Hi st' Nat . America Septentrionalis. 25 5 
de la ville de Mexico. impr. avec le Voyage en Cali- 
fornie de Chappe d’Auteroche ; p. 54 — 68. 
Paris, 1 772. 4. 
.Excerpta quaedam in Journal de Physique, Tome 1. 
p. 221—223. 
6 2 . America Meridionalis et Insularum adja • 
c entium. 
Stubbes. 
Observations made by a curious and learned person, sail- 
ing from England, to the Caribe-fslands. 
Philosoph. Transact. Vol. 2. n. 27. p. 493 — 501. 
An enlargement of the observations, formerly publisht 
iiumb. 27. ibid. Vol. 3. n. 36. p. 699 — 709. 
37 * P- 717 — 722 . 
Norwood. 
An acCount of some particulars, referring to those of Ja- 
maica, numb. 27 and 36. ibid. n. 41. p. 824, 825. 
James Peti veH. 
Pterigraphia americana, icones continens Filicum, nec 
non Muscos, Lichenes, Fungos, Corallia, Spongias, 
aliaque submarina ; cui adjiciuntur Crustacea, Tes- 
tacea, aliaque animalia fere omnia ex insulis nostris 
Charibbaeis. 
Tabb. aeneae 3 catalogi, et 20 iconum. fol. 
* in Operum ejus Vol. 2do. 
Figurae maximam partem e Plumerii filicibus desumtae, 
valde diminutae. 
Samuel Fahlberg. 
Utdragaf samlingar til natural-historien ofver on St. Bar- 
tbelemi i Vest-Indien. Vetensk. Acad. Handling. 1786. 
p. 215 — 240, etp. 248 — 254. 
fVilliam Smith. 
A natural history of Nevis, and the rest of the English 
Leeward Charibee Islands in America. 
Pagg. 318. Cambridge, 1745. 8. 
Griffitb Hughes. 
The natural history of Barbados 9 
Pagg. 31 4 * ta kk* aeneae 29. 
London, 1750. fol. 
