W. TH ACKER 6- CO., LONDON. 



Imperial 161110., cloth, 580 pages, xis. 6d. Rs. 10. 



A NATURAL HISTORY OF THE 

 MAMMALIA OF INDIA, 



BURMAH AND CEYLON. 

 By R. A. STERNDALE, F.R.G*S*, F.Z.S* 



With 170 Illustrations by the Author and others. 



The geographical limits of the present work have been ex- 

 tended to all territories likely to be reached by the sportsman 

 from India. It is copiously illustrated, not only by the author 

 himself, but by careful selections made by him from the works 

 of well-known artists. 



Knoioledge. — " It is the very model of what a popular natural history should be." 



Saturday Review. — " Full of accurate observations, brightly told." 



Athenceum. — " The results of a close and sympathetic observation."^ 



The Times. — " The book will, no doubt, be specially useful to the sportsman, 

 and indeed has been extended so as to include all territories likely to be reached 

 by the sportsman from India." 1 



The Daily News. — " Has contrived to hit a hap])y moan [^between the stiff 

 scientific treatise and the bosirof what may be called anecdotal zoology." 



