British Islands. 



780 



8000 de 



Johnstone. ."ilSlT. A fossil stump. 



Kidston ami Gwynne-Vaughan. 51915. 

 Fossil Osiiuiiulacea\ 



Ley. 52370. Brecon and West 

 Yorkshire Hawkwceds [Ilicmciuvi]. 



and Wolley-Dod. 52374. 



Collection and idcntilication of roses. 



Linn6. 52430. Flora anclica. 

 Upsaliae, 17.54. [Reprinted, incor- 

 poratin<; atUlitions and alterations made 

 in the 175U edition.] 



Linton. 52440. British species and 

 varieties of Thymus. 



Lubbock. 52541. Seeds with special 

 reference to British Plants. 



McArdle. 52584. Lcnlinns Icpideus 

 Fr. var. hibernicus n. var. 



Macvicar. 52G16. Two new British 

 Hej)aticac. 



Margerison. 52085. Vegetation of 

 some disused quarries. 



Marshall, K. S. 52ti95. Jligli alpine 

 flora of Britain. 520(M'» : Kitphrasin 

 and Rhinanlhiis. 5270<i : Amvjallis 

 arvensis L. [wild in Britain]. 52702 : 

 Carcx catiescens Lightf. 52720 : Struc- 

 ture and aflinities of British Tuberaceac. 



Meyrick. 52842. Occurrence of an 

 Kpilobium new to Britain. 



Moss. 52974. Nomenclature of the 

 ]iriti.sh Melicae. 52975 : British local 

 floras. 52970 : The hybrid oak 



[Quercus Jiobur x scssVi jlorti] in York- 

 shire and other parts of Britain. 



Owen and Boulger. 53212. The 

 country month by month. 



Peacock. 53312. Followers of man. 

 [Occurrence of certain plants in Britain.] 

 53314 : Heredit}' of acquired characters 

 [in various British plants]. 53315; 

 Shunncrs of man. [Occurrence of 



certain British plants.] 



Rankin. 53029, A first book of 

 wild flowers. 



Rea. 53000. New and rare British 

 fungi. 



Rogers. 53803. British Rubi (April, 

 1900-December, 1908). 



Sage. 53941. Bacillus prodigiosus. 



Smith, A. L. 54300. Jfyxobacteria- 

 ceae. 54307 : New or rare microfungi. 



Smith, T. 54382. ]-:tliblc and 

 poisonous fungi. 



Swanton. 54024. Fungi and how to 

 know tliem. 



Turner. 54S52, Dcsmids. 



Tynan and Maitland. 54803. The 



book of flowers. 



Waddell. 54995. Common fungi : 

 how to collect and study them. 



Walker. 55018. Klodea canadensis. 



Watt. 55000. Orchis ericctorum, 

 Linton, and other flowering plants. 



West, C. S. and Griffiths. 55129. 

 Ilillhoui^ia mirahilis |n. gen. and sp.]. 

 a giant sulphur Bacterium. 



West, W. and West, 0. S. 55132. 

 British freshwater phj-toplankton, 

 Desmid- plankton and the distribution 

 of liritish Desmids. 



Westell and Turner. 55135. The 

 hedge I know. 55130 : The pond I 

 knoNV. 55137 : The wood I know. 

 55138 : The meadow I know. 56139 : 

 The stream I know. 55140 : The 

 common I know. 



Williams. 55199. The high alpine 

 flora of Britain. 55203 : Brodromus 

 florae Britannicae. 



Yapp. 55324. Stratification in the 

 vegetation of a marsh, and its relations 

 to evaporation and temperature. 



Young. 55329. Bacillus prodigiosus. 



l'>Nc;i.ANI). 



Beport of botanical finds during 

 field (lays. Marlborough Rep. Coll. 

 N. H. Soc. 1908 1 1909] (22-23). 



Report of the Botanical Section. 

 Marlborough Rep. Coll. N. H. Soc. 

 1908 [1909] (35-44). 



New botanical finds [in Nottingham- 

 shire, ^Vest Yorkshire, etc.]. Naturalist 

 London 1909 (00). 



The annual " Fungus Foray " [in 

 Epping Forest]. Stratford Essex Nat. 

 15 1908 [1909] (149-150). 



Aiken. 49110. Carex Boenning- 

 hauseniana : flora of Northumberland. 

 49120 : Carcx Bocnninglmusiana : its 

 occurrence in Northumberland. 



Alexander. 49127. Hyljrid between 

 Orchis maculaUi and Ilahcnaria conopsca 

 in Yorkshire. 



