S04 Rev. E. Stanley’s Observations at Alderley Rectory. 
TABLE, shewing the Annual Mean for 10 Years, calculated from 
the preceding Tables. Thus, 45.12 is the Mean Temperature 
at 8 A. M.for the last 10 Years. 
Thermometer^ 
Mean of, from pre- 
ceding Tables. 
Barometer, 
Mean from 
preceding 
Tables, 
2 P. M. 
Prevailing Winds, 
and No. of days 
of each. 
Variable. | 
Snow or 
Rain. 
Fall 
of 
Rain. 
8 A. M. 
2p. m. 
10 P.M. 
N. 
E. 
S. 
W. 
January, ... 
34.04 
39.05 
34.82 
29.46 
60 
42 
166 
39 
3 
138 
17.86 
February, 
35.89 
41.90 
36.27 
29.45 
50 
19 
163 
46 
5 
145 
21.25 
March, 
38.00 
45.84 
38.64 
29.38 
61 
16 
150 
75 
8 
179 
28.43 
April, 
42.82 
52.07 
41.76 
29.47 
87 
55 
105 
41 
12 
139 
20.96 
May, 
49.49 
57.64 
47.99 
2.9.47 
72- 
47 
118 
51 
21 
157 
25.59 
June, 
54.87 
61.68 
53.52 
29.54 
93 
29 
103 
58 
15 
141 
27.42 
July, 
56.75 
62.81 
55.54 
29.48 
.70 
16 
127 
79 
18 
171 
34.68 
August, ... 
55.93 
62.40 
54.80 
29.59 
40 
28 
137 
86 
19 
174 
31.53 
September, 
52.38 
59.94 
51.87 
29.52 
36 
30 
150 
72 
11 
154 
25.65 
October, ... 
45.79 
52.34 
45.57 
29.37 
60 
44 
151 
44 
11 
173 
31.25 
November, 
40.48 
46.13 
41.27 
29.41 
47 
24 
181 
46 
3 
162 
32.05 
December, 
35.01 
39.38 
36.16 
29.48 
39 
32 
190 
45 
4 
153 
32.38 
45.12 
51.76 
44.83 
29.46 
715 
382 
1741 
682 
130 
1886 
32.905 
Art. XIII. — Professor Buckland’s Reply to some observations in 
Dr Fleming’s Remarhs on the Distribution of British Ani~ 
mals. In a Letter to Professor Jameson, dated Ojiford, De^ 
cember 16. 1824. 
Dear Sir, 
.Allow me, through the medium of your Journal, to ex-* 
press my obligations to Dr Fleming, for the handsome manner 
in which he has spoken of my Reliquies, Diluviame in your last 
Number; and for the mild and gentlemanly tone he has main- 
tained, whilst expressing his opinions on certain points whereon 
he differs from me. 
I perfectly coincide with that eminent naturalist, as to the ex^ 
pediency and the necessity of illustrating the history of the Fossil 
World, by the analogies afforded by the structure and habits of 
living plants and animals, and the operations of nature now passing 
before us ; but I see not how the charge of neglecting all these 
things can, with propriety, be advanced by him, against the present 
