Vegetation of the Peak District. By C. E. Moss, B.A. 

 (Cantab.), D.Sc. {Vict.), F.R.G.S., F.L.S., Curator of 

 the Herbarium, University of Cambridge. 



Demy 8vo. pp. x + 236. With 36 illustrations and 2 coloured maps in pocket. 



Price 12^. net. 



Extract from the Preface 

 The present work is the result of a botanical survey of the 

 Peak District of the southern Pennines begun in January, 

 1903 With regard to the nomenclature of plant com- 

 munities, the terms plant formation and plant association are 

 used in accordance with resolutions passed unanimously by 

 the British Vegetation Committee, and presented to the 

 International Congress of Botanists held at Brussels in 



1 9 10 The names of plants are, as a rule, the same as 



those given in the tenth, the latest edition of The London 

 Catalogue of British Plants (London, igo8). This being so, 

 the author-citation is omitted, as being unnecessary in a work 

 of this character ; synonyms, however, are added in special 

 cases. The sequence adopted is that of Engler's system, 

 which, in several European countries and in the United 

 States of America, is rapidly superseding that of Bentham 

 and Hooker. 



CAMBRIDGE COUNTY GEOGRAPHIES 



General Editor: F. H. H. Guillemard, M.A., M.D. 



A series of County Geographies, price \s. 6d. each, 

 suitable for general use as hand-books to the various counties 

 and also intended for use in schools. Each volume gives an 

 account of the history, antiquities, architecture, natural history, 

 industries, and physical, geological, and general characteristics 

 of the county, and each has two coloured maps (one physical 

 and the other geological) and a large number of illustrations. 



The latest addition to the series is : — 



Herefordshire. By A. G. Bradley. 



A list of the forty-six volumes already published, together 

 with prospectuses of particular volumes, will be sent on 

 application. Volumes on the remaining counties of England, 

 .Scotland, and Wales are in an active state of preparation ; 

 arrangements for a series of Irish geographies have also been 

 made. 



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