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upon reptiles), while a young physician, who is an admirable draughtsman, makes my anatomical figures.
For my share, I direct their work while writing the text, and thus the whole advances with great strides.
I do not, however, stop here.
Having by permission of the Director of the Museum one of the finest collections of fossils in Germany at my disposition, and being also allowed to take the specimens home as I need them, I have undertaken to publish the ichthyological part of the collection.
Since it only makes the difference of one or two people more to direct, I have these specimens also drawn at the same time.
Nowhere so well as here, where the Academy of Fine Arts brings together so many draughtsmen, could I have the same facility for completing a similar work; and as it is an entirely new branch, in which no one has as yet done anything of importance, I feel sure of success; the more so because Cuvier, who alone could do it (for the simple reason that every one else has till now neglected the fishes), is not engaged upon it. Add to this that just now there is a real need of this work for the determination of the different geological formations.
Once before, at the Heidelberg meeting, it had been proposed to me; the
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