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ZEKIAH HOWE, 



BOOKSELLER, NEW HAVEN, 



HAS FOR SALE AN EXTENSIVE VARIETY OF 



1. 



BOOKS, 



IN THE VARIOUS DEPARTMENTS OF SCIENCE, AMONG WHICH 



ARE THE FOLLOWING : 



Bucklantl's Reliquiae Diluvianae, or observations on the organic remains contain- 

 ed in caves, fissures, and diluvial gravel, and other Geological phenomenaj attesting 

 the action of an universal deluge, 4to. 



Ure's New System of Gcologyj in which the great revolutions of the earth and 

 animated nature are reconciled at once to modern science and sacred history, 8vo. 



Bakewell's Introduction to Geology, comprising the Elements of the science in its 

 present advaucctf^STOTerr^nT?! all the recent discoveries, with an outline of the Geology 

 of England, and Wales, with an appendix by Professor Silliman, containing an out- 

 • line of his course of lectures on Geology, 8vo. 



Pcnn's comparative estimate of the Mineral and Mosaical Geologies, revised and 

 I enlarged with relation (o the latest publications on Geology , 2 Vols. Svo. 



^ Brande's Outlines of Geology, 12mo. 



Conversations on Geology, comprising a familiar explanation of the Huttonian and 

 Wernerian Systems, the Mosaic Geology, and the late discoveries of Prof. Buckland 

 Humboldt, M'Culloch, and others, 12mo. 



Conybeare and Phillips' Outlines of the Geology of England and Wales, with an 

 Introductory Compendium of the general principles of that Science^ and compara- 

 tive views of the structure of iar^eJo^countries, Svo. 

 * Phillips' Illustrations of the Geology of YorkshTre7i5r a^escripiion of the strata and 



p; organic remains of the Yorkshire Coast, accompanied by a Geological Mi»p, section* 



and plates of the fossil plants and animals, 4to. 



M'Culloch's Geological Classification of Rocks, with Descriptive Synopses of 

 the species and varieties, comprising the elements of practical Geology, Svo. 



Humboldt's Geognostica! Essay on the superposition of Rocks in both hemis- 

 pheres, Svo. 



Maclure's Observations on the Geology of the IT. States of America, with some 

 ^ remarks on the eflFect produced on the nature and fertility of soils, by the decompo- 



sition of the different classes of Rocks, and an application to the fertility of every 

 State in the Union, in reference to the accompanying Geological Map, Svo. 



Daubeny's description of active and extinct Volcanos, with remarks on their cHigin, 

 their chemical phenomena, and the character of their products, as determined by the 

 condition of the earth during tlie period of their formation, Svo. 



Scrope's Considerations on Volcanos, the probable cause of their Phenomena, the 

 Laws which determine their march, the disposition of their products, and their con- 

 nection with the present state and past history of the Globe, leading to the establish- 

 ment of a new theory of the earth, Svo. 



Cordier's Essay on the Temperature of the Interior of the Earth, translated from 



the French by the Junior Class of Amherst College, 12mo. 



De la Beche's selection of the geological Memoirs, contained in the Annales des 

 Mines, together with a synoptical table of equivalent formations, and M. Brongniart'» 

 table of the classification of mixed rock?, 8vo. 



