19 



/ 



sponte crescentes, quas admethodum CL Linnaei sexualem anno 

 1742, etc., observavit et descripsit Cadwallader Golden. (D.) 



In Acta Societ. Reg. Sci. Upsala, 1749-51. 



Onondaga County, 



^^^ Filices Onondagenses. ByMrs.^S. M. Rust. (K.) 



Syracuse (no date). 

 Queens County. 



S^ Plantae Plandomenses, or catalogue of Plants growing near Plan- 

 dome, Long Island. By C. W. Eddy.- ("A.) 

 In Medical Repository, Vol, xi. New York, 1807. ■ 

 Q Richmond County, 



Flora of Richmond County. By Arthur HoUick and N. L. Britton.(B.) 

 8vo, pamph. pp. 26. Staten Island, 1879,' (Addenda in Bullet. 

 Torrey Club, Jan., 1880.) 

 Rensselaer County. 



o ^ Catalogue of Plants growing in the vicinity of Tjroy. By James Hall 



and J. Wright, M.D. (B.) 

 8vo, pamph. pp. 42. Troy, 1836. 

 Schenectady County. 

 f 7 Catalogue of the flowering Plants of Schenectady County. • By E. 



W. Paige. (B.) 



8vo, pamph, pp. 48. Albany, 1864. 

 Suffolk County, 

 A^ Catalogue of the phaenogamous and acrogenous Plants of Suffolk 



County. By E. S. Miller and H. W. Young. (A.) 

 8vo, pamph. pp. 19. Port Jefferson, 1874. (Addenda in Bullet. Tor. 



Club, Vols, vi and vii.) 

 ^ Tioga County. • 



/ ' Catalogue of forest Trees growing wild in the town of Nichols, Tio- 

 ga County. By Robert Howell. (A.) 

 In Ann. Rep. Regents. Albany, 1852. 



Yates and Seneca Counties. 

 ^"^ Catalogue of Plants growing without cultivation in the vicinity of 



Seneca and Crooked Lakes, in Western New York. By H. P. 



Sartwell, M.D. 

 In Ann. Rep. Regents. Albany, 1845. 



Westchester County. 

 qZ Catalogue of Plants growing in the vicinity of North Salem Acad- 

 emy. By S. B. Mead. (A.) 

 In Ann. Rep- Regents. Albany, 1831-2. 

 / -^ Report on the Flora of Westchester County. By O. R. Willis, (B.) 

 Appendix to Bolton's Hist. Westchester Co. New York, 1880. 



W. R. G. 



N. L. B. 



^17. Botanical Notes. — Curious Fungi tnthe Nevada Mines. — The 

 Virginia City (Nev-) Enterprise^ speaking of the old deserted Mexican 

 and Ophir mines, says that fungi of every imaginable kind have 

 taken possession of the old levels. " In these old mines, undisturbed 

 for years, is found a fungus world in which are to be seen counterfeits 

 of almost everything seen in our daylight world. Owing to the 

 warmth of the old levels and to the presence in them of a certain 



