154 Botany. 



Hassall (ARTHUR HILL). [1817-94] 



His herbarium, containing 883 specimens, the types of his work on 

 the " British Freshwater Algae," presented by his widow, 1894. 



Hauck (FERDINAND) [1849-89] and PAUL Richter. 



"Phykotheka Universalis," 750 algae in 15 fascicles (1885-96), 

 purchased. 



Haussknecht (H. CARL), [d. 1903] 



3,668 plants from Asia Minor and the Caspian region, purchased 

 1870 ; 2,928 plants from Greece, purchased 1889. 



Havers (T.). 



82 plants from the Falkland Islands, presented 1874. 

 Haviland (GEORGE DARBY). [1857- ] 



1,031 Bornean plants, received 1893-97. 



Hayes (BUTTON), [d. 1863] 



1,320 plants from Panama, purchased 1863-64. 

 Hector (Sir JAMES). [1834- ] 



200 New Zealand plants, presented 1876. 

 Heldreich (THEODOR VON). [1822-1902] 



3,220 plants from Greece, purchased at various dates from 1845 to 

 1897. 



Heifers (JOHANN WILHELM). [d. 1840] 



Published set of Indian plants (" Fl. Indise Orient.") acquired with 

 Herb. Shuttleworth. 



Hellbom (PEHR JOHAN). [1827-1903] 



750 lichens and 250 mosses from Scandinavia, purchased in 1872 and 

 1891. 



Heller (A. ARTHUR). [1867- ] 



625 plants from New Mexico and 291 from the Hawaiian Islands, 

 purchased 1895-97. 



Henriques ( JULIO AUGUSTO). 



198 specimens of Portuguese plants obtained by exchange, 1887 ; 142 

 plants from St. Thomas, West Africa, presented 1888. 



Hepp (PHILIPP). [d. 1867] 



His cryptogamic herbarium containing 2,406 lichens, 778 mosses and 

 1,640 algae, purchased 1868 ; also his " Flechten Europas," 962 specimens 

 in 32 fascicles (1853-67), purchased 1874. 



Hermann (PAUL). [1640-95] 



His herbarium in 4 vols. of Ceylon plants (with a few from the Cape 

 of Good Hope). It was sent in 1745 by Augustus Gunther, an apothecary 

 at Copenhagen, to Linnaeus, who based upon it his "Flora Zeylanica"; 

 the specimens are named in Linnaeus's hand. It afterwards came into the 

 possession of Count Adam Gottlob Moltke, at whose death it was bought 

 by Prof. Treschow of Copenhagen, who sold it to Sir Joseph Banks for 

 75. A full account of its contents will be found in Journ. Linn. Soc. 



