GENERAL INDEX OF SUBJECTS. (i 
table organisms in sea-water, on pre- 
serving the, v. 9-15. 
Bamboo, rate of growth of, iv. 545. 
Banana of Nayigator’s Islands, remarks 
on, ui. 671. 
Baobab-tree, i. 433. 
Barbarea precox, iii. 208. 
Bardfield Oxlip (see Oxlip), i. 204, 205, 
975, 996, 1001. 
Barkhausia setosa, i. 997. 
Bartramia falcata, i. 1085. 
Bartramidula Wilsoni, note on, ii. 1017. 
Batrachospermum vagum, iv. 500. 
Bdellium, notes on, iv. 448. 
Beauty, vital, in plants, ii. 642. 
Belfast, plants near, collected by Mr. 
William Millen, revised, augmented, 
and communicated by the Rey. W. M. 
Hind, y. 185. 
Bentall’s drying paper, i. 1018. 
Betula alba, i. 821. 
Birch wine, i. 780. 
Blight in wheat, iv. 700. 
Blue flowers affected by chlorine, i. 45. 
Bog-lands of Sussex, ii. 368. 
Boletus on a Lycoperdon, iv. 446. 
Books, reviewed or quoted, or extracts 
from :— 
Adams, Arthur, Manual of Natural 
History, v. 203, 204. 
Anonymous, a Series of Botanical 
Labels for the Herbarium, i. 110. 
(Gordon, the Rev. G.), 
Collectanea for a Flora of Moray, i. 
124. 




London Catalogue of 
British Plants, 1. 932. 
— Naturalist’s Pocket Al- 
manac for 1844, i. 835; ii. 24. 
Ayres, Dr., Mycolog. Brit. ii. 78. 
Babington, Manual of British Botany, 
i. 623, 636 ; ii. 843, 871. 
Backhouse, Narrative of a Visit to the 
Australian Colonies, ete., i. 549, 
570, 606, 664, 737 ; ii. 78, 86. 
Balfour, etc., a Catalogue of British 
Plants, i. 109. 
— Manual of Botany, i. 581 ; 
iv. 433. 
Barneoud, Organography of Irregular 
Corollas, iii. 11. 
Brocas, Fasciculi of British Mosses, 
iv. 307. 
Buckman, The Ancient Straits of Mal- 
vern, ii. 456. 
— Botanical Guide, ii. 123. 
Cocks, J., M.D., The Seaweed Collec- 
tor’s Guide, iv. 1045. 
Davis, A. J., Principles of Nature, 
ii. 149. 


Books—continued. 
Decaisne, Parasitism of the Rhinan- 
thacez, ii. 1025. 
Drummond, On Natural Systems of 
Botany, iv. 313. 
Dowden, Wild Flowers, iv. 689-91. 
Fee, Physiology, etc., of the Sensitive- 
Plant, ii. 751. 
Forbes, Travels in Lycia, etc. See 
Sprat, Lieut. 
Gardner, Travels in Brazil, iii. 94. 
Gardiner, Botanical Rambles in Brae- 
mar, ll. 95. 
Flora of Forfarshire, iii. 65. 
Harvey, Manualof British Alge, i. 122. 
The Seaside Book, ui. 549. 
Henfrey, Structural and Physiological 
Botany, u. 804. 
— Rudimentary Botany, ii. 


647. 

— Vegetation of Europe, iv. 
582. 
Hooker, British Flora, i. 635; iv. 
170. 

Species Filicum, ii. 119, 835 ; 
lv. 259. 
J.D.,M.D., Himalayan Rho- 
dodendrons, ui. 615. 
Johnson, Itinera Botanica, i. 909; 
im. 114. 
Johnston, Physical Atlas, ii. 170. 
Johnston, G. M. D., Terra Lindisfar- 
nensis, iv. 1087, 1120. 
Jussieu and Wilson, Elements of 
Botany, iii. 471. 
King, On the Study of Natural His- 
tory, 1. 565. 
Kunze, On three supposed Species of 
Polystichum, ii. 450. 
Lees, Botanical Looker-Out, i. 420. 
—- Botany of the Malvern Hills, i. 
705; iv. 796. 
Leighton, Flora of Shropshire, i. 11, 
2. 

Shropshire Rubi, i. 1049. 
Lindley, Elements of Botany, ii. 866. 
M‘Gillivray, Flora of Aberdeen, iv. 
935. 
Miller, Hugh, Foot-prints of the 
Creator, ii. 717. 
Mitten, On the Roots of Thesium 
linophyllum, ui. 807. ' 
Mohl and Henfrey, Anatomy and 
Physiology of the Cell, iv. 837. 
Moore, Thomas, Handbook of British 
Ferns, iii. 465; iv. 1157. 
Newman, History of British Ferns, 
ete., i. 945; v. 158-164. 
— Catalogue of British Ferns, 
un. 190. 

