eee Es 
7 
REPORT OF THE DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY, BRITISH MUSEUM. 213 
I.—TZo the Herbarium. 
General Herbarium, 
Phanerogamia. 
1800 Species of pe rere lants of F 
by jonten Brie ec ae ants of France ; collected and named 
see epesiee of seabed from Castile, Spain ; collected b 
191 
100 
870 
A very e 
plete Fo Roses; collect 
270 
y Graells. 
m N. a m Italy ; : any and named 
ax Caruel, Sav. 
el in Italy, and "iroattad by Dr. 
d 
sented by J. F. Duthie, Esq. 
from the Tyrol and Central Europe; 
collected ait named by Huter and others. 
from Cherson, Russia ; vollected and named 
mann 
y: 
of Scandinavian Hieracia ; named by Lindeberg 
of Composite; chiefi from the collection of "his 
e Dr. Sahalte-Bypontfinas 
lat 
extensive Herbarium of the species and varieties of 
d and named by Chabert, acd. Puget, &c. 
0 Species ‘of plants from Lebanon ; collected and presented by 
rom the Provinee ae Agow, Abyssinia ; 
pasa y Schi 
m North Africa ; sclbaated by Col. Paris. 
fen New Caledonia ; collected by Pancher. 
from Tasmania. 
from Martinique ; collected by Sieber. 
from Cuba; collected by Ramon de la Sagra. 
from Costa Rica ; present ye. J, 
Veitch, Esq., 
from Oregon ; collected by E. Hall. 
from be emerara; collected by the late C. 
hei ae ew Granada; and 
from Brazil ; collected by J. Weir. 
Cordova, La Plata ; collected by E. Fielding. 
A large collection ‘of plants forming the principal ons of the Her- 
barium of J. A 
tabilium 
A. Murray, formerly Professor of Botany at Gottingen, 
and editor of the fourteenth edition of Linnaeus’ «Systeme Ve ege- 
Cryptogamia. 
A collection of Ferns from Natal; collected by Col. Bolton, and 
peed by Dr. J. E. G 
0 Species of Cryptogamic plants from Switzerland; collected 
nek. 
100 
» 
ed by Wartmann and Sche 
Cryptogamic plants from Italy, being Ore fascicles 
of the ‘‘ Erbario Crittogamico Italian 
