282 



BOTANICAL INrOKMATION. 



Mauritius. P. 

 Boarbon. 



Senegambia. 



St. Helena. 



Madeira. 



Azores, 



Algeria. 



Egypt and Abyssinia, 



Nubia and Ethiopia. 



Collected by 

 Sieber, Telfair. 



Unknown coUec- Some beautiful Ferns, and se- 

 tor. veral highly curious Orchi- 



dese, 

 Hudelot. About 500 species, many new 



or rare. 



Cuming. 



Lippold. 



Guthnick. 



Bove. 



Schimper, 



Kotschy. 



Author of the Flora of Algeria. 



Who obtained a high post under 

 the GoFemmeut of that coun- 

 try. 



NORTH AMERICA. 



Arctic regions, Rocky Moun- Drumraond, 



tains, and Texas, 



Columbia and California. 



United States. P. 



Canada. P. 



Mexico and Guatemala. 



Douglas. 



Nuttall^, about 

 2000 species ; 



Nearly complete seta of the 

 plants collected by this ar- 

 dent Botanist. 



The unfortunate Naturalist who 

 lost his life by falling into a 

 pit in one of the Sandwich 

 Islands, in which a wild bull 

 had been entrapped. 



^ Sometime Professor of Botany 

 at Cambridge, Mass.- 



Torrey and Gray®; 2 Authors of the excellent Flora 



Frank, Freedley, of North America. 



Rugel, Short^, etc. ^ An excellent Botanist of 



Louisville, Kentucky. 

 Gouldie. 



Hartweg^Schiede ^Sent out as collector by the 



and Deppe, Ber- 

 landier, Parkin- 

 son, Galeotti, 

 Andrieui, Mo- 



cino and Sesse. 

 West Indies, chiefly St. Do- Sieber, Guilding, 



mingo, P, and Doustan. 



Trinidad, Cuba, Martinique. 



Horticultural Society. 



But in this region the Collec- 

 tion is very defective. 



