BIBLIOCKAPIIY. 657 



Descriptions of new species and records of distribution of species. Each 

 of the four Contributions was distributed separately in advance. 

 Britten, N. L. Explorations in the Bahamas. .Journ. N. Y. Br.t Cnr • G :«- 



85. 1905. 



Narrative of exploration of Rose Island, the Berry I.slanil>. »ir.;ii i.ii;:ima 

 and the Exuma Cays with Dr. Millspau^h and Dr. Howe. 

 Britton, N. L. Eeport on the Continuation of the Botanical Exploration of 



the Bahama Islands. Journ. N. Y. Bot. Card. 8: 71-Hl. H»07. 



Narrative of exploration, with Dr. Millspaugh, of ?"leuthera. Little San 

 Salvador, Cat Island, Conception Island, ^Vatling's Island, and Lonjj Island. 

 Mrs. Britton and Mrs. Millspaugh collected on Harbor Island. 

 Britton, N. L. The Genus Ernodra Swartz: A Study of Species :*' ' '' >•. 



Bull. Torr. Club 35: 203-208. 1908. 



Discussion of the six species of the Bahamas, three described a*^ I;<■^\. 

 Britton, N. L. The Botanical Name of the ^Vild Sapo.lilla. Torreya 11: 128, 



129. 1911. 



SynonjTny of Mimiisops emarginata (L.) Britton. 

 Britton, IST. L. Four Undescribed West Indian Sedges. Torreya 13: 215-217. 



1913. 



Stenophyllus Wilsoni, Fimhristylis inagucn.'iis, Iiinwhospora hahamrnsis 

 from the Bahamas. 

 Catesby, Mark. The natural history of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama 



Islands. 2 vols., folio, London, ' ' 1731 ' ' and ' ' 1734. ' ' 



Issued in ten parts, of twenty plates each, 1730-43; and an ai>pendix of 

 twenty plates, 1748. The plates are numbered 1-100 in each volume, and 

 ISO in the appendix. Each plate, as a rule, illustrated one animal and one 

 plant, and descriptive text accompanietl each object figured ; these include 

 about sixty-five Bahama plants. 



A second issue in 1754, "revised" by George Edwards, librarian to the 

 Royal College of Physicians, is a mere reprint, with the addition of a sheet 

 at the end of each volume giving the Linnaean names of the animals and 

 plants in the work. 



A third issue, in 1771, differs from the prece<ling only in the resetting of 

 the title-page and preface, and the numbering of the pages and plates of the 

 appendix consecutively with those of the second volume. 



The London issues all had the text in both English and French, in parallel 

 columns. There was another edition (Niirnberg. 1750), with text in Latin 

 and German, in parallel columns; this contained a few additional plates, not 

 in Catesby 's work. 



The Bradley Bibliography mentions also a Gorman translation by lluth 



(Nurnberg, 1755), and a Dutch translation by Houttuyn in nine volumes 



(Amsterdam, 1772-81), but both are indicated as not seen by the comi>iler. 



Coker, William C. Vegetation of the Bahama Lslands. In Shattuck '• The 



Bahama Islands,'' 185-270. Baltimore, 1905. Also issued as a separate. 



Contains an account of previous botanical exploration, a discussion of the 

 composition and relationships of the flora and of its distribution, notes on 

 useful plants indigenous and introduced, a description of the botanical for- 



