224 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
weaker than the spreading ones. Branch-leaves rather large, ovate- 
la — regularly imbricate, apex truncate and toothed with the 
margin inrolled; when dry almost without metallic lustre. Hyaline 
on 
with large round pores; near r the apex with small pores in the 
Chlorophyliose cel section isosceles- pair nae a inserted 
between the but tittle convex hyaline cells on the inner surface 
of the leaf and fe free; on the outer nelaaag pasa completely 
enclosed by the much swollen a cells. 
Distrib. France; North A 
(To be as 
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES. 
XXITI.—An Overtooxep Paper sy RarinesQuE. 
{So much interest attaches to the work of this eccentric but 
capable iiaiaist that it seems worth while to rescue from obscurity 
the only paper which he seas ed tee an English periodical—a 
paper which appears to have been entirely overlooked. It is not 
included in Dr. R. E. Call’s bibliography = nted in his Life and 
Writings of Rafinesque (1895), and does not appear in the Royal 
Society's Catalogue of Scientific Papers, the periodical in question 
not ra inlied among those catalogue d in that 
nineteen volumes of Loudon’s Gardener’s Magazine (1826-1843) 
merit one aitesition than th ey have received from botanists. 
They contain much information connected with biography and 
bibliography, — bearing upon British botany, and occasionally 
papers, such as the one here reproduced, of general interest. 
Rafinesque’s renege tion appeared in vol. viii. pp. 245-8 (1832). 
iz 
@ 
Rafinesquianum, issued as ‘extra of No. 6” of the <Atlantic 
sega’ is stated to number forty-eight pages, in two parts, 
and to have been published in 1833. The copies in the Museum 
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or by American 
authors. In the last number of the Atlantic Journal Y esiatee of 
1833”) Rafinesque mentions this Supplemental (or, as he there 
calls it, ‘additional’’) Flora of North America at the end of a 
+ Chronological Index ” of his “ principal botanical works,” but 
