1921.] The Eighth Indian Science Congress. exliii 
ty has assumed from the beginning, the aim of its journal will 
be. as far as possible, to interest all students of Nature, ever 
remembering that there are many Naturalists, in the highest 
sense of the term, who have not such a technical knowledge of 
to the p 
In addition to the Indian zoological serials already mentioned 
J. A. Murray appears to have issued a magazine called the 
Ww 
connection with the Medical, Forest and Agricultural services, 
all of which accept Zoological papers bearing on their respective 
subjects. 
This brief survey of the history of zoology in India is ob- 
viously incomplete. Thus not only does it make no attempt to _ 
describe the important work of zoologists still, happily, working 
in the country ; but, in addition, the valuable marine work done 
by the “ Investigator ” has scarcely been mentioned, and no spe- 
cial attention has been paid to the zoological work of expedi- 
tions such as those of Leonardo Fea to Burma’? ; John Anderson 
, 1889). 
ts sai in the Ann. Mus. Civ, Genova from 1869 onwards. 
3 See “ Anatomical Zoological Researches; comprising an account o 
the zoological results of the two expeditions to Western Yunnan in 1868 
and 1875; and a monograph of the two Cetacean genera, Platanista and 
Orcella ”’ (London, 1878). 
4+ J. Linn. Soc. (Zool.) XXI-XXII, 1888-89. 
s 5 ** Scientific Results of the Second Yarkand Mission ’’ (London 1878- 
91). 
