476 Scientific Intelligence. 
in the introduction of officinal plants and in n orngmenie: cultiva- 
‘tion. ith one villa- garden on the shores of the Mediterra- 
nean—that of his brother at Moxtnle—tle is memory to us is indel- 
ibly associated. Although remarkably self-reliant, Mr. Hanbury 
was the opposite of self-asserting or ambitious ; but his sterling 
ch 
him to all who knew him. ith the sense of personal fons ‘his 
ipa and promise is ge short, and that in a line in which, it 
o be feared, he lea no successor. Hanburia Mexicana, 
a potiens adanétapcona. genus, commemorates his services to 
Botany. : 
16. The Crustaceans of the Caves of 7 gies. y and Indiana ; 
by 8. I. Sarru.—Through the courtesy of Dr. Packard of Salem, 
wells at iddletown, Conn. Since this note was first 
n, I have examined several specimens of this last species, 
pie nasal b x i ae Thacher, under stones in a small brook, 
near New Hav m this it seems not at all improbable that 
the — ea "Kentucky and Indiana—and very likely 
e eyeless, cave species of other age telanad still be found 
in the surtace streams of the same re gio 
colorless in life, and are probably only imperfect organs of vision, 
although the structure of the facets can be distinctly made out. 
