MOLLUSCS AND BRACHIOPODS 



VOLUME III. 



Molluscs, by the Eev. A. H. COOKE, M.A. ; Brachiopods (Recent), by 

 A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., F.RS.; Brachiopods (Fossil), by F. E. C. 

 REED, M.A. 



FIELD. "We know of no book available to the general reader which affords 

 such a vast fund of information on the structure and habits of molluscs." 



KNO WLEDGE. "If succeeding volumes are like this one, the Cambridge Natural 

 History will rank as one of the finest works on natural history ever published." 



ATHENAEUM. "The series certainly ought not to be restricted in its circula- 

 tion to lecturers and students only ; and, if the forthcoming volumes reach the 

 standard of the one here under notice, the success of the enterprise should be 

 assured." 



VOLUME IV. 



Crustacea, by GEOFFREY SMITH, M.A., and the late W. F. R. WELDON, 

 M.A. ; Trilobites, by HENRY WOODS, M.A. ; Introduction to 

 Arachnida, and King -Crabs, by A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., F.RS. ; 

 Eurypterida, by HENRY WOODS, M.A. ; Scorpions, Spiders, Mites, 

 Ticks, etc., by CECIL WARBURTON, M.A. ; Tardigrada (Water-Bears), 

 by A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., F.RS.; Pentastomida, by A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., 

 F.R.S. ; Pycnogonida, by D'ARCY W. THOMPSON, C.B., M.A. 



MORNING POST. 1 ' The present volume fully maintains the standard that has 

 been set by the earlier volumes. . . . The editors are heartily to be congratulated 

 on the accomplishment of their laborious undertaking. They have produced a 

 trustworthy account of the various departments of the animal kingdom, of value 

 both to the naturalist and to the professed zoologist, a work containing such a 

 quantity of information as will scarcely be found in any other zoological treatise of 

 the same kind." 



GUARDIAN. "The editors may be congratulated on the production of a work 

 which is excellently fitted to accomplish its purpose of meeting the needs both of 

 the serious student and also of the general reader in search of accurate information. 

 Such an undertaking could only have been brought to a successful issue by the 

 combined labour of many specialists, and in the present volume, no less than in 

 others of the series which have been already noticed in these columns, the principle 

 of co-operation has been employed with the best results." 



PERIPATUS, MYRIAPODS, AND INSECTS-PART I. 



VOLUME V. 



Peripatus, by ADAM SEDGWICK, M.A., F.E.S. ; Myriapods, by F. G. 

 SINCLAIR, M.A. ; Insects, Part I., Introduction, Aptera, Orthoptera, 

 Neuroptera, and a portion of Hymenoptera (Sessiliventres and 

 Parasitica), by DAVID SHARP, M.A., M.B., F.RS. 



Prof. RAPHAEL MELDOLA, F.R.S., F.C.S., in his Presidential Address to the 

 Entomological Society of London, said : "The authors of this volume are certainly 

 to be congratulated upon having furnished such a valuable contribution to our litera- 

 ture. When its successor appears, and I will venture to express the hope that this 

 will be at no very distant period, we shall be in possession of a treatise on the 

 natural history of insects which, from the point of view of the general reader, will 

 compare most favourably with any similar work that has been published in the 

 English language." 



ENTOMOLOGIST'S MONTHLY MAGAZINE. "We venture to think the 

 work will be found indispensable to all who seek to extend their general knowledge 

 beyond the narrowing influence of exclusive attention to certain orders or groups, 

 and that it will take a high position in 'The Cambridge Natural History' series." 



