U<T OF TflE I'F.ANTS. 49 



».72. P. ABiETiMs, Fries, i. p. 370. Boletus abiotimis, Ftrs. p. 541. (W.) 



♦)73. P. riNXABAHiNPS, Frn"t. i. p. 371. Boletus cinnabarinus, Pers. 540. (W.) 



674. Hydnim rAOiN.«UM, Fries, i. p. 473? (W.) 



67.5. Thblephora pi'RprRBA, PtTs. p. 571. (W.) 



bli). Th. AMORPHA. Greville. Peziza ainorpha, P«t.v. p. 057. (W.) 



677. Tremblla mesrnterica, Pt^s. p. 622. Muhl. Cat. (W.B.) 



678. Pkxixa sarcoides, Prr^. p. 6.13. Muhl. Cat. p. 108. (\V.) 



679. P. popcLNRA. Pirs. p. 672. (W.) 



680. ERiNiiM BETiLi, GfeviUe. Ed. Phitos. Journ. v. i\. p. 77. t. 3. f. 1. (W.) 



ALGiE. 



681. Oscillatoria MiRALis, Agordh. Syn. Alg. Scand. p. 108. (W.B.) 



682. Conferva glomerata, Agardh. p. 89. Muhl. Cat. (W.) 



683. Ulva crispa, Agardh. p. 43. Lightfoot. Fl. Scot. p. 972. (B.) 



684. U. MONTANA, Eng. Bot. t. 2193. (exclud. Syn. Palmellaj aipicoia- Lym^di/r) 

 Palraella rupcstris, Lyngbye, Hydrophytolog. Dan. (exdudeiul. Treinell. sab. et Ulv. 

 rupestris, Eng. Bot.) (B.) 



685. Peers CERANOiDEs, llahi. Ft. Lapp. p. 490. (B.; 



Cxriusirr uf a Conferva, and the frairment of a Floridea (Lam.), this was the only al^a vrr ubiirrve*! in 

 the Arctir Sea. 



686. Ficcs AGARDHii, Hooker. App. Parry^s Second Voy. ined. (W.) 



flab. Hudson 8 Bay. 



687. Algarim GENi's?? Confervis simplicissimis et Tremella; cruenta? {Eng. Bot.) 

 quo(lainniO(lo affine ? ? Brown, List of Plants, Ross's Voy. ed. 2da. Uredo nivalis, Baiu-r. 

 Lepraria kermesina. Baron Wrangel, Kongl. Vetensk. Acad. Handiinger, fsraar 1823, 

 Ire part. p. 71. (quoted from Bull, des sciences naturelles, Sept. 1824, p. 56.) Roto- 



coccus nivalis, Agardh et Palmella Hooker. Ed. Journ. of Science, vol. i. p. 383. 



and Bot. App. Parry's 2d Voy. ined. (W.B.) 



The it"»earrhc« of the learned and acute naturalist» above quoted, induce u« to refer to the Red Snoir, nt" 

 which »u'-h extensive patches were seen by Capt. Ross, a red auhstance rcsembliiif^ a lepraria, which was 

 obverred in lat. 60°. at Moose-deer Island, on Slave Lake, upon fra^nents of mountain limestone, and .it 

 Furt Enterprise, lat. 64^'. encrustin? very sparingly ch^Js of earth within the channels of mountain-torrent* 

 and upon the margin of the river, and which, in the sprint:, communicated its colour to the melting xnow. 

 The cohxjred patch ■« obser^ed by us were not above a few inches in extent. 



