FLORAS OF THE WORLD—PART II 293 
Murray, Alexander. The northern flora; or, a description of the wild 
plants belonging to the north and east of Scotland with an account of their 
places of growth and properties. Pt. I (all publ.). xvii, 150, xiv p. 2 
facsim. 22.5 em. Edinburgh, Aberdeen, and London, 1836. (New York 
- Botanical Garden library.) 
Descriptive account of angiosperms, on the Linnaean system (Monandria- 
Pentandria), with localities; included here for its account of plant uses. 
Trail, J. W. H. Topographical botany of Scotland. Annals Scott. Nat. 
Hist. 1898: 39-46, 98-111, 164-177, 230-235. 1898; 1899: 95-103, 165-172. 
1899; 1900: 32-42, 103-108. 1900.—Scottish Rubi. lc. 1902: 170-176, 233- 
244. 1902; 1903: 41-47, 103-107. 1903.—Scottish Hieracia. l.c. 1902: 244— 
250. 1902.—Additions and corrections... l.c. 1905: 174-177, 224-235. 1905; 
1906: 33-48, 93-100, 172-184, 230-233. 1906; 1907: 226-232. 1907; 1908: 
44-48. 1908; 1909: 178-180. 1909. 
List of Watsonian provinces and vice-counties; systematic list of vascular 
plants and Characeae, with the numbers of the vice-counties in which they 
are known, and occasional annotations. The “Additions and corrections” and 
the Supplement (begun 1907: 230) are similarly arranged; the latter is un- 
finished, ending with Naiadaceae. The Salicaceae, omitted in the first series 
of papers, are treated l.c. 1906: 181-184. 1906. 
Topographical botany of the river-basins Forth and Tweed in Scot- 
land. Trans. and Proc. Bot. Soc. Edinb. 22: 277-308. 1904. 
Geography, botanical explorations (with references to publications) ; partly 
annotated list of known vascular plants and Characeae. 
West, George. A comparative study of the dominant phanerogamic and 
higher cryptogamic flora of aquatic habit, in three lake areas of Scotland. 
Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinb. 25: 967-1023. 110 fig. on 55 pl. 1905. 
General features of lakes in the Loch Ness region (Inverness), the island of 
Lismore (Argyll), and between Nairn and the Culbin sandhills (Nairn); 
annotated list of aquatic and semi-aquatic vascular plants and some groups 
of cellular plants, with localities; descriptive account of the lakes mentioned. 
—See also his A further contribution to a comparative study of the dominant 
phanerogamic and higher cryptogamic flora of aquatic habit in Scottish lakes. 
Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinb. 30: 65-181. 62 pl. on 31. 1910. (Topography, etc.; 
annotated list of vascular and cellular plants (p. 71-96); descriptive account 
of the lakes studied. Refers to areas in Kirkcudbrightshire, Wigtownshire, 
Fife, and Kinross.) 
ae ae W. The edible wild fruits of Scotland. Scott. Nat. 3: 22-28, 
—76. 1875. 
Annotated list, with uses. 
Wood, John. Scotch names of native wild flowers. Annals Andersonian 
Nat. Soc. [1]: 89-103. 1893. 
Running account of old Scotch names of native plants, grouped according 
to habit of plant or origin of names, with botanical names and notes on 
etymology and uses. The names are taken from the 1818 edition of John 
Jamieson, An etymological dictionary of the Scottish language——See also 
Cameron, above, and additional reference there given. 
ABERDEENSHIRE 
See also Banff (Marshall and Shoolbred, Plants observed near Tomintoul, N. B.):; also 
Inverness (Trail, The fiowering plants and fern allies of the Cairngorms). 
Vice-county 92, South Aberdeen; vice-county 93, North Aberdeen. 
General 
Dickie, George. The botanist’s guide to the counties of Aberdeen, Banff, 
and Kincardine. xxxii, 344 p. pl., map. 18 cm. Aberdeen [etc.] 1860. 
(Gray Herbarium library.) 
Climate, etc.; topography and geology (by Alexander Cruickshank) ; anno- 
tated list of vascular and cellular plants, with localities. 
Local 
_ Macgillivray, P. H. A catalogue of the flowering plants and ferns grow- 
ing in the neighbourhood of Aberdeen. viii, 44 p. 16 cm. Aberdeen [etc.] 
1853. (Gray Herbarium library.) 
