ADVERTISEMENTS. 



7 



lYATURAL HISTORY AGENCY OFFICES, for the registering, 

 -L^ exhibition, pui^chase, sale, and exchange of Books, Collections, and Obiects, con- 

 ducted by G. B. SOWERBY, F.L.S. Also for the pubHcation of SOWERBY'S 

 ILLUSTRATED INDEX OF BRITISH SHELLS :-all the Species, 30s • THE- 

 SAURUS CONCHYLIORUM, 25s. each part; BRITISH FLOWERING PLANTS 

 in numbers at 3s. 391, Strand, W.C. 



TO GEOLOGISTS. 



"DED AND WHITE CHALK of Speeton and East Yorkshire. 

 At The characteristic and rarer Fossils of the above formations constantly on 

 sale at Bridington. Address as under. 



Edward Tindall, Old Guildhall, Bridlington. 



ISLE OF WIGHT FOSSILS. 



H KEEPING can furnish small or large Collections of Fossils 

 • from the Hempstead, Bembridge, and Headon Series, and Barton Clay of 

 the Isle of Wight, Bracklesham Sands of Bramshaw, and Barton Clay of Barton, 

 at Id. and upwards per specimen, lists of which can be sent on application. 



The specimens are all collected by himself, and are kept carefully separate. 

 Satisfactory references can be given to several well-known Geologists by whom 

 he has been employed during many years. 



H. K. also acts as guide to the different geological localities. 



Stroud Place, Freshwater, Isle of Wight. 



n LASS-CAPPED CIRCULAR BOXES, of various diameters and 

 VT depths for preserving and displaying in Cabinets delicate Fossils, Minerals, 

 Recent Shells, Eggs, &c., can now be purchased of 



JAMES GREGORY, 3, King William-street, Strand. 



JOHN GRAY, 13, Upper King-street, Holborn. 



GEORGE KNIGHT, 2, Foster-lane, Cheapside. 



ROBERT HENSON, 113a, Strand. 



CAROLINE SOWERBY, 61, Great Russell-street, Bloomsbury. 

 JAMES TENNANT, 149, Strand. 



BRICE M. WRIGHT, 36, Great Russell-street, Bloomsbury. 

 G. B. SOWERBY, 391, Strand. 

 The application of these boxes to Natural History purposes may be seen in 

 the Museums of Edinburgh, Newcastle, York, and Liverpool. 



A lithographed sheet, shewing sizes and prices, may be had by post. 



EDWARD CHARLESWORTH. 



British Natural History Society, 

 York; August, 29, 1859. 



In the Press, price to Subscribers, 5s. 



qPHE CHALK CLIFFS OF DOYER ; A Geological and Palseon- 



1. tological Description of the typical section of the English Upper Cretaceous beds.— By 

 S. J. Mackie, F.G.S., F.S.A. 



Of the beautiful and instructive section of the Chalk Strata at Dover, there exists no other 

 description than the original and admirable paper by William Phillips in the Geological Trans- 

 actions of 1818. The author's long and intimate acquaintance with this locality gives him 

 peculiar facilities for presenting in a light and readable form a concise and accurate account of 

 the White Cliffs of this celebrated shore, and which he trusts will be thought worthy of being 

 regarded as a text-book generally for the chalk-districts of England. 



The proposed work will be illustrated by first-class woodcuts, and will be issued to Subscribers 

 at the price of Five Shillings. Subscriptions will be received by the Author, 154, Strand. 

 London : J. Van Voorst, Paternoster-row. 



ADDITIONAL SUBSCRIBERS' NAMES RECEIVED:— 

 John Edward Price, Esq., West Smithfield. 



Charles Singleton Haines, Esq., 29, Gordon-street, Gordon-square. 

 S. H. Needham, Esq., 28, Ballsal Heath Road, Birmingham. 

 Algernon Bathurst, Esq., 40, Devonshire Street, Portland Place. 

 *»* A feio Copies' will be Printed on Tinted Paper, and Bound in Superior Style, at 10s. 6d. 



