627 
Sir William Jackson Hooker considered the work as concluded after the publication of the first 
two series [in the year 1854]; but after bis deatb [which occurred in 1865J the 'Icones' were continued by his 
son [and successor as director of the Kew Herbarium], Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, who after his 
resignment from the latter post was followed as editor in 1891 by Prof. Daniel Oliver and in 1896 by the 
present Director of the Kew Gardens William Turner Thiselton Dyer. 
Series III (10 volumes. Williams & Norgate. 1867—91), under the new title: Hooker's Icones Plantarum; or 
Figures, with descriptive characters, of new and rare plants, selected from the Kew Herbarium. Edited 
by Sir J. D, Hooker. [Vol. X. Edited for the Bentham Trustees hv D. Oliver]: 
Vol. I (or vol. XI of the entire work). 1867—71. — Vol. IJ ?ol. XII). 1876. — Vol. III (or vol. XIII). 
1877—79. — Vol. IV (or vol. XIV), 1880 — 82. — Vol. V (or v .V). 1883-85. — Vol. VI (or vol. XVI). 
1886-87. — Vol. VII (or vol. XVII). 1886—87. — Vol. VIII (or voi. III). 1887-88. — Vol. IX (or vol. XIX). 
1889. — Vol. X (or vol. XX). 1891. 
Series IV (Volumes I— VI. Dulau. 1892—98. — Vol. I— IV, edited for the Bentham Trustees by D. Oliver; 
Vol. V and VI edited by W. T. Thiselton Dyer): 
Vol. I (or vol. XXI of the entire work). 1892. — Vol. II (or vol. XXII). 1894. — Vol. III (or vol. XXIII). 
1894. — Vol. IV (or vol. XXIV). 1895. — Vol. V (or vol. XXV). 1896. — Vol. VI (or vol. XXVI). 1898. 
The volumes of the Series III and IV have all been published in 4 parts each with 25 plates. 
[Price of the parts of vols. 11—17: 8 s., of vols. 18—26 4 s.]. 
Through more than 60 years this most important work has been conducted in a remarkable unifor- 
mity, each volume containing 100 lithograph. plates (in Octavo, Quarto or Folio) with 2 Indexes (one alpha- 
betical, one systematical). One page of letterpress is added to every plate. 
Series I and II are entirely out of print and — especially the Series I — extremely rare. Only very 
seldom complete copies, including the first ten volumes, occur for sale. 
Our copy is a very good one, partly in parts and partly in original bindings. — Some volumes can 
be supplied separately. 
R^^riedländer_&^ in Berlin. 
Soeben erschien: [i04 
Die Liehenen 
der Flora von Augsburg 
von 
(Separatabdruck aus dem 33. Bericht des Naturwissenschaft- 
lichen Vereins für Schwaben und Neuburg in Augsburg.) 
1898. 
41 Seiten in- 8. 
— Preis 2 Mark. — 
Der Verfasser hat die von ihm vor ca. 20 Jahren herausgegebene Zusammen- 
stellung der Liehenen der Flora von Augsburg unter Ä.ufnahme zahlreicher neuer 
Funde und Fundorte nach dem gegenwärtigen Stande der Lichenenforschung um- 
gearbeitet und bei nicht wenigen Arten Bemerkungen eingeschaltet. Am aus- 
führlichsten findet siel die Familie Gl ad onia behandelt, indem hier auch Funde 
aus den Algäuer Alp^n, den Tauern und dem Spessart berücksichtigt sind. 
