134 LITERATURE LIST 



*28. Reid. Archdall. The Principles of Heredity. London, 1906. 



*29. Romanes, J. G. Darwin and After Darwin. 3 vols. London. 

 1892—1897. 



30. Royal Society. Reports to the^Evolution Committee, i — v, 



1902—1909. 



31. Schuster, E. Hereditary Deafness. Biometrika, it, 1906, 



p. 465. 



32. Standfuss. Handbnch der Palaarctischen Grossschmetter- 



linge. Jena. 1896. 

 *33. Thomson, J. A. Heredity. Murray 1908. (Very good 

 bibliography.) 



34. Tower. An Investigation of Evolution in Chrysomelid 



Beetles of the Genus Leptinotarsa. Publ. Carnegie Inst. 

 Washington, No. 48, 1906. 



35. Treasury of Human Inheritance. Publ. Galton Laboratory 



for Nat. Eugenics. London University. 

 *36. Tries. H. de. The Mutation Theory Trans. ). London, 1910. 

 *37. Species and Varieties, their origin through Mutation. 



Chicago and London. 1905. 

 *38. Wallace, A. R. Darwinism. London, 1889. 

 39. Weismann. A. Essays upon Heredity and Kindred Subjects 



Trans.,. Oxford.' 1891, 1892. 

 *40. The Germ Plasm. Trans. Parker and Ronnfeldt). 



London, 1893. 

 *41. The Evolution Theory Trans. J. A. and M. R. 



Thomson,. London. 1904. 

 42. Wheldale, Muriel. Plant Oxydases and the Chemical Inter- 

 relationships of Colour-varieties. Progressus Rei Botani- 



cae, in. p. 457. Jena. 1910. 

 *43. Whetham, W. C. D. and C. The Family and the Nation. 



London. 1910. 

 44. Yule. G. V. Mendel's Laws and their probable relations 



to intra-racial Heredity. New Phytologist. Vol. 1, 1902, 



p. 193. 



