Page:Icones muscorum.djvu/12

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

viii

Müller.—Synopsis Muscorum Frondosorum omnium hucusque cognitorum. 2 vols, octavo. Berlin, 1849–1851.

Hampe—Mosses collected in the Southern United States by Beyrich, in Linnæa, 1839.

Hampe.—Mosses collected in California by J. A. Bauer, in Linnaja, 1859.

Sullivant.—Musci Alleghanienses, or Dried Specimens of 292 Species Musci and Hepaticæ, collected by Gray and Sullivant among the Alleghany Mountains. 2 vols, quarto. Columbus, Ohio, 1846.

Sullivant.—Contributions to the Bryology and Hepaticology of North America. Parts I. & II., with 10 quarto plates. Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1846-1849, published in Mem. Amer. Acad. Art. Sci., n. ser. Vols. III. and IV.

Sullivant.—Brief Descriptions of the Musci and Hepaticæ of the United States east of the Mississippi River, with 8 octavo plates, illustrating the genera, contributed to Gray's Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States. New York, 1856.

Sullivant.—Mosses collected by John M. Bigelow during Lieutenant Whipple's Railroad Exploration, by Order of the Government, (1853 and 1854,) near the 35th Parallel of Latitude, between the Mississippi River and the Pacific Ocean; with 10 quarto plates. Washington, D. C, 1856.

Sullivant.—Mosses collected by the United States South Pacific Exploring Expedition during the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842, under the Command of Captain Charles Wilkes, U. S. N.; with 26 folio plates. Philadelphia, 1859.

Sullivant.—Musci Cubenses, or Mosses collected in 1856–1858 by Charles Wright on the Eastern Part of the Island of Cuba. Published in Proceedings Amer. Acad. Art. Sci. Cambridge, 1861.

Sullivant & Lesquereux.—Musci Boreali-Americani, or Dried Specimens of 416 Species and vars. of Mosses. 1 vol. large folio. Columbia. Ohio. 1856.—A second and much enlarged edition of this work will shortly appear.

Sullivant & Lesquereux.—Mosses of the North Pacific Exploring Expedition under Captain John Rodgers, U. S. N., including those of the Japan Expedition under Commodore Perry, with 18 quarto plates (ready for the press,—the new species already published in Proceed. Amer. Acad. Art. Sci. 1859).

Lesquerex.—Mosses collected in California by II. Bolander. Published in Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. Philad. 1862.