398 
THE NATURALIST’S LIBRARY. 
Taylor, Half-hours at the Sea-side. 
Greene, Manuals of Sponges and Coelen- 
terata. 
Dana, Corals and Coral Islands. 
Vereill and Smith, Invertebrates ofVine- 
yard Sound. 
Gould and Binney, Invertebrata of Mas¬ 
sachusetts. 
Woodward, Manual of Mollusca. 
Packard, Guide to the Study of Insects. 
Duncan, Transformations of Insects. 
Stoker, Fishes and Reptiles of Massachu¬ 
setts. 
Coues, Key to North American Birds. 
Jordan, Popular Key to the Birds, etc., 
of Northern United States. 
Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway, Birds of 
North America. 
Baird, Mammals of North America. 
Allen, Mammalia of Massachusetts. 
Soammon, Marine Mammals of North Pa¬ 
cific. 
Pkschel, The Races of Man. 
Marsh, Man and Nature. 
Tyloii, Primitive Culture. 
Nicholson, Palaeontology. 
Of serial publications, the student should have access to the American 
Naturalist , American Journal of Science , Popular Science Monthly , Smith¬ 
sonian Contributions and Miscellaneous Collections , Bulletins and Proceed¬ 
ings of the various societies, Annals and Magazine of Natural History , and 
Nature. 
The following German works are recommended as having no English 
equivalents : 
Claus, Grundzuge der Zoologie. 
Payenstechek, Allgemeine Zoologie. 
Bronn, Classen und Ordnungen des Thier- 
Also the periodicals— 
Zoologischer Anzeiger. 
reichs (unfinished and expensive, but 
indispensable to the working zoolo¬ 
gist). 
Biologisches Centralblatt. 
