BIHANG TILL K. SV. VET.-AKAD. HANDL. BAND 13. AFD. IT. N:0 5. 35 



Id. Supplementum Recreationis mentis et oculi, in: Obser- 

 vationes circa Viventia, 4:o, Romas 1691, p. 316, f. 1 — 47. In 

 the library of Count Tessin. 



6. Lister, Historia Animalium Angliae, tres tractatus, 4:o, 

 1678. In LiNNiEUs' own library. 



Id. Appendicis editio altera, in: Goedartius de Insectis, 

 <S:o, 1685. In Linn.eus' own library. 



7. Id. Exercitatio anatomica, I, II, III, 1694 — 1696. 

 In LiNN.EUs' own library. 



8. Id. Historia Conchyliorum, folio, 1685 — 1692. Two 

 copies were in the Queen's library, one containing the land- 

 and freshwater-shells alone, altogether without numbers, and 

 22 plates of anatomical details from the Exercitationes, the 

 other comprising all the four books, with the appendix and 

 the mantissa\ The plates are numbered only from 1 to 218, 

 which is the vignette introducing Lib. III, P. II. »A capital 

 work, only it is a pity the plates are not numbered, so that 

 they cannot be quoted properly.» »Lister was a great genius, 

 industrious and careful.» In the lecture of 1733 Linn^eus 

 says it to be in the University Library at Upsala. The copy still 

 preserved there is one of the verv earliest impressions, being 

 entirely without any numbers whatever or any inscriptions, 

 beyond the usual abridged ones indicating the habitat. LiN- 

 N.«us sometimes refers to the fioures in a verv circuitous 

 way, hut in many instances, already in the lectures of 1752, 

 bv numbers, and these too verv hisrh, 1 do not know from 

 what source. There existed numbered copies already in 1702, 

 as quoted by Petiver in the description of t. V of the Gazo- 

 phylacium. Huddesford's edition is of 1770; it was presented 

 in 1772 to Linnj^ius by the University of Oxford*). 



9. Plancus, de Conchis minus notis, fol. 1739. In Lin- 

 N^.us' own library. 



10. Olearius, die Gottorfische Kunstkammcr, 4:o transv., 

 1666. In the Queens library and in that of LiNNiEUS. 



With the exception of 6, 7, 9, the w^orks marked 1 — 10 were 

 all at hand in the librarv at Drottningholm and one at least, 

 Petivers Gazophylaciura, not be found anywhere else in the 

 country. With two exccptions of little moment they are like- 

 wise cited in the M. L. U. If this work and the lectures are 

 compared together, it will be seen that there are in the Testacea: 



') Egenhänd. Anteckn., p. 65. 



