Abstract
THE publication of a new work on experimental zoology is a sign of the times. Until comparatively lately the experimental method was not widely adopted in the pursuit of zoological inquiry. The morphologist, as a general rule, confined his attention to the form and structure of animals arid the changes through which these pass in the progress of individual development, without regard to the different ways in which form and structure arise in embryogeny and the forces which control the modes of growth.
Experimental Zoology.
Part i., Embryogeny: an, Account of the Laws governing the Development of the Animal Egg as ascertained through Experiment. By Dr. Hans Przibram. Pp. viii + 124; 16 plates. (Cambridge: University Press, 1908.) Price, 7s. 6d. net.
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MARSHALL, F. Experimental Zoology . Nature 80, 2–3 (1909). https://doi.org/10.1038/080002a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/080002a0
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