Muscti Exo TIc1.—Menziesiant. 
JUNGERMANNIA MENZIESII. 
Jungermannia caule elongato repente dense bipinnatim 
ramoso ; foliis distichis horizontalibus inzequaliter bi- 
lobis conduplicatis ciliatis, lobis rotundatis, lobulis 
minutis oblongis, ramorum claviformi-saccatis, stipu- 
lis quadrifidis ciliatis, xamorwm segmentis duobus cla- 
viformi-saceatis. (Tas. CXVIII.) 
Has. In insula Staten Land dicta, prope Cape Horn. D. Men- 
zies, 1787. 
Caulis 3-4-pollicaris, repens, subflexuosus, dense bipinnatim di- 
visus, pinnis pinnulisque horizontalibus. Folia arcte imbri- 
cata, horizontalia, disticha, fuscescentia, nitore expertia, in- 
eequaliter biloba, pulcherrime ciliata, ciliis longis subdistantibus, 
lobis conduplicatis; superioribus seu majoribus rotundatis pla- 
niusculis ; infertoribus seu lobulis multo minoribus, caulium 
oblongis, acuminatis, marginibus recurvis longe ciliatis (fig. 2.), 
ramorum plerumque claviformi-saccatis nunc setigeris (fig. 3.). 
Stipule magne, quadripartite, segmentis longe acuminatis, 
marginibus recurvis ciliatis, yamorum duobus intermediis non 
raro claviformi-saccatis. (fig. 5.) Fructificationem non vidi. 
This species again belongs to the same curious family with 
J. clavigera, J. magellanica and palpebrifolia, approaching 
nearest to the latter in the foliage, but differing from it in the 
leaves being ciliated with long hair-like processes in the undi- 
vided lobule, and considerably also in the ramification, which is 
here closely beset with pinnz and pinnule, and these so horizon- 
tally placed that they might almost be called pectinate. Their 
places of growth are widely distant. 
Fig. 1, plant, nat. size. Fig. 2, cauline leaf. Fig. 3, cauline 
-Stipule. Fig. 4, leaf from abranch, Fig. 5, stipule from ditto. 
Fig. 6, portion of a leaf,—magn, 
