646 
NATURE 
[ April 28, 1870 
SCIENTIFIC WORKS. 
Mr. WALLACE’S “MALAY ARCHI- 
PELAGO:” The Land of the Orang-Utan and the Bird of Paradise. A 
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THE POPULATION OF AN OLD 
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numerous Illustrations by BecKER. Crown 8yo. 6s. [Thies day. 
FORCE and NATURE: ATTRACTION 
AND REPULSION. The Radical Principles of Energy graphically dis- 
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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. Witha 
Complete Examination of the Active Constituents of Opium. By JOHN 
HARLEY, M.D. Lond. F.R.C.P.  8vo. 12s. 
STRONG DRINK AND TOBACCO 
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HOW CROPS GROW; A Treatise on 
the Chemical Composition, Structure, and Life of the Plant, for Agricultural 
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Analyses. Revised, with Numerous Additions, and adapted for English use 
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FIRST BOOK OF INDIAN BOTANY. 
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“ Will enable the learner at once to master the elements of his study, and 
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BIBLE TEACHINGS IN NATURE. 
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| E 
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FORMS OF ANIMAL LIFE. Being 
| Outlines of Zoological Classification Based upon Anatomical Investigation 
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GEORGE ROLLESTON, M.D., F.R.S., Linacre Professor of Anatomy 
ank Physiology in the University of Oxford. 
Cont s:—Characteristics of the Sub-kingdom Vertebrata, Mollusca, 
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zoa, Spongiade. x 
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Partr. By W. F. DONKIN, M.A., F.R.S., Savilian Profesor of Astro- 
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VESUVIUS. By Professor PHILLIPS. 
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EXERCISES in PRACTICAL CHEMIS- 
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AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON 
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DESCRIPTIVE ASTRONOMY. A Hand- 
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224 Illustrations and numerous Tables. By G. F. CHAMBERS, F.R.A.S., 
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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 found information hitherto to be met 
with only in the publications of learned societies, difficult of access and in- 
convenient for reference even to the Astronomer, and absolutely out of the 
reach of the general reader. 
OXFORD: Printed at the CLARENDON PRESS, and Published by 
MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON, Publishers to the University. 
