iv Proceedings of Royal Society of Edinburgh. 
Cesia corallioides (1ST.), detected under the name of C. concinnata 
in Dr Greville’s herbarium. 
Cesia crassifolia (Carr.), collected near Ben Lawers by the late 
Dr A. 0. Black. 
Marsupella sphacelata (Giesecke), collected by the late G. E. Hunt 
on Ben MacDhui and Loch Kandor, 1868. 
Marsupella Nevicencis (Carr.), collected on Ben Nevis by Mr John 
Whitehead, July 1875. 
Scapania Bayilingii (Hampe), first recorded as British, from 
specimens collected on rocks near the Stnd, Bolton Woods, York- 
shire, 1858. 
Hygrobiella myriocarpa (Carr.). Spruce, discovered near Ben 
Venue, July 1876. 
Riccia glaucescens , Carr., discovered at Barmouth, North Wales. 
Riccia tumida, Lindenb., collected by Mr Joshua near Mon- 
mouth, May 1877. 
Riccia sorocarpa, Bischoff, collected by B. M. Watkins on Great 
Doward Hill, near Boss. 
One of our rarest and most beautiful hepatics was named in his 
honour by the late Professor Balfour ; and Herr J. B. Jack, in his 
monograph of the European Radidce , named one of the rarest 
Radula Carringtonii after him. The late Professor Lindberg 
founded a new genus, which he named Carringtonia. 
About twelve months before he died, his valuable collection was 
acquired for the Manchester Museum by the Owens College 
authorities, and under the care of Professor E. E. Weiss it has 
been arranged, and is now accessible to students. 
Dr Carrington was a widely-read man, passionately fond of 
poetry, his favourite authors being Keats, Shelley, and Words- 
worth, having no mean skill himself in the accomplishment of 
verse, but the “ nice backwardness afraid of shame ” withheld him 
from publishing more in this field as in scientific ones. Of an 
extremely retiring disposition, meek and gentle in spirit, the 
memory of him will be treasured by all who were fortunate enough 
to have known him. 
On the 18th of January 1893, his sixty-sixth birthday, he died 
at Brighton, and was buried in the Carlton Hill Cemetery in that 
town. 
