ADVERTISEMENTS. 
5 
In the Press, price to Subscribers, 5s. 
THE CHALK CLIFFS OF DOVER ; A Geological and Palajon- 
ti)lo^'ioal Duscription of the ty|iical section of tiie Eiiy;li»li Upper Cretaceous Ijcds. — By 
S. J. Mackie, RG.S., F.S.A. 
Of tlie beautiful and instructive section of tlio Chall< Strata at Dover, tliere exists no other 
description than the original and a<lnurnble paper l)y William Phillips in the Geological Trans- 
actions of 1818. The author's long and intimate aciiuaintanco 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 w ill bo illustrated by first-class woodcuts, and will be issued to Subscribers 
at the price of Five Shillings. Subserijitions will be received by the Author, 164, Strand. 
London : J. Van Voorst, Paternoster-row. 
ADDITIONAL SUBSCRIBERS' NAMES RECEIVED;— 
Colonel Kaban, 7, Old Burlington Street. 
Sydney Webb, Esq., Manor House, Redstone. 
*.* A few Copies will be Printed on Tinted Paper, and Bound in Superior Style, at IQs. 6d. 
GEOLOGY m THE GARDEN; 
OR, 
THE FOSSILS IN FLINT PEBBLES. 
By henry ELEY, M.A. 
With Illustrations. 
London, Bell & Daldt, 185, Fleet Street, 1859. 
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 moderate fixed prices, hsts 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 dui-ing many years. 
Stroud Place, Freshwater, Isle of Wight. 
pEOLOGTCAL COLLECTIONS in great variety, containing 
VX Fossils, specimens of Strata, Igneous Rocks, and Ores of Metals. The £5 5s. 
Collection is particularly recommended, including Books, Charts, Diagrams, &c. 
CONCHOLOGY. — Any genus of Recent or Fossil Shells can be supplied by 
C. SOWERBY, from a Stock of several millions. No. 61, opposite the British 
Museum. Established Fifty Years. 
JUST RECEIVED from Java, Moluccas, and Japan, a Collection consisting of 
47,000 Shells, the chief part of which will be sold for 3d. and 6d. each. A small 
box from the Straits of Magellan, containing a very interesting series of Margarita, 
a new Pecten, Yoldia antarctica, and superb specimens of Trophon, &c., &c. 
Likewise a case from Australia with some interesting species. Also a small con- 
signment fi-om New Zealand, containing the large Terebratula, HeUx Busbii, &c. 
A FEW UNIQUE SPECIMENS on sale:— Conus gloria maris £50 ; 2 Conus 
omaicus, very fine, each £20 ; Conus cervus, 5 inches Ln length, £30 ; Voluta 
Junonia, £45 ; Voluta piperata, £6; Ancillaria Vernedei, length 4| inches, £25 ; 
and Spondylus regis, of a brilliant scarlet colour, 18 inches across the spines, £25. 
GEOLOGY.— King's College, London.— Professor Tennant, F.G.S., 
will commence a Course of Lectures on GEOLOGY, on Friday Morning, 
January 27th, at Nine o'clock. They will be continued on each succeeding 
Wednesday and Friday, at the same hour. Fee, £2 12s. 6d. 
R. W. JELF, D.D., Principal 
