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the "Arcliives" wliicli contain that model one on the 3fal- 

 2)igJilaccce of his lamented botanical master. It illustrates in 

 detail about 470 species, under 40 genera, and is accompanied 

 by tNventy well-filled plates, drawn by the author. It opens 

 with a conspectus of the members of the great group to which 

 the true Urticacece belong (which the author inclines to receive 

 rather as the orders of a class than as suborders of an exten- 

 sive order, fully admitting, however, their close affinity inter 

 se), followed by a brief indication of the principal investiga- 

 tors of these plants, and of the resources at his own command. 

 A general account of the organs of vegetation and reproduc- 

 tion, of the affinities, and the geographical distribution of the 

 plants of the group, and of their properties and uses, conclude 

 the preliminary matter. The body of the work is occupied 

 by their systematic arrangement and description. 



Apetalce being viewed as degenerations of Polypetalm., our 

 author searches anion o- the latter orders for the nearest rela- 

 tives of the great Urticaceous order of alliance, and finds 

 them in the Tiliacece., that is, in the group of orders of which 

 the 3Ialvacem are the highest development. According to 

 AYeddell's happy illustration, Malvacece crown the summit of 

 a three-sided pyramid, with Sterculiacece., Byttneriacece^ and 

 Tiliacem just below them, one upon each face ; under the 

 Byttneriacem he ranks the Eupliorhiaceos, with the Antides- 

 meoB, and under these, at the very base of the pyramid, the 

 Scepacece, the lowest degradation in this direction of the Mal- 

 vaceous type. On the adjacent face, under the Tiliacece^ and 

 on the same level with the £Jupho7'biacece, he inscribes the 

 Urticacece, with the Cuindiferm perhaps underneath them. 

 Upon this ingenious plan of representation, the apetalous 

 orders throughout may be most conveniently and instructively 

 ranked under their superior types ; — bearing in mind that 

 some types degrade as much within an order (e. g., Euphor- 

 biacece, Onagracece inclusive of Haloragece, Caryoplnjllacem 

 including lllecehrecB), as others do through a series of two or 

 three orders, or even as the same group does {e. g., Caryo- 

 phyllaceai) through a series of orders on the other side of the 

 pyramid. 



