584 



1871. Ausserer, A., Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Arachniden-Fa- 

 milie der Territelariae Thor. (Mygalidse autor.) (Verhandl. 

 d. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. in Wien, XXI, 1871). 



1871. — id. — Neue Radspinnen (ibid.). 



1853. Belke, G., Quelques mots sur le climat et la Faune de 

 Karaieniec-Podolski (Bull, de la Soc. Imp. d. Nat. de Moscou, 

 XXVI, Anne'e 1853). 



1859. — id. — Esquisse de l'histoire naturelle de Kamienietz- 

 Podolski , precede d'un coup d'oeil sur les travaux des Na- 

 turalistes des provinces occidentales de la Russie et da 

 Royaume de Pologne au XIX siecle (ibid., XXXI, 1858). 



1866. — id. — Notice sur l'histoire naturelle du district de Ra- 

 domysl (Gouvernement de Kief) (ibid., XXXIX, 1866). 



1870. Bertkau, Ph., Ueber den Bau und die Function der Ober- 

 kiefer bei deD Spinnen und ihre Verschiedenheit nach Fa- 

 milien und Gattungen (Archiv f. Naturgescliicbte , Jahrg. 

 XXXVI, i, 1870). 



[1867. Blackwall, J , A succinct review of recent attempts to ex- 

 plain several remarkable facts in the physiology of spiders 

 and insects (Linn. Soc. Journ., Zool., VII)]. 



1870. — id. — Description of a new species of Epeira (Ann. and 

 Mag. of Nat. Hist., 4 Ser., IV (1869)). 



1870. — id. — A list of Spiders captured by Prof. E. Percival 

 Wright M, D. in the province of Lucca, in Tuscany, in the 

 summer of 1863, with characters of such species as ap- 

 pear to be new or little known to arachnologists (Linn. 

 Soc. Journ., X). 



1870. — id. — List and descriptions of species [of Sicilian Spi- 

 ders] etc., vid. Wright and Blackwall. 



1872. — id. — Notice of Spiders captured by Miss Hunter in Montreal, 

 Upper Canada , with descriptions of species supposed to be new to arach- 

 nologists (Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., 4 Ser., VIII (1871). 



[1850. BOttcher, Ueber den anatomischen Bau der Kreuzspinne 



because that language is far more widely diffused over every part of the earth 

 than any other culture-language , and that already two of the greatest nations 

 publish in it the results of their scientific labours, but because English, on ac- 

 count of its simple grammar, and as combining in nearly tlie same degree Teu- 

 tonic and Romanic elements, is by most Europeans more easily acquired than 

 any other language. 



