151 



LITERATURE LIST 



The Works marked * are general treatises suitable 

 for further study. 



1. Bateson, W. Materials for the Study of Variation. London, 

 1894. 



*2. ■ Mendel's Principles of Heredity. 2nd Impression. 



Cambridge, 1909. (Full bibliographyto date of publication.) 



3. Boveri, T. Ergebnisse iiber die Konstitution der Chroma- 



tischen Substanz des Zellkerns. Jena, 1904. 



4. Castle, W. E. Heredity of Hair-length in Guinea-pigs, and 



its Bearing on the Theory of Pure Gametes. Publ. Carnegie 

 Inst. Washington, No. 49, 1906. 



5. Studies of Inheritance in Rabbits. Publ. Carnegie 



Inst No. 114, 1909. 



*5a. Darbishire, A. D. Breeding and the Mendelian Discovery. 



Cassell, 1911. 

 *6. Darwin, C. The Origin of Species. 



*7. Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication. 



*8. Darwin and Modern Science. Cambridge, 1909. 

 9. Davenport, C.B. Statistical Methods with Special Reference 



to Biological Variation. New York and London, 1899. 

 9a. Doncaster, L. Recent work on the Determination of Sex. 



Science Progress, July 1909: reprinted in Smithsonian 



Report (Washington) for 1910. 



