GEOGRAPHICAL BOTANY. 329 



ration, but is still looked for in vain, has published a 

 Catalogue of the Plants growing wild at Christiania 

 (Enumeratio Plantarum, quse circa Christianiam sponte 

 nascuntur, Christiania, 1844, p. 4). It contains 790 

 vascular plants. Fries has continued the publication of his 

 Critical Remarks upon Swedish plants and their stations 

 (Bot. Notis. 1844, p. 1, 49, 75 et seq.) Parts ix and x of 

 his Normal Herbarium have appeared. Anderson and 

 Lindblqm have worked at the Alpine Epilobia of Sweden 

 (id.) Angerstrom has issued some contributions to our 

 knowledge of the Scandinavian Mosses (Nov. Act. soc. 

 Upsal. 12, pp. 345-80). 



Lindblom's Botaniska Notiser also contains the follow- 

 ing Memoirs upon the Topography of Swedish plants : 

 Borgstrom, Contributions to the Flora of Warmeland 

 (1842) ; Lindgren and Torssell, Mosses of Upsal (1842-3) ; 

 Forssell, Catalogue of the more rare Plants which occur 

 in Norrtelge (north-east of Stockholm) (id.); Hofberg, 

 Localities at Strengnas on the Lake Malern (1842-3) ; 

 Von Post, Botanical Conditions of the Western Bank of 

 Lake Malern (1844), of some interest, on account of 

 the careful observation of the localities in which 480 

 phanerogamous plants are distributed; Hamnstrom, New 

 Localities in Nerike (1842) ; Lindgren, Localities at Lake 

 Wener, with critical remarks (1842-3); Holmgren, 

 Kalen, and Hamnstrom, Localities in East Gothland 

 (1841-3); Lagerheiin, the same in West Gothland (1844); 

 Sieurin, Diary of Travels in North Holland, containing 

 habitats (id.) ; Lindblom and Borgstrom, Habitats at 

 Schonen (1843-4). Nyman has published Contributions 

 to the Flora of Gothland, by which the number of vascular 

 plants found upon this island is increased to more than 

 800 (Vetenskaps Akademieens Handlingar for ar 1840, 

 pp. 123-51). The results of Beurling's voyage now com- 

 municated in these Memoirs, are confined to lists of 

 localities, principally in Jemtland ; they are copiously 

 detailed as regards the mountain Areskuten. 



On the death of C. E. Sowerby, the proprietor of the 



