xcii Appendix A. 
four coloured plates. (A fragment, never continued.) London, 
Paris, and Vienna. 
1817. On Tayloria, a new Moss allied to the genus Splachnum. 
Brand's Journal of Science and Art, 1816, No. 3, p. 144, with 
one plate. 
1817- 28. Curtis’s Flora Londinensis, new edition, by George 
Graves. This sumptuous but impracticable work in five vols. 
folio will be described under date of 1828. 
1818- 20. Musei Exotici, containing figures and descriptions of 
new or little known Foreign Mosses and other Cryptogamic 
subjects. 2 vols. 8vo, and a few copies 4to. 176 plates, 
coloured. Dedicated to James Brcdie, Esq., of Brodie House, 
N.B. 
1818. Muscologia Britannica, containing the Mosses of Great 
Britain and Ireland, systematically arranged and described, with 
plates illustrative of the characters of the Genera and Species, by 
W. J. Hooker and Thomas Taylor, M.D., &c. One vol. 8vo, 
with thirty-one coloured plates, by W. J. H. The plates also 
published separately in 4to form, coloured in a very superior 
manner, by George Graves. Species described, 269. Dedicated 
to Rev. James Dalton, M.A. 
1819. Observations on the germination of Mosses, in a letter 
to William Jackson Hooker, Esq., F.L.S. By Mr. James Drum- 
mond, A.L.S. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii, 24. The authorship of 
this article is erroneously attributed to W. J. H. in the Royal 
Society's Catalogue of Scientific Papers. 
1821. Flora Seotica. Two parts, 8vo. Part I. Flowering Plants 
only, arranged according to the Linnean System. Part II. 
Including also the Cryptogamic Orders, &c., all arranged accord- 
ing to the Natural System. Of the second part the author says 
it may be considered as a joint work of himself and his friend 
Mr. Lindley ; and the great assistance of his friend R. K. Greville, 
Esq., in respect of the minuter Fungi is acknowledged. Dedicated 
to the Chancellor of Glasgow University, James, Duke of Mon- 
trose. It gives an idea of the number of recorded Scottish plants 
in the first quarter of the nineteenth century, to find from this 
work, Acotyledons, 902, Monocotyledons, 159, Dicotyledons, 
723; total, 1784. 
