nd and 
Campbell's Islands. | CRYPTOGAMIA ANTARCTICA. 33 
Has. Campbell’s Island; on rocks near the hill-tops, growing amongst mosses, &c. 
Cespites luride atro-purpurei, vix 1 unc. alti, supra muscos elati. Caules seepius curvati, anni preeteriti nunc 
ad apices innovationibus binis instructi. Folia ita imbricata et secunda ut caulis superne profunde canaliculata ap- 
pareat, opaca, acinaciformia, margine posteriore lente recurva, anteriore convexa. 
A larger plant than the former, or than J. concinnata; of a rigid habit, more sparingly branched and of a fus- 
cous or blackish purple colour, with leaves so densely imbricated all round the stem, that the latter appears terete 
and grooved down the front. It is perhaps more nearly allied to the J. lutescens, Gottsche, but its leaves are broadly 
rounded, of a thinner texture, the shoots pale lemon-colour, the whole plant of a different habit, and further, the 
latter is furnished with stipules. 
Puare LXII. Fig. V.—1, a specimen of the natural size; 2, another specimen, magnified ; 3, part of stem and 
leaves; 4, a leaf; both magnified. 
3. JUNGERMANNIA ochrophylla, Hook. fil. et Tayl.; pallide viridis, caule suberecto v. decumbente 
parce ramoso, foliis distichis laxe imbricatis erecto-patentibus late obovatis v. subquadratis breviter bifidis 
segmentis obtusis concavis, stipulis valde inconspicuis v. nullis. . (Tas. LXII. Fig. VI.) 
Has. Lord Auckland's group; amongst mosses on rocks at the tops of the hills, altitude 1200 feet. 
Laxe cwspitosa. Cespites pallide virescentes, 1 unc. lati et ultra. Caules subunciales, superne subincrassati, 
irregulariter pinnatim ramosi. Folia semiamplexicaulia, imbricata, patentia, subdivaricata, obovata, basi angusta, 
concava, bifida, sinu brevi, segmentis longitudine vix 4 folii obtusis. Stipule dum adsint minime, oblonge, 
apicibus vix emarginatis. 
This has more the appearance of the European J. minuta than of any of its congeners, but the leaves are not so 
abruptly truncate, the notch at their summits is much narrower and their sides more rounded. It is a more con- 
spicuous plant than either of the two preceding, of a looser texture and paler colour, and has patent leaves. From 
J. perigonialis, nobis, it may be distinguished by its greater size, paler hue, stout stems and more crowded leaves, 
which are loosely reticulated and have obtuse segments. 
Puare LXII. Fig. VI.—1, specimen of the natural size; 2, a portion of a branch with leaves; 3, a leaf; 
both magnified. 
(2. SARCOSCYPHUS, Corda.) 
4. JUNGERMANNIA perigonialis, Hook. fil. et Tayl.; pusilla, caule ceespitoso erecto subramoso, foliis 
approximatis suberectis secundis obovatis v. ovato-rotundatis insequaliter bifidis subobtusis basi semi-am- 
plexicaulibus marginibus integerrimis, perigoniis ovato-oblongis, foliis perigonialibus arcte imbricatis sub- 
integris valde concavis basi ventricosis saccatisve. (Tab. LXII. Fig. VIL.) 
Has. Lord Auckland's group; on rocks, at the tops of the hills. 
Cespites densi, luride brunnei, 2-3 unc. diametro. Caules graciles, intertexti, sub 4 unc. longi, crassiusculi. 
Folia laxe imbricata, subsecunda, curvata, breviter bifida, sinu obtuso, segmento inferiore plerumque majore. Peri- 
gonia plurima, terminalia v. ramulis ultimis lateralia, basi subampullacea v. in sacculum producta, apicibus brevibus, 
rarius emarginatis, nunc bifidis. 
No calyces have been observed upon this plant, which is so nearly allied to the J. Funckii, Mohr, that they 
might easily be confounded; the latter differing in its short stems and more closely imbricated leaves, which are, 
as well as those of the convolute perigonia, acutely bifid; the segments of all are acute. It also a good deal re- 
sembles J. stygia, nobis, though the plant is larger and the leaves have a very different direction. 
