264 



The African Repository and Colonial Journal. March, 1843. Wash- 

 ington. 8vo. — From the American Colonization Society. 



Schriften der in St. Petersburg gestifteten Russisch-Kaiserlichen 

 Gesellschaft Fur die Gesammte Mineralogie. lr. Band. lite. 

 Abtheilung. St. Petersburg, 1842. Svo.—From Mr. Charles 

 Cramer. 



The American Journal of the Medical Sciences. Edited by Isaac 

 Hays, M.D. No. X. New Series. April, 1843.— From the 

 Editor. 



The Medical News ar*d Library. Vol. I. No. 4. April, 1843. Phi- 

 ladelphia. 8vo. — From Messrs. Lea 8f Blanchard. 



A New Universal Biography, &c. &c By the Rev. John Platts. 

 London, 1825, 1826. 5 vols. 8vo.— From Mr. William S. 

 Young. 



History of the Great Reformation of the Sixteenth Century in Ger- 

 many, Switzerland, &c. By J. H. Merle d'Aubigne. New York, 

 1842. 3 vols. 8vo. — From the same. 



The History of the Inquisition in Spain from the Time of its Esta- 

 blishment to the Reign of Ferdinand VII : Abridged and trans- 

 lated from the original works of D. Juan Antonio Llorente. Lond. 

 1827. 8vo. — From the same. 



Life of Thomas M'Crie, D.D., Author of the Life of John Knox, &c. 

 &c. By his Son, Rev. Thomas M'Crie. Philadelphia, 1842. 

 12mo. — From the same. 



Sketches of the Higher Classes of Coloured Society in Philadelphia. 

 Philadelphia, 1841. 12mo. — From the same. 



Notice on the Beet Sugar. Translated from the works of Dubrun- 

 faut, De Domballe, and others. Northampton, 1837. 12mo. — 

 From the same. 



A Map of North America, from the French of M. D'Anville; improved, 

 with the back Settlements of Virginia and Course of the Ohio ; 

 with Geographical and Historical Remarks. — From the Hon. C. 

 J. Ingersoll. 



Dr. Hays invited the attention of the Society to the Reports 

 of three papers recently read to the Geological Society of Lon- 

 don relative to the Mastodontoid animals in the collection of 

 Mr. Koch. 



The first of these papers was by Dr. Grant. This distinguished 

 naturalist, after a careful examination of Mr. Koch's collection, con- 

 siders the genus Tetracaulodon, to be well founded. In his paper he 



