966 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE _ AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
Much like V, floccosum, f Chelifers which h 
ПУ stems еи: and sete less woolly and had bier ism this summer et d a he 1 imbs of the і 
crenate leaves, Jonget | MOS and by t use-fly. Мт. ie mentioned that i in the 
ich are white in Жү floccosum. Екы ot Abe rdeen the com wasps were | 
TI bu t this summer. А let was read 
with one that is ed known and widely diffused npon | fro Stone, giving an account o pidemio | 7 
the Continent, the V. Sc cope anum of Schrader, the V. 
nigro-floccosum of Koch, the V. mixtum of Ramond in 
De Candolle’s * Flore Proin" The Norfolk speci- 
mens agree well with the pla 
It is probable also that the V. t -nigrum 
i : AP m Schrader, igrum 
h: all tireo ? bein g yorida 
m and the other species, 
nt b; Mr. A. G. More eal 
ве neighbourhood of „Tring, both Buc! ks and Hert 
of Wirtgen's Fasciculus, h 
England, whereby vast nu 
destroyed, so Rees voe 4 any of the perfect wasps 
ave been n during the summer. к had also 
noticed that Tio earwigs, which on the o 
been exceedingly numero 
wasps-nests and devoure 
r hand had 
Professor 
Westwood read a letter from a pi^: in 
wkich it was stated that vast numbers of ear- 
wigs had congregated in the cov 
er of a bee-hive, 
F. Sm M stated 
specimens from indes Nae of the. Continent, is a 
conviction that the pre of 
not observed a single wasp or wasp’s nest 
jen “collecting OP at ошого 
some po 
which has been 0 т ыг а mark by which this may | 
diagnostic acter. It is sometimes present in the 
smali-flowered G. Amarella, and in large-flowered 
G. germanica every variation may be traced from 
g b = y "ed ec 
Watson, from Thames Dit tton, Sart rey, from amongst 
sown Clo over. Probably not uncommon, but very easily 
di P. je nceolata. 
Nenhi d. 
attacked by the larvæ of Laverna subbistrigella. 
fessor Westwood gave an account of the hibition rof | 
Econo and of n Products, — 
ndustrie, at | 
te ty of 
Polyommatus Alexis, measuring only 8j lines in the 
expanse of the fore wings. Mr. Stevens exhibite ^ 
pee m: - HON - insects just arrive ed fro 
Damara L 
e | peats 
us, had attacked » vübr of the | fess 
ed 
o 
ds of Epilobium montanum, 
and 
of Goliath badalas "Me. B d commun icated a notice of 
=- Neotinea i intacta, Reich. fil 
ap I was LE to the Rm Flora by wa 
"is ged ants eiui the 
steeple of St. Morris' ' Church, бнр which A d bee en 
nd 
тпаїе 
of lez eaves Dod to ран Our auth 
a ЧР 
mistaken for smoke, an had осе rete gre 
among the inh abitants ; and Mr. Wormald 
К, “ must be left for т the considertia 
by P ебі іп the dint Number of|he had recently observed the н diam about 
the * уот of Botany," Pier ra anied by a coloured | the spire of ]ban's Abbey. А n гези ісе was also 
figure. Only some | half-doze n specimens have yet been communicate of the — effects of a speci es of 
gathered. mules in Sont h America, as 
known British species, dut was dig rmerly "referred by well as Sir «seni 
p 
Б Aceras, 
y It of Asia Minor, the 
что вак Northern 
a pia 
, Africa, бео, Italy, Spain, Por- 
ш 
т Wilkinson s account of the 
poisonous fly named Zebub i in Upper Egypt. 
теа а is des great padres inte à 
ere 
Potamogeton nitens, Weber.—This is а s adi new to 
Britain which been fonnd by Dr. Moore in Ireland, 
and Mr. G. E. Hunt in Loch As T ute. 10 has 
I cribed and figured in the Journal 
33. Ofthe previously known British 
itis.— 
Һа ате e sent — which wnguestin 
ably belong from a station in um- 
berland, tha € locality of which it is not thought | 
desirable Siks int, which is within 100 yards of th 
level not aware of any other English 1 locality 
f 
This little volume comprises 
of Dub lin. London, 1865. 
- substance of 15 
lectures epe d н Trinity College, Dublin, and “is 
ded a 
intende roduction to the more лунур 
treatises of Lye, "Pens, Jukes, and others The 
chemical history of the globe we i the constitu- 
tion, so far as is known, ы К: erficial а ad of the 
the 
| inhabitants of this plane t. When oxygen was absent, 
ae. we cannot forbear expressing our regret 
Mr. Haughton, for whose ability we have so highs 
онш of 230065, respect, should, because һе differs in opinion 
Mens 1 of Geology. Ву the Rev 5 Haughton, M.D., ome other naturalists o the mode in which i» 
= ` (9 fashi i 
F.R.S, Pirina of. UE TOANE, пла арар 
n the University а 
360. h 
ера огу of the globe 
Inthe concluding yos. the reader will finda; 
summing up of the Los derived from the 
fossils of the vario epochs, an and an account of 
сл of Таш arwin, and others, ir, lm 
Fs their object the explanation, 80 foras is possible d 
e Ше history of the globe. In connexion with 
ungenerous as they are or. 
mn de la Fédération des Sociétés d^ Ф Horti 
1805. 8vo, dep 
The аг ti 
of и wee 
2 
which t К йк clearly mian Mr. 
Mid ian Zone. That in the county of D 
"IP { 300 yards 1 iigher. 
P. angulare.—Mr. Richardson 
Еа merui of this, which was not previ iously 
n 
sends also a charac- | 
s, the earth's 
mihl ы по охудеп. 
ositi iut of T stratified rocks, and their 
eposition from water, an 
rious slates, sandstones, and 
кто vtae. with their associated minerals, are the 
m In the third lecture 
d 
the prias. i "ihe 
nstance in 
2 their value to io йош, as for 
а barr 
uled =ч near Wooller, Northumberland. 
Ophi ud m vulgatum.—Gathered by Mr. J. G. 
Baker last summer, on the Hambleton Plateau, N.E. subjec! next tre 
Yorkshire, at an elevation ot fally оз ards above the | f. f 
вез ехе! and in the Su а ЗЕКИП, 
к» trachyodon var.—M - d. More sends | Horefo таны. wher 
from са am of Lough Cu йеп, E by 
an Eq em d, by atmospherie 
by its bed d sheaths with weak green te griculturist, carbonates 
Chara alopecuroides, Delile,—Mr. Mor 
ore sen nds a ЖА 
Не Soa d^ only ir 
e salbworks of New 
This 18 т зб to Bri 
ply of this Me Meme species, 
brackish water, 
Wight. 
e 
pemi a ре Mcd с 
p 
the | No 
considered, and allusion made 
in D 
р 
а оће interesting matter, of wi 
culars -— 
r readers some р 
i 
ре 
own colum 
аг еа on pe йо ору 0 of Ass on 
о aid the otherwise poor "x 
"ni г 
the crust of the globe, form the subject of the next 
le cture. We need scarcely say that no very satisfac- 
deposit the 20 miles thickness of strata i constitute | m 
"o айай hereafter.—Parts 
Я of 
XXIX XXX. "E 
bring the "work up | to үрен 
1 лайоп. 
more bus M than 
ed. 
—The principal plants which come 
ead which w we have to — are Camelina 
M 
d at Clesdon, iv 
, and арна y fd a КОМИ 
arwickshire (H. Bromwi 
iler 
Tis relative abundance of the various groups 
nimals and plants at the different geological 
epocha is next considered, 
on Temperature , by J, P. 
from the Proceedings of the Mp mrs fon 
rs, of the Brit 
ding t 
: Malacozoic, Iehthyozoie, 
rODozoic, 
e pre evailing 
Anth 
Кама, xy sums up the 
OLOGICAL: 4.—F. Smith, Est, Y.P, in 
Mr. F, Bond exhibited some interesting 
varieties of Fidonia atomaria (a moth remarka ble for 
the EE in deos "59 and markings of th 
of the oppos es), namely, a male and female, 
рон mM ordinary m of the male and another 
e lastly the existence of Mi he considera- 
ion of the geometrical laws "that. ie ы яри 
of plants, сты, ри ME forms the 
the seventh lectu n are also 
ge eometrical med 
soe mds се of Vds male; 
to the ry of the 
various Miss upon "e. 
sbn pina of Molinos, T үн} Reptiles, Mammals, rd 
1 the nearly allied Lepid 
Foraminifera пр to the malia Sp: 
h | chapters, which, Анта we recommend 
ch of our reade SEES 
еч тасм. Тһе Mra p. expects to 
1 namely, Æshna tendis EN signos, and the notice of su 
two new species of Phry туғапе wis x 
mentioned some peculiarities h ана nn 
with the devel the даа silkworm. меи 
Dorville exhi i f Caradrina cubicula 
with a number of small red B eet arranged symmetri- 
cally on the under surface of the wings. Mr. Stainton 
to find 
an account of the more recent ‘deposits of the 
5 | and. ote upon 
d | lower carboniferous 
William Ё ў 
CATALOGUES KRECEIVED.— jg a ve^ 
tive Catalogue of a Selection of Rotti 
