Abstract
THE rapid advances which have been made in recent years in our knowledge of crystals, and the increasing number of points at which crystallography comes into contact both with chemistry and physics, render it more than ever desirable that students of these sciences should acquire a sound knowledge of the nature and properties of crystals and an acquaintance with the methods of crystallo-graphic research. In illustration of this it is only necessary to refer on one hand to the work of Pope and Barlow on the relation between valency and crystalline structure, and on the other to that of Lehmann, Vorländer, and others on the remarkable group of bodies forming the so-called “liquid crystals.”
(1) Crystallography and Practical Crystal Measurement.
By Dr. A. E. H. Tutton Pp. xiv + 946, with 3 plates and 720 figures in the text. (London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd., 1911.) Price 30s. net.
(2) Crystals.
By Dr. A. E. H. Tutton Pp. x + 301, with 24 plates and 120 figures in the text. (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trbner and Co., Ltd., 1911.) Price 5s. (The International Scientific Series.)
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B., H. (1) Crystallography and Practical Crystal Measurement (2) Crystals . Nature 88, 439–440 (1912). https://doi.org/10.1038/088439a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/088439a0