794 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS. 



^Estiv^afcioii iu Asiiuiua. Am. J. Sci., Ill, x, C)^. 



Note oil poiia from inuiumies and clover from greeusauil marl. Natiou, No. 52:^, 

 p. 27. 



The Potato Rot; Slittiu«: down the Bark of Fruit Trees in Early Summer. Am. 

 Agriculturist, July, pp. 262, 263. 



A Pilgrimage to Torreya. Am. Agriculturist, July, pp. 266,267. 



The Box-Huckleberry (Gaylussacia brachycera (rray). Am. J. Sci., Ill, x, 155. 



Spontaneous Generation of Plants. Am. Agriculturist, Oct. 



iEstivatiou and its Terminology. Am. J. Sci., Ill, x, 339-344. [Trimen's Jour. 

 Bot., XIV, 53-58.] 



Menyanthes trifoliata; Botrychium simplex, with pinnated divisions to the sterile 

 frond. Am. Nat., ix, 468. 



The Botanic Garden. The Harvard Book, i, 313-315. 



Miscellaneous Botanical Contributions. Proc. Am. Acad., xi, 71-104. 



Burs in the Borage Family. Am. Nat. x, 1-4. 



Plantain. Am. Agriculturist, Jan., p. 19. 



How Flowers are Fertilized. American Agriculturist. Art. I. Campanulas or 

 Bell Flowers, Jan., p. 22; Art. II. Compound Flowers, Feb., p. 62 ; Art. III. Clero- 

 dendron and Fire-weed, Apr., pp. 142-143; Art. IV. Houstonia and Pari ridge-berry, 

 May, p. 182; Art. V. Dicentra or Bleeding-hearts, June, p. 222; Art, VI. Laurel, 

 July, p. 262; Art. VIL False Indigo and Red Clover, Aug., p. 303; Art. VIII. Beans 

 and other Flowers of the Pulse Family, Oct., pp. 382,383; Art. IX. Ground-nut or 

 Apios, Jan. 1877, pp. 22,23; Art. X. The Busy Bee, Feb., pp. 62,63; Art. XI. The 

 Good of Cross-fertilization, Mar. p. 102; Art. XII. How Cross-fertilization benetits, 

 May, p. 182 ; Art. XIII. Lady-slippers, June, pp. 222. 323. 



Cheilanthes Alabamensis ; Dichogamy in Epilobium angustifolium ; Dimorphism 

 in Claytonia. Am. Nat., x, 43,44. 



Comparative Zoology, Structural and Systematic. Nation, No. 578, p. 63,64. 



Seeds that Jloat in water ; Use of the hydrometric twisting of the tail to the car- 

 pels of Erodium. Am. J. Sci., Ill, xi, 157, 158. 



Our Wild Gooseberries. Am. Nat., x, 270-275. 



Tolmijea Menziesii. Am. Nat., x, 300. 



Botany of California. [Saxifragacere and Gamopetala', by Asa Gray]. — Vol. i, 192- 

 208, 277-622. 



Darwiniana : Essays and reviews pertaining to Darwinisiu. New York, 1876. 8vo, 

 pp. 396. 



Schcenolirion Ton: Am. Nat. x, 426,427, 5.52, .553. 



Anthers in Trillium. Same, x, 427, 428. 



Notes on Acnida [Trimen's Jour. Bot., xiv, 310-312] ; Large Elm ; Calluua vul- 

 garis, the Ling or Heather, rediscovered in Massachusetts. Am. Nat., x, 487-490. 



Sedum reflexum, L. Am. Nat., x, 553. 



Nympha^a flava, Leitner. Am. J. Sci., Ill, xi, 416. 



Heteromorphism in Epigrea. Am. J. Sci., Ill, xn, 74-76 [Am. Nat. x, 490-492]. 



Contributions to the Botany of North America.— 1. Characters of Canbya (u. gen.) 

 and Arctomecou. 2. Characters of New Species, etc. Proc. Am. Acad., xii, 51-84, 

 with two plates. 



Subradical solitary Flowers in Scirpus, Relation of Coloration to Environment. 

 Am. J. Sci., Ill, XII, 467. 



Date of Publication of Elliott's Botany of South Carolina and Georgia. Am. J, 

 Sci.. Ill, XIII, 81, 392. 



Homogone and Ileterogone (or Homogenous and Heierogonous) Flowers. Am. J, 

 Sci., Ill, XIII, 82, 83. [Am. Nat.,xi,42.] 



