312 PLANTS, SEEDS, AND CURRENTS 



stones in the form of islands that would support a mangrove flora 

 (pp. 307-309). 



9. The inference that New Zealand in its relation with South America 

 iigures both as giver and receiver, whilst Australia merely receives 

 South American plants and makes no return, though here concerned 

 only with coastal plants, is the identical conclusion framed by Mr. 

 Hedley with respect to the general relations between the faunas and 

 .floras of these ocean-parted lands (p. 309). 



LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL WORKS QUOTED 



GfuPPY, H. B., Observations of a Naturalist in the Pacific, Vol. II., Plant-Dispersal, 

 1906. 



Hedley, C, The Palseographical Relations of Antarctica, Proc. Linn. Soc. 

 London, 1911-12. 



Page, J., on the bottle-drift observations of the U.S.A. Hydrographic Office, 

 National Geographic Magazine, Vol. XH., 1901, New York. 



Russell, H. C, Current papers in Journ. Roy. Soc. N.S.W., 1894 and 1896. (Quoted 

 in these pages from Schott's memoir.) 



Schott, G., Die Flaschenposten der Deutschen Seewarte, Archiv der Deutschen 

 Seewarte, XX., 1897. 



Wood-Jones, F., Coral and Atolls, 1910, p. 294. 



