312 PROFESSOR ROLLESTON ON THE 



Bischoff. Entwickelungsgeschichte Siiugethiere und Menschen. 1842. French translation by M. Jourdan, 



Encyclop. Anatom. 1843. 

 Milne-Edwards. Sur la Classification Naturelle. Annales Scien. Natur. ser. 3. torn. i. 1844. 

 Goodsir. Anatomical and Pathological Observations. 1845. 

 Bischoff. Hunde Ei. 1845. 



Breschet. Sur la Gestation des Quadrumanes. Mem. de I'lnstitut, torn. xix. 1845. 

 Weber. Zusatze zur Lehre (of the year 1835). Abhandlung. Jablon. Gesell. 1846. 

 Coste. Histoire du DSveloppement des Corps Organises. 1847. 

 Kilian. Die Structur des Uterus. Henle's Zeitschrift. 1849. 

 Barkow. Zootomische Bemerkungen. 1851. 

 Ecker. Icones Physiologicse. 1852-1859. 

 Bischoff. Meerschweinchen Ei. 1852. 



Virchow. Ueber die Bildung der Placenta. 1853. Reprinted in his ' Gesammelte Abhandlungen,' p. 779. 

 Bischoff. Rehe-Ei. 1854. 



Matthews Duncan. Edinburgh Monthly Medical Journal. September 1853. 

 Matthews Duncan. Medico-chirurgical Review. October 1853. 

 Chisholm. Edinburgh Monthly Journal. September 1854. 

 Bergmann and Leuckart. Vergleichende Anatomie und Physiologie. 1855. 

 Cazeau. Traite des Accouchements. 1856. 



Colin. Traite de Physiologie Comparee. 1856. ] 



Chisholm. Edinburgh Monthly Journal. January 1857, 

 Owen. Linnean Society's Proceedings. February and April 1857. 

 Owen. Philosophical Transactions. April 14, 1857. 



Matthews Duncan. Edinburgh Medical Journal. December 1857, February 1858, April 1859. 

 KoUiker. Entwickelungsgeschichte des Menschen und der hiiheren Thiere. Leipzig, 1861. 

 Robin. De la Muqueuse Uterine. Mem. Acad. Imp. Medecine, Paris, tom. xxv. 1861. 

 Priestley. Lectures on the Gravid Uterus. 1862. 

 Matthews Duncan. On the Condition of the Uterus after Parturition. Obstetrical Society's Transactions, 



vol. iv. 1862. 

 Birnbaum. Untersuchungen fiber den Ban der Eihaute. Berlin, 1863. 

 Huxley. Lectures on the Elements of Comparative Anatomy. London, 1864. 



Professor Huxley's views on the Placental Method of Classification were made public 

 in his lectures at the College of Surgeons in the spring of 1853, and these lectures 

 were pubhshed about the same time in the ' Medical Times and Gazette.' This I 

 mention in order that the date appended to the last work on my list may not he taken 

 to imply a repudiation of the great obligations I owe to the teaching that book contains. 



