Bibliography. 415 



or abridgment of any larger work of an European author, (as most 

 American text-books of this sort are,) but the offspring of a mind well 

 imbued with the science, and capable of presenting it in a forcible and 

 attractive style. No experimental details or figures of apparatus are 

 given, and it is evidently intended by the author that these must be 

 supplied by the oral instructions of the teacher, who has access for the 

 purpose to more extended works. The separation of chemical phi- 

 losophy from chemical manipulation seems to be the leading feature of 

 Mr. Smith's creditable work. 



6. New Books received. — The Medals of Creation; or, First Lessons 

 in Geology, and in the study of Organic Remains. By Gideon Alger- 

 non Mantell, Esq., LL. D., F. R. S., author of the Wonders of Geol- 

 ogy, etc. Two volumes, with colored plates, and several hundred fig- 

 ures of fossil remains. These beautiful volumes have reached us only at 

 the last moment, and all notice of them must be postponed to our next. 



On Dinornis,* an extinct genus of tridactyle Struthious Birds, with 

 descriptions of portions of the skeleton of six species which formerly 

 existed in New Zealand. By Prof. Owen, M. D., F. R. S., Z. S., &c. 



Part I. 



Geological Observations on the "Volcanic Islands visited during the 

 voyage of H. M. S. Beagle, together with some brief notices on^he 

 Geology of Australia and the Cape of Good Hope ; being the second 

 part of the Geology of the voyage of the Beagle, under the command 

 of Capt. Fitzroy, R. N., during the years 1832 to 1836. By Charles 

 Darwin, M. A., F. R. S., Vice President of the Geological Society, and 

 naturalist to the expedition. London : Smith, Elder & Co., 65 Corn- 

 hill. 1844. pp. 175, 8vo. 



Transactions of the New York State Agricultural Society, together 

 with an abstract of the Proceedings of the County Agricultural Societies. 

 Vol. III. Albany, Carroll & Cook, 1843. pp. 671, 8vo. This vol- 

 ume contains, besides much valuable agricultural matter, a condensed 

 review of the labors of the New York geological corps, from the pen 

 of Mr. James Hall, which is an interesting paper, fully illustrated by 



figures of fossils. 



Lectures on Polarized Light, delivered before the Pharmaceutical 



Society of Great Britain, pp. HO, 8vo. London, 1844. 



Researches on Light; an examination of all the Phenomena con- 

 nected with the chemical and molecular changes produced by the in- 

 fluence of the solar rays ; embracing all the known photographic pro- 

 cesses and new discoveries in the art. By Robert Hunt, Secretary to 

 the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society. London, printed for Long- 

 man & Co., 1844. pp. 303, 8vo. 



" Auvos, surprising, and Sfvts, bird." 



