D. APPLETON & OO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



THE GEOLOGICAI, HISTORY OF PLANTS. By Sir J. 



William Dawson, F. E. S. Vol. 61 of The International Scientific 



Series. With Illustrations. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75. 



" The object of this work is to give, in a connected form, a snmmary of the 

 development of the vegetable kingdom in geological time. To the geologist and 

 botanist the snbject is one of importance with reference to their special pnrsnits, 

 and one on which it has not been easy to find any convenient manual of informa- 

 tion."— JVom the Preface. 



THE GEOGRAPHICAL AND GEOLOGICAL DISTRIBIT- 

 TION OF ANIIUALS. By Angelo Heilprin, Professor of In- 

 vertebrate Paleontology at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Phila- 

 delphia, etc. Yol. 67 of The International Scientific Series. One 

 vol., 12mo, 435 pages, 12.00. 



" In the preparation of the following pages the author has had two objects in 

 view : that of presenting to his readers such of the more sigBiBcant facts con- 

 nected with the past and present distribution of animal life as might lead to a 

 proper conception of the relations of existing faunas ; and, secondly, that of 

 furnishing to the student a work of general reference, wherein the more salient 

 features of the geography and geology of animal forms could be sought after 

 and readily found."— Jjiom <fte Pr^ace. 



ANIMAL MAGNETISM. From the French of Alfred Binet and 



Charles Feke. Vol. 59 of The International Scientific Series. 12mo. 



Cloth, $1.60. 



"The authors^ after giving a brief, clear, and instructive history of animal 

 magnetism from its remotest known origin down through Mesmer and the Aca- 



Joarnal qf Commerce. 



WEATHER : A POPULAR EXPOSITION OF THE NATDEE OF 



WEATHER CHANGES FROM DAY TO DAY. By the Hon. Ralph 



Abeecrombt, Fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society, London. 



Vol. 58 of The International Scientifiic Series. 12mo. Cloth, $1.'75. 



" Mr. Abercromby has for some years made the weather of Great Britain a 

 special study, and has recently extended his experience by making a meteorologi- 

 cal tour around the world. As a fruit of this preparation, he gives us a book that 

 is to be commended for its simple, deliberate style, freedom from technicality and 

 unnecessary theorizing, rational description, classidcation, and explanation of 

 atmospheric phenomena, and rich store of illustration from the weather-maps cf 

 many parts of the world." — Z%e Nation. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 5 Bond Street. 



