TICKS 
A Monograph of the Ixodoidea 
By GEORGE H. F. NUTTALL, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., F.R.S., CECIL 
WARBURTON, M.A., F.Z.S., W. F. COOPER, B.A., F.Z.S., F.L.S., 
and L. E. ROBINSON, A.R.C.Sc. (London) 
Now Ready. PART I. THE ARGASIDAE. With 116 text 
Figures and 3 Plates. Royal 8 vo. 5s. net 
This bo ok will deal with the Classification, Structure and Biology of 
Ticks, the study of the group having occupied the authors for several years. 
Practically all that has been published on the subject has received adequate 
consideration. 
The book will be issued in about four parts, which will be complete in 
themselves but are designed to form a volume of about 500 pages when all 
the parts have been published. Each part will be issued in a stiff paper 
cover and will include a bibliography printed on one side of thin paper so 
that the references can be conveniently cut out and gummed on index cards. 
A complete bibliography, including all the publications cited in each part, 
will conclude the volume. 
“ For those who are not experts on Ticks, but are made practically acquainted with 
them from the pathological point of view, a comprehensive monograph or handbook of 
the group has become an urgent requirement, and this need will now be supplied by the 
monograph which is now being produced by Messrs Nuttall, War burton. Cooper and 
Robinson .”—Nature 
“ The subject of ticks had been little studied, at least by medical men, until it came 
to be established that these parasites might spread disease from animal to animal, or even 
to man. This fact having been proved, a book on these insects was clearly required, and 
Dr Nuttall, in conjunction with Messrs Warburton, Cooper, and Robinson, has done well 
to provide Ticks: A Monograph of the Ixodoidea.... Too much praise cannot be given to 
Dr Nuttall and his collaborators for taking up this difficult and somewhat thankless task.” 
—British Medical Journal 
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