10 
WORKS PUBLISHED BY 
By Sir William 
XXI 
CONTRIBUTIONS TO ORNITHOLOGY. 
JardinEj Bart., R.R.S.E., R.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. 
Nos. 1, 2, 3, & 4, for 1849, containing four Plates each, price 3s. 
per Number. 
XXII. 
PHYCOLOGIA BRITANNICA ; or. History of the British Sea- 
Weeds ; containing coloured tigui’es, generic and specific cha- 
racters, synonymes, and descriptions, of all the species of 
Algae inhabiting the shores of the British Islands. By William 
Henry Harvey, M.D., M.R.I.A., Keeper of the Herbarium 
of the University of Dubbn, and Professor of Botany to the 
Dublin Society. 
“The ‘History of British Sea- Weeds’ we can most faithfully recommend for 
its scientific, its pictorial, and its popular value ; the professed botanist wiU find 
it a work of the highest character, whilst those who desire merely to know the 
names and history of the lovely plants which they gather on the sea-shore, will 
find in it, when complete, the faithful portraiture of every one of them .”- — Annals 
and Magazine of Natural History . 
8vo. Pubbshed monthly, in parts, price 2«. 6c?., coloured ; 
large paper, 5s. To be completed in sixty parts, containing three 
hundred and sixty plates. Part XLV. just published. 
Vols. I. and II., price 2?. 10s. each, are now ready. 
XXHI. 
NEREIS AUSTRALIS ; or. Illustrations of the Algse of the 
Southern Ocean, being Figures, Descriptions, and Remarks 
upon new or imperfectly known Sea-Weeds, collected on the 
shores of the Cape of Good Hope, the extra-tropical Australian 
Colonies, Tasmania, New Zealand, and the Antarctic Regions, 
and deposited in the Herbarium of the Dublin University. 
By William Henry Harvey, M.D., M.R.I.A., Keeper of the 
Herbarium, and Professor of Botany to the Dublin Society. 
“ Of this most important contribution to om* knowledge of exotic Algie, we 
know not if we can pay it a higher compliment than by saying it is worthy of the 
author. It should be observed that the work is not a selection of certain species, 
but an arranged system of aU that is known of Australian Algse, accompanied by 
figures of the new and rare ones, especially of those most remarkable for beauty 
of form and colour .” — London Journal of Botany. 
Imp. 8 VO. To be completed in Four Parts, each containing 
twenty-five coloured plates, price \l. \s. 
Part I. recently published. Part II. now ready. 
