Bibliography. 147 
height. Besides this, the combined Jength of the other conservatories 
amounts to hardly less than 3750 feet. Of the ten ies illustrated in 
this fasciculus, the following are natives of California, and were raised from 
gyne, a 
arate section in the tribe Anthemidee. Lastly, with a fine illustration 
of Nemophila liniflora, F. and M., a new arrangement of that genus is 
i mong 
them a new one, NV. microcalyz, is proposed, ed on Ellisia micro- 
calyz, Hook., a little plant of Louisiana, AiaBan; ae Georgia, which 
has been supposed to be merely a form of NV. parvi A. Gr. 
NpLIcHER and Martius, Flora Bra Piliensis.—T he sixth part, 
published in July last, comprises the Solanacee and Cestrinee of Brazi 
by Dr. Sendtner of Munic h, pp. 227, fol., with nineteen plates, to which 
Prof. Von Martius has added an interesting excursus on the geographical 
distribution and the history and uses of. the Solanacee, especially of 
tobaceo, Of the six physognomic plates which this fasciculus contains, 
two are Pg to views from the summit of the Concorado, and a third 
is a fine illustration of a Brazilian forest, taken from some part o of the slope 
t ntain 
15. Tranrverrer, Plantanin Imagines et Descriptiones Floram Rus- 
sicam Iilustrantes. Munich... Fase. 1-7, (1844-6,) pp. 54, tab. 1-35. 
4to.—These are the earlier fasciculi of a work. designed to illustrate @ 
considerable number of plants of the vast flora of the Russian dominions, 
which have not yet been figured, at least in a sufficient manner. The 
plates, like the text, are in small quarto, and are neatly engraved on stone 
in the style which is so well executed at Munich. The work is dedic sis 
to the Prof. Trautvetter’s former preceptor, the accomplished Ledebou 
the author of the Flora Altaica, the splendid Jcones Pl. Fl. Ross. Tlustr. 
and othe Flora Rossica now in ress. ate oo of the plants that lave 
under this hame by fpolves lox Sibirica, "L. te rimula Sibi- 
rea, Jacq. t. : a serpylilifolia, Para, var. viscosa, fone t. 
31 ane *. oilaan vr. _foliolosa, t. Br. 
@ preface which will be read with interest. appear, contrary to 
the opinion which has generally prevailed, that the species of Ferns often 
ave a very wide geographi and are found points of 
the earth’s surface the most remote from each other. — For example, the 
habitat of Cistopteris fragilis embraces North Europe, North America, 
West Indies, Mexico, Chili, Northern India, Abyssinia, cesta the 
Azores and the ra ‘of Good Hope ! A. Gr. 
17. Plea Neeru ee Rares @ Amerique; par Stern. Moricann, 
fasc. 1-8, pp. 140, plates 1-84, 4to, Geneva, 1833-44. —The greater 
