annotated reprints in 18 bound volumes. 

 Included in volume X were 3 publications 

 printed for private circulation. 



Nuttall, G. H. F. 1906. Application of 

 G. H. F. Nuttall for election to the 

 Quick Professorship of Biology, 

 Cambridge. 21 pp. Printed by John 

 Clay, M.A. , at the University Press. 



(Undated but betweeen 1909 



and 1919). Statement regarding a 

 project to build a field laboratory 

 for research in parasitology in the 

 vicinity of Cambridge. 4 pp. Uni- 

 versity of Cambridge. 



1907-24. Annual report of the 



Quick Professor, Cambridge. [Reports 

 for 1907, 1910, 1912, 1913, and 1921 

 are in Nuttall 's handwriting, but 

 copies were also undoubtedly 

 printed.] 



Explanatory Notes on the Catalogue 



Format 



I have attempted to reproduce the Nuttall 

 catalogue as a document historically 

 faithful to the original work. In the 

 left-hand column of each page is the 

 catalogue as originally handwritten, 

 including all remarks by Nuttall or his 

 colleagues at Cambridge. Nuttall 

 skipped the numbers 1555, 2101, and 

 3245-3254. These omissions are noted in 

 the text. I found that the following 

 original catalogue numbers needed to be 

 rearranged: 2211, 2327-2344, 2746, 

 2905, and 3412 were repeated for com- 

 pletely unrelated collections and I have 

 renumbered them, respectively, 22112, 

 2327Z-2344Z, 2746Z, 2905Z, and 3412Z. 

 Nuttall misnumbered the catalogue item 

 1242 as 1142, which I have corrected. 



At the Molteno Institute, Cambridge 

 University, I was given various note- 

 books, including an almost complete 

 one-volume copy of the tick catalogue 

 that belonged to Nuttall. Professor 

 Bruce Newton of the Molteno Institute 

 graciously allowed me to deposit this 

 material with Nuttall 's tick collection 

 at the British Museum (Nat. Hist.). 

 Among these documents was a notebook 

 entitled "Ticks. Collections Sent 

 Away," which contains the names and 

 addresses of numerous persons (usually 

 parasitologists, teachers, and natural- 

 ists), the ticks they received, and the 

 Nuttall number from which the ticks were 

 taken. I have indicated these donations 

 in the remarks section of the original 

 catalogue column because they are part 

 of Nuttall 's original records although 

 not so entered into his catalogue. 



Nuttall often indicated the date he 

 replied to the donor of a collection 

 (i.e., R. 14. VII. 1914). In addition, he 

 often entered the abbreviation of an 

 author of a species name (i.e., Ambly. 

 cohaerens Do. ). I have deleted reply 

 dates and abbreviations. Throughout the 

 catalogue he abbreviated names of tick 



genera, 

 Hyal. 



an 



such as Ambly., Boo., Haem. , and 



I have given complete names for 

 tick genera. Also, in some but not 



