ALLEN'S BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CETACEA AND SIRENIA. 531 



1830. WAGLER, JOH. Continued. 



gart und Tiibingen. j In der J. G. Cotta'schen Buchhandlung. | 1830. 8. 

 pp. i-vi, 1-354. 



Mammalia. Ordo XVI. Ceti, Walle, pp. 32-35, 53, 54. Familia I. Hedraeoglossi. A. G. 

 naribus anticis in rostri apice. Gonus 1. Manatus Rondel., p. 32 ; genus 2. Halicore Illig., p. 

 33; genus 3. Rytina Illig., p. 33. B. C. naribus superiis in rostri basi. Genus 4. Balcena 

 Linn., p. 33; genus 6. Physeter Linn., p. 33; genus 7. Cetus (species: Delphinus globiceps 

 Cuv.), p. 33; genus 8. Delphi* (= Beluga), p. 34; genus 9. Tursio [ Delphinapterus Less.] 

 (species: Delphinus Peronii Cuv.), p. 34; genus 10. Nodus [= Heterodon Less.] (species: 

 Delphinus edentulus Schreb.), p. 34; genus 11. Ceratodon Briss. [=Monodon Linn.], p. 34; 

 genus 12. Orea (species : Delphinus Udentatus Hunt.), p. 34; genus 13. Phocaena, Cuv., p. 

 34; genus 14. Delphinus Linn., p. 35; genus 15. Platanista [=Susu Less.], (species: Del- 

 phinus gangeticus), p. 35. Hedraeoglossi, fam. n. (=Sirenia et Cetce), p. 32. 



Cetus (p. 33), Delphis, Tursio, Nodus, Orca (p. 34), Platanista (p. 34), genn. nn. 



Critical remarks respecting various genera and species of authors are given in foot-notes.. 



[754.] 



1830. WATSON, J. F. Annals | of | Philadelphia, | being a collection of | Memoirs, 



Anecdotes, & Incidents | of the | City and its Inhabitants | from | The days 

 of the Pilgrim Founders. | Intended to preserve the recollections of Olden 

 Time, and | to exhibit society in its changes of manners and | customs, and 

 the city in its local changes | and improvements. | To which is added | An 

 Appendix, | containing | Olden Time Researches and Reminiscences of | New 

 York City. | | "Oh! dear is a tale of the olden time!" | | "Where peep'd 

 the hut, the palace towers; | Where skimni'd the bark, the war-ship lowers: | 

 Joy gaily carols, where was silence rude ; | And cultur'd thousands throng the 

 solitude." | | By John F. Watson, | Member of the Historical Society of 

 Pennsylvania. | | Philadelphia, | E. L. Carey & A. Hart; | New York, | G. 

 & C. & H. Carvill. | 1830. | 8. pp. i-xii, 1-740 + 1-78 pll. 



Whales and Whalery, pp. 667-668. On the early Whaleftshery of the Delaware, with 

 records of the stranding or capture of Whales in the river down to 1809. [755.] 



1831. ANOX. Considerations sur la Pche de la Baleine. Par A. de la Jonkaire. 



<For. Quar. Rev., vii, 1831, pp. 355-370. 



An extended account, in part statistical, of the "progress and present state of the Whale 



Fishery, " apropos of the appearance of the brochure, the title of which forms the caption of 



the paper. [756.] 



1831. C., F. D. Notice sur l'oste"ologie et la dentition du Dugong; parle D r . Knox. 



(Edinb. Journ. of Sci., i, 1829. ) <Ferwsac > 8 Bull, des Sci. nat., xxv, 1831, p. 350. 



Resume. [757.] 



1831. CRAIGIE, DAVID. Observations on the History and Progress of Comparative 

 Anatomy. . . . Section III. Early Zootomical Authors to Eustachius, 1501- 

 1576. <Edinb. New PUlos. Journ., [xi], 1831, pp. 42-56. 



Contains an extended critical resum6 of Belon's account of the anatomy of the Dolphin as 

 given in that author's "L'Histoire Naturelle des Estranges Poissons Marins, avec la vraie 

 Peincture et Description du Daulphin et de plusieurs autres de son espece. Paris 1551," q.'v. 



[758.] 



1831. CUVIER, G. The | Animal Kingdom | arranged in conformity with its organiza- 

 tion, | by the Baron Cuvier, | Perpetual Secretary to the Royal Academy of 

 Sciences, etc. etc. etc. | | The Crustacea, Arachnides and Insecta, | by P. 

 A. Latreille, | member of the Royal Academy of Sciences, etc. etc. etc. | | 

 Translated from the French, | with Notes and Additions, | by H. M'Murtrie, 

 M. D. &c. &c. | | In four volumes, with plates. | Volume I. [Mammals 

 and Birds.] | New York: | G. & C. & H. Carvill. | MDCCCXXXL 8. pp. 

 i-xxxii, 1-448, 1. 1, pll. i-iv. 



Order ix. Cetacea (=Sirenia + Cete), pp. 202-214. 



This is a scholarly translation of the "nouvelle Edition" (1829), q. v. Says the translator: 

 "An immaculate book is perhaps rather to be wished for than expected, and that errors should 

 have crept into the Regne Animal is not at all surprising. These I have endeavoured to cor- 

 rect, not by erasure or altering the text (those cases always excepted where the mistake was 

 evidently and purely typographical), but by note, either on the page itself or in the appendix. 

 Thus, whatever has been added, nothing has been taken away, and the text of my author 

 remains as I found it" (pp. v, vi). [759.) 



