156 
2. GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, 
It is not intended to enter into prne of the vegetation of the 
- United Kingdom, but it may be useful to eee visiting this country 
to give the titles of a few of the leading botanical 
Britannica; or Bri tish Plants - their Geo- 
1859 
Watson, H.C. Cybele 
- graphical Relations. London, 1847-1 Fou 
Syme, J. T. Boswell. Engli sh Botan = P aS —86, third 
BP 
edition. Twelve vols. large 8vo, with coloured plates of all the species. 
Moore, D., and More, A. G. Contributions towards a Cybele Hiber- 
nica. Dublin, 1866. Small 8vo. E 
Moore, D., and More, A. G. On the Climate, e and Crops of 
Ireland: " Report of the Proceedings F Ks of the Botanical 
Congress, London, 1866. pp. 165-176. 
Trimen, H. Botanical uen Pao of the British Counties: 
Journal of Botany, 1874, pp. 66-73, Cornwall to Surrey and Kent ; 
pp- 108-112, Essex to Seca ; pp- 155-168, Monmouth to Anglesea ; 
pp- 178-183, Lincoln to Northumberland ; pp. 233-238, Scotland 
mene C.C. Manual of British Botany, containing the E Porai 
Plants Ferns, arranged E to t the Natural Orders. London, 
1881, oobth edition. Smail 8 
Watson, H. C. Topkapi Botany : Being local and personal 
Records towards shewing the Meses lu. of British Plants. on, 
~ ane second edition, edited by J. G. Baker and the Rev. W. W. 
Newbould. 
>g s gD Ihe sigh Flora i the British Islands. London, 
1884, third edition. Smali 
Fitch, W. and Smith, p G. cuu of British Plants : 
Series of Wood Bogart with dissectious. London, 1886. Second 
edition. 1,311 engravi 
Bentham, Manithook of the British Flora: a description of the 
Flowering Plants and Ferns. London, 1887. Fifth edition, by Sir 
Joseph Hooker. 8vo. pp. 607. 
3. CHANNEL ISLANDS AND MEDITERRANEAN. 
HxLiGOLAND.—An island in the North Sea, in 7° 51’ E. long. and 
54° 11’ N. lat., opposite and about twenty-five miles from the mouth of 
the Elbe. Area, inclusive of = adjacent island, named * Sandy,” 
about three-quarters of a square mile. The main island is a red sand- 
stone cliff about 170 feet high, ind inaccessible except in one spot. 
Hallier, Ernst. Die Vegetation auf Helgoland. Hamburg, 1861. 
8vo. pp. 48, with four uncoloured plates. 
The enumeration contains 150 species of phanerogams, about a third 
of which are introduced plants. Hippophe M and Lycium 
P barbarum are the only woody species found in a 
_ There is = a 2" of eultivated trees and iiic useful to persons 
Pain near t 
JERSEY, emend eni and Sank.—' The “Channel Islands ” 
are situated between 49° and 50° N. lat., and between 2° and 3? E. long., 
