PUBLISHED BY REEVE, BENHAM, AND EEEVE. 



9. NEREIS AUSTRALIA or Illustrations of the Algge of 

 the Southern Ocean, being Figures, Descriptions, and 

 Remarks upon new or imperfectly known Sea- Weeds, 

 collected on the shores of the Cape of Good Hope, the 

 extra-tropical Australian Colonies, Tasmania, New Zealand, 

 and the Antarctic Regions, and deposited in the Herba- 

 rium of the Dublin University. By WILLIAM HENRY 

 HARVEY, M.D., M.R.I.A., Keeper of the Herbarium. 



" Of this most important contribution to our knowledge of exotic Algse, we know not 

 if we can pay it a higher compliment than by saying it is worthy of the author. 



" It should be observed that the work is not a selection of certain species, but an 

 arranged system of all that is known of Australian Algse, accompanied by figures of 

 the new and rare ones, especially of those most remarkable for beauty of form and 

 colour." London Journal of Botany. 



10. ILLUSTRATIONS OF BRITISH MYCOLOGY, con- 



taining figures and popular descriptions of the Funguses 

 of interest and novelty indigenous to Britain, by Mrs. T. 

 J. HUSSEY. 



" The observations, especially those of the culinary department, will be found of much 

 interest to the general reader, and we doubt not that our tables will in consequence 

 receive many a welcome addition, while from the accuracy of the figures, there will 

 be no danger, with ordinary attention, of making any serious blunder." Gardener's 

 Chronicle. 



11. CONCHOLOGIA ICONICA, or Monographs of the 



Genera of Shells, including Latin and English Descrip- 

 tions of all the Species known at the time of publication, 

 with their synonymes and references, copious remarks on 

 their characters, affinities, and circumstances of habitation, 

 chiefly illustrated from specimens in the collection of 

 Hugh Cuming, Esq., with coloured figures of the natural 

 size. By LOVELL REEVE, F.L.S. Published monthly in 

 Parts, 10*., and subsequently in Monographs. 



" This great work is intended to embrace a complete description and illustration of 

 the shells of molluscous animals ; and so far as we have seen, it is not such as to 

 disappoint the large expectations that have been formed respecting it. The figures 

 of the shells are all of full size ; in the descriptions a careful analysis is given of the 

 labours of others ; and the author has apparently spared no pains to make the work 

 standard authority on the subject of which it treats." Athenitum. 



