P . o oa 
Botany... 135 
_ P. spectabilis, Ung. . Calcareo-argillaceous schiaf; Radabeses 2: t)) i 
» P. salicifolius, Ung., “in arenaceo lignitum,” Altsattel. " 
. P. angustifolius, Ung. Ibid. EP 
Fasciculites didymosolen, Cotte, Ung. Limi, ee 
_ F. Cotte, Ung. . Locality unknown. i ae 
F. anomalus, Ung. Oo. 
_.F.? lacunosus, Ung. do. ait 
F. palmacites, Cotte. Tertiary at Chemnitz? Antigua? 
FP. perfossus, Ung. Altsattel, Bohemia. “a 
F. Partschii, Ung.. Locality unknown. 
»F. Fladungii, Ung. do. 
_ F. sardus, Ung. Bonarvo, Sardinia. 
_ Baccites cacoides, Zenk. Rumaitogs Saxony. 
Ibid. 
nk. 
. Endogenites. Brongn. Prodr. p. 208. Horgen, near Zurich. 
In the pliocene formation, there are— 
Flabellaria antiguensis, Ung. Island of Antigua. 
_ Palmacites crassipes, Ung. Ibid 
3 Faseiculites ma Ung. Ibid. _ 
. i, Ung. Ibid. A. Gr... 
3. hats Sispnr ‘the Flora of Japan and that of the United 
States.—Prof. Zuccarini, the author, in conjunction with Dr. Siebold, of 
the excellent Flora Japonica now in progress, (which we have more 
than once noticed in this Journal,) has recently published the first part 
of a brief memoir, entitled, “ Flore Japonice familie Naturales, ad- 
jectis generum et specierum exemplis selectis: Sect. 1, Plante dicoty- 
ledonea polypetale.” It is interesting to remark how many of our char- 
acteristic genera are reproduced in Japan, not to speak of striking anal- 
agous forms. Thus the flora of Japan has not only Wistaria, Lespede- 
za, Sieversia, Chimonanthus (in place of our Calycanthus), Philadel- 
phus, several species of Rhus closely resembling our own, and two 
peculiar genera of Juglandew, but also a Pachysandra, some Berche- 
mias, a Staphylea, and a peculiar genus of the tribe (Euscaphis), be- 
sides, not only a dozen Maples but also a Negundo, a Stuartia, two 
Tilias, a Phytolacca, an Opuntia (surely not indigenous ?), a Sicyos 
referred to our own S. angulata, two Droseras, a Nelumbium, a Nu- 
phar and two species of Nymphea, Gynandropsis, a real Dicentra (Di- 
pots) and an allied new genus, with several species of Corydalis, a 
Trollius, our own Coptis and two new ones like the western C. aspleni- 
folia, an Jsopyrum, two species of Aquilegia, one of them near A. 
ensis, a Cimicifuga, a Trautvetteria, an Illicium, some Magno- 
ias, Kadsura and Spherostemma in place of Schizandra, a Mitellopsis, 
= species of Astilbe (Hoteia), many Hydrangeas as well as peculiar 
