REEVE AND CO.’s PUBLICATIONS. 
19 
SUNSHINE AND SHOWERS : their Influences through- 
out Creation. A Compendium of Popular Meteorology. By Andrew 
Steinmetz, Esq., of the Middle Temple, Barrister-at-Law, Author of ‘A 
Manual of Weather-Casts,’ etc. etc. Crown 8vo, Wood Engravings, 
Is. Qd. 
This Work not only treats fully all the leading topics of Meteorology, but es- 
pecially of the use of the Hygrometer, for which systematic Rules are now for 
the first time drawn up. Among other interesting and useful subjects, are chap- 
ters on Rainfall in England and Europe in general — Wet and Dry Years — Tem- 
perature and Moisture with respect to the health of Plants and Animals — The 
Wonders of Evaporation — Soil Temperature — The Influence of Trees on Climate 
and Water Supply — The Prognostication of the Seasons and Harvest — The 
Characteristics and Meteorology of the Seasons — Rules of the Barometer — Rules 
of the Thennometei- as a Weather Glass — Popular Weather-casts — ■Anemometry 
— and finally, W'hat becomes of the Sunshine — and what becomes of the 
Showers. 
THE REASONING POWER IN ANIMALS. By the Rev. 
J. S. Watson, M.A. 480 pp. Crown 8vo, 05. 
The object of the above treatise is to trace the evidences of the existence in 
the lower animals of a portion of that reason which is possessed by man. A 
large number of carefully- selected and well-authenticated anecdotes are adduced 
of various animals having displayed a degree of intelligence distinct from in- 
stinct, and called into activity by circumstances in which the latter could have 
been no guide. 
MANUAL OF CHEMICAL ANALYSIS, Qualitative aud 
Quantitative; for the Use of Students. By Dr. Henry M. Noad, F.R.S. 
Crown 8vo, pp. 663, 109 Wood Engravings, 16^. Or, separately, Part I., 
‘QUALITATIVE,’ 6^. ; Part II., ‘QUANTITATIVE,’ 10^. 6^! 
A Copiously-illustrated, Useful, Practical Manual of Chemical Analysis, pre- 
pared for the Use of Students by the Lecturer on Chemistry at St. George’s 
Hospital. The illustrations consist of a series of highly-finished Wood-Engra- 
vings, chiefly of the most approved forms and varieties of apparatus. 
PHOSPHORESCENCE ; or, the Emission of Light by Mine- 
rals, Plants, aud Animals. By Dr. T. L. Phipson, E.C.S. Small 8vo, 
225 pp., 30 IVood Engravings and Coloured Prontispiece, 5^. 
An interesting summary of the various phosphoric phenomena that have been 
observed in nature, — in the mineral, in the vegetable, and in the animal world. 
THE GEOLOGIST. A Magazine of Geology, Paleontology, 
and Mineralogy. Illustrated with highly finished Wood - Engravings, 
Edited by S. J. Mackie, P.G.S., F.S.A. Vols. V. and VI., each, with nu- 
merous Wood-Engravings, 185. Vol. VII., 95. 
