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dicinal Plants of the United States, containing their History and Chemical 
Analysis and Properties, and Uses in Medicine, Diet, and the Arts, by 
Jacob Bigelow, M.D. With coloured Engravings. 60 Plates, royal 8vo. 
Yol. I., 1817, pp. xi. and 197; Vol. II., 1818, pp. xvi. and 199 ; Yol. III., 
1820, pp. x. and 197. Boston. 
Bigelow. —Elorula Bostoniensis, by Jacob Bigelow, M.D. 2nd edition, 
greatly enlarged; to which is added, a Glossary of the Botanical Terms 
employed in the Work. 8vo. Boston, 1821. 
Bigelow.— Elorula Bostoniensis. A Collection of Plants of Boston and its 
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Descriptions, Places of Growth, and Time of Elowering, and Occasional 
Remarks, by Jacob Bigelow, M.D., &c. 3rd edition, enlarged. 12mo, pp. 
468. Boston, 1840. 
Breckenridge. —Botany of the United States’ Exploring Expedition: Cryp- 
togamia, Eilices including Lycopodiacese, and Hydropterides, by William D. 
Breckenridge. Yol. XVI. of the whole Work. 4to, pp. 366. Atlas of 46 
Plates, folio. Philadelphia, 1855. £8 8s. 
Browne. —Sylva Americana; or, a Description of the Eorest Trees indigenous 
to the United States; Practically and Botanically considered, by Daniel 
J. Browne^ . Illustrated by more than 100 Engravings. 8vo, pp. 408. 
Boston, 1832. 
Browne. —The Trees of America, Native and Eoreign, Pictorially and Bo¬ 
tanically delineated, and Scientifically and Popularly described, by D. J. 
Browne. 8vo. New York. £1 8s. 
Carson.— Illustrations of Medical Botany, consisting of Coloured Eigures of 
the Plants affording the important Articles of Materia Medica, and descrip¬ 
tive letter-press, by Joseph Carson, M.D. 100 coloured Plates. 2 vols. 
4to. Philadelphia, 1847. 
Comstock. —An Introduction to the Study of Botany, including a Treatise 
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l2mo, pp. 490. New York. 6s. 6d. 
Coultas. —The Principles of Botany, as Exemplified in the Cryptogamia; for 
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1852. cloth. 3s. 
Darby.— Manual of Botany, by William Darby. 12mo. Macon, Ga. 1841. 
Darby.— Botany of the Southern States. In two Parts. Part I. Structural 
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of Southern Plants; arranged on the Natural System; preceded by a Lin- 
nsean and a Dictrotomous Analysis, by Professor John Darby, A.M. With 
Illustrations. 8vo, pp. 612. New York, 1855. cloth. 9s. 
Darlington.— Agricultural Botany ; an Enumeration and Description . of 
Useful Plants and Weeds, which merit the notice, or require the attention, 
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Darlington.— Elora Cestrica; an Herborizing Companion for the Young 
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Dickerson. —Report on the Cypress Timber of Mississippi and Louisiana, by 
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Downing. —The Eruits and Eruit Trees of America; or, the Culture, Propa¬ 
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Draper. —A Treatise on the Eorces which produce the Organization of Plants, 
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4to, pp. xi. and 216. New York, 1844. 18s. 
