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Boston Journal of Natural History— Continued. 
Article 
Analyses. Read before the Boston Society of Natural History, March 3, 1852, by 
David A. Wells . . . . . 324 
20. Description (with Figure) of Menobranchus punctatus, by Lewis R. Gibbes, 
M.D.,'Professor Math., College, Charleston, S. C. . . . 369 
21. Descriptions of Shells from the Gulf of California and the Pacific Coasts of Mexico 
and California, by Augustus A. Gould, M.D. . . . 374 
Brickell.— The Natural History of North Carolina ; with an Account of the 
Trades, Manners, and Customs of the Christian and Indian Inhabitants, by 
John Brickell, M.D. Illustrated. Dublin, 1737. 
This Work is almost an exact transcript of Lawson’s Voyage to Carolina. 
Brocklesby.— Views of the Microscopic "World; designed for General Read¬ 
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square 12mo. New York, cloth. 6s. 
Canadian Naturalist and Geologist (the). Edited by E. Billings. 6 Numbers. 
8vo. Montreal, 1856. 15s. 
Canadian Naturalist and Geologist (the). Conducted by a Committee of the 
Natural History Socipty. Vol. II. for 1857, in 6 parts. 8vo. Montreal, 
1857. 15s. 
Darby.— Natural and Civil History of Elorida, by William Darby 8vo. 
Philadelphia, 1821. 
De Vere.— Stray Leaves from the Book of Nature, by M. Scheie De Vere, of 
the University of Virginia, crown.8vo, pp. 292. New York, 18^5.' cloth. 5s. 
Directions for Collecting, Preserving, and Transporting Specimens of Natural 
History. Prepared for the Use of the Smithsonian Institution. 2nd edi¬ 
tion. 8vo, pp. 28. Washington, 1854. 
Ewbank. —The World a Workshop; or, the Physical Relation of Man to 
the Earth, by Thomas Ewbank, Author of “Hydraulics and Mechanics.” 
12mo, pp. 198. New York, 1855. cloth. 5s. 
Girard. —Bibliography of American Natural History, for the year 1851, by 
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Godman. —Rambles of a Naturalist, by J. D. Godman. 12mo. Philadelphia, 
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Godman.— American Natural History, by John D. Godman. 3rd edition. 2 
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Index of the Library of the Lyceum of Natural History of New York. 8vo, 
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Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. — Yol. I. Part 
• I. 18 Plates. 8vo, pp. iv. and 220. Philadelphia, 1817. 
’ CONTENTS. 
Introduction. 
Description of Six New Species of .the Genus Firola, observed by Messrs. Le Sueur 
and Peron, in the Mediterranean Sea, in the months of March and April, 1809, 
by C. A. Le Sueur. 
Account of an American Quadruped supposed to belong to the Genus Ovis, by G. 
Ord. 
Description of Seven Species of American Fresh-water and Land Shells, not noticed in 
the Systems, by Thomas Say. 
The same, concluded. 
Description of several New Species of North-American Insects, by Thomas Say. 
Observations on the Genus Eriogonum and the natural Order Polygonese of Jussieu, 
by Thomas Nuttall. 
Notice of the late Doctor Waterhouse, 
