Smith's Neiu Geological Map of England, ^c. 305 



a place in the office or counting-house of every professional man, 

 merchant, or considerable trader in the kingdom ; to say nothing 

 of the study of the curious in geological researches, to whou) its 

 facts regarding the straiificalion of our country, are more parti- 

 cularly addressed. Here, for tiie small sum of Ms. will be found 

 embodied all that is most generally useful and interesting, as the 

 results of Mr. Smith's unwearied labours, commenced in the year 

 1792, regarding the localities of the favoured districts of our 

 Island, producing its mineral treasures, as coal, limestone, iron- 

 stone, lead and copper ores, freestone, pottery clay, &c. &c. ; 

 and a delineation of the unparalleled means which British enter- 

 prize, capital, and skill have provided, for conveying of these 

 treasures from the places of their production to their places of 

 consumption, viz. rivers rendered navigable, canals, railways, and 

 turnpike roads. 



Smith's Geological Atlas, No. 3, published by Gary, St. 

 James's-street. — This number of a work unparalleled in its ob- 

 jects, viz. that of exhibiting on separate ma])s the Geology of 

 the several counties of England and Wales, contains the coun- 

 ties of Oxford, Buckingham, Bedford, and Esiex, each on a 

 scale sufficientlv large, and so well and neatly filled up by the 

 engraver, as to contain most of the smaller villages, roads, 

 streams, &c. and thereby identify the localities of all the princi- 

 pal strata, and their tortuous lines of parting on the surface, in a 

 far more correct and satisfactory manner, than has heretofore 

 been done in any of Mr. Smith's geological publications ; and 

 such as may challenge comparison with the imitative productions 

 of any other individual, however powerfully liis pretensions may 

 be supported. Any of the maps in this Atlas being sold sepa- 

 rately, every one has now the opportunity, at a very trifling cost, 

 of making himself conversant with the geology of his own parti- 

 cular county, or of any district of the kingdom wherein he may 

 occasionally reside, or feel an interest. 



Aji Introduction to Mineralogy ; comprising the Natural His- 

 tory and Character of Minerals, and a Description of Rocks, 

 both simple and aggregate. By Robert Bakevvell, Author of an 

 Introduction to Geology. Plates. 8vo. 2ls. 



Notices, illustrative of the Drawings and Sketches of some of 

 the most distinguished Masters in all the principal Schools of 

 Design. By the late Henry Reveley, Esq. 8vo. 125. 



A New System of Cultivation, without Lime, Dung, or S 

 er Fallows, as practised at Knowie Farm, in the County of 1 



Sum- 

 — , -- , , ... _, _. Sus- 

 sex, bv Major-General Alexander Beatson, late Goyernor of the 

 . Vol' 55. No. 2G1. ylpril 1820. A a Island 



