REEVE AND BENHAM, HENRIETTA STREET. 
7 
ORNITHOLOGY. 
THE NATURAL HISTORY OE IRELAND. By William 
Thompson, Esq., President of tlie Natural History and Philo- 
sophical Society of Belfast. Yols. I. & II. — BIRDS. 
“ Our readers, if once they get hold of this volume, [Vol. I.] will not readily lay 
it down ; for while habits are dwelt upon in a manner so amusing that we have 
known extracts to be read aloud to a delighted circle of children, it contains the 
precise information which the ornithologist demands, and brings forward topics 
both of popular and scientific interest, such as the geographical distribution of 
species, the causes which seem to operate on their increase and decrease, their 
migrations, their uses to man, the occasional injuries they inflict, and the impor- 
tant benefits they confer. * * * The space we have devoted to this volume 
tells, more plainly than any commendation we could employ, our high approba- 
tion of its merits. It is a standard work, and will rank with those of our 
first ornithologists .” — Dublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science. 
8 vo. Vol. 1. Price 16s. Vol. 2. Price 12s. 
* * 
* 
Vol. 8 is nearly ready. 
CONTRIBUTIONS TO ORNITHOLOGY. By Sir William 
Jardine, Bart., E.R.S.E., E.L S., &c. 
The “Contributions” are devoted to the various departments of Orni- 
thology. They are published at intervals in Parts, and form an annual Volume, 
illustrated by numerous Coloured and Uncoloured Plates, Wood Cuts, &c. 
The Series for 1848, containing ten Plates, price 9s. 
The Series for 1849, containing twenty-four Plates, price 21s. 
Numbers 1 to 7, for 1850, with Plates, price 3s. per Number. 
THE DODO AND ITS KINDRED • or, the History, Affinities, 
and Osteology of the Dodo, Solitaire, and other extinct 
birds of the islands Mauritius, Rodriguez, and Bourbon. By 
H. E. Strickland, Esq., M.A., E.R.G.S., E.G.S., President of 
the Ashmolean Society, and A. G. Melville, M.D., M.R.C.S. 
“ The labour expended on this book and the beautiful manner in which it is 
got up render it a work of great interest to the naturalist. * * It is a model 
of how such subjects should be treated. We know of few more elaborate and 
careful pieces of comparative anatomy than is given of the head and foot by 
Dr. Melville. The dissection is accompanied by lithographic plates, creditable alike 
to the Artist and the Printer.” — Athenaeum. 
*** One vol. royal quarto, with eighteen plates and numerous 
wood illustrations. Price 21s. 
