WORKS ON NATURAL HISTORY. 
THE VERTEBRATE FAUNA OF SCOTLAND. Edited by J. A. 
HARVIE-BROWN and THOMAS E, BUCKLEY. Small 4to. 
VOLUMES ALREADY PUBLISHED— 
rt. A Vertebrate Fauna of Sutherland, Caithness, and West Cromarty. 
[Out of print. 
2. A Vertebrate Fauna of the Outer Hebrides. [Out of print. 
3, The Birds of Iona and Mull, 1852-1870. By the late HENRY DAVENPORT 
GRAHAM. With a Memoir of the Author. Illustrated from the Author's 
Sketch Books. ars. net. 
4. A Vertebrate Fauna of the Orkney Islands. 305. 
s. A Vertebrate Fauna of Argyll and the Inner Hebrides. 30s. 
Sandy a Vertebrate Faune ofthe Moray Basin: ~LweMalse66s, 
“AMONG’’BRITISH BIRDS IN THEIR NESTING HAUNTS. 
_ By Oswin A. J. Les. “Mustratéa”by the Camera, Parts Ty'toXIvare now 
ready. Issued in Parts at intervals of from Four to Six Weeks, folio, 11 
by 15 inches, price ros. 6d. net each Part. 
“It would not be easy to exaggerate the patience, enthusiasm, ingenuity, and hard 
work that must have been employed in securing the plates, which are the great feature 
of the work; but the results are such as to fully repay from both the naturalist’s and the 
artist’s point of view the pains and labour expended.’—Scotsman. 
“As photographic representations of natural objects it is difficult to imagine anything 
more beautiful than many of these reproductions.’—/eld. 
_.HELIGOLAND AS" AN” ORNITHOLOGICAE“OBSERVAFORY. 
The Result of Fifty Years’ Experience. By HEINRICH GATKE, Honorary 
Member of the British Ornithologists’ Union, etc. Translated by RUDOLPH 
RosENsTOocK, M.A. Oxon. Demy 8vo, 305. 
‘The most fascinating and important contribution to our knowledge of the ever 
marvellous phenomena of migration that has ever appeared.’—Dazly Mews. : 
“A volume that will ever remain famous in the annals of ornithology.’—edd. 
©One of the most original, most remarkable, and most valuable books ever written 
about New Mt enc very Renin 
illustrated, 21s. net. 
‘Fowling, as dealt with in Mr. Macpherson’s handsome volume, comprises all modes 
of taking birds other than by the use of the gun or of the hawk. It is the most ancient 
and one of the most ingenious forms of sport, and before the invention of guns it was 
quite a serious occupation. The interest attaching to it now is partly inherent in certain 
forms of fowling, because they are survivals of very ancient practices. Of these the 
author gives a large, curious, and interesting collection of examples ; but the knowledge 
of the habits of birds, and the ingenuity exhibited in the sport are not less remarkable 
than its antiquity, and it is this which lends the main interest to the history of the 
craft.’—Sfectator. 
. VERTEBRATE FAUNA OF LAKELAND, including Cumberland 
and Westmoreland, with Lancashire north of the Sands. By the Rev. H. A. 
MacpHerson, M.A., with Preface by R. S. FERGUSON, F.S.A., Chancellor 
of Carlisle. Demy 8vo, Illustrated, 30s. 
4, THE BIRDS OF BERWICKS yr with “ReMarksom:their Local 
Distribution, Migration, on d-also on the Folk-lore, Pr 
AT = PRS Ee EZ.S., Member of the British Ornithologists’ Union, 
Member of the Berwickshire Naturalists’ Club, etc., Two Vols., demy 8vo, 
Illustrated, 30s. net. 
\_-BIRDS FROM MOIDART AND ELSEWHERE. By Mrs. Hucu 
BLACKBURN. Small 4to, with 87 Illustrations, 155, 
