SCIENCE 



JNew Series. 

 Vol. IX. No. 221. 



Friday, Maech 24, 1899. 



Single Copies, 15 cts. 

 Annual Subschiption, S5.00 



THE SCIENCE SERIES 



Edited by PKOF. J. McKEEN CATTELL, M.A., Ph.D., and F. E. BBDDARD, M.A., F.R.S. 



By Major C. E. Dutton, 



EARTHQUAKES. 



U.S.A. 



NO W IN READINESS : 

 1.— THE STUDY OF MAIV. By Professor A. 

 C. Haddon, M.A., D.Sc, M.R.I.A. Fully illus- 

 trated. 8vo. S2.00. 



" A timely and useful volume. . . . The author wields 

 a pleasing pen, and knows how to make the subject attrac- 

 tive. . . . The work is calculated to spread among its 

 readers an attraction to the science of anthropology. The 

 author's observations are exceu'lin.i^ly genuine, and his de- 

 scriptions are vivid." — London . \ifi':n'i inn, 



2.— THE GROUi\I»WORK OF SCIENCE. 

 A Study of Epistemology. By St. George Mivakt, 

 F.R.S. 8vo. §1.75. 



3.— RIVERS OF XORTH AMERICA. A 



Reading Lesson for Students of Geography and 

 Geology. By Israel C. Russell, Professor of 

 Geology, University of Michigan ; author of ' ' Lakes 

 of North America," "Glaciers of North America," 

 etc. Fully illustrated. 8vo. §2.00. 



4.— EARTH SCULPTURE. By Prof. Jajies 

 Geikie, F.R.S., University of Edinburgh. Fully 

 illustrated. Svo. §2.00. 



TOIiCAlVOES. By Prof. T. G. Bonnet, F.R.S., 

 University College, London. 



Each volume of the series will treat some department of science with 'reference to the most recent advances, and will 

 be contributed by an author of acknowledged authority. Every effort will be made to maintain the standard set by the 

 first volumes, until the series shall represent the more important aspects of contemporary science. The advance of science 

 has been so rapid, and its place in modern life has become so dominant, that it is needful to revise continually the statement 

 of its results, and to put these in a form that is intelligible and attractive. 



PHYSIOGRAPHY: The Forms of tlie 

 Land. By Prof. W. M. Davis, Harvard Univ. 



THE STARS. By Prof. Simon Newcomb, U.S.N. . 

 Nautical Almanac Office, and Johns Hopkins Uni- 

 versity. 



METEORS AND COMETS. By Prof. C. A. 

 You.NG, Princeton University. 



THE MEASUREMENT OF THE EARTH. 



By President T. C. Menden-hhall, Worcester Poly- 

 technic Institute, formerly Superintendent of the 

 • U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. 



ETHNIC PSYCHOLOGY. By Prof. Daniel 

 G. Brinton, University of Pennsylvania. 



RECENT THEORIES OF EVOLUTION. 



By Prof. J. Mark B.alijwin, Princeton Univ. 



THE ANIMAL OVUM. By F. E. Beddard, 

 F.R.S., Zoological Society, London. 



AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST 



n:ew smriss. vol,, i. no. i, now ready. 



The new series of the American Anthropologist will be issued under the editorial management of the fol- 

 lowing board; Dr. Frank Baker, Smithsonian Institution Washington; Dr. Franz Boas, American Museum of 

 Natural History, New York; Dr. Daniel G. Brinton, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; Dr. George M. 

 Dawson, Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa ; Dr. George A. Dorsey, Field Columbian Museum, Chicago ; Prof. 

 "VTiLLiAM H. Holmes, TJ. S. National Museum, Washington; Maj. .1. W. Powell, Bureau of American Ethnology, 

 Washington ; Prof. Frederic W. Putman, Peabody Museum, Cambridge. Secretary and Managing Editor, F. W. 

 Hodge, 13SS F Street, Washington, D. C. 



The new journal will be devoted to the interests of Anthropology. Anthropology, as the science of man, appeals 

 strongly not only to specialists, but also to other classes of intelligent readers ; yet the science is young and has not hitherto 

 produced an adequate journal in this country. It is the aim of the editorial board to meet the need of such a journal, a 

 need which has for some years been apparent and is steadily growing. 



Each number will contain 200 octavo pages, and will be fully illustrated. Issued quarterly. 



Subscription Price per Year, $4.00; Price of Single Numbers, $1.25. 



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