.22 



SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



Besides a large coloured Geological Map of the dist7'icty the work 

 is illustrated by upwards of 260 cuts of sections, fossils, animals^ 

 etc. '^ 772^ book tmll doubtless ft ud a place in the library, not only 

 of the scientific geologist, but also of all who are desirous of the in- 

 dustrial progress and commercial prosperity of the Acadian pro^ 



Mining Journal. ' ' A style at once poptdar and scientific. 



vtnces. 



. . . A valuable addition to our store of geological knowledge,'^'' 

 Guardian. 



F 



Flower (W. H.) — an INTRODUCTION TO THE OSTE- 

 OLOGY OF THE MAMMALIA. Being the substance of the 

 Course of Lectures delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons 

 of England in 1870. By W. H. Flower, F.R.S., F.R.C.S., 

 Hunterian Professor of Comparative Anatomy and Physiology. 



With 



Globe 8vo. 7^-. (>d. 



Although the present zvork contains the substance of a Course of Lectures, 

 the form has been changed, so as the better to adapt it as a hand- 

 book for students. Theoretical views have been ahnost eiitirely ex- 

 cluded: and while it is impossible in a scientific treatise to avoid the 

 employment of technical terms, it has been the author's endeavour to 

 use no more than absolutely necessary, and to exercise due care in 

 selecting only those that seem most appropriate, or which have re- 

 ceived the sanction of general adoption. With a very 

 tions the illustrations have been drawn expressly for this work from> 

 si>ecimens in the Museum of the Roval Collep-e of Siyirp-mns. 



'ew 



Galton. — Works by Francis Galton, F.R.S. 



Weather, 



600 



4to. 9^-, 



s Mr, Galton entertains strong vieius on the necessity of Meteorolo* 

 gieal Charts and Maps, he deter7?ii7ted, as a practical p7^oof of what 

 could be done, to chart the e7ttire area of Europe, so far as 77ieteorological 

 stations extend, duri7ig one uionth, viz, the 77ionth of Dece77iber, 1861. 

 Mr, Galto7t got his data fro77t authorities in eve7y pm^t of B7dtain 

 and the Continent, and on the basis of these has he7^e drawn up 

 nearly a hundred different Maps a7id Charts, shoiving the state of 

 the weather all over Europe during the above pe7'iod, * ^ If the 

 various Gove7^n7)ients and scientific bodies woidd pe7fo7'm for the 



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 of heredity in 

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^»i ^vith its Ph^ 

 •^'ogical Map 



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