ZOOLOGY AND BOTANY, MICROSCOPY, ETC. 457 



Peola, P. — Sulla Flora carbonifera del Piccolo S. Bernardo. (On the carboniferous 

 flora of -the Little St. Bernard.) Mem. Carta Geol. Italia, xii. (1904) 



24 pp. (1 pi.). 

 Prain, D. — Flora of the Sundribuns. 



[Contains some Pteridophyta.] Rec. Bot. Surv. India, ii. (1903)pp. 3G1-5. 



Rippa. G.— La Peteridofite raccolte da G.Zenker al Congo. (The Pteridophyta 

 collected by G. Zenker on the Congo.) Bull. Ort. Bot. Napoli, ii. (1904) 



pp. 109-14. 

 Robinson, B. L. — A Connecticut Station for Lycopodium Selago. 



Shodora, vii. (1905) p. 20. 



Rota-Rossi, G. — Alcune considerazioni sulla ontogenia delle cormofite vascolari. 

 (Some views on the ontogeny of the vascular cormophytes.) 



Atti 1st. Bot. Pavia. x. (1904) 4 pp., 1 pi. 



Rudolph, K. — Psaronien und Marattiaceen. Vergleichend anatomische Unter- 

 suchungen. (Psaronite and Marattiacese. Researches into their comparative 

 anatomy.) K. Akad. Wis*. Wien Sitz. Anz. Math. Nat., Feb. 10, 1905. 



Schaffner, J. H.— Lycopodium porophilum in Ohio. 



Ohio Naturalist, v. (1905) p. 301. 



„ „ The Life-Cycle of a Heterosporous Pteridophyte. 



Tom. cit., pp. 255-60 (fig.). 



Scott, D. H. — A New Type of Sphenophyllaceous Cone from the Lower Coal Mea- 

 sures. 



[Sphenophyllum fertile, from Shore Littleborough, in Lanca- 

 shire.] Hep. Brit. Ass. Adv. Sri. 1904 (1905) 



pp. 777-8. 



„ „ On the structure and affinities of fossil plants from the Palaeozoic 



rocks. V. On a new type of Sphenophyllaceous cone (Spheno- 

 phyllum fertile) from the Lower Coal Measures. 



Proc. R. Soc. London, lxxiv. (19D4) pp. 314-15 ; 

 Ann. of Bot., xix. (1905) pp. 168-9. 



„ „ What were the Carboniferous Ferns ? 



Journ. R. Micr. Soc, 1905, pp. 137-49 (3 pis.). 



Scott, J. G. — History of Asplenium ebenoides [in North America]. 



Germantown Independent Gazette, Jan. 13, 1905 (fig.). 



St o ring, J. — Een vreemde Varen: Platycerium alcicorne. 



[An exotic fern.] ' Be Natuur, xxiv. (1904) pp. 365-6. 



Ta ylor, A. P. — How and where Ferns grow in South-West Georgia. 



[Field notes.] Fern Bulletin, xiii. (1905) pp. 53-60. 



Terry, E. H. — Dicksonia pilosiuscula forma schizophylla in Vermont. 



Rhodora. vii. (M05) p. 99. 



Van Hook, M. L. — Illinois Ferns near Lake Michigan. 



[Field notes.] Fern Bulletin, xiii. (1905) pp. 23-5. 



\Y acker, A. H. — Ecological Notes on Ohio Pteridophytes. 



Ohio Naturalist, v. (1905) pp. 295-7. 



Weiss, F. E.— The Vascular Supply of Stigmarian rootlets. 



Ann. of Bot., xviii. (1904) pp. 180-1 (fig.). 



White, D. — The seeds of Aneimites. 



[The author describes and figures the seeds of the fossil Adiantites, 

 which plant he removes in consequence to Aneimites Dawson. The 

 fruits, which are true seeds, are named Wardia fertilis, and are 

 borne singly, or rarely plural ly. at the apices of lax. flexuose, 

 ramose, and slightly dilated terminal extensions of the peripheral 

 pinnae. The group of hitherto supposed ferns to which these seeds 

 belong is now to be referred to the Pteridosperinae of Oliver and 

 Scott, the " Cycadofilices " of Potonie'.] 



Smithson. MUcell. Coll., ii. 'J 905) pp. 322-3 1 (2 pis.). 



