INDEX TO BOOKS REVIEWED AND NOTICED. 
Rafflésia, after Sir S. Raffles, i. 67. 
Regio ophthdlmica, region of the eye, i. 277. 
Regio parética, protuberance over the ear, i. 277. 
Rémiges, the oars, i. 277. 
Rheum, from Rha, the ancient name of the 
River Volga, iii. 350. 
Rhizamérpha, from rhixa, root, and morphé, 
form, i. 155. 
Rodbur, applied by the Romans to the hardest 
kind of oak, i. 248, 
Rongeurs, from ronger, to gnaw, iii. 513. 
Rostrum, the bill, i. 123. 
Rubelite, from rubellus, reddish, i. 154. 
Rumindntes, from ruminare, to chew again, 
iii, 514, 
Sticcus jugularts, the pouch, i. 124, 
Sablonous, sandy, iii. 500. 
Sailep, from the Arabic sahkled, iii, 352. 
Salpigléssis, from sa/pigx, a trumpet, glossa, a 
tongue, i. 362. 
Scariosa, scarious, i. 168. 
Scapulares, scapulars, i. 123. 
Scansores, climbers, i. 122. 
Scansorii, climbing, i. 124. 
Schists, argillaceous clayey slate, or schistese 
slate, iii. 499. 
Schistose, rocks abounding with schist, iii. 500. 
Scorpe*na, from skorpios, a scorpion, i. 162. 
Semipalmatus, semipalmated feet, i. 124. 
Sinciput, hinder part of the head, i. 277. 
Sdlen, from sd/én, a tube, i. 28. 
Souwlangiana, in honour of the Chev. Soulange- 
Bodin, i. 362. 
Spatha, a slice, iii. 52. 
Spéculum, the wing. spot, i. 123. 
Sphendtoma, from sphéno, to connect together, 
toma, a slice or section, i, 61. 
hyd 
Spiroldbee, from speira, a spire, Jobos, a pod, i.144. 
Spéndylus, from spondylos, the prickly head of 
an artichoke, i. 28. é 
Supercilia, the eyebrows, i. 123. 
Téctrices catid@, the tail-coverts, i. 123. 
Téctrices, the wing-coverts, i. 123, 
Telarius, from tela, a web, i. 157. 
Témpora, the temples, i. 123, 
Tenuerdstres, slender-beaked, i. 122. 
Testaceous, having a shell, iii, 335. 
Thalamiflore, from thalamus, a bed, and flos, a 
flower, i. 136. 
Tinetorius, dyeing, used by dyers, i. 168. 
Toise, the French, equal to 1:06575 English fa- 
thoms, iii. 499. 
Trichodictylus, from thrix, hair, and daktylos, 
a toe, i. 185. 
Tridictyli, three-toed, i, 123. 
Trochus, from trochus, a boy’s top, 1. 29. 
Trop@*olum, dim. of trop@xm, a trophy, iii, 141. 
Trtncus, the trunk, i. 423. 
Umbeiliferous, umbe}-bearing, ii. 156. 
Ungues, the claws, i. 124. 
Univalve shell, composed of one piece, iii. 335. 
Uropggium, the rump, i. 123. 227. 
Vasculares, from vas, a vessel, i. 186. 
Ventral, from venter, the belly, i, 162. 
Vertex, the crown, i. 123. 
Vibrisse, from vibro, to shake or move nimbly, 
iii. 33, 
Vittdtus, from vitta, a band, i. 163. 
Volitans, from volito, to fly about, i. 162. 
Volva, from voivere, to wrap, iii. 52. 
Willughbiélla, named after Willughby, a friend 
of Ray’s, i. 273. 
Zoophyte, from xdon, an animal, phyton, a plant, 
i. 159. 
INDEX TO BOOKS REVIEWED AND NOTICED. 
THE GENERAL SUBJECT. 
RITISH Naturalist, the, vol. i. 80. vol. ii. 426. 
Catalogue of the Norfolk and Norwich Museum, 
563. 
First Report of the Scarborough Phil. Soc. Nat. 
564, 
Gardens and Menagerie ef the Zool. Soc., 81. 
Gorham’s Memoirs of Martyn, 427. 
Johnson’s Life of Ray, announced, 81. 
Journal of a Naturalist, 84. 
Library of Entertaining Knowledge, 80. 564. 
Neill’s Address, &c. &c. noticed, 564. 
Paris’s Life of Sir H. Davy, reviewed, 589. 
Report of the N. H. Soc. of Northumberland, 
&e. 564, 
Rhind’s Studies in Natural History, 79. 
Transactions of the Plinian Society, not. 79. 
Transactions of the N. H. Soc. of Northumber- 
land, &c. 564 
Turner’s Introductory Address to the N. H. Soc. 
of Northumberland, &c. 564, 
Young Lady’s Book, 81. 
ZOOLOGY. 
Audouin’s Systems of the Linnean Inscets, &c. 
announced, 565. 
Bennet’s Fishes of Ceylon, 427. 
Boisduval’s N. American Coleéptera, &c. 565. 
Brebisson’s Minute Hymenoptera, 565, 
Brown’s Conchology of Great Britain and Ire- 
land, 427. 
Carcel’s Minute Hymenéptera, 565. 
Curtis’s British Entomology, vol. vi. ann. 81. 
pe mcans Species General of Coleéptera, ann 
565. 
Iconography of the Europ. Coledéptera, 
ann, 565, 
Desvoidy, Robineau, his Miscide, 565, 
Dupont’s Beetles, ann. 565. 
Duponchel’s French Moths, 565. 
Gory and Percheron’s Cetoniada, ann. 565. 
Gray’s Illustrations of Indian Zoology, ann, 81. 
Griffiths’ Animal Kingdom, not. 564. 
Guerin’s Iconography of Cuvier, &c. &c. 565. 
Latreille’s Introduction to Entomology, ann. 
565. 
Natural Classification of the Weevils, 
ann. 565. 
Lefebvre’s Cimicidz, ann. 565. 
Percheron’s Hemiptera, &c. &c. ann. 565, 
Richardson’s Zoology of Northern British Ame- 
rica, 427. 
Saint Hilaire’s Cours del’ Histoire Naturelle des 
Mammiftres, rev. 420. 
Saint Fargeau’s Hymendéptera, 565. 
Selby’s Illustrations of British Ornithology, 427. 
Serville’s Faune Francaise, 565. 
Thompson’s Zoological Researches, &c. 426. 
Zoological Journal, 564, 
BOTANY. 
Castle’s Introduction to Botany, 427. 
Chandler’s Camellie‘e, +97. 
Geological Flora of Europe, not. 289. 
Greville’s A’lge Britannice, 427. 
Jones and Kingston’s Fldra Devoniénsis, &c., 
rev. 288. 
Lindley’s First Principles of Botany, 427; copper- 
plates to, 564; Introduction to the Nat, Syst. 
of Botany, not. 564, 
Loudon’s Hértus Britannicus, 426, 
Sowerby’s Supplement to English Botany, 427. 
Strutt’s Delicie Sylvarum, rev. 378; Sylva Bri- 
tannica, rev. 546. 
Wallich’s Plante Asiatic Raridres, 427, 
GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY. 
Lindley and Hutton’s Fossil Flora of Great 
Britain, not. 289. 
Lyell’s Principles of Geology, 427. 
Ure’s Geology, 90. 
Young’s Geological Survey of the Yorkshire 
Coast, rev., 423. 
METEOROLOGY. 
Murray’s Atmospheric Electricity, not. 560. 
PP 2 
