12 BIBLIOGRAPHY, BIOGRAPHY, HISTORY[ Bot. Absts., Vol. V, 



75. Bonnier, G. Notice sur Viviand-Morel. Rev. Gen. Bot. 31: 5-9. 1919.— A brief 

 sketch of M. Viviand-Morel (1843-1915), a French taxonomist whose researches dealt chiefly 

 with the problem of elementary species. — L. W. Sharp. 



76. Chodat, R. Casimir De Candolle, 1836-1918. [Avec tin portrait.] Arch. Sci. 

 Phys. Nat. Geneve v: 1: 5-28. 1919.— Anne Casimir De Candolle was born in Geneva, Feb. 

 20, 1836, the son of Alph. De Candolle. He received a thorough training in physics, mathe- 

 matics and chemistry in Paris under the direction of Berthelot. He then visited London 

 where he remained for some time with the mycologist Berkeley. England became to him a 

 second home; there he married the daughter of a fellow countryman and there his four chil- 

 dren were born. De Candolle's botanical contributions were varied, including collaboration 

 with his distinguished father on the Prodromus; but his love for the physical sciences led 

 him mainly into the newer physiological fields of his day, and it was in these fields that he 

 did his best work. De Candolle's strong human sympathies and great versatility won many 

 close friends, and his death is widely lamented. One son, M. Augustin, continues the botan- 

 ical labors of the family De Candolle, a race of outstanding botanists. — J. H. Faull. 



77. Farlow, W. G., Roland Thaxter, and L. H. Bailey. George Francis Atkinson. 

 Amer. Jour. Bot. 6: 301-302. 1919. — A sketch of the life and work of Professor Atkinson. — 

 E. W. Sinnolt. 



78. Fitzpatrick, Harry M. George Francis Atkinson. Science 49: 371-372. 1919. — 

 An appreciation of Professor Atkinson as a teacher, investigator and friend, together with 

 a brief resume of his life and work. — A. H. Chivers. 



79. Fitzpatrick, Harry M. Publications of George Francis Atkinson. Amer. Jour. 

 Bot. 6: 303-308. 1919. — A compilation of 178 titles of Professor Atkinson's papers, arranged 

 in chronological order. — E. W. Sinnott. 



80. Friedel, J. Notice sur Charles-Louis Gatin. Rev. Gen. Bot. 31: 65-74. Por- 

 trait . 1919. — An account of the work of Charles-Louis Gatin (1877-1916), a French botanist 

 who fell at Douaumont. In Algiers and at the Sorbonne he carried out a number of im- 

 portant researches on the anatomy and physiology of germination in palms and certain other 

 monocotyledonous families. A list of his 51 papers is given. — L. W. Sharp. 



81. Hamilton, A. G. List of papers and books on, or containing references to, the pol- 

 lination of Australian plants. Australian Nat. 4: 81-86. 1919. 



82. Janvrin, C. E. The scientific writings of Thomas J. Burrill. Trans. Illinois Hoi- 

 tic. Soc. 51: 195-201. 1918. — A complete bibliography of the scientific publications of this 

 pioneer botanist is given. The first paper was in 1869 and the last in 1917. Most of the 

 papers dealt with some phase of plant pathology. — H. W. Anderson. 



83. Krok, Th. O. B. En sallsynt botanisk skrift. [A rare botanical publication.] 

 Bot. Notiser 1919: 165-166. 1919. — In the Royal Library at Stockholm, there is found a little 

 publication of 31 unnumbered pages in small 8vo, entitled: "Catalogus plantarum Tain in 

 excultis quam incultis locis prope Aboam superiori aestate masci abservatarum. In gratiam 

 Philo-Botanicorum concinnatus. Ab Elia Til-Landz. Maij 1673, Aboae-Excusus a Petro 

 llansonio." This is the only copy now known in existence. It contains the enumeration 

 of 496 plants, wild and cultivated. A second edition was published in Abo 1683, enumerating 

 536 plants. Til-Landz was born in 1640. His original name was Tillander, but after having 

 been saved from a shipwreck, he changed it to Til-Landz, which means "on land." Linnaeus 

 named Tillandsia of the Family Bromeliaceae after him. — P. A. Rydberg. 



84. Mangin,L. Paul Hariot (1854-1917). Notice necrologique. [Obituary notice.] Bull. 

 Soc. Path. Veg. France 5: 65-70. [With portrait.] 1918. [Issued April 1919.]— The subject 

 of this notice was the son of a pharmacist and was trained in the. same profession. His 



