MISCELLANEA. 
625 
Mit iiber 200 Illustrationen sammtliche Algengattungen bild- 
lich darstellend. Leipzig, Yerlag von Eduard Kummer, 1863. 
Be gel. —Tentamen Florae Ussuriensis oder Versuch einer Flora des 
Ussuri-Gebietes. Nach den von Herrn B. Maack gesammelten 
Pflanzen, bearbeitet von E. Eegel. Petersb. Mem. iv. p. 173. 
Acotyledonese seu Cryptogams. 
Eedslob. —Die Moose und Flechten Deutsehlands. Mit sonderer 
Beriicksichtigung auf Nutzen und ISTacbtheile dieser Gewachse, 
beschrieben von Dr. Julius Eedslob. Mit. 32 naturgetreucolor- 
irten Kupfertafeln. 1, Lief. Leipzig, bei Willi. Bansch. 1863. 
Commentario della Societa crittogamologica Italiana, No. 2. 
Settembre, 1861; Genova, 1861; Taf. iii. iv. v. No. 3, Settembre, 
1862 ; Genova, 1862 ; Taf. vi. and vii. 
Note on a gigantic form of Polyporus sulfureus, Fr. Bull. Soc. 
Bot. de Fr. Yol. ix. p. 43. 
Note on the projection of the Sporangia of Cyathus striatus. Bull. 
Soc. Bot. de Fr. Yol. ix. p. 95. 
Eapport sur un Memoire de M. Duval-Jouve intitule Histoire 
naturelle des Equisetum de France. C. Eendus, Yol. lvi. p. 518 
(March 23, 1863). 
Collections of Plants. 
Fitckel. —Fungi Ehenani exsiccati. 
Gottsche and Babenhorst. —Hepaticae Europaeae (continuation) * 
Hohenacker. —Algae marinae exsiccatae. X. Lief. 
Jack, Leiner and Stizenberger. —Kryptogamen Badens. Fasc. 
xi. xii. 
Babenhorst, Dr. L.—Further parts of Die Algen Europa’s, 
Lichenes Europaei exsiccati, and Bryotheca Europaea. 
Wagner, Hermann. —Cryptogamen-Herbarium. II. Ser. 3. u. 4. 
Lieferung. Flechten. Bielefeld, Helmich. 
Wartmann. — Schweizerische Kryptogamen unter Mitwirkung 
mehrerer Botaniker, gesammelt und herausgegeben von Dr. B. 
Wartmann, Professor in St. Gallen, und B. Schenk, Kunstgartuer 
in Schalfhausen. Fasc. i. und ii. St. Gallen, 1862. 
iHtsscellaneit. 
On a Boat belonging probably to the third century, and 
FOUND IN A PEAT MOSS, NEAR FlENSBURG IN SLESVIG. 
M. Engelhardt, Director of the Museum at Flensburg, and 
already so well known to Archaeologists from his interesting descrip¬ 
tions of Antiquities found in the peat-mosses at Thorsbjerg and Ny- 
dam, has lately found at the latter place, close to the spot where 
the other discoveries had been made, a ship, or rather a large flat-bot¬ 
tomed boat, seventy feet in length, three feet deep in the middle and 
eight or nine feet wide. The sides are of oak-boards overlapping one 
another and fastened together by iron bolts. On the inner side of 
