OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS. 
BIOLOGICAL SERIES. (Translations of Foreign Memoirs.) 
Memoirs on the Physiology of Nerve, of Muscle, and of the Electrical Organ. 
Edited by Sir J. Bubdon-Sakderson, M.D., F.B.SS.L. & E. Medium 8vo, 21s. 
The Anatomy of the Frog. By Dr Alexander Ecker, Professor in the. University 
of Freiburg. Translated, with numerous Annotations and Additions^ by Gbobgb HAsnAM, M.D. 
Medium 8vo, 21.<;. 
Essays upon Heredity and kindred biological Problems. By Dr August Weis- 
MA.NN. Authorized Translation. Crown 8vo. , 
Vol. I. Edited by E. B. Poclton, S. Schonland, and A. E. Shipley. Second Edition. 7s. 6d. 
'Vol. II. Edited by E. B. Poulton and A. B. Shipley. 5s. 
The Earliest Inhabitants of Abydos. (A Craniological Study.) By D. Randall- 
MacItee, M.A. Portfolio, eight plates, and sixteen tables. 10s. Qd. net. 
The Structure and Life-History of the Harlequin Fly (Chironomus). By L. C. 
Miall, F.B.S. , and A. E. Hammond, F.L.S. With One Hundred and Thirty Illustrations. 8vo, 7s. &d. 
Alternating Generations ; a Biolo^cal Study of Oak Galls and Gall Flies. 
By Hebmann Adlee, M.D. Translated and Edited by C. E. Stbaton, F.E.C.S. Ed., F.E.S. With 
coloured Illustrations of forty-two Species. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10s. 6d. net. 
A Monograph, Structural and Systematic, of the Order Oligochaeta. By 
Frakk EvEBs Beddard, M.A., F.E.S. With Plates and Illustrations. Demy 4to, 42s. met. 
On certain Variations in the Vocal Organs of the Passeres. By J. Muller. 
Translated by F. J. Bell, B. A., and edited by A. H. Gabbod, iH.A., F.E.S. With Plates. 4to, 7s. 6d. 
Annals of Botany. Edited by Isaac Bayley Balfour, M.A., M.D., F.R.S., D. H. 
Scott, Ph.D. , F.E.S., and W. G. Fablow, M.D. ; assisted by other Botanists. Eoyal 8vo. 
Published quarterly, price 14s. per number. 
CoMPiiETE Catalogue Post free on application. 
LONDON: HENRY FROWDE, OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 
WAREHOUSE, AMEN CORNER, E.G. 
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 
CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHICAL SERIES. 
General Editor, F. H. H. Guillemard, M.D., late Lecturer in Geography at 
the University of Cambridge. 
Man, Past and Present. By A. H. Keane, F.R.G.S., late Vice-President ' Anthro- . 
polbgical Institute^ Corresponding Member Italian and Washington Anthropological Societies. 
Crown 8vo. With Illustrations. 12s. 
"We may conclude by the expression of oar sense of the high value of Mr Keane's work, which will 
be acceptable alike to the advanced student of ethnology and to all those interested in the natural 
history of their own race. (E. L.)" — Nature. 
" This important work is intended as a supplement to the Author's Ethnology. It deals syste- 
matically with the primary divisions of mankind taking up each group in turn, and the statements 
are fortified by an immense amount of references, which the advanced student will find of the 
utmost service." — Geographical Journal. 
Ethnology. By the same Author. With numerous Illustrations. Second Edition. 
Crown 8vo. 10s. 6d. 
"A handy but comprehensive work on ethnology has long been required alike by the student and 
general reader, and it is with pleasure and interest that we welcome the appearance of a book 
which is claimed by the author to be a synthesis and a trustworthy guide We recommend it as 
a most useful introduction to a very complicated study} and as the author has brought together and 
abstracted a, large number of references, the student can use the book as a point of departure, and 
thus it wUl serve as a base for a more extended or detailed survey of this really important branch 
of science." — Nature. 
" This book, ought to be bought by every public library, member of parliament, colonial official, 
missionary, captain of a man-of-war, and novelist." — Speaker. 
LONDON: 0. J. CLAY and SONS, 
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, 
AVE MARIA LANE. 
