796 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS. 



Gerardia teDiiifolia, Vabl, var. asperula. Bot. Gaz., iv, 153. 



Beutham ou Nomenclature. Same, iv, 158-161. 



Notes upou '' Notes of a Botanical Excursion into North Carolina " (by J. H. Red- 

 field). Bull. Torr. Bot Club, vi, 331-333. 



Epipactis Helleborine, var. virideus {E. viridiflora, Reicheubacb), a North Ameri- 

 can plant. Bot. Gaz., iv, 206. 



Roots and " Yarbs." — In the Mountains of North Carolina. Am. Agriculturist, 

 Sept., p. 337, 338. 



Botanical Contributions. — 1. Characters of some new Species of Compositie in the 

 Mexican Collection made by C. C. Parry and Edward Palmer, chiefly in the Province 

 of San Louis Potosi, in 1878. 2. Some New North American Genera, Species, etc. 

 Proc. Am. Acad., xv, 25-52. 



Pertinacity and predominance of Weeds. Am. Jour. Sci., Ill, xviii, 101-167. 



On the Self-fertilization of Plants. Bot. Gaz., iv, 182-187. 



Who finds White Partridge-berries ? Bot. Gaz., iv, WO. 



Duplicate Corolla of Campanula. Bot. Gaz., i\', 207. 



Scutia ferrea and Reynosia latifolia. Bot. Gaz., iv, 208. 



Nomenclature in Atlantic U. S. Polypetalaj. Bot. Gaz., iv, 210. 



The beheading of flies by Mentzelia ornata ; The Dichogamy of Spigelia Marilan- 

 dica; The most Arctic timber; " Carniverous Plants." Bot. Gaz., iv, 213-215. 



The Gymuospermy of Coniferaj. Bot. Gaz., iv, 222-224. 



Vaccinium macrocariiou, var. intermedium; Common and Troublesome Weeds 

 near Santa Barbara, Cal. Bot. Gaz., iv, 22G. 



On the Genus Garberia, Proc. Acad. Phila., 1879, 379, 380. 



3 8SO. 



The Flora of Boston and its vicinity, and the changes it has undergone. Winsor's 

 Memorial History of Boston, I, 17-22 (with autograph). 



Tennessee Plants. Bot. Gaz., v, 3. 



Littorclla and Schiza-a in Nova Scotia. Bot. Gaz., V, 4. [Gard. Chrou., xiii, 4.] 



Note on trapping of moths or butterflies by certain plants. Am. Nat., xiv, 50. 



Natural Science and Religion : Two lectures delivered to the Theological School 

 of Yale College. New York, 1880. 12mo, pp. 111. 



The Genus Leavenworthia ; Automatic Movement of the Frond of Asplenium 

 Trichomanes. Bot. Gaz., v, 25-27. 



Flora of Kerguelen's Land. Bot. Gaz., V, 39. 



Notula? exigute. Bot. Gaz., v, .53,, 63, 75, 87, 88. 



On a point of botanical nomenclature. Trimen's Jour. Bot.,xviil, 186 (from Am. 

 J. Sci., Ill, XIX, 420). 



Meanwhile, what should be done and how ? Independent, xxxii. No. 1652, p. 1. 



Action of Light on Vegetation. Am. ,J. Sci., HI, xx, 74-76. 



Contributions to North American Botany. — 1. Notes on some Coniposit;e. 2. Some 

 Species of Asclepias. 3. A New Genus of Gentianaceie. 4. Miscellanea', of the 

 North American Flora. Proc. Am. Acad., xvi, 78-108. 



Mesembriauthemum, not Mesembryanthemum. Trimen's Jour. Bot., xviii, 243 

 (from Bot. Gaz., v, 89). 



Botany of the Black Hills of Dakota. Report on the Geology and Resources of 

 the Black Hills of Dakota, by H. Newton, E. M., and W. P. Jenney, E. M. [U. S. G. 

 G. Survey R. M. R.], pp. 529-537. 



1881. 



The Vegetation of the Rocky Mountain Region and a Comparison with that of 

 other Parts of the World. By A. Gray and J. D. Hooker. Bull. U. S. Geol. and 

 Geogr. Survey of the Territories, vi, 1-77. 



