Experience a classic natural history reference that organizes life into clear, enduring categories.
This late 18th‑century volume presents a systematic overview of animals, including worms, mollusks, and shelled sea life, alongside early thoughts on how living forms relate to each other and to their habitats.
Designed for scholars and curious readers alike, the book compiles descriptive entries, hierarchical classifications, and plates that aided early scientific study. It offers a window into historical methods of naming, grouping, and comparing species across oceans and continents, with an emphasis on structure, habitation, and variation.
- Systematic groupings such as worms, mollusks, and testacea are explained with terms and relationships common to the period.
- Entries cover forms, habitats, and notable features, helping readers understand early taxonomy.
- Descriptive passages illustrate how 18th‑century naturalists connected organisms to their environments.
- Includes sections on infusoria and other minute life forms, reflecting the era’s expanding scope of natural history.
Ideal for readers of historical science, taxonomy enthusiasts, and anyone curious about how early naturalists organized the living world.