

Deciduous Shrubs. 





No. 



Signs. 





No. 



47 J 



^ Of the largest size 



_ 



- 129 



16 



m Middle size - 



. 



- 379 





J4 Under- Shrubs 



. 



- 20 





J, Twining Shrubs - 



- 



- 33 



2 



J Climbing Shrubs - 



- 



- 47 





-* Trailing Shrubs - 



. 



- 20 





a Creeping Shrubs - 



- 



- 4 



1 



24 



Evergreen Sh] 



RUBS. 





* Of the largest size 



_ 



- 66 





jft Middle size - 



_ 



- 167 



50 



11. Under- Shrubs 



- 



- 103 



£. Twining Shrubs - 



- 



- 3 





fl_ Climbing Shrubs - 



_ 



- 19 





s^ Trailing Shrubs - 



_ 



- 25 



21 



Kt Creeping Shrubs - 



- 



- 4 





Abbreviations. 







p. peat. 







90 



b. p. bog or moist peat. 







2 



s. 1. sandy loam." 







504 Catalogue of Works on Gardening, §'c. 



name, and native country, stamped with steel types, at 2^d. each. These 

 lead plates, having a small hole at each corner, may be bent, applied, and 

 fastened by nails to oak or larch stakes ; or they may be fixed with putty, in 

 sunk panels, in such bricks as were used in the Derby Arboretum. [Vol. XVI.] 



Deciduous Trees. 



Signs. 



5? Round-headed - - - 



A Fastigiate-headed - - - 



^ Spiry or Fir-headed, with the 

 lateral branches pendent 

 (larch) _ - - - 



^ Spiry or Fir-headed, the late- 

 ral branches horizontal (de- 

 ciduous cypress) 



^ Pendulous-headed 



Evergreen Trees. 

 2 Round-headed - - - 

 1 Fastigiate-headed - - - 

 I* Spiry or Fir-headed, with the 



lateral branches pendent 



(firs) .... 



^ Spiry or Fir-headed, with the 



lateral branches horizontal 



(pines) . - - - 

 ^ Pendulous-headed 



Total number of species and varieties, making a deduction for those to 

 which two signs are put, 1608. 



Lest it should be thought that there is anything exclusive in printing a 

 catalogue with signs, it may be useful to observe that nurserymen in general, 

 and curators of botanic gardens, having their catalogues printed by Mr. Spottis- 

 woode, and willing to go to the small extra expense, may have signs placed 

 before all the species and varieties, whether ligneous or herbaceous, hardy or 

 house plants, as in our Hortus Britannicus, Abridged Arboretum, and other 

 works in which signs of habits, and of natural or garden habitats, are used. 



Account of the Museum of Economic Geology, and Mining Records Office, 

 established by Government, in the Department of Her Majesty'' s Commissioners 

 of Woods and Forests, under the Direction of Sir Henry de la Beche, F.R.S. 

 and G. S., N^os. 5. and 6. Craig^s Court, Charing Court, Open to the Public 

 gratuitously. By T. Sopwith, F.G.S., &c. &c. 12mo, pp. 120, plates and 

 woodcuts. London, 1843. 



" The Museum of Economic Geology, No. 6., Craig's Court, Charing Cross, 

 is open to the public gratuitously every day in the year, Sundays, Good 

 Friday, and Christmas Day alone excepted, from ten o'clock in the forenoon 

 to four in the afternoon in winter (November to February, both inclusive), 

 and until five o'clock during the rest of the year. 



" The following account has been drawn up and published, from a conviction 

 that this museum eminently deserves to be extensively known, inasmuch as 

 it is not less important for the objects sought to be attained, than it is 

 interesting and Instructive from the varied and popular nature of its con- 

 tents." {Preliminary Notice, p. 8.) This work, like all those by Mr. Sop- 

 with, is very scientifically and carefully got up ; the engravings are eminently 

 instructive, and the little book is remarkably cheap. 



Sketch of Furness and Cartmel, compiising the Hundred of Londsdale north of 

 the Sands. By Charles M. Jopling. Post 8vo, pp. 275, with two maps, 

 many woodcuts, and vignettes. London and Ulverston, 1843. 

 A local guide, highly creditable to Ulverston, and giving a very good idea 



of that part of the country, its antiquities, its geology, its principal country 



