BRITISH JUNGERMANNIAv. 
(J. ItEvigata.) 
JUNGERMANNIA LiEVIGATA, 
(TAB. XXXV.) 
Jungermannia, surculo proeumbente, vagfe bipinnatlm ramoso : foliis bifariis, inaequalitfer 
bilobis, spinuloso-dentatis ; lobis superioribus majoribus, rotundato-ovatis ; inferioribus ligulatia, 
planis, appressis : stipulis oblongo-quadratis, spinuloso-dentatis. 
Jungermannia Icevigata. Schrader, Syst. Samml. n. p. 6. Roth, Germ. m. p. 406. 
Lamarck, FI. Fr. ed. 2. t. n. p. 432? 
Hab. Upon the earth in a wood on the north side of the banks of Lochness. — Mr. Brodie 
has given me specimens found at or near the same place. — Communicated to me 
likewise by Mr. J. T. Mackay, whose brother, the late Mr. Mackay of Edinburgh, 
gathered it in Scotland. — Near Bantry, in a mountainous situation. Miss Hutchins . — 
Upon a rock, on the Castle-Hill, Kinnordy, Kerrie-muir, Mr. Lyell. 
Plant growing in loose patches, which lie over each other in an irregularly imbricated manner. 
Root consisting of a few, very small, simple fibres, descending, at distant intervals, from 
the lower side of the plant. 
Stems procumbent, flexuose, from two to three and even four inches long, beset with 
manv distichous, nearly horizontal, scattered ramuli, which vary from half an inch to 
two inches in length, long and short being intermixed without order ; the smaller ones 
simple, the larger again pinnated by a few short and simple shoots, equally irregular in 
point of size, number, and position : the whole of the branches are singularly attenuated 
at their origin, but then linear, and blunt at their points : their texture is firm : their 
color a dirty brown. 
Leaves (f. f. 3. 4) in general about half or three-quarters of a line long, those at the base and 
extremity of the stems and branches smallest; it not very unfrequently happens that the 
even outline of the shoots, which is in general remarkable, is here and there interrupted 
