116 
Brown, John Croumbie. 
on the location of a school of forestry. 
8°. pp. 11. 
“Reprinted from the Journal of forestry and estates management,” 
1878, i, 756-761, 837-842. 
Pine plantations on the sand-wastes of France. 
Edinburgh. IS878. 8°. 
Rural primary schools of science, agriculture, for- 
estry, and rural economy. London. 1879. 8°. pp. 12. 
“Reprinted from the Journal of forestry and estales management,” 
1880, iii, 252-258, 334-338. 
~ School of forest engineers in Spain, indicative of a 
type for a British national school of forestry. Edinburgh, 
Opinions of continental foresters 
London. — 1878. 
elc. 1886. sm. 8°. 
- — The school of forestry in the Escurial in Spain. Lon- 
don. 1877. 8°. pp. 7. 
Reprinted from the Journal of forestry and eslales management, 1878, 
i, 304-398. 
— The school of forestry at Evois, in Finland. 
don. 1877. 8°. pp. 15. 
Reprinted from the Journal of forestry and eslales management, 1878, 
i, 545-551, 701-707. 
The school of forestry in the polytechnic school of 
Carlsruhe. London. 1877. 8°. pp. 7. 
Reprinted from the Journal of forestry and estales management, 1878, i, 
168-174. 
Lon- 
The school of forestry in the Royal Wurtemburg 
academy of land and forest economy. London. 1877. 8°. 
pp. 7. 
Reprinted from the Journal of forestry and estales management, 1878, i, 
81-87. 
On schools of forestry. (Edinburgh. 1878.] 8°. 
pp. [2], 8. 
* Reprinted from the Transactions of the Scollish arboricullural sociely,”* 
1878, viii, 225-232. 
The schools of forestry in Europe. A plea for the 
creation of a school of forestry in connection with the arbore- 
tum at Edinburgh. Edinburgh. 1877. 8°. pp. [2], 72. 
Water supply of South Africa and facilities for the 
storage of it. Edinburgh, efc. 1877. 8°. pp. xvi, 651. 
“Index to authorities cited,” pp. xv—xvi. 
Brown, John Ednie. Eucalyptus leucoxylon, var. macro- 
earpa. Adelaide. [188-?] Colored plate. 
The forest flora of South Australia. 
{I8S82-90.| f°. 45 colored plates. 
The forests of western Australia and their develop- 
Perth. 1899. 4°. pp. 68. Map and 24 plates. 
A practical treatise on tree culture in South Australia. 
With illustrations by J. W. Love. 2ded. Adelaide. 1881. 
8°. 29 plates. 
Brown, John Pinkney. The Catalpa tree and its importance 
in commerce. Connersville, Ind. 1900. nar. 16°. pp. 11. 
The destructive bark beetles of the Pinus ponderosa. 
Denver. 1902. 1. 8°. pp. 8. Illustr. (International so- 
ciety of arboriculture. Special Rocky Mountain bulletin.) 
Has also the title: “ The destroyers of the pine trees.”’ 
The forests of America. [Connersville, Ind. 
f°. pp. [4]. 
Practical arboriculture; how forests influence climate, 
control the winds, prevent floods, sustain national prosperity. 
Connersville, Ind. 1906. 1. 8°. Illustr. 
Brown, Mrs. Margaret Read. The wild flowers of southern 
and western India. N. Pp. [1868.] 1. f°. 10 colored plates. 
Brown, Nellie Adalesa. Crown-gall of plants, its cause and 
remedy. See Smiru, B. F., and others. 
Adelaide. 
ment. 
19-?) 
——— The structure and development of crown gall. See 
Ssura, E. F., and others. 
Brown, Rk. C. Lundin. British Columbia; an essay. [With 
appendix.) New Westminster. 1863. 8°. pp. [4], 64, 
[2], Xxxiii. 
Brown, Robert (1773-1858). Asclepiadeae recensitae a 
Roberto Brown, ex idiomate anglico transtulit C. B. Presl, 
o 
LIBRARY OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM 
edidit C. G. Sternberg. Pragae. 1819. 8°. pp. 68. 2 
tables. 
[ } Uber die asclepiadeen, eine natiirliche pflanzen- 
familie, welche von Jussieu’s apocyneen abgesondert werden 
muss. [Niirnberg. 1826.) 8°. Tables. 
From Robert Brown's * Vermischte botanische schriften,” ii, 347-414. 
Botanical appendix to Captain Sturt’s Expedition 
into central Australia. (London. 1849.] 8°. pp. 29. 
From Sturt’s “* Narrative, elc.,"’ vol. ii. 
Botanique. (Jn Denuam, Dixon, and CLarrerton, 
Hugh. Voyages et découvertes dans le nord et dans les 
parties centrales de I’ Afrique, 1826, iii, 251-335.) 
Character and description of Kingia, a new genus 
of pans found on the south-west coast of New Holland 
with observations on the structure of its unimpregnated 
ovulum, and on the female flower of Cyeadew and Conifers. 
(In Kina, P. P. Narrative of a survey of the intertropical 
and western coasts of Australia, 1826, ii, 534-565.) 
The same, reprinted. 
Characters and descriptions of three new species 
of plants; selected from the only part of Mr. Abel’s China 
herbarium that escaped the wreck of the Alceste. (Jn 
Ape, Clarke. Narrative of a journey in the interior of 
China, 1818, pp. 374-379.) 
= Les coniféres; traduit de l'anglais [avee observa- 
tions du traducteur, Fennebresque. Tours. 1873]. 8°. 
Annales de la Société d’agricullure, sciences, arts et belles-lettres du dé- 
parlement d’Indre-el-Loire, 1873, lii, 179-201. 
On Cyrtandrew. London. 1838-39. f°. 2 plates. 
“From Dr. Horsfield’s ‘ Planta javanica rariores,’"’ pp. 102-122. 
Sur les eyrtandrées. Extrait des Plante javanice 
rariores du Dr. Horsfield, traduit par M. Guillemin. [Paris. 
1840.] 8°. 
Annales des sciences naturelles, 2° sér. Botanique, 1840, xiii, 149-180. 
General remarks, geographical and systematical, on 
the botany of Terra Australis. (/n FuNpers, Matthew. 
A voyage to Terra Australis, 1814, ti, 533-613.) 
— List of new and rare plants collected in Abyssinia. 
(In Sauvr, Henry. A voyage to Abyssinia, efc., 1814, pp. 
Ixiii-Ixv.) 
— On the Malayan species of Melastoma. 
William. 
——— Miscellaneous botanical works; 
Bennett]. 3 vol. London. 1866-68. 
plates. (Ray society. Publications.) 
i. Geographico-botanical, structural and physiological memoirs. 
1866. pp. viii, [2], 612.— ii. Systematic memoirs and contributions 
to systematic works, 1867. pp. viii, 786.— iii. Atlas, 1868. pp. 
[4], 15. 38 plates. 
Observations on the natural family of plants called 
Composite. London. 1817. 4°. 
“From the Transactions of the Linnean sociely,”’ 1818, xii, 75-142. 
Observations on the structure and affinities of the 
more remarkable plants collected by Walter Oudney, and 
Major Denham, and Captain Clapperton in the years 1822- 
1824, during their expedition to explore central Africa. 
London, 1826. 4°. pp. 41. 
“Printed as the botanical appendix to the Narrative of travels and 
discoveries in northern and central Africa, commencing at p. 208." 
Observations, systematical and geographical, on 
Christian Smith’s collection of plants from the vicinity of 
the river Congo. (Jn Tuckey, J. K. Narrative of an 
expedition to explore the river Zaire, 1818, pp. 420-485.) 
Sur la pluralité et le développement des embryons 
dans les graines des coniféres. Lu a la réunion de |’Associa- 
tion britannique 4 Edimbourg en aofit, 1834. [Paris. 1843.] 
8°. pp. 7. Plate. 
“Extrait des Annales des sciences naturelles,’ 2° sér. Bolanique, 1843, 
xx, 193-199. 
On the plurality and development of the embryos 
in the seeds of Coniferw. [London. 1844.] 8°. pp. 7 
Plate. 
“From the Annals and magazine of natural history,”’ 1844, xiii, 368-374. 
See Jack, 
{edited by J. J. 
8° and f°. 38 
