LINNEAN SOCIETY OF LONDON. XXXV 



jects are chiefly contained in the ' Phytologist,' and in the ' Bota- 

 nical Grazette,' and the following is a list of them, as far as they 

 are known to me : — 



1. A Note on the "Weymouth Stations of Lathy r us Nissolia and 



Salicornia radicans. — JPhytologist, vol. i. p. 866. 



2. On the effects of Cultivation on Hyacinthtts non-scriptus. — 



Fhyf. vol. i. p. 988. 



3. Three days' botanizing at Selborne. — Phyt. vol. i. p. 1132. 



4. Note on the Filia^-foemina as a Tree-fern. — JPhyt. vol. i. 



p. 1141. 



5. Observations on the genus Bulus. — Phyt. ii. pp. 87, 97, 131, 



198. 



6. On the yellow juice of (Enanthe crocata. — Fhyt. ii. p. 116. 



7. Remarks on the Calamintha sylvatica of Bromfield. — PTiyt. ii. 



p. 171. 



8. On the meaning of the word recurvus. — Phyt. ii. p. 200. 



9. On the fertility of certain Hybrids. Eead before the Isle of 



Wight Philosophical Society. — Phyt. ii. p. 737. 



10. Effects of the mildness of the present Season (the Winter of 

 1852-53).— P%?5. iv. p. 847. 



11. A Descriptive Table of British Brambles. — Henfrey's Bota- 

 nical Gazette, vol. ii. pp. 113, 147. 



Of all these the most important, next to his Papers on Buhi, 

 are his observations on hybrids, the fertility of which he tested in 

 the genera MpiloUum and Geirni, through numerous generations. 

 On the death of his friend and neighbour Dr. Bromfield, he was 

 requested, in conjunction with Sir W. J. Hooker, to undertake 

 the publication of the elaborate materials collected by that la- 

 mented Botanist for a Plora of the Isle of Wight, which was pub- 

 lished in 1856, by their joint care, under the title of ' Plora Yec- 

 tensis.' In this work he naturallj^ took great interest, having 

 for ten or twelve years worked side by side with Dr. Bromfield, 

 and he added much to its value by his own observations. Dr. Bell 

 Salter became a Pellow of the Linnean Society in 1837, he was 

 married only in the February of last year, and died on the 30th 

 of September last, at the age of 44, at the house of his brother-in- 

 law, Dr. Lake, of Southampton, after a very short illness. " A 

 more kind or generous spirit," says the writer of a notice in a 

 local paper, " never breathed ; while his vast erudition threw a 

 charm round his society for the like of which we shall have long 

 to look in vain." 



Benjamin Cruttall Pierce Seaman, Esq., of Eotherby and Hoby 



c2 



