From Gurney & Jackson's List 
STUDIES IN BIRD MIGRATION 
BY WILEIAM DAGEE (CLARKE, iSO. Wild. ERS E. 
Member of the British Association Committee on the Migration of Birds 
as Observed on the British and Irish Coasts, and Author of its Final 
Reports, 1896-1903, etc. 
With Numerous Illustrations, Maps, and Weather Charts. 
2 Nols. Sq.’ Demy 8vo. 21s. ‘met. 
“ There is no other English ornithologist better qualified to write on the migration of 
birds than’ Mr Eagle Clarke, whose name has long been inseparably associated with the 
problems of this difficult but fascinating subject. It is certain that to the serious student 
of bird migration the volumes are indispensable.’ — 7he Atheneum. 
“This book has been long expected, and it is certainly one worth waiting 
for.” —NVature. 
An Illustrated Manual of British Birds 
By Howarp Saunpers, F.L.S., F.Z.S., etc. Second Edition. Demy 
8vo, with 384 fine Woodcuts and 3 Maps. 1, ls. net. 
“Excellent alike in style and matter, it ought to be in the hands of every lover of 
birds.” —A xanals of Natural History. 
‘““The whole book forms the most concise and at the same time trustworthy book on 
birds of a single region that has ever been written.” —Sczence Gossip. 
The Birds of Ireland 
An Account of the Distribution, Migrations, and Habits of Birds, as 
observed in Ireland, with all additions to the Irish List, including an 
Introduction and Tables showing the Distribution of Birds in the 
Breeding Season. By RicHarp J. USSHER and RoBeRT WARREN. 
With a Coloured Plate, Maps, and other Illustrations. 450 pp. $vo, 
cloths, pl2s: net: 
GURNEY & JACKSON, 33 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON, E.C. 
A PHOTOGRAPHIC ATLAS. SECOND SERIES 
By EE. K. PEARCE 
With 125 photographs Royal 8vo 15s net 
“The photographs are as good as any we have seen of this class of insect—a 
peculiarly difficult class to represent pictorially in any natural manner; the venation of 
the wings is well brought out wherever the banding or colouring of the wings does not 
obscure it, and there are excellent short notes as to habitat, larval habits, and so on 
under the pictures.’—/Va/wre on THE FIRST SERIES. 
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 
FETTER LANE, LONDON, 
E.C. 4: 
C. F. CLAY, Manacrr I 
