150 J. H. MAIDEN. 



RECORDS OF AUSTRALIAN BOTANISTS. 

 By J. H. Maiden, i.s.o., f.r.s., f.l.s. 



SECOND SUPPLEMENT, 



(For First Supplement see Report Aust. Assoc. Adv. of Science 



XIII, p. 22^ 1911.) 



[With Plates VIII, IX.] 



[Read before the Royal Society of N.S. Wales, September 7, 1921.'] 



Prefatory Note. — The list of worthies already recorded 

 by me can readily be ascertained by consulting the last 

 reference. I use the same numbering (heavier type) in the 

 quotation of previous papers, as in the First Supplement. 



Anderson William ( —1778). See ($), p. 11. 



He was surgeon of Cook's Third Voyage, which lasted 

 from 1776 to 1779, and made a number of botanical en- 

 quiries, relatively unimportant if compared with those of 

 the First Voyage (Banks and Solander). The expedition 

 did not call at the Australian mainland, but at Tasmania. 

 He died after "lingering under a consumption for more 

 than twelve months." A very full account of what is 

 known of him is given by Mr. James Britten in Journ. Bot. 

 liv, 345, and lv, 54. 



Armit, William Edington de Margrat (1848 - 1901). 

 See (6), p. 374. 

 He was born at Liege, Belgium. Additional particulars 

 of this botanical collector will be found in the Annual 

 Report on British New Guinea from 1st July 1900 to 30th 

 June 1901, and at pages xli and xlii will be found additional 

 notes. He was Resident Magistrate, Northern Division* 

 when he died on 3rd January, 1901. On 20th November* 

 1895 he became Sub-collector of Customs, etc., at Samarai. 



