By the same Author.

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Post 8vo, 21s.

A NATURALIST’S RAMBLES ON THE DEVONSHIRE COAST.

WITH TWENTY-EIGHT PLATES.

“The charming book now before us.... The lively pages of this graphic and well-illustrated volume.... We know of no book where that beautiful family, the Sea-Anemones, are more graphically described and brought before the eye of the reader.”—Fraser’s Magazine, Oct. 1853.

Post 8vo, 17s.

THE AQUARIUM;
AN UNVEILING OF THE WONDERS OF THE DEEP SEA.

Second Edition, Enlarged.

WITH CHROMATOGRAPHS AND WOOD ENGRAVINGS.

“The beautiful work now before us.... Every page of this fascinating work is quotable.... A fitting ornament for the drawing-room table.”—Chambers’s Journal, Aug. 1854.

Fcap. 8vo, 2s. 6d.

A HANDBOOK TO THE MARINE AQUARIUM.

SECOND EDITION.

“This little handbook appears to contain every information that can be required for a commencement; and will, doubtless, prove highly acceptable to those who interest themselves in Marine Zoology.”—Annals of Nat. History, Feb. 1856.

Two Vols. 8vo, 15s.

A MANUAL OF MARINE ZOOLOGY FOR THE BRITISH ISLES.

WITH NEARLY SEVEN HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS.

“As a Manual of British Marine Zoology, it needs fear no rival: as a sea-side book, it will be the constant companion of the student of nature, who will find it a most useful work.”—Nat. Hist. Review, 1855.

Post 8vo, 21s.

TENBY; A SEASIDE HOLIDAY.

WITH TWENTY-FOUR PLATES, COLOURED.

“Here we have another issue from the fertile pen of Mr. Gosse; and another of his delightful sea-side books. It is fully worthy of its predecessors in pleasant gossip, in interesting information, in important scientific novelty, and in variety and beauty of illustration.”—AthenÆum, May 31, 1856.

Post 8vo, 10s. 6d.

OMPHALOS;
AN ATTEMPT TO UNTIE THE GEOLOGICAL KNOT.

WITH FIFTY-SIX ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD.

This Work announces and illustrates a grand Physical Law, which, though hitherto unrecognised, is proved to be of universal application in the organic world—the Law of Prochronism in Creation. On this principle the Author shows that the conclusions of geologists as to the great antiquity of the earth are not inevitable, that there is another solution of the facts at least possible.

“We have no hesitation in pronouncing this book to be the most important and best-written that has yet appeared on the very interesting question with which it deals. We believe the logic of the book to be unanswerable, its postulates true, its laws fairly deduced.”—Nat. Hist. Review, Jan. 1858.

Post 8vo, 21s.

ACTINOLOGIA BRITANNICA;
A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH SEA-ANEMONES AND CORALS.

WITH COLOURED FIGURES OF THE SPECIES AND PRINCIPAL VARIETIES.


JOHN VAN VOORST, PATERNOSTER ROW.


Small 8vo, 5s.

LETTERS FROM ALABAMA (U. S.),
CHIEFLY RELATING TO NATURAL HISTORY.

WITH TWENTY-NINE ENGRAVINGS ON WOOD.

“In these ‘Letters’ we have one of the pleasantest little volumes imaginable on all the curious life that abounds in the woods and forests of Alabama—a part of the United States ‘visited by comparatively few Englishmen.’ A vast amount of interesting information, gathered from a careful and daily search and ramble through primeval forests, woods, and swamps, is collected for us in this little book, and put together in an extremely readable and attractive form. We heartily recommend the volume.”—St. James’s Chronicle, Aug. 25.


LONDON:
MORGAN & CHASE, 3, AMEN CORNER, PATERNOSTER ROW.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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