo, published also in 1803, containing only 184 species, prinri|iully the large 

 •helk — engraved in a stilT and slight manner; price jE". lis. So that it requires both these works to be possessed of all the Shells known even m 

 their time — the joint price amounting to £14. Is and then you have only the small number of 389 species, and these very indifferently done. 



"Brown's illustrations are sold at £(>. 16s. )!d. The Engravings are /ii<;/i/i/_/ini.'i/ic(/, and, as we have said, beautifully coloured. The volume 

 coosistj of 53 elegant quarto plates, containing 11 54! figures of Shells, 13.5 of which are entirely new, and never before published; besides 148, which 

 have only appeared in the Transactions of different learned Societies." — Edinburgh Evening Post. 



1^1" This Work, originally published at £6. I6s. 6d., will now cost only £2. 5s. with Six additional Plates. 



III. 



I» tilt' Prt'.s.'i, antl Sprt'tli/i/ trill Apjw.ar, 



THE ELEMENTS OF FOSSIL CONCHOLOGY, 



lllu.stratrd by Figures, engraved on Steel, of .\LL the known Genera; with their Generic Characters, and aeoinplete 

 Description of their application to the elucidation of the various Geological periods. By Caitain Thomas 

 HnowN, F.L.S., I'^tc. Royal IHmo. 



IV. 



ISpeediltf will Appear, 



THE ELEMENTS OF CONCHOLOGY, 



BY CAPTAIN THOMAS BROWN, F.L.S., &c.. 



Illustrated liy Figures, engraved on Steel, of ALL the known Genera, Sub-Genera, and Sections, with their Generic 

 Characters, riTiifiitty rlucidated. 



The arrangement adopted is that of Lamarck, with the addition of all the New Genera which modern investigation 

 has rendered necessary. 



