464 The American Journal of Science and Arts. 



II — Botany. 



Fevrier. — The greater portion of the Number is occupied with a 

 continuation of Bra VA is' essay, .v?<r /a disposition desfenilles c%ir- 

 viseriees. There are other two original articles — Hisioire de V In- 

 digo, depiiis I'origine des temps historiques jusqu a I'annee 1833, 



par M. Aug. de Saint-Hilaire. Precis des observations sur 



lafamilledcs liypoxylos, par M. de A. Libert. The Number con- 

 tains besides a short notice of Esenbeck's well-known Genera Plan- 

 tarum ; and of a large systematic work on the Grasses by Kunth. 

 An error in the memoir of Jussieu is corrected. It is there stated, 

 that in 1789, among other families, Jussieu established the Parony- 

 chias, hut Aug. de Saint-Hilaire shews that he was really the 

 author of this, as the former had himself acknowledged. 



Mars. — The only original paper is a Memoir e sur L'accroissement 

 en grosseur des Exogcnes, par M. Girou de Buzareingues. The 

 other contents are extracts from Communications sur Javafaites a 



MM. Wirtgen et Nees d'Esenbeck par M. Junghuhre. Ma- 



teriaux pour servir a I'etude des Jlgues, par J. N. de Suhr 



Enumeration des plantes decouvertes par les voyageurs dans les lies 

 de la Societe, principalement dans celle de Taiti, par J. B. A. Guil- 



The American Journal of Science and Arts. Conducted by Ben- 

 jamin Silliman, M. D. Vol. xxxii. No. 2, July 1837. (Con- 

 tinued from page 282 ) 



On the Economical uses of some Species of Testacea, continued, 

 p. 235. — The species treated of are Mureoc — The shell purple of 

 the ancients, M, Tritonis, Linn. — Murex:, — affording the dye used 

 by painters. — Ostrea edidis, — the history of this shell-fish is imper- 

 fect, the writer also considers the European oyster " smaller and 

 thinner;, and more rounded than the American, while the lower valve 

 is less concave or vaulted. It is not beaked, and the fish, compared 

 with the size of the shell, is smaller, and it possesses a different 

 flavour, while their habits are so dissimilar, that there can be no 

 doubt of their being distinct species." — Ostrea scahra — Mya 

 pictorum. — Tiirho littoreus, Linn. — Pecten maximus. — P. oper- 



cidaris P. concentricum. — Voluta gi'avis. — Cyprea moneta — 



Chiton fasciatus, cooked for the table in the island of Barbadoes. 

 — Murex despectus. — Solen siliqita. — Mytilus edvlis, differs from 

 the British species, " in being flatter, not so much ridged, more an- 

 gidar, more extended at the lower end, more polished on the out- 

 side, and it seldom grows so large or thick, but it is probably only 

 1 



