PHYSICAL SCIENCE. 



25 



^Land and 

 '-nual of th, 



PRESSES, 

 R-S. New 



ncipation-^ 

 ^lere to find 

 tl Value of 



Zoology :~ 



■ Aspects of 

 al Contem- 

 ' Reform ;— 

 '' Origin of 

 e Method of 

 %thr The 

 m physical^ 

 ' Ms works 

 drifts of 



'iS 



RESSES, 



'£ above. 



•. 6/. 



lessons, i^e 



ral ^^^ ^^ 



. Respi^^' 



J 



L 



! 



\ 



\ 



\ 



tion : Sources of Loss and of Gain to the Blood; the Function of 



Motion 



Organs ; the Organ of Sight ; the Coalescence of Sensations with 



one another and with other States of Consciousness ; the Nervous 



System and Innervation; Histology, or the Minute Structure of 



the Tissues. A Table of Anatomical and Physiological Constants 



is appended. The lessons are fully illustrated by numerous en 



'' Unquestion* 



'* Pure gold throughout. 



Guardian, 



gravings. 



ably the clearest and most complete elementary treatise on this subject 



that we possess in any language '' —^ ^%\x^y^%\.^x Review. 



Kirchhoff (G.)—researches on the solar spec 



TRUM, and the Spectra of the Chemical Elements. By. G. 

 Kirchhoff, Professor of Physics in the University of Heidelberg. 

 Second Part. Translated, with the Author's Sanction, from the 

 Transactions of the Berlin Academy for 1862, by Henry R. 

 RoscoE, B.A., Ph.D., F.R.S., Professor of Chemistry in Owens 

 College, Manchester. 



''It is to Kirchhoff tve are indebted for by far the best and most accurate, 

 ob sey-v alio ns of these phenomena'' — Edin. Review. '* This juemoir 

 seems abnost indispensable to every Spectrum observer^ — Philo- 

 sophical Magazine. 



Lockyer (J, N.)— ELEMENTARY LESSONS IN AS- 

 TRONOMY. With nmnerous Illustrations. By J. NORMAN 



Lockyer, F.R.S. 



Eighth Thousand. 



i8mo. 5*^- ^^' 



view 



and to supply facts, and ideas founded on the facts, to serve as a basis 



for subsequent study and discussion. The chapters treat of the 

 c/,>^^<< ^^^^ A/'^/w//^ . /^^ c-7y^ • fhp ^nlrf-r ^M^f.pnt * Af)i)arent Move* 



Heavenly Bodies ; the Measurement 



Heavenly 



Bodies; the Real Distances and Dimensions ; Universal Gravitation, 

 The most recent Astronomical Discoveries are incorporated. Mr. 

 Lockyer' s work supplements that of the Astronomer Royal. " The 

 book is full, clear, soiind, and zvorthy of attention, not only as a 

 popular exposition, but as a scientific 'Index.' — Athenaeum. 

 "The most fascinating of elementary books oit the Sciences.'^ 

 Nonconformist. 



I 



I 



