INDEX. 



197 



Germany, expeditions sent uul by, Ui/ci, 1294. 



Gift, accessions by, Berlin, p. 169 ; — British Museum, 

 p. 3 ; — Kew, JDyer, p. 74 ; — —library, Vyer, p. 99 ; 

 — Paris, p. 168 ; St. Petersburg, p. 165 ; — Vienna, 

 p. 162. 



Gingko, fossil leaves resembling those of that genus, 



Woodward, 1087. 

 Glasgow herbarium should be kept up to date, Fawcett, 



542. 



Glaziou, A., large gifts to Paris, p. 168. 



Gluing of specimens, Dyer, p. 94 ; not done, Murray, 

 p. 4. 



Godefroy-Lebeuf, at Kew, Dyer, p. 66. 



Godman, F. D., St. Vincent collections his property, 

 Dyer, p. 87. 



Gold Coast rubber trade, Dyer, p. 76. 



Government, collections sent to Kew, Dyer, p. 65 ; 



JInrray, 173, p. 126 ; have enriched Kew 



Masters, 662 ; fossil plants sent to British 



Museum, Murray, 172, p. 141 ; control of British 

 Museum apparently wanting, Dyer, p. 57 ; — en- 

 quiries ; see House of Commons, Boyal Commissions; 

 — expeditions, collections allotted, Bichards, p. 147 ; 



fossils sent to British Museum, p. 146 ; 



^plants sent to Kew, p. 126 ; should be sent 



thither to be worked out, p. 126, 141 ; ^with a set 



for the British Museum, p. 141 ; — no assistance given 

 for physiolc^cal botany. Dyer, 1362-1365 ; — offices, 

 their relations with Kew, Dyer, p. 64 ; — reqmsitions, 

 seldom made, Cornu, p. 167 ; Murray, p. 3. 



Graineterie at Paris, Cornu, p. 167. 



Grant, special, for Hooker collections, Dyer, p. 98. 



Gray, Dr. J. E., transference of Searles-Wood collec- 

 tion to Geological Department, Woodward, 1083. 



Great Britain, geology shown at Jermyn Street, 

 Lankester, 1169. 



Greenwich, comparison with Kew, Dyer, 1273. 



Grisebach, H. R. A., his West Indian flora. Dyer, p. 65. 



Groups under geographic arrangement, Murray, p. 4. 



Groves, Henry, at Kew, Dyer, p. 65. 



Groves, James, F.L.S., accessibility of both establish- 

 ments compared, 350-353 ; amalgamation desirable if in 

 London, not otherwise, 342 ; botanists would regret 

 removal of herbarium from London, 346 ; British col- 

 lection of plants at the British Museum not a perfect 

 one, 365, 366 ; — plants should be studied in relation 

 to European plants, 345, 361 ; British Museum, ac- 

 cessibility, 350-353 ; — amalgamation of Kew collec- 

 tions in London, desirable, 342 ; — herbarium chiefly 

 used by him, 338 ; — • — more useful to him than Kew, 

 340, 341 ; library in Botanical Department most 

 useful, 362 ; — pre-Linnean collections rarely used by 

 him, 345, 346 ; Characese, study of, 345 ; Continental 

 plants required for comparison with British, 362, 



363 ; — should be a complete European herbarium, 



364 ; Cryptogams should remain with the Phanero- 

 gams, 354-357 ; evidence, 337*-370 ; European plants 

 for comparison with British, 362-364 ; Kew her- 

 barium used when the British Museum is not avail- 

 able, 339 ; — inconvenient of access, 347,351 ; — living 

 plants not used by witness, 359 ; library at British 

 Museum most useful, 362 ; living plants not required 

 in proximity to a herbarium, 367, 368 ; London the 

 preferable locality for the union of the two herbaria, 

 345, 346 ; pre-Linnean herbaria rarely used by him, 

 344. 



Grunow, A., collection of Diatoms at Vienna, p. 161, 

 162. 



Guides, British Museum, Murray, p. 3 ; — Kew, Dyer, 

 p. 58. , 



Guildford Sinapis identified at Kew, Holmes, p. 173 ; 

 Murray, p. 178. 



Gum, new, from Zanzibar, Dyer, p. 66 ; — used as an 

 adhesive, Murray, p. 4. 



Gunn, R. C. Tasmanian collections, Dyer, p. 86. 



Gymnosperms at Kew, known to witness, Seward. 869 ; 

 — in Museum, Dyer, p. 94 ; — work on, Seward, 891. 



H. 



Halymenia Lafifnlia misnamed by Dr. Dickie. Holmes, 

 p. 173. 



3499. 



Hamilton, Lord George, mentioned. Dyer, 1300, 1303. 



Hammersmith, botanist living at, Carruthers, p. 134 ; 

 Waterhouse, p. 124 ; — identified as being probably 

 John Miers, Fanizzi, p. 125. 



Hanbury, Fi-ederick Janson, F.L.S., African and Ameri- 

 can plants not studied by him, 515 ; botanist skilled 

 in critical genera wanted, 509, 512 ; British Museum, 

 deprecated transference to Kew, 508 ; — the herba- 

 rium of British plants most excellent, and not 

 equalled at Kew, 506 ; Colonial plants not studied by 

 him, 515 ; critical genera. State botanist required for, 

 509, 512 ; — plants now examined as a favour by 

 specialists, 511 ; errors in names in British herbarium 

 at the British Museum, 512 ; evidence, 495-522 ; 

 European plants studied in connection with British 

 plants, 515, 518 ; general herbarium should be re- 

 tained at the British j\Iuseum, 517 ; herbaria in his 

 own possession, 498 ; Hieracium, has a critical know- 

 ledge of the British forms of that genus, 497 ; Indian 

 plants not studied by him, 515 ; Kew, deprecates 

 transference of British Museum collections to, 504- 

 508 ; — British Herbarium at Cromwell Road, un- 

 equalled at Kew, 506 ; — less accessible than the 

 British Museum, 504 ; — little help obtainable from 

 it for local botanists, 500 ; — little visited by him,. 



499 ; reasons, 500 ; types might be transferred 



to Kew, if authentic specimens left at British 

 Museum, 507, 508, 520, 521. 



Hanbury, Right Hon. R. W. , extension at Kew, Dyer, 

 . p. 97. 

 Hand lists of Kew collections. Dyer, p. 58. 



Hanover, King of, his house at Kew now appropriated 

 to the herbarium, p. 141. 



Hariot, Paul, in charge of cryptogams in Paris, p. 166 ; 

 — on Leveill^'s herbarium, Dyer, p. 98. 



Harleian collections, p. 111. 



Harley, Robert, afterwards Earl of Oxford and Morti- 

 mer, his manuscripts, p. 111. 



Harris, Dr. J. H. , lectures at Kew, Dyer, p. 60. 



Harvey, Dr. W. H. , work on South African flora. Dyer, 

 p. 64. 



Hawley, Sir H., an executor of Banks's will. Dyer, p. 

 101. 



Heer, Oswald, collection of both fossil and recent fruits 

 required, p. 122. 



Heimerl, Anton, Ascoboleenpraparate, p. 162. 



Hemsley, William Botting, F.R.S., activity in the 

 herbarium, 120S ; 'additional room urgently required, 

 1221, 1241 ; advajnJtageous to amalgamate, 1211, 1213, 

 1220 ; amalgaanaJtion at Kew desirable, 1211, 1213 ;_ 

 backing the sheets of specimens impracticable, 1222 ; 

 Banks, Sir Joseph, dried plants acquired by, 1225 ; 

 Banksian herbarium, 1209, 1213 ; — its growth, 1220 ; 

 boiling specimens, means for, 1248 ; botanic research, 

 herbarium used for, 1202 ; British Museum, known 

 to him by personal visits, 1206 ; — its old colleotions, 

 1207 ; —one-third only as large as Kew, 1222, 1227 ; 

 of. 1232-1238 ; buildings at Kew needed, 1243, 1245 ; 

 cabinets, amalgamation by, 1218, 1224 ; — differences 

 in size, 1215, 1216, 1231 ; collections at the British 

 Museum, and at Kew, miany the same, 1246, 124/ ; 

 — purchased, 1252-1256 ; collectors for Banks were 

 Kew men, 1220 ; —terms, 1260, 1261, 1263 ; colonial 

 collections, reasons for being sent to Kew, 1262 ; 

 competiitiion as to purchased colleotions, 1253-1255 ; 

 — ^insignifiaant, 1255 ; Cook's voyages, specimens in 

 herbarium, 1209 ; cultivated plants, names verified, 

 1202 ; cutting down of British Museum sheets de- 

 precated, 1215, 1216, 1219 ; cyeads need a large size 

 of paper, 1231 ; determination, plants sent for, 1202 ; 

 disadvantages of amalgamiation not obvious, 1214 ; 

 dried plants sent to Banks, 1220, 1225 ; duplicates, 

 of numbered colleotions, 1257, 1258 ; — should be 

 eliminated, 1215, 1224, 1230, 1245, 1247, 1258; evi- 

 dence, 119^7-1263 ; extension of herbaxiiim at Kew 

 needed, 1243, 1245 ; fire-proof, the herbarium not so, 

 1239; fire-risk and precautions, 1240, 1248-1251; 

 fires, none in herbariiim building. 1248 ; floras, 

 drawn up by, Dyer, p. 65 ; — ^types at Kew, 1263 ; 

 fruits belonging to the Banksian colleotions not at 

 Kew, 1225 ; functions of the herbarium. 1202 ; 

 garden plants, names verified, 1202 ; Hanover House, 

 library begun at, 1225 ; 'herbarium, functions, 1202 ; 

 — growing, 1228, 1229 ; — ^known to h'm for forty years, 

 1199-1200 ; - —now isolated, 1240, 1249 ; —over- 

 crowded, Iffil, 1241; — want of space detrimental, 



Cc 



