376 LINNiEUS. 



2. Florula Lapponica, quae continet catalogum 

 plantarum, quas per provincias Lapponicas Westro- 

 bothnienses observavit C. Linnaeus. It was written 

 in 1732, and inserted in the Acta Litteraria Suecise 

 of the same year^ but only in part, the second sec- 

 tion having appeared in the same collection in 1735. 



3. Systema Naturae, sive Regna Tria Naturae, 

 systematice proposita, per classes, ordines, genera 

 et species. Lugd. Batav. apud Haak, 1735. 14 

 pages folio. Of this work we have already spoken 

 at considerable length. The two editions most in 

 use are that of 1766-68, published at Stockholm, 

 being the last that appeared under the author's in- 

 spection, and the enlarged but ill-digested one of 

 Gmelin, published in 1788-1792 at Leipsic. 



4. Hypothesis Nova de Febrium Intermittentium 

 Causa. Harderovici, 1735. 4to. This is Linnaeus's 

 thesis, written when he took his medical degree at 

 Harderwyk in Holland. 



5. Fundamenta Botanica, quae majorum operum 

 prodromi instar, theoriam scientiae botanicae per 

 breves aphorismos tradunt. Amst. 1736, apud 

 Schouten. 36 pages 12mo. There have been eight 

 editions of this tract, of which the last was published 

 at Paris in 1774- 8vo. 



6. Bibliotheca Botanica, reeensens libros plus 

 mille de plantis, hue usque editos secundum sys- 

 tema auctorum naturale, in classes, ordines, genera 

 et species dispositos, &c. Amstelod. 1736, apud 

 Schouten. 136 pages 12mo. There have been two 

 other editions ; the last of which appeared at Am- 

 sterdam in 1751. 



7. Musa Cliffortiana, Florens Hartecampi prope 

 Harlemum. Lugd. Batav. 1736. 40 pages 4to, 



