ON CHARTS AND PICTURES FOR USE IN SCHOOLS. 385 
by Messrs. G. Philip & Son. 32 Fleet Street, London, E.C. 4, includes several photo- 
graphs, admirable in themselves, which more or less nearly approximate to the ideas 
of the Committee. These are included in Messrs. Philips’ series 1, and are as follows :— 
No. 3. A Waterfall (Aysgarth), Lower Fall, Yorkshire. 
5. Chalk Cliffs and Natural Ridge on the Dorset Coast. 
7. Volcano. (The Crater of Mount Tarawera, New Zealand.) 
10. Glacier and Mountains. (The Mer de Glace, Alps.) 
11. Antarctic Ice and Snow Views. 
14. Desert. (Tunis.) 
16. Plain in Uruguay. 
In addition to the above, a few photographs may be noted which would appear 
specially suitable for enlargement for the purpose which the Committee has in view. 
These photographs are copyright and have been used in various publications, the 
references to which are given. ‘These references are not, of course, to enlargements, 
but to plates in books. 
No. 1. Rocky Mountains in British Columbia; a cirque; lake; coniferous woods ; 
precipitous ridge. Phot. Office of the High Commissioner for Canada. See 
Oxford Survey of the British Empire, London; Oxford University Press. 
Six vols., 70s. Vol. 4, page 176. 
. River entering Alluvial Plain. (River Tay in Carse of Gowrie, Scotland.) 
Deciduous Woods. Phot. Wilson Bros., tbid., vol. 1, page 27. 
. Savanna in South Africa. Phot. Office of the High Commissioner for South Africa, 
ibid., vol. 3, page 97. 
. Tropical Palm Forest in North Borneo. Phot. Visual Instruction Committee, 
ibid., vol. 2, page 434. 
Downs in Victoria, Australia. Phot. Office of the High Commissioner for Australia, 
ibid., vol. 5, page 14. 
. A Highland. (The Black Forest.) Phot. Photochrome Ltd., Clarendon Geo- 
graphy. Vol. 1, page 68. (London ; Oxford University Press. 2 vols. 4s. each.) 
. The Khaibar Pass, India. Phot. Visual Instruction Committee. Oxford Survey of 
the British Empire. Vol. 2, page 18. 
. The Gorge of the Middle Rhine, with flood plain beyond. Phot. Photochrome, 
Ltd. Clarendon Geography. Vol. 1, page 54. 
. Snowdon, North Wales, showing watershed, screes, etc. Phot. W. H. Spooner, 
Oxford Survey of the British Empire. Vol. 1, page 82. 
Mr. Herbert G. Ponting has many striking photographs illustrating Antarctic 
subjects which could be enlarged for school use. He also suggests the suitability 
of some of the Scott Expedition pictures for the same purpose. (An exhibition of 
Mr. Ponting’s Photographic pictures taken during the British Antarctic Expedition, 
1910-13, was arranged by the Fine Art Society, 148 New Bond Street, London, and 
a catalogue, priced, can still be obtained.) 
© 7m nn er 
VIII. GEOLOGY. 
The geological photographs included in the following list are of a pictorial character 
and illustrate subjects easily understood and mostly lying on the border-line 
between Geology and Geography. The more strictly geological subjects are gene- 
rally of too technical a character for the purpose contemplated. 
1. Fingal’s Cave, Staffa. Illustrating marine erosion of columnar and non-columnar 
basalt. J. Valentine & Co., Ltd., Dundee. (LIII.) 
2. North Golton Castle, Stromness. Illustrating the production of a sea stack by 
erosion along joints. J. Valentine & Co., Ltd., Dundee. (1047.) 
3. Mist Effect on Scuir nan Gillean, Skye. Illustrating bare and nearly precipitous- 
sided gabbro mountains. Abraham Brothers, Keswick. 
4. Giant’s Causeway, Antrim. Columnar basalt. R. Welch, Lonsdale Street, 
Belfast. (1652.) 
. The Fairy Glen, Gough’s Cave, Cheddar. Illustrating the form of stalactites. 
Pictorial Stationery Company, London. 
. Ingleborough and the Limestone Plateau below. Illustrating the soil-less character 
of a limestone plateau. S. H. Reynolds, The University, Bristol. (1919—47.) 
. The Scuir of Eigg. Mlustrating differential erosion. A. 8. Reid, Trinity College, 
Glenalmond, Perth, N.B. (2240.) 
a1 o®& & 
