1792 



Do. 



4 10 



1788 



Do, 



4 8 



1792 



Do. 



4 5 



1792 



Do. 



6 



1800 



Do. 



5 7 



1793 



Do. 



6 1 



1793 



Do. 



5 6 



1793 



Do. 



5 9| 



1793 



Do. 



4 8 



1793 



Do. 



3 10^ 



1788 



Do. 



7 



1793 



Do. 



5 2 



STATE OP THE BOTANICAL GARDEV AT ST. VINCENT. 375 



Tadle of the Growth of certain Trees in the Botanical Growth of 

 Garden at St. Vincent. ^'■*^es in the 



-, J- 'ru J botanical gar- 



lectona grandis— The seeds he m the ground from eighteen months to den at St. Vin- 

 two years, before they vegetate. They have produced seeds in the cent's. 



garden ten years ago. 

 First seeds received from Sir J. Banks in 1788 ft. in. 



Circumference of stem, in 1807at Gft.aboveground 4 6 



Caryota urena, seeds from Sir J.Banks, 

 Sapindusedulis, (Litche) plant from ditto 1788 

 Mimosa Lebbeck, seeds do. 



Sterculia fcetida, do. do. 



Gomutu I'alm, seeds from Bd. of Agri. 

 Artocarpus incisus, small plants 



integrifolius, do. 

 Jatnbolifera pedunculata, do. 

 Aleurites triloba, seeds 

 Eugenia Malaccensis, small plants 

 Mangifera iiidica, from seeds 

 Ditto, small plants from E. I. 



Natives. 

 Swietenla Mahagoni, seeds 1790 ^ 



has been producing plenty of seeds for C Do. 3 4 



several years j 



Copifra officinalis, seeds from the \ 



Continent 1790 ! 



One of the most valuable woods. 

 Mimosa grandis, seedling plant from the • 



Continent 1792 J 



A very hard and valuable wood. 

 Carolini a insignis, seeds from Trinidad 1787 Do. 8 



The wood of no value, 

 Bt.Vincent, July 21, 1807. 



A. ANDERSON. 



IX. 



On the Oxides of Iron. By Thomas Thomson, M. D. 

 F. R. S. E. Fellow of the Imper. Chudrurgo.Med, 

 Acad, of Petersburg. 



In the Annales de Chimie for May 1809 (vol. Ixx, p. 145) Remarks on Dr. 

 there is an article by Mr. HassenfratZj of which the follow- JJ^^^.^^'^^^^ 

 JDg is an abstract. Hassenfratz. 



" I have 



Do. 3 2 



Do. 6 6 



