157 
ith a maximum elevation of a little over 300 feet. J ersey, the largest, 
is about eleven miles long by four and a half in breadth, and Sark is 
three miles long, and a mile and a half in its greatest width. There 
are several smaller islets 
Babington, C. C.  Primitie Flore Sarnice. London, 1839. 8vo. 
pp. vy 
total number of flowering plants and ferns recorded is 848 ; but 
this aioe has been slightly augmented by subsequent discoveries, 
recorded in various publications. 
AR.—At the entrance to the Mediterranean, is about 36? N. 
lat. and 5? W. long. row nearly two square miles, and (€ height 
1,439 feet 
elaart, F. Flora Calpensis. Contributions to the Botan 
and Topography of Gibraltar. London, 1846. 8vo. pp. 220, with 
several views. 
Gandoger, M. Plantes de Gibraltar: Bulietin de la Société Botani- 
que de France, xxxiv. (1887), pp. 223-227 and 309-313 
Rouy, G. Plantes de Gibraltar et d'Algeciras: Bulletin de la 
Société de France, xxxiv., 1887, pp. 434-446. 
A rich and varied flora, considering the smallness of the area, in- 
cluding a number of beautiful plants not known to oenar elsewhe 
Kelaart enumerates Es pec of indigenous flowering plants and fer 
and reproduces descriptions of new species publishe db E Boissier in his 
* Voyage Botanique [a le Midi de l'Espague rues l'année 1887.” — 
Gendoger's lists of plants, collected by Mr. L. Dasoi, add many new — 
discoveries. 
may be desirable to mention that ** Flora Calpensis " is the nom- 
ne of the author of ** Reminiscences of Gibraltar," 1881. 
A.—An island in the Mediterranean, about 58 miles from Sicily, 
N. 
and a it 180 from the nearest point of A t e capital, 
is in 35? 54' N. lat 14? 31' E. lon Ar square miles. 
Gozo is about 20 square miles in area, C one, and F 
lying to the south-west, much s The greatest elevation is about 
uc 
1,200 feet, and there are T streams nor lakes, hence the indigenous 
vegetation is poor and scanty. 
Wic óm, J. Plante So etc.: Års- Berättelser om Botaniska 
Arbeten, 1843-4, Bihang, pp. 5 
Grech Delicata, J.C. Flora Melitensis, sistens Stirpes Phanerogamas. 
Malin denm v dx xvi and 49. 
This work contains a history of the botanical literature of the 
island, Mid a list of 716 phis. amens including colonists. 
Wickstróm's introduction is in Frenc 
Peran records Statice petioulata; Centaur ea crassifolia, and Parie- 
: populi da; as endemie in Malta, but the first has since been 
found 4 in Sici 
US. a dm island is situated between 34° 33’ and 35° 41’ N. lat., 
and bet week 32? 15’ and 34° 35’ E. rad ates and has an area of 3,596 
square miles, the mountains rising to a height of 6,000 feet. The 
climate is dry, and little of the original forest is left. 
Unger, F, and Kotschy, Th. e Insel Cypern. Vienna, 1865. | 
8vo. pp. 598, with map and view dice. 
