Botany. : 189 
of stag; among them are two molar teeth beauti ‘ully preserved. This 
deposit of bones is in a layer of sands, mar] containing boulders of quartz 
and numerous fragments of terrestrial] and freshwater shells, but no trace 
of human remains,” (The correspondent of the “ Sentinelle” is a rail- 
toad engineer, Mr. Chapard.)—Translated and sent to this Journal by 
A. F. Bandelier, Jr., Highland, Ia. 
II. BOTANY. 
ers, seed, and embryo, ascertaining (as 
Ey 
a 
° 
o 
as 
a 
° 
= 
& 
oOo 
° 
oc 
ch 
Ment and th 
~ Plants upon the Toots of which 
€ made to germinate along with the latter; and even when the rootlet 
| the re 
nder seedli f the f iant, when, perhaps, this remaining 
Be. erent eu ding aS of the par- 
i resting point in the history of the development e par. 
sete may be Shirts : bs A. G. 
: he ; 
J the Mer 1861—A separate issue from the 13th volume, new series, of 
"9g ,°Moirs of the Imperial Society of Naturalists, Moscow. | It occupies 
' quar oe aud is well illustrated by outline figures which fill 13 plates, 
8t Petershe : Regel,—now the Director of the Imperial Botanic Garden at 
