[187] See Mr. Morris's Catalogue of British Fossils.
On this subject Dr. Dieffenbach remarks, that "although in its flora New Zealand has some relationship with the two large continents between which it is situated, America and Australia, and even possesses some species identical with those of Europe, without the Latter being referable to an introduction by Europeans, yet the greater number of species, and even genera, are peculiar to it. New Zealand, with the adjacent islands, Chatham, Auckland, and Macquarrie, forms a botanical centre. It is sufficiently distant from both continents to preserve its botanical peculiarities, and it offers the most striking instance of an acknowledged fact in all branches of natural history, viz. that the different regions of the globe are endowed with peculiar forms of animal and vegetable life. The number of species of plants at present known is 632, of which 314 are dicotyledonous, and the rest, or 318, are monocotyledonous and cellular. The monocotyledons are few in comparison with the cellular plants, for there are but seventy-six species. The grasses have given way to ferns, for the ferns and fern-like plants are by far the most abundant in New Zealand, and cover immense districts. They replace the Gramineæ of other countries, and give a character to all the open land of the hills and plains. Some of the arborescent kinds grow to thirty feet and more in height, and the variety and elegance of their forms, from the minutest species to the most gigantic, are very remarkable."[188] In the accumulations of vegetable matter now in the progress of formation in the morasses, bays, and creeks of New Zealand, the remains of ferns largely predominate; and I am informed by my son,[189] that in the estuaries they are associated with numerous shells of brachiopodous mollusca.
[188] Dr. Dieffenbach's New Zealand.
[189] Mr. Walter Mantell, of Wellington, New Zealand.
ON COLLECTING BRITISH FOSSIL VEGETABLES.
ON COLLECTING FOSSIL VEGETABLES.
From what has been advanced, the student will perceive that to obtain an illustrative collection of the fossil plants of Great Britain, many different localities must be visited.
The fruits and stems of Palms, Conifers, and many dicotyledons, may be collected in the Isle of Sheppey, and other places where the London Clay is exposed. (See Excursion to the Isle of Sheppey, Part IV.) Cycadeous stems and coniferous wood may be procured in the Isle of Portland; from the Wealden Cliffs along the southern shore of the Isle of Wight; and on the Sussex coast, from Bexhill, by St. Leonard's, to the east of Hastings. The foliage of several species of Zamiæ and ferns, occur abundantly in the lower Oolite, along the Yorkshire coast, near Scarborough, and at Gristhorpe Bay. The Lias of Lyme Regis, Charmouth, and their vicinity, affords stems and branches of coniferous trees, and leaves of cycads.