PREFACE. 



ARISTOTLE S researches in Natural Science are set forth 

 in a series of his works, some of which have already received 

 a great deal of attention, while the rest have been much 

 neglected. Translations, with or without explanatory notes, 

 of all these works have been produced in English, French, 

 German, or Latin, and separate treatises or papers discuss 

 ing Aristotle s researches in one or more branches of Natural 

 Science have been published from time to time. Among 

 such treatises and papers may be mentioned J. Muller s 

 Uber den glatten Hai des Aristoteles, &amp;lt;c., Berlin, 1842, 

 a folio volume with six plates, relating, in part, to the 

 placental cartilaginous fishes of Aristotle; J. B. Meyer s 

 Aristoteles Thierkunde, Ein Bcitrag zur Geschichte der 

 Zoologie, Physiologic, und alien Philosophic, Berlin, 1855 ; 

 H. Aubert s Die Cephalopoden des Aristoteles, d-c., Lepzig, 

 1862, 39 pp. ; C. J. Sundevall s Die Thierarten des Aristo 

 teles von den Klassen der Sdugethiere, Vogel, Reptilien 

 und Insekten, Stockholm, 1863; G. H. Lewes Aristotle : A 

 Chapter from the History of Science, London, 1864 ; and 

 Dr. J. Young s paper &quot; On the Malacostraca of Aristotle,&quot; 

 published in The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 

 1865. There are also several works and papers which inci 

 dentally give valuable assistance in the study of Aristotle s 

 researches in Natural Science, e.g. Cuvier and Valenciennes 

 Histoire Naturelle des Poissons, Paris, 1828-49 ; J. L. 

 Ideler s Meteorologia veterum Grcecorum et Eomanorum, 

 Berlin, 1832 ; Spratt and Forbes Travels in Lycia, d-c., 

 London, 1847 ; Hoffman and Jordan s &quot; Catalogue of the 

 Fishes of Greece, with Notes on the Names now in Use, 

 and those Employed by Classical Authors,&quot; published in the 

 Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences of Philadelphia, 

 for 1892; D A. W. Thompson s Glossary of Greek Birds, 

 Oxford, 1895 ; and T. Gill s &quot; Parental Care among Fresh 

 water Fishes,&quot; published in the Annual Report of the 

 Smithsonian Institution, Washington, 1906. 



