MISCELLANEOUS. 



191 



Vol. i. Pages 773. 

 — • ii. 550. 



— ill- 491. 



— iv. 722. 



— v. 559. 



Parsons's Observations on the Analogy between the Pro- 

 pagation of Animals and that of Vegetables. London, 

 1752, 8vo, neat, 3s. 

 Pages 276. 



Pennant's Arctic Zoology. London, 1792, 2 vols. 4to. 

 Vol. i. Pages cc and 185. Plates 8. 



— ii. 187—586. 9—23. 



Supplement, Pages 163, with 2 Maps, 



British Zoology. London, 1812, 4 vols. 8vo, 



best edition, half-bound, 31. 10s. 



Vol. i. Pages xli and 568. Plates 66. 



— ii. viii — 451. « 48. 



— iii. viii — 545. 84. 



— iv. xvi — 379. 95. 



The same, 4 vols, large paper, 51. 5s, 



Pennant's Indian Zoology. London, 1790, 4to, 18s. 



Pages 161. Plates (coloured) 16. 

 Petiver's Works, complete ; containing several thousand 

 Figures of Birds, Beasts, Reptiles, Insects, Fish, Beetles, 

 Moths, Flies, Shells, Corals, Fossils, Minerals, Stones, 

 Funguses, Mosses, Herbs, Plants, &c. from all Nations; 

 on 156 copper Plates, with Latin and English Names. 

 Lond. 1764, 2 vols, folio, and a third in 8vo, very neat, 



8/. 8s. 



Petiver, some time before his death, was offered, by 

 Sir Hans Sloane, 4000/. for his museum ; the con - 

 tents of which are preserved in his Works. He was 

 one of the very few, after the Tradescants, who 

 made any considerable collection ; and such was his 



