[7] Travellers who intend to make collections of zoological specimens are advised to call on the Secretary of the British Museum (Natural History), Cromwell Road, S.W. He will be happy to supply any information required.
[8] General travelling outfit can be procured from Messrs. Silver & Co., 67 Cornhill, E.C.
[9] Ejector guns are apt to get out of order in sandy countries.
[10] The shafts of old golf-drivers, when shortened to about 2 feet 6 inches in length, make the most perfect handles for nets.
[11] All the above-mentioned articles for collecting insects may be procured from Mr. Janson, 44 Great Russell Street, W., or from Messrs. Watkins & Doncaster, 36 Strand, W.C., or from Miss E. M. Sharpe, 4 Barrowgate Road, Chiswick.
[12] Cf. British Museum ‘Handbook,’ p. 47.
[13] Cf. British Museum ‘Handbook,’ pp. 15-32.
[14] Much useful information may be found in the ‘Manual of the Mollusca,’ by S. P. Woodward, F.G.S., one of Weale’s series; an admirable book in a small form.
[15] More extended accounts of the departments of the Science of Man here noticed will be found in Tylor’s ‘Anthropology: an Introduction to the Study of Men and Civilisation’ (Macmillan and Co., New edition, 1895).
[16] Some useful training under this head can be obtained at the London School of Economics.