XX ERRATA. 



Page 252, line 7, from top, for * simi,' read * semi.' 



— 13, from top, for ' attractions, read ' attraction.' 



— 8, from foot, (note) for ' in,' read ' on.' 



253, 7, from top, for ' extinction,' read ' extrication.' 



— 12, from foot, for * to have,' read ' we have.' 



— 9, from foot, place the comma before ' has.' 



254, 8, from top, for ' monogram,' read ' monograph.' 



— 18, from foot, for ' greater comparatively,'' read ' comparatively 



greater? 



— 17, from foot, for ' heat-conducting probable,' read ' probable 



heat-conducting.' 



255, I, for ' Phlegrsen,' read ' Phlegraean.' 



— 16, from top, for ' precipices,' read ' precipitous.' 



— 18, from foot,/or • of,' read ' at.' 



In the Latin interlineation of the column 1. 12, in the large Devanagari plate, 

 for ' Magnatis,' read ' Magni.' 



310, I j for ' for,' read ' from.' 



313, 10, for ' near Kabul' read ' in the Punj&b, lat. 32 . long. 72 east 



of Paris.' 

 315, 25, for ' mass,' read ' chamber.' 

 367, 24, for ' seer' read falus (or pice)=282 grs. troy. 

 378, in the General Table,/or ' Timutchir,' read ' Timutchin.' 

 405, line 17, for ' 3° 0' 0",' read « 0° 0' 0".' 

 409, in column headed Saugur,ybr ' 12 18,' read ' 11 18.' 

 443, line 9, for « 10 and 11' read ' 9 and 10.' 



10, for ' own,' read ' now.' 

 447, 37, after Farnaviz, insert (fard-navis, record-writer.) 

 450, last line, for ' Larhkhara,' read ' Lashkhara.' 

 452, 14, for MIOPA read MI0PA. 



498, 21, the 19th character, J, should be fa like the one immediately 



preceding it. 

 560, line 34, for ' cross,' read ' crop.' 

 593, 4, /or* univalve,' read ' bivalve.' 



ADDENDUM. 



Page 450, line 10, insert as afoot note,* Dr. J. Swiney has pointed out to me 

 the following passage in the " Analecta Antiquitatum et Consuetudinurn Persica- 

 rum," contained m a work entitled, " Asia, by Baptista Gramaye," page 377. 

 " Dianam Persica voce Nanneam vocabant, et certis mysteriis colebant." 

 This is precisely the word on the reverse of the Kanerkos coin, and would 

 prove the figure to represent the moon, a very probable circumstance, as some 

 coins since discovered place her in direct connection with Mithra, the sun. It 

 also readily accounts for the word Mao, on numerous coins of the same class, 

 that being doubtless the Zend for Mas (Sunscrit) and Mali (Persian), the moon. — > 

 J. P. 



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