524 
NATURE 
| March 7, 1870 
CLARENDON PRESS PUBLICATIONS. 
VESUVIUS. By Professor PHILLIPS. 
Contents :—Vesuvius at Rest—In Action—In the Nineteenth Century— 
Periods of Rest and Activity — Ch® yeteristic Phenomena— Form and 
Structure—Minerals —Laya and Ashes, « With numerous Illustrations. 
r baad] 
Crown 8yo. tos. 6d. 
“Contains much historical and scientific matter reduced to a pleasant and 
readable form. Of the volume as a whole, we can only speak in terms of the 
highest praise, and we regard it as a work which deserves a place on the 
shelves of every student of physical science.” —Z xaminer. 
“A work of high value both to the student and to the tourist on the shores 
ot the Bay of Naples.”—Padl Madd Gazette. 
CLARENDON PRESS SERIES. 
A TREATISE ON NATURAL 
PHILOSOPHY. Volume I. By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., D C.L., 
F_R.S., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Glasgow, and 
P. G. TAIT, M.A., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of 
Edinburgh. 8vo. 25s. Second Edition in the Press. 
“No book inthe English language on that subject can be so little dispensed 
with. In form it is a book, but in substance it is a library.” —Scotsman. 
Recently published, in Crown 8vo. price 7s. 6d. 
EXERCISES in PRACTICAL CHEMIS- 
TRY: Qualitative Analysis. By A.G. VERNON HARCOURT, F.R.S. 
Lee’s Reader in Chemistry at Christ Church, Oxford, and H. GC. MADAN, 
F.C.S. With numerous Illustrations. 
“The plan of the book appears to us to be admirable, and the directions 
given for performing the various operations involved in the course are 
wonderfully precise and clear.” —Chemmist and Druggist. 
Second Edition, with Solutions. 
CHEMISTRY FOR STUDENTS. By 
A. W. WILLIAMSON, Phil. Doc., Professor of Chemistry, University 
College, London. Extra fcap. 8vo. Cloth. Price 8s. 6d, 
“This volume is really a too rare example of what a good elementary text- 
book in any science ought to be: the language, brief, simple, exact ; the 
arrangement logical, developing in lucid order principles from facts, and 
keeping theory always dependent upon observation ; a book that keeps the 
reason of the student active while he strives to master details difficult but never 
without interest, and that furnishes him with means for practising himself 
in the right management of each new tool of knowledge that is given to him 
for his use,” —Z.xaminer. 
Extra fceap. 8vo. cloth, price 7s. 6d. 
AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON 
HEAT, with numerous Woodcuts and Diagrams. By BALFOUR 
STEWART, LL.D., F.R.S., Director of the Observatory at Kew. 
“This compact little treatise is commendable both as an elementary expo- 
sition of the chief phenomena of heat and their practical applications, and 
also as a brief exposition of the philosophical theories which have recently 
given a new interest tothe phenomena. The structure of the work is also 
excellent.” —Fortnightly Review. 
Demy 8vo. cloth, price 21s. 
DESCRIPTIVE ASTRONOMY. A Hand- 
book for the General Reader, and also for practical Observatory work, With 
224 Illustrations and numerous Tables. By G. F. CHAMBERS, F.R.A.S., 
Barrister-at-law, 
The aim of this work, briefly expressed, is general usefulness, whether in 
the hands of the student, the general reader, or the professional observer. 
Great pains have been taken to present the latest information on all branches 
of the science. The development of Astronomy is now so rapid that unless 
an author exercises constant vigilance his book must fall behindhand : and it 
is believed that this volume not only contains the most recent discoveries and 
deductions, but that in it will also be tound intormation hi 0 to be met 
with only in the publications of learned societies, difficult of a@iss and incon- 
venient for reference even to the Astronomer, and absolutely out of the reach 
of the general reader. 
FORMS OF ANIMAL LIFE. By G. 
ROLLESTON, M.D., F.R.S., Linacre Professor of Physiology, Oxford. 
Illustrated by Descriptions and Drawings of Dissections. early ready. 
THE ELEMENTS OF INDUCTIVE 
LOGIC, designed mainly for the use of Students in the Universities. By 
T. FOWLER, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Lincoln College, Oxford. Ext. 
fcap. 8vo. Cloth, 6s. 
OXFORD: Printed at the CLARENDON PRESS, and Published by 
MACMILLAN & €O., LONDON, Publishers to the University. 
SCIENTIFIC WORKS. 
Mr. WALLACE’S “MALAY ARCHI- 
PELAGO:” The Land of the Orang-Utan and the Bird of Paradise. A 
Narrative of Travel, with Studies of Man and Nature. ‘T'wo Vols. Crown 
8vo. With Nine Maps and more than 5o Illustrations, 24s. Second Edition. 
OBSERVATIONS on THE GEOLOGY 
AND ZOOLOGY OF ABYSSINIA. Made during the progress of the 
British Expedition to that Country in 1867-8. By W. J. BLANFORD, 
late Geologist to the Expedition, 8vo. with Coloured Illustrations. 
(Lmmediately. 
FORCE and NATURE: ATTRACTION 
AND REPULSION. The Radical Principles of Energy graphically dis- 
cussed in their Relation to Physical and Morphological Development. By 
C. F. WINSLOW, M.D. 8vo. 145. 
HABIT AND INTELLIGENCE, in their 
Connexion with the Laws of Matter and Force. A Series of Scientific 
Essays. By JOSEPH J. MURPHY. 2 vols. 8vo. 16s. 
A HISTORY OF CHEMICAL THE- 
ORY, from the Age of Lavoisier to the Present Time. By AD. WURTZ. 
Translated by H. WATTS, F.R.S. Crown 8vo. 6s. 
THE OLD VEGETABLE NEUROTICS, 
HEMLOCK, OPIUM, BELLADONNA, AND HENBANE ; their Phy- 
siological Action and Therapeutical Use, alone and in combination. With a 
Complete Examination of the Active Constituents of Opium. By JOHN 
HARLEY, M.D. Lond. F.R.C.P. 8vo. 12s. 
STRONG DRINK AND TOBACCO 
SMOKE. The Structure, Growth, and Uses of Malt, Hops, Yeast, and 
‘Tobacco. With One Hundred and Sixty-seven Original Illustrations, en- 
graved on Steel. By HENRY P. PRESCOTT, F.L.S. 8vo. 7s, 6d. 
HOW CROPS GROW; A Treatise on 
the Chemical Composition, Structure, and Life of the Plant, for Agricultural 
Students. By S. W. JOHNSON, M.A. Professor of Analytical and Agri- 
cultural Chemistry in Yale College. With Illustrations and Tables of 
Analyses. Revised, with Numerous Additions, and adapted for English use 
by A. H CHURCH, M.A. and W. T. DYER, B.A., Professors at the 
Royal Agricultural College, Cirencester. Crown 8vo. 8s. 6d. 
ON COMPARATIVE LONGEVITY IN 
MAN and the LOWER ANIMALS. By E. RAY LANKESTER, B.A. 
Crown 8vo. 4s. 6d. 
GLAUCUS : or, THE WONDERS OF 
THE SHORE. By CANON KINGSLEY. Fourth Edition, corrected 
and enlarged, with Coloured Illustrations. Extra fcap. 8vo. 5s. 
CAMBRIDGE COURSE OF ELE- 
MENTARY NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, for the Degree of B.A. 
Originally compiled by J. C. SNOWBALL, M.A., late Fellow of St. John’s 
College. Fifth Edition, revised and enlarged, and adapted for the Middle- 
Class Examinations by THOMAS LUND, B.D., late Fellow and Lecturer 
of St. John’s College, Editor of Wood’s Algebra, &c. Crown 8vo. cloth. 
5S. 
ON COMPARATIVE LONGEVITY IN 
MAN andthe LOWER ANIMALS. By E. RAY LANKESTER, B.A. 
Crown 8vo., 4s. 6a. (This Day. 
BY THE REV. HUGH MACMILLAN. 
HOLIDAYS ON HIGH LANDS; 
Rambles and Incidents in Search of Alpine Plants. Crown 8vo. 6s. 
Literary Churchman.—‘‘ One of the most charming books of its kind ever 
written.” 
Saturday Review.—‘‘Mr. Macmillan’s glowing pictures of Scandinavian 
uature are enough to kindle in every tourist the desire. to take the same 
interesting high lands for the scene of his own autumn holiday.” 
BIBLE TEACHINGS IN NATURE: 
Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. 
FOOTNOTES FROM THE PAGE OF 
NATURE; or, First Forms of Vegetation. With Illustrations. Fcap. 8vo. 5s- 
or, 
Printed by R. Cray, Sons, & Tayior, at 7 and 8, Bread Street Hill, in the City of London, and published by MACMILLAN & Co. 
at the Office, 63, Bleecker Street, New Yo k.—Tuuxspay, March 17, 1870 
