Pleistocene, Tabular View of, [472].
Polygenesis of Species, [418].
Pre-determination in Nature, [329].
Primitive Rocks, [16].
Protozoa, their Place in Nature, [152].
Pseudo-Fucoids, [318].
Pupa vetusta, [288].
Races of Early Men, [474].
Rill Marks, [317].
Scorpions, Carboniferous, [295].
Sigillariæ, Erect, [276].
Sorde, Cave of, [476].
Species, Permanence of, [87], [180].
---- Origin of, [418].
Sponges in Cambro-Silurian, [46].
Spore-cases in Coal, [234].
Stigmaria, [246].
Stone Age in America, [464].
Terraces of Lower St Lawrence, [346].
Tides of the Bay of Fundy, [312].
Time, Geological, [416].
Tracks of Animals, [51].
Trees, Erect, with Animal Remains, [276].
Tuckerman's Ravine, [427].
Underclays, their Origin and Nature, [236].
Vegetable Life, the Earliest, [338].
Vegetable Kingdom, its History, [202].
Vertebrates, History of, [183].
Vision of Creation, [90].
Worlds, the Making of, [9], [14].
Worm Tracks, [318].
White Mountains, [426].
Zoological Regions, [405].
SCIENCE IN BIBLE LANDS.
Modern Science in Bible Lands. By Sir J. W. Dawson, C.M.G., LL.D., F.R.S. With Maps and Illustrations. 12mo, Cloth, $2 00.
The special object of the work, the author tells us, is "to notice the light which the scientific explorations of the countries of the Bible may throw on the character and statements of the book." It contains much interesting and valuable matter, and Sir J. W. Dawson's opinions and explanations will doubtless meet with the respect and attention which they merit.—Academy, London.
Will add to Professor Dawson's deservedly high reputation as a scientist, and will be found to possess the same fascination for the reader that has characterized his previous works.... The work is not only a most interesting and valuable one from a scientific point of view, but will prove a notable addition to Biblical literature.—Boston Traveller.
One of the most valuable of recent books for Bible students.... This volume is a treatment at once scientific, and in the best sense popular, of such phases of Bible lands as most impressed themselves on the professor's mind when journeying in the East.—Boston Advertiser.
At once intensely interesting and instructive.—Albany Press.
The author writes delightfully, even in his technical passages. His book gives freshness to antiquity, and his personal adventures and experiences, though told modestly, show him to be heroic as a student of science and religion—Philadelphia Bulletin.