419 



belly, and Terregles woods, &C. 

 common. 



Vaccinium Oxycoccos. Terregles wood ; 

 Lochar-moss. 



Utricularia minor and vulgaris. Lochar- 

 moss. 



Valeriana pyrenaica. Banks of tlie Clu- 

 den in several places ; plentiful 

 about Routing bridge. 



Veronica AnagalUs. Growing luxuriant- 

 ly in a ditch near Dalscairth. 



Buxbaumii. Near Rosehall. 



' Montana. Mavis-grove wood; 



glen above Irongray manse. 



Viburnum Opulus. Mavis-grove wood ; 

 Glen. 



Viola palustris. Plantation nr. Lincluden. 



AUosorus erispus. Near Carsethorn ; road- 

 side near craigs. 



Dumfries, November 12, 1842. 



Botrychium Lunaria. Glen. 

 Cystopteris fragilis. Cluden craigs. 

 Lycopodium alpinum. Dalscairth hills. 

 clavatum. Dalscairth hills ; 



Lochar-moss. 



selaginoides. 



Criffel ; Dals- 



cairth hills. 

 Selago. 



Abundant ou the 

 summit of Criflfel ; sparingly on 

 Dalscairth hills. 



Polypodium Dryopteris. Cluden craigs; 

 Dalscairth woods. 



Phegopteris. Road-side near 



Mabie ; Dalscairth woods. 



Scolopendrium vulgare. Cluden craigs, 

 abundant ; Glen. In the latter sta- 

 the fronds are, almost without ex- 

 ception, irregular. 



Peter Gray. 



Art. cm. — Some Account of the Botanical Collections recently 

 made hy Dr. Theodore Kotschy (for the IVurtemhurg Botani- 

 cal Union) in Nubia and Cordofan. Communicated by Mr. 

 Wm. Pamplin, jun, 



(Continued from p. 390) 



Third, in the province Berber, the city Chartum and the village 

 Gubba, the island Tutti near Chartum ; the villages Abu Haschim, 

 Abu Hamed, with the island Mograd and Kalebsche, and the great 

 desert of Berber. It is therefore evident that our traveller made best 

 use of the short space of time allotted to him, in extending his excur- 

 sions as much as possible through a great variety of locality, namely, 

 mountains, hills, plains, lakes, river-sides &c., circumstances however 

 prevented him in a great measure from taking the altitudes and noting 

 other particulars of the mountainous districts. 



In the third place, a conspectus of the natural orders and number 

 of species in each family of which the collection consists, is here 

 given, namely : — 



