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**STILL Some Error Code PDF Size: 119Mb Language: English Format: pdf** Still
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Saurians, age of, Postscript, xv.
Thirria, M., on oolitic group in France, 283.
Thurmann, M., cited, 55. 252. 266.
Thuja occidentalis in stomach of mastodon, 138.
Till, term explained, 121.
origin of, 123.
Tilestone, 351.
Tilgate Forest, remains in, 229.
Tin, veins of, in Cornwall, 490. 498.
Tiverton trap, porphyry near, 432.
Travertin, how deposited, 34.
Tree ferns in Permian formation, 307.
Trias, or new red sandstone, 286. 289. and Postsc., xiii.
in Cheshire and Lancashire, 290. 295.
Trilobite in Devonian strata, 348.
Trilobites of Lower Silurian, 357.
Trimmer, Mr., on sand-galls, 82.
on shells in drift near Menai Straits, 130.
Tripoli composed of infusoria, 24.
Tuff, volcanic, and trap, 6. 374.
Tuffs on Wrekin and Caer Caradoc, 434.
Tuomey, Mr., cited, 208.
Turner, Dr., cited, 41. 42.
Tuscany, volcanic rocks of, 408.
Tynedale fault, 64.
Tynemouth Cliff, limestone at, 302.
U.

Uddevalla, shells of, compared with those near Naples, 108.


Underlying, term applied to granite, 8.
United States, coal field of, 326.
cretaceous formation in, 224.
Devonian strata in, 349.
Eocene strata in, 206.
older Pliocene and Miocene formations in, 171.
oolite and lias of, 284.
Silurian strata of, 359.
Upsala, strata containing Baltic shells near, 124.

V.

Val di Noto, composition of, 407.


igneous rocks of, 389.
inland cliffs in, 76.
Valleys, origin of, 70.
transverse of Weald, 244.
Valorsine granite, 445.
Veins, mineral. See Mineral Veins, 488.
Veinstones in parallel layers, 493.
Velay, volcanos of, 428.
Venetz, M., on Alpine glaciers, 140.
Verneuil, M. de, on Devonian Flora, 350.
on horizontal strata in Russia, 124.
on the old red sandstone in Russia, 348.
on Pentamerus Knightii, 353.
on Permian flora, 305.
Vesuvius, eruption of, 405.
Vicenza, basaltic columns near, 386.
Vidal, Capt., survey by, 393.
Virginia, U. S., fossil shells in, 172.
Virlet, M., on corrosion of rocks by gases, 477.
on geology of Morea, 431.
on inland cliffs, 73.
Volcanic mountains, form of, 5. 390.
dikes, 378.
Volcanic rocks, age of, 397.
described, 5. 385.
analysis of minerals in, 377.
Cambrian, 435.
composition and nomenclature, 368.
of Hungary, 421.
post-pliocene period, 401.
test of age of, 400.
Silurian, 434.
Volcanic tuff, 374.
Volcanos of Auvergne, 422.
extinct, 408. 420. 422.
newer, of Eifel, 418.
in Spain, age of, 414.
round Olot in Catalonia, 410.
Von Buch, Baron, cited, 373. 456. 457.
on boulders of Jura, 143.
on Canary Islands, 392.
on Cystideæ, 358.
on land rising, 45.
Von Dechen, M., on granite veins in Cornwall, 445.
Oeynhausen, M., cited, 415.

W.
Waller quoted, 93.
Warren, Dr. J. C., on skeleton of Mastodon giganteus, 138.
Waterhouse, Mr., cited, 188. 269.
on triassic mammifer, Postscript, xiv.
Watt, Mr. G., experiments on fused rocks, 406. 475.
Weald clay, 227.
Weald valley, denuded at what period, 254.
Wealden, term explained, 225. 226.
the fracture and upheaval of, 251.
extent of formation, 236.
period, changes during, 235.
Wealden, plants and animals of, 229. 236.
Webster, Mr. T., cited, 105. 231. 233.
Wellington Valley, caves in, 156.
Wener Lake, horizontal Silurian strata of, 45.
Wenlock formation, 354.
Werner on classification of rocks, 90.
on mineral veins, 488.
on volcanic rocks, 369.
Westerwald, igneous rocks of, 417.
Westwood, Mr., on beetles in lias, 282.
Whin-Sill, intrusion of trap between strata, 384.
White chalk, 211.
White mountains, granite vein in, 450.
Wigham, Mr., on fossils near Norwich, 149.
Wolverhampton, fossil forest near, 319.
Wood, Mr. Searles, on fossils of crag, 162.
on fossils of Isle of Wight, 198.
on number of shells in crag, 149.
on cetacea of crag, 166.
cited, 170. 177.
Woodward, Mr., on mammoth bones, Norfolk, 147.
Wrekin, trap of, 70.
Wyman, Dr., cited, 208.

Z.

Zamia, at Lyme Regis, 282.


Zamia spiralis, figure of, 233.
Zechstein, 306.
Zeuglodon cetoides, 207. and Postscript, xxi.

London:

Spottiswoodes and Shaw,


New-street-Square.

Albemarle Street,
July 5, 1851.

MR. MURRAY'S

L i s t o f R e c e n t W o r k s
HISTORY OF THE ROMAN STATE;

FROM 1815-1850. BY LUGIA CARLO FARINI.


TRANSLATED FROM THE ITALIAN

BY THE RIGHT HON. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P.

2 Vols. 8vo. 24s.

———♦———

THE EXPOSITION OF 1851;

OR, VIEWS OF THE INDUSTRY, THE SCIENCE, AND THE


GOVERNMENT OF ENGLAND.

BY CHARLES BABBAGE, ESQ.,


Author of the "Economy of Manufactures and Machinery."

Second Edition, with an Appendix. 8vo. 6s. 6d.

———♦———

THE DOVECOTE AND THE AVIARY;

OR, THE NATURAL HISTORY OF PIGEONS AND OTHER DOMESTIC


BIRDS, WITH HINTS FOR THEIR MANAGEMENT.

BY THE REV. EDMUND SAUL DIXON, M.A.,


Author of "Ornamental and Domestic Poultry."

With Numerous Woodcuts. Fcap. 8vo. 7s. 6d.

———♦———

MEMOIR OF THE LIFE OF THE LATE BISHOP


STANLEY.

PREFIXED TO A SELECTION FROM HIS ADDRESSES AND


CHARGES.

BY THE REV. ARTHUR PENRHYN STANLEY, M.A.

8vo. 10s. 6d.

"The memoir is executed with feeling, and, as might be expected


from the biographer of Dr. Arnold, with great skill. Mr. Stanley brings
out into strong relief the more attractive parts of his father's
character, and suggests the best defence—namely, the consistent
uprightness and perfect sincerity of his motives—for the more
questionable policy, on some memorable occasions, of the bishop."
Morning Chronicle.

———♦———

A PASTORAL LETTER ON THE STATE OF THE


CHURCH,

BY HENRY LORD BISHOP OF EXETER.


Eighth Edition. 8vo. 4s.

———♦———

THE ACTS OF THE SYNOD OF EXETER.

HOLDEN IN THE CHAPTER HOUSE OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH


OF EXETER.

On June 25, 26, and 27, 1851.

8vo.

⁂ The Sermon may be had separately, price 1s.

———♦———

THE EVANGELICAL AND TRACTARIAN MOVEMENTS.

BY ARCHDEACON WILBERFORCE.

(A Charge delivered to and published by Request of the Clergy.)

8vo. 1s.

———♦———

A HISTORY OF ERASTIANISM.

BY ARCHDEACON WILBERFORCE.
16mo. 3s.

———♦———

CATHOLIC SAFEGUARDS

AGAINST THE ERRORS, CORRUPTIONS, AND NOVELTIES OF THE


CHURCH OF ROME.

BEING DISCOURSES AND TRACTS SELECTED FROM THE WORKS


OF EMINENT DIVINES OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND WHO LIVED
DURING THE 17TH CENTURY; WITH PREFACE, RECORDS, AND A
CAREFULLY COMPILED INDEX.

BY REV. JAMES BROGDEN, M.A.

3 Vols. 8vo. 36s.

———♦———

RECORDS OF THE SUPREMACY OF THE CROWN,

AND THE CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTIES OF THE PEOPLE OF


ENGLAND.

BY REV. JAMES BROGDEN.

8vo. 4s.

———♦———
HORÆ ÆGYPTIACÆ;

OR, THE CHRONOLOGY OF ANCIENT EGYPT.

DISCOVERED FROM ASTRONOMICAL AND HIEROGLYPHIC


RECORDS UPON ITS MONUMENTS INCLUDING MANY DATES FOUND
IN COEVAL INSCRIPTIONS.

BY REGINALD STUART POOLE, ESQ.

With Plates. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

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a series of papers in this journal. Since their publication the author
has devoted further time and attention to the subject; and it may
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made to the study of Egyptian Chronology and history. We are
indebted for the publication of the present valuable work to the
liberality of the Duke of Northumberland, whose warm and generous
support of literature and art deserves our grateful
acknowledgments."
Literary Gazette.

———♦———

LAVENGRO;

THE SCHOLAR—THE GIPSY—AND THE PRIEST.

BY GEORGE BORROW, ESQ.


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life, with earnest sympathy for all genuine workers, with profound
insight into the wants and wishes of the poor and uneducated, and a
lofty disdain of the conventional 'shams' and pretensions which fetter
the spirits or impede the energies of mankind. Nor is a feeling for
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environed by green meadows or bosomed in tufted trees; an old
mercantile and ecclesiastical city, with a history stretching from the
times of the Cæsars to the times of George III.; the treeless plain,
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because in any work of Mr. Borrow's these will naturally be the first
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concluded; a fourth volume will explain and gather up much of what
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measure, 'the vision and the faculty divine' for discerning and
discriminating what is noble in man and what is beautiful in nature.
We trust Mr. Borrow will speedily bring forth the remaining acts of
his 'dream of adventure,' and with good heart and hope pursue his
way rejoicing, regardless of the misconceptions or
misrepresentations of critics who judge through a mist of
conventionalities, and who themselves, whether travelled or
untravelled, have not, like Lavengro, grappled with the deeper
thoughts and veracities of human life."—Tait's Magazine.

———♦———

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BY WILLIAM JOHNSTON, ESQ.

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point he is much superior to his prototype and apparent master, Mr.
Alison."

"Mr. Johnston's work is readable and well-written, abounding with


information of many kinds."—Edinburgh Review.
———♦———

THE SAXON IN IRELAND:

BEING NOTES OF THE RAMBLES OF AN ENGLISHMAN IN THE


WEST OF IRELAND IN SEARCH OF A SETTLEMENT.

With Map. Post 8vo. 9s. 6d.

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"Let the intending emigrant devote a few hours to the perusal of
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———♦———

SLEEP AND DREAMS:

TWO LECTURES DELIVERED AT THE BRISTOL LITERARY AND


PHILOSOPHICAL INSTITUTION.

BY JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS, M.D.,

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———♦———

THE PALACES OF
NINEVEH AND PERSEPOLIS RESTORED.

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BY JAMES FERGUSSON ESQ.,

With Woodcuts. 8vo. 16s.

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of the most wonderful discoveries that has occurred in the history of
the world. Mr. Fergusson writes very dispassionately. What he has
said deserves serious consideration."—Gentleman's Magazine.

———♦———

SHALL WE KEEP THE CRYSTAL PALACE

AND HAVE RIDING AND WALKING IN ALL WEATHERS, AMONG


FLOWERS, SCULPTURE, AND FOUNTAINS?

BY DENARIUS.

8vo. 6d.

———♦———

MEMOIRS OF ROBERT PLUMER WARD.

WITH HIS CORRESPONDENCE, DIARIES, AND LITERARY


REMAINS.

BY THE HON. EDMUND PHIPPS.


With Portrait. 2 Vols. 8vo. 28s.

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the flush of his military triumph, was also in the prime of his power
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habits, his method of arguing public questions, his ready resource
and never-tiring energy, which possesses occasionally a striking
interest."—Examiner.

———♦———

THE MILITARY EVENTS IN ITALY, 1848-9.

TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN.

BY THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF ELLESMERE.

With a Map. Post 8vo. 9s.

"Military history is, as the Earl of Ellesmere declares, a rare article


in English literature; and, therefore, he thought that the most
authentic extant narrative of the operations implied in the title page
of the present book, written by an impartial Swiss, would not be an
unwelcome addition to the British library. His lordship has judged
rightly; the work of which he has presented a version is a worthy
labour, and the events to which it relates are of the last importance.
It is written with judgment, and has been translated with care."—
Morning Chronicle.

———♦———
A TRANSPORT VOYAGE TO THE MAURITIUS,

BY WAY OF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE AND ST. HELENA.

BY THE AUTHOR OF "PADDIANA."

Post 8vo. 9s. 6d.

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sometimes meets with in company, who has an anecdote or a story
ready à propos of everything, whose fund of amusing tales is
inexhaustible, and who rattling on from one thing to another, will
keep a whole table in a roar, or a whole drawing-room in high glee.
Even such is our author. He gossips on and on, telling now of one
adventure, and then of another; his volume is a perfect chaos of
racy reminiscences graphically told."—John Bull.

———♦———

ADMIRALTY MANUAL OF SCIENTIFIC ENQUIRY

FOR THE USE OF OFFICERS AND TRAVELLERS IN GENERAL.

BY PROFESSORS WHEWELL, AIRY, OWEN, SIR W. HOOKER, CAPT.


BEECHEY, J. R. HAMILTON, ESQ., SIR JOHN HERSCHEL, &c.

EDITED BY SIR JOHN F. HERSCHEL, BART.

Second Edition. Post 8vo. 10s. 6d.

⁂ Published by Authority of the Lords Commissioners of the


Admiralty.
———♦———

LIVES OF THE CHIEF JUSTICES OF ENGLAND.

FROM THE NORMAN CONQUEST TO THE DEATH OF LORD


MANSFIELD.

BY LORD CHIEF JUSTICE CAMPBELL.

2 Vols. 8vo. 30s.

"There is, indeed, in Lord Campbell's works much instruction; his


subjects have been so happily selected, that it was scarcely possible
that there should not be. An eminent lawyer and statesman could
not write the lives of great statesmen and lawyers without
interweaving curious information, and suggesting valuable principles
of judgment and useful practical maxims: but it is not for these that
his works will be read. Their principal merit is their easy animated
flow of interesting narrative. No one possesses better than Lord
Campbell the art of telling a story: of passing over what is
commonplace; of merely suggesting what may be inferred; of
explaining what is obscure; and of placing in strong light the details
of what is interesting."—Edinburgh Review.

———♦———

THE FORTY-FIVE.

BEING A NARRATIVE OF THE REBELLION IN SCOTLAND OF 1745;

BY LORD MAHON.

Post 8vo. 3s.


"This is a very comprehensive and lively sketch of the famous
'Rebellion' so vividly remembered, even after the lapse of a century,
by the people of Scotland. The incidents of that unfortunate invasion
from first to last, from the landing of Charles (July 25th) in
Borrodale, with the 'seven men of Moidart,' to the fatal battle of
Culloden (16th April, 1746), are minutely and faithfully recorded; but
we have no doubt the reader will be most and mainly interested in
the personal history and adventures of the Pretender himself. The
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illiterate as scarcely to be master of the most common elements of
education. 'His letters,' says Lord Mahon, 'which I have seen among
the Stuart papers, are written in a large, rude, rambling hand, like a
schoolboy's. In spelling they are still more deficient.' We recommend
Lord Mahon's narrative as a very agreeable sketch of a stirring and
eventful period."—Edinburgh Advertiser.

———♦———

A HISTORY OF GREECE.

FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE END OF THE


PELOPONNESIAN WAR.

BY GEORGE GROTE, ESQ.

Vols. I.-VIII. With Maps. 8vo. 16s. each.

The Work may be obtained in Portions, as it was published:—

Vols. I.-II.
Legendary Greece.
Grecian History to the Reign of Peisistratus at Athens.

Vols. III.-IV.
History of Early Athens, and the Legislation of Solon.
Grecian Colonies.
View of the Contemporary Nations surrounding Greece.
Grecian History down to the first Persian Invasion, and the Battle of

Marathon.

Vols. V.-VI.
Persian War and Invasion of Greece by Xerxes.
Period between the Persian and the Peloponnesian Wars.
Peloponnesian War down to the Expedition of the Athenians against

Syracuse.

Vols. VII.-VIII.
The Peace of Nikias down to the Battle of Knidus [b.c. 421 to 394.]
Socrates and the Sophists.

———♦———

KUGLER'S HANDBOOK ILLUSTRATED.

THE SCHOOLS OF PAINTING IN ITALY.


FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES.

TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN BY A LADY, AND EDITED WITH


NOTES

BY SIR CHARLES LOCK EASTLAKE,


President of the Royal Academy.

A New Edition. 2 Vols. Post 8vo. 24s.

"We cannot leave this subject (Christian Art, its present state and
its prospects), without reverting to Sir C. Eastlake's edition of
Kugler's Handbook of Painting, not for the sake of reviewing it,—for
it is a work now of established reputation,—but for the purpose of
recommending it as being upon the whole by far the best manual we
are acquainted with, for every one who, without the opportunity of
foreign and particularly Italian travel, desires to make a real study of
art. Its method, its chronological arrangement, and its generally
judicious criticism, make it most instructive to a learner. We may add
that the present edition is enlarged just where the former one
needed enlargement, and the Handbook is now far more satisfactory
as to the early religious schools than it was before. The edition is
beautifully got up, and so profusely and judiciously illustrated by one
hundred woodcuts drawn by Scharf, that it would be next to
impossible to speak too highly in its praise, even were its matter less
valuable and important than it is."—The Ecclesiastic.

———♦———

CHRISTIANITY IN CEYLON:

ITS INTRODUCTION AND PROGRESS UNDER THE PORTUGUESE,


DUTCH, BRITISH, AND AMERICAN MISSIONS.

BY SIR JAMES EMERSON TENNENT, K.C.S., LL.D.

With Illustrations. 8vo. 14s.

"To those who take either a religious or a philosophical interest in


the subject, Sir Emerson Tennent's volume may be safely

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