496 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
and 2 Equisetaceez from Washington, from W. N. Suksdorf; 49 
phanerogams and 75 eryptogams from Costa Rica, from Tonduz; 
Macoun ; 50 mosses of the Indian and Pol nesian 
Archipelago, from Fleischer; 464 mosses and hepatics of Sikkim, 
Guatemala and Mexico, from Levier; 20 American hepatice, 
fr 
fungi and 46 microscope-preparations, from Miss _A. 
Lorrain Smith; 100 Russian lichens from Elenkin. 
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES. 
XLVITI.—Jouyx Hawkins anp HIS PLATEs. 
i 
WE have in the Department of Botany a copper-plate en- 
graving of Cinchona which was received from the British Museum 
as a duplicate in December, 1888. It does not appear, however, 
to have been a uplicate, as no copy is at present in the library 
is 
scribed “Johannes Hawkeens Philobotan, exemp. sic. delin. 1739: 
J. Mynde sculp.” There is no name for the plant on the plate; 
the various details are indicated by letters, but there is no printed 
explanation, although space was left for this, and an explanation 
has been added by Hawkins in MS. 
@ plate (reversed) was re-engraved for Lambert’s Description 
of the Genus Cinchona (1797)—not, however, it would seem, from 
the original, but from a reproduction of it which appeared in 1756 
appended to a publication by Jacob de Castro Sarmento entitled 
De uso e abuso das Minhas agoas de Inglaterra, Londres, 1756, 
