510 guide to the literature of botany. 



§ 95. Asia. 



JRirssELL (A.). Tte Natural History of Aleppo. Ed. 2. (by P. 

 Eussell), Lond. 1794. 2 vols. 4°. 



Plants, vol. ii. pp. 237-271 ; tie specimens described are in the 

 Botanical Department, British Museum. 

 JScHLiEMANN (H.). Ilios : the city and coimtry of the Trojans, etc. 

 Lond. 18&0. 8°. 



Contains, Catalogiie of the plants hitherto knoivn of the Troad, 

 by P. Ascherson, T. von Heldreich, and P. Kurtz, pp. 727-736. 



§ 97. China and Japan. 



*fPiEEKE (L.). Flore foresti^re de la Cochincliine. Paris, [1880]. 

 fol.-> 



§ 98. India. 



|Atkinson (E. T.). Economic Products of the North-Western 



Provinces. Part I. Gums and Gum Eesins. AUahahad, 



1876. 4°. 

 JLiOTAiLD (L.). Memorandum, on Materials in India suitable for the 



manufacture of Paper. Calcutta, 1880. fol. 

 JBkaitdis (D.). Vegetation and Country from Narkanda to Pangi. 



Simla, 1879. 8°. 



§ 100. East Indian Archipelago. 



f St. John (S.). Life in the Forests of the Far East (or Ti-avels in 

 Northern Borneo). Lond. 1862. 2 vols. 8°. Ed. 2. (Title 

 extended as above), 1863. 



Vol. i. has four plates, illustrating as many species of Nepenthes. 



JBuEBiDGE (F. "W.). The Gardens of the Sun, or a naturalist's 

 Journal . . . in . . . Borneo and the Sulu Archipelago. 

 Lond. 1880. 8°. 



§ 101. Australia. 



J"WooDs (J. E. T.). Geological observations in South Australia. 

 Lond. 1862. 8°. 



A few botanical remarks will bo found, pp. 29-54. 



