via 



Regional Bureaus have already been established in Austria, Belgium, 

 Canada, Cape Colony, Denmark, Egypt, France, Great Britain and Ireland, 

 Germany, Greece, Holland, Hungary, Italy, India and Ceylon, Japan, 

 Mexico, New Zealand, New k^outh Wales, Norway, Portugal, Poland^ 

 Queensland, Russia, South Australia, Sweden. Switzerland, the United 

 States of America, Victoria, Western Australia, Finland. 



The branches of Science to be included in the Catalogue are the 

 seventeen following : — 



A — Mathen:atics 



B — Mechanics 



C — Physics 



D — Chemistry 



E — Astronomy 



F — Meteorology (including Terrestrial Magnetism) 



G — Mineralogy (including Petrology and Crystallography) 



II — Geology 



J — Geography (Mathematical and Physical) 



K — Palaeontology 



L — General Biology 



M— Botany 



N — Zoology 



— Human Anatomy 



P — Physical Anthropology 



Q — Physiology (including experimental Psychology, Pharmacology 



and experimental Pathology) 

 R — Bacteriology 



Each complete annual issue of the Catalogue thus consists of 

 seventeen volumes. The price at which this set is sold to the 

 public is £18. Individual volumes are sold at piices varying with 

 their size fiom about teu to thirty-nine shillings. 



A Schedule of Classification and an Index tliereto are pre- 

 fixed to each volume in English, French, German, and Italian. 

 This will not only enable the scientific worker to study the system 

 of classification in the language with which he is most familiar, but 

 also in cases of doubt — c.ff. as to the meaning of a word — will enable 

 him to refer to the coi-responding entry iu another language. Should 

 there be a marked discrepancy among the schedules on aiiy point the 

 English schedule is to be taken as guide, the schedules printed in that 

 language being those which were approved by the International 

 Council. 



The various headings and sub-headings throughout the Subject Index 

 aie given in English. Translations of the njain headings can be found 

 on refei-ence to the schedules in the other languages by means of 

 the registi'ation numbers that are attached to them. 



Tlie entries in the Subject Indexes are in the language of the 

 original paper when that is one of the following five languages: 

 Latin, English, French, German, and Italian. These aie tlie only 

 languages used in the Subject Index, but in case of translation the 

 name of ihe language of the original is inserted within round brackets. 



In the Authors' Catalogue each title is given in the original 

 language. When, however, that language is not one of the five 



