LIST OF PAPERS, lOi'l. ^^J 



Dixon, Annie. Aiigiosppinis llcpaticie LKpport onj. .1/'/'. It' i>. Mun'li. Minn. 



Sue, 1920, p. 8G. 

 Dixon, C!borc;k. In ;i Chi-sliive Wood. Coiinlri/ l/ijc. July 2, p. 20. 

 Dixon, H. N. Miscellanea Bryologica.— VII. /'Jurhi/nchiimi mcridwnalv in 



Britain. 

 . Tortilla incrinuii (Biicl.), Mont., as a British plant. 



D'nhjmodon riii(iriu.< (Aiist.), Kindb. 



DisaliviiL nudum, Br id. 



Remarkable form of Dicianuin fu</u>ici'iix. Turn. Jouni. Hot. May, 



pp. 132-13.5. 

 Peculiar Fern Growth. Juurn. Xoillnuil.i Xut. Hint. 8oc. Dec, 



pp. 102-103. 

 DuucE, G. Claridge. Short account of Botanical work in tin; Shetlands [abs.]. 

 Nature. Mar. 17, p. 92. 



Report of the Secretary and Treasurer, lici). Hot. Sue and Exchange 



Club for 1920, pp. 9-13. 



Plant Notes, etc., for 1920. Mostly New Plants to the British Isles, 



torn, cit., pp. 14-57. 



Reviews and Notes on Pul)lic;itions, New Books, etc, 1920, torn. cit.. 



pp. 58-92. 



Obituaries : J. G. Baker ; A. M. Bell ; H. Clarke; N. Colgan ; R. Farrer ; 



J. R. Jackson; Lord Morcton: W. M. Rogers; (!. Stanton; V. W. 

 Stedman, turn. cit.. pp. 93-107. 



New Country and other Records, toin. cit., pp. 108-1()3. 



/)'»)■.<« jju.itori^, Weber, lorn, ril., pp. 179-190. 



Duncan, J. B. Mosses. Curudci- and S.V.F.C. Rcc. of Bare Facl.-< for 1920, 

 pp. 9-10. 



Hepatics, torn, cit., pp. 10-11. 



DuNLOP, G. A. Occurrence of the Parsley Fern {(_' niptiKjraiinna cri---/i(i, 151.) in 

 Lancashire and C;heshire. Lane, and 6'. Nat. Jan., p. 143. 



Di'MES, T. A. .^Seeding and Germination of Euscus aculcafu.i, Linn. [abs.]. 

 Linn.-.B'oc.' Circular , No. .382, pp. 4-5. 



Edmonds, H. Plants and their Environment [abs.]. lie p. Brighton and Iluce 

 Nat. Hist, and Phil. Soc, 1920, p. 14. 



Flowers and Insects [abs.], torn, cit., pp. G2-63. 



Elliot, G. F. Scott. Plants of Holms, Merselands, and River Valleys. 



Trans. Dumfries, and (rail. Nat. Hut. Soc. Vol. VII., pp. 32-45. 

 Elliott, Jessie S. Bayliss, and Chance, Helena C. Three Fungi Imperfecta 



Trans. Brit. Mi/col. Soc. for 1920, ])p. 47-49. 

 Elliott, W. T. INIycetozoa on the Midland PUileau. .Juurn. But. July, 



pp. 193-196. 

 [Ellis, David.] Iron Bacteria in Relation to the Incrustation of Pipes. Water. 



Nov. 21, pp. 420-421. 

 Evans, William. Some Moss Records from St. Kilda. Trans. But. Soc. 



Mdin. Vol. XXVIII., pp. C7-69. 

 Fagg, C. C. Report of the Regional Survey Section. .S'.A'. Nut. 1920, 



pp. xxix-xl. 



First Steps in a, Local iSurvey. An Account of the Aims and .Methods of 



Surface Utilisation Surveys, torn. cit.,jp^. 31-40. 

 F'alconer, Wm. Plant Gall Forav at Leeds. 'Nat. Aug., pp. 269-272: Dec, 



pp. 405-408. 

 FitzRandolph, Helen. Besom-making in Derbyshire and Nottinghamsliire. 



Journ. Minis. A;/ric. Aug., pp. 439-442. 

 Friedlaender, V. H. ' Comes October ' [Burnham Beeches]. Countri/ Life. 



Dec. 3, pp. 723-276. 

 Fritsch, F. E. Thalassiophyta and the Algal ancestrv of the higher plants. 



New Phyt. Nov., pp. 165-178. 

 Fkoiiawk, F. W. Longevity of Wild Plants. Country Life. Oct. 1, p. 429. 

 Gates, R. Rtjggles. Mutations and Evolutio;i. New Phyt. Nov., pp. 213-253. 

 [Gill, E. L.] Report on Museum Work 1915- 191G, 1916-7. 1917-8, 1918-9. Nat. 



Ilitt. Trans.. Northuniln rland , Dur'uun. and N eweastle-on-T yne. 



Vol. v., pt :i., pp. vi-viii., xxii-xxvi., xxxix-xlii., Ivi-lx. 



K K 2 



