SPECIAL WORKS OF REFERENCE ON SECTION OF 

 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY 



(Prepared by Courtesy of Professor William E. Ritter) 



COPE, E. D., The Primary Factors of Organic Evolution. Open Court Pub. Co., 

 Chicago, 1896. Most of the evolutionary views, that concerning the " Law of the 

 Unspecialized " with the others, were put forth by Cope long before the publica- 

 tion of this work. 

 DEAN, BASHFORD, The Preservation of Muscle-fibres in Sharks of the Cleveland 



Shale. American Geologist, vol. xxx, p. 273, 1902. 

 DOHRN, ANTON, Der Ursprung der Wirbelthiere und das Princip des Functions- 



wechsels. Leipzig, Wilhelm Engelmann, 1875. 



DRIESCH, HANS, Analytische Theorie der organischen Entwicklung. Leipzig, W. 

 Engelmann, 1894. Although Dr. Driesch has since published many papers, 

 and his views have undergone considerable modification, this work still con- 

 tains the most comprehensive presentation of his views on development. 

 FOSTER, Sir M., Lectures on the History of Physiology during the sixteenth, 



seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. Cambridge Press, 1901. 

 GASKELL, W. H., On the Origin of Vertebrates deduced from the Study of Ammo- 

 ccetes. Some twelve papers published at intervals during the last eight or ten 

 years in the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology. 

 GEGENBAXJER, CARL, Ontogonie und Anatomic in ihren Wechselbeziehungen be- 



trachtet. Morph. Jahrb. bd. xv, p. 1, 1889. 



HARVEY, WILLIAM, On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals. Willis's 

 translation, revised and edited by Alex. Bowie, M. D., C. M., London: George 

 Bell and Sons, 1889. 



HERTWIG, O., Zeit-und Streitfragen der Biologie. Jena, G. Fischer, 1894. A full 

 and very admirable discussion of Preformation and Epigenesis, with a pre- 

 sentation of the author's own views. 



KORSCHELDT and HEIDER, Textbook of the Embryology of the Invertebrates. 

 1891-1900. English translation by E. L. Mark and Wm. Woodworth; and 

 Matilda Bernard and Martin Woodward. 4 vols. The section dealing with the 

 development of each phylum is terminated by an important discussion of the 

 probable affinities of the phylum as judged from the evidence of embryology. 

 MALPIGHI, MARCELLO. 1667-1671. The Transactions of the Royal Society of Lon- 

 don for these years contain numerous letters and communications from this 

 author, in several of which the similarity, if not the unity, of processes in 

 plants and animals is dwelt upon. Sir Michael Foster's treatment of Malpighi is 

 especially good. 

 MONTGOMERY, THOMAS H., Jr., On Phylogenetic Classification. Proc. of the Acad. 



of Nat. Sciences, Philadelphia, April, 1902, p. 187. 



Roux, W., The Problems, Methods, and Scope of Developmental Mechanics. A 

 translation by Dr. W. H. Wheeler, of the Introduction to the "Archiv fur 

 Entwickelungsmechanik der Organismen." Biological Lectures delivered at the 

 Marine Bological Laboratory of Wood's Holl, Summer, 1884. Boston, Ginn and 

 Company, 1895. 



STENO, NICOLAUS, De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento. 1669. The sub- 

 stance of this classical work is given by Sir Charles Lyell in the historical part 

 of his Principles of Geology. 



