JDH writes to his father, WJH, re. Falklands plants. Lichens are abundant, algae huge, mosses only now fruiting. He has found the same species as Gaudichaud & D'Urville & kept notes on distribution. Discusses mosses on East Falkland, incl: Andreaea, Sphangnum & Trichostoma. 30 lichens found incl Usnea melaxantha which he compares to a Kerguelen sp.. Collected 50 sp. of seaweed incl Macrocystis & Laminariae. Disagrees with Harvey re. Sphacelaria callitricha. Confervoid plants cover the bays. Fungi are scarce but Lyall will send some in spring, incl. large Agarici. Lists ferns collected, incl. a tiny new Aspidium. Asks that a contribution be made to William Burnett on his behalf. The expedition will soon leave for Cape Horn & St Martin's Cove or other port in Tierra del Fuego, allowing JDH to complete his flora of the Antarctic regions. Discusses Fagus sp. found there by Foster & Mirbel. Mentions 3 plants from sub-Antarctic islands which represent new natural orders. Mentions Niger Expedition. Discusses books on cryptogamic plants. Wants Gardner to help arrange his mosses. McLeary will collect moss for JDH in New Holland [Australia]. Discusses Quinary & circular classifications for cryptogamic plants. Mentions the sale of Bauer's drawings & Fitch illustrating GENERA FILICUM. Fielding of Staddagy Lodge has left his collection to the Botanical Society London. Describes walking from Berkeley Sound to Uranie Bay. Plants seen incl Macrocystis & Sticta. Birds observed: steamer ducks sandpiper, kelp goose, Carcara Hawk, gulls, Teal, oyster catcher & Chionis. Describes the quartz hills & the lichens that grow on them, Uranie Bay, a seaweed possibly D'urvillea, the sand hills & the sp. that grow there. Describes a Usnea. Berkeley is wrong about Darwin finding fungi on timber in the Falklands. JDH is sending a parcel to WJH, as well as plants it incls a sketch by Davis, veneer from HMS 'Terror's' rudder, kaurigum, & Tussac grass seeds to share with Edmonstone in the Shetlands.
Transcript
H.M.S. "Erebus" Berkeley Sound[,] East Falkland Isl[an]d.
August 25th 1842.*1
My dear Father
In a letter just finished to my Mother you will find all that I know of our future movements, as also by what conveyance I despatched my last to England, & that my long protracted silence has arisen from not having had any opportunity since of sending home. Our stay here has given me time to investigate as much of the Botany of this Island as the windy weather & season will permit, & I would fair hope that little remains which has escaped my notice, especially in the lower orders. Some of my specimens are very bad & only preserved because they may be known in England & even should that not be the case they may still add one or two to certain Nat[ural]. orders whose geographical distribution is an object of great interest to me. Amongst the Lichens I have had a good field here, some of which, especially the rupincolous [rupicolous] species are very handsome. The collection to be sent home contains a great many specimens of every the order found here, except of the Algae, which here attain gigantic dimensions & of which I wish to take the entire suite on to the Cape that Harvey may inspect them. Even of the other orders I retain all uniques & an excellent set of the others for you, lest any untoward event should prevent their reaching England, or, after that, their being placed in your hands. My notes too are rather copious both upon the plants themselves, & on their distribution on the parts of the Island I have visited. All the plants mentioned in Gaudichaud's list (which Maria copied for me) have come under my notice except 3 or 4. & As well as many other which D'Urville may have found, his list, quoted by D.C. [DeCandolle] is not known to me. Mosses are now coming into fruit & only now; & though I have found as many species as I could expect, so many are barren, especially of the Pleurocarpi that I fear little use can be made of them. Of Andreaea there are 2 ? species. Sphangnum one (or 3 if you call them so). Grimmia 2 in fr[ui]t. Trichostoma our hoary friend barren & very scarce. Orthotrichum 1 like the Kerg [Kerguelen's] Land maritime sp. -- Didymodon 2 or 3. Dicranum 2. -- Camylopus 1. -- Tortula 2. Bryaea 3 in fr[ui]t. -- Fumaria 1 -- Bartramia 2 in fr[ui]t. Polystrichum 2 barren -- Several Hynpna[ceae] & 2 Hookeriae all barren. About 10 Jungermmaniae, 2 Marchant[ia]. & a Riccia. Of Lichens about 30 amongst which is the Usnea melaxantha quite different from the yellow Kerguelens Land Usnea, larger & more handsome. Also some beautiful Stictae, Roecellae, several Cladoniae which I feel sure will please you. My Seaweeds are not examined but I expect there are about 50 species, amongst which are three of Macrocystis & several Laminariae which here take the place of Sargassa [Sargassum] in milder climates. some beautiful Florideae & the Ballia one of the commonest plants here attains a large size. I do not doubt that is the Sphacellaria callitricha Ag.[.] Harvey is wrong in supposing that the green specimens are decayed, the colour varies even in the youngest specimens, nor do I think that the season at all affects the plant, at least not here or,
H.M.S. "Erebus" Berkeley Sound[,] East Falkland Isl[an]d.
August 25th 1842.*1
My dear Father
In a letter just finished to my Mother you will find all that I know of our future movements, as also by what conveyance I despatched my last to England, & that my long protracted silence has arisen from not having had any opportunity since of sending home. Our stay here has given me time to investigate as much of the Botany of this Island as the windy weather & season will permit, & I would fair hope that little remains which has escaped my notice, especially in the lower orders. Some of my specimens are very bad & only preserved because they may be known in England & even should that not be the case they may still add one or two to certain Nat[ural]. orders whose geographical distribution is an object of great interest to me. Amongst the Lichens I have had a good field here, some of which, especially the rupincolous [rupicolous] species are very handsome. The collection to be sent home contains a great many specimens of every the order found here, except of the Algae, which here attain gigantic dimensions & of which I wish to take the entire suite on to the Cape that Harvey may inspect them. Even of the other orders I retain all uniques & an excellent set of the others for you, lest any untoward event should prevent their reaching England, or, after that, their being placed in your hands. My notes too are rather copious both upon the plants themselves, & on their distribution on the parts of the Island I have visited. All the plants mentioned in Gaudichaud's list (which Maria copied for me) have come under my notice except 3 or 4. & As well as many other which D'Urville may have found, his list, quoted by D.C. [DeCandolle] is not known to me. Mosses are now coming into fruit & only now; & though I have found as many species as I could expect, so many are barren, especially of the Pleurocarpi that I fear little use can be made of them. Of Andreaea there are 2 ? species. Sphangnum one (or 3 if you call them so). Grimmia 2 in fr[ui]t. Trichostoma our hoary friend barren & very scarce. Orthotrichum 1 like the Kerg [Kerguelen's] Land maritime sp. -- Didymodon 2 or 3. Dicranum 2. -- Camylopus 1. -- Tortula 2. Bryaea 3 in fr[ui]t. -- Fumaria 1 -- Bartramia 2 in fr[ui]t. Polystrichum 2 barren -- Several Hynpna[ceae] & 2 Hookeriae all barren. About 10 Jungermmaniae, 2 Marchant[ia]. & a Riccia. Of Lichens about 30 amongst which is the Usnea melaxantha quite different from the yellow Kerguelens Land Usnea, larger & more handsome. Also some beautiful Stictae, Roecellae, several Cladoniae which I feel sure will please you. My Seaweeds are not examined but I expect there are about 50 species, amongst which are three of Macrocystis & several Laminariae which here take the place of Sargassa [Sargassum] in milder climates. some beautiful Florideae & the Ballia one of the commonest plants here attains a large size. I do not doubt that is the Sphacellaria callitricha Ag.[.] Harvey is wrong in supposing that the green specimens are decayed, the colour varies even in the youngest specimens, nor do I think that the season at all affects the plant, at least not here or,
Marine confervoid plants are abundant many of the Bays being covered with an odious slime formed by one or two species, there are also several fresh water species. Fungi are scarce -- on our first arrival two large Agarici & a yellow Helvella ? were so common that I neglected to gather them after the first cold weather they all vanished. I have however left a bottle of spirits for Lyall to collect them as the spring sets in -- others are too small[.] Agarici -- a Lycoperdon & Peziza -- My ferns are two Lycopodia, 2 Stegania, the Hymenoph. caespitosum, the smallest fern I ever saw, a beautiful new Aspidium very rare found last week in the "stream of stones" mentioned by Darwin & a Gleichenia given me by the Ass[istant] Surgeon but never seen alive. --
Now that I think of it, a subscription list has been just put into my hands, for a piece of plate for Sir Wm Burnett, to which, as all naval medical officers do, I must subscribe, should it not be too late; would you be kind enough to ask Dr Richardson how much it w[oul]d be advisable for me to give & to pay the same out of the enclosed bill? remembering that as my pay is double the sum should be accordingly large. It was the "Carysfort" that first told us of the subscription so that should it be too late it is no fault of mine, no vessel having sailed since her arrival, for England, or anywhere else, except herself for the W[est] . coast of S[outh]. Am[erica].. --In about a week we sail for the neighbourhood of Cape Horn, to St Martin's cove if we can fetch it, but in such latitude in such a season & with such ships it is very probable that we may have to bear up for any Port in Tierra del Fuego, perhaps in Staten Island [Isla de los Estados]. Strong westerly winds prevailing all the year round & the equinoxial gales coming on. We fear a very long passage under these circumstances & perhaps an uncomfortable one, though we no know, from long experience that no sea can hurt such vessels as ours, which rise like tubs on the water & tumble about in the waves. I already begin to think of the Fagi & was only this morning looking over your monograph in the charming journal. Webster in his account of Capt[ain] Fosters voyage gives some account of the two Fugian species in his appendix, but according to the accounts of Capt[ain] King & yourself he makes a sad bungle, calling the F[agus]. antarctica the evergreen beech (V.2.p.291), the other he calls the deciduous beech or Fuegian beech & adds that the leaves are plicate & 3 lobed. In a few days I shall hope to have settled all this by as well as the 3 doubtful species or varieties of Mirbel's F. betuloides by collecting specimens at different heights on the hills. It is however amongst the mosses & other Cryptogam[ia] . that I shall hope for novelty in the S. extremity of the American continent & Capt[ain] King's account of the ascent of Kater's peak from St. Martin's cove is very attractive. You will not wonder that after spending so long a time in the Antarctic regions, I should be most anxious to complete the Botany of this desolate part of the world, by going even to the Horn & that any new moss or Lichen from such Latitudes appears of infinitely more value to me than a new Palm or Rafflesia would to you, nor can you well conceive my delight at on finding the three curious Halorageous, Portulaceous & Crassulaceous weeds of Kerguelen's Land at Auckland then Campbells Isl[an]d & again on the Falklands. 3 curious forms of small natural orders, as strictly Antarctic as Parrya or Sieversia is Arctic. Amongst the lower orders I find it takes all my eyes to get up a tolerably complete collection for in such dreary climates where vegetation itself is scarce I find that every thing in however bad a state must be taken at once & looked for in fruit or flower afterwards. Indeed I often wonder what can be done with the barren specimens I am forced to be content with; it was
only yesterday that I found a new Polytrichum (the 3rd species) here, rather a handsome moss with large patent leaves, but then it is barren & was very scarce where it grew, also a Gyrophora or Umbilicaria of a black colour growing on the hard quartz rock also likewise barren. Still I hope to find at Cape Horn besides many new things some of the old ones in a better state; where I most anxiously wish we were, for I am heartily tired of waiting here longer for letters -- I would now willingly give a guinea a number for your journal (after p.388 of Vol.1) could I procure them by such means for my ignorance of the Botanical world is quite lamentable. Most thankful we ought to be that Vogel & Ansell are safe home from the Niger for your sake particularly I rejoice at their return. I often think that this expedition has saved me from joining those steamers, which I should readily have done, & given me health strength & happiness unintermittedly for now 31/2 years a greater share of these blessings I could nowhere have enjoyed -- I shall leave behind here to be forwarded to you 3 2boxes & a cask of specimens. The boxes contain chiefly Birds & shells with one bundle of plants & some specimens of tree ferns &c from New Zealand - The cask contains your sets of Auckland & Campbell Isl[an]d plants &c which were put in nearly two years ago & have not been opened since, the cask is a good Gov[ernmen]t Rum--puncheon worth taking care of -- The Birds are chiefly New Zealand & Antarctic with some of the Falklands, of the latter I have now much better specimens which will please you especially a pair of each of the 3 magnificent species of geese which frequent this place & some good Hawks. It was very foolish in me to have brought so few books on Cryptogamic plants having nothing but Loudon's Encyclop.[edia] & the miserable Sprengel to help me, from knowing something of the mosses before I can get on with them I examine them very minutely but with the Algae & Lichens I am sadly puzzled, your parcel to me, when it comes!, will be a great catch if it is only for the Journal to which Berkeley no doubt still contributes.-- Gardner always runs in my head, to use a vulgar phrase, nor can I help hoping that he may be assisting you to arrange the herbarium, or perhaps he is going on some other travels as soon as he has published his collections, in either he will be sure to shine, is he still fond of the mosses which seem very much neglected by English Botanists of late. McLeay had promised to collect for me in New Holland, & knowing him as we do, when one thinks that hardly a dozen mosses have been described from that vast country, there can be no bounds to the novelties he may fall in with. he was quite delighted when I showed him the Sclotheimia Brownii growing on rocks near his house & the Dawsonia amongst some roots he had brought from the forests of the interior. He seemed rather cautious about broaching his Quinary system & I was rather anxious to hear how he thought it would apply to the higher orders of plants. The circular system no doubt holds amongst the Cryptogamiae[,] Fries having proved it with regard to Fungi & Berkeley seems to incline the same way. The sale of Bauer's private drawings is announced in the papers, they were I suppose far above your means[.] I should much like to have had that group of flower's (similar to Brown's). Fitch will continue the "Genera filicum" & complete it, I hope. Do not let the Journal die for want of funds as long as I have a bill to send home I have no work that pleases me so much -- Fielding of Stoddagy Lodge has left his collection to the Bot. Soc. Lond. whose brilliant meetings are noticed by 2 lines in each Athenaeum[.]
Sept[embe]r 1st This letter has been progressing by fits & starts though I could pleasantly employ a whole day in thus talking to you whether you receive as much pleasure in reading my prosy ineubrations[sic] or no. I have just returned from a long walk to Uranie Bay where poor Freycient lost his ship. Leaving the ship you go to the S[outh]. end of the upper extremity of this harbor along a slaty beach overhung by low cliffs of clay slate covered with the Gunnera, Acaena, Oxalis ennaephylla, Cardamine glacialis & here & there bushes of Empetrum rubrum & Chiliotrichum amelloides, Nassauvia gaudichaudii[,] Homoianthus echinulatus & many smaller plants, some maritime, as a fine Statice, a little Psyllium & 4 or five curious forms of Umbellif[erae]. as the Bolax forming large overhanging semicircular mounds & the little Azorella lycopod. & filamentosa. A new Caldasia & a very singular Hydrocotyle? with pistulae simple linear leaves. The shore is covered with entangled masses of 2 species of Macrocystis & other seaweeds. A beautiful Sticta forms large leafy patches amongst the grasses of several kinds & the barren rocks are covered with the L. geographicus[,] a noble Roccella sometimes nearly a foot long & other fine Lichens which completely whiten them where they are most exposed to the light[.] The holes & crevices are full of mosses & Jungermanniae[.] A Riccia, 2 Hookeriae, 2 Bartramiae & others. It has been the first fine day we have had for a long time & the plants are just beginning to spout. The Viola magellanica & Oxalis have just shown their leaves & the tufts of grass look green at the base especially the fine Hierochloe sp? whose old leaves just drying in the sun smell delightfully. The poor birds whose breeding season is just commenced are revelling in the change; the steamer ducks flock along the water so tame that one may approach within a good yard of them pluming themselves & uttering their wheezing clack clack presenting a curious contrast to the restless black backed gull who watches them from overhead & whenever the poor steamer after a dive emerges with a fine sea animal in his bill this pirate gull darts down & seizes the morsel before the [1 word crossed through illeg.] bird has drawn a breath. Little sandpipers are running & chattering along, & every here & there the beautiful kelp goose with her spotless white gander appear sitting on a rock & picking choice specimens of algae. A smaller gull with a black head & beautiful rose coloured breast has the habits of a Tern, perpetually screaming aloft & suddenly dropping with its wing erect on the water with a little splash to fish up some incautious shrimp.-- Leaving the beach the upland grounds are low & flat intersected by little valleys & slow streams running deep in the boggy earth, the Arundo alopecurus forming an excellent pasturage for cattle covers all the bays & the Bolax forms large hassocks on the drier [tracts]; here one has constant companions in the Caracara Hawks (Polyboreus) which follow you everywhere, perching close by on the ground, frightening poor rabbits out of their forms & narrowly watching all your motions. Nothing grows so high as the grass but here & there are tufts of the Empetrum & a little Arbutus with Corniculariae, Conomyces with red Pyxidia & Cetrariae.
The valleys again are full of bushes of the Chiliotrichum, Trichostomum lanuginosum Sphagnum [Sphagmum] & a few other mosses, every now & then a snipe gets up or a flock of thrushes or the beautiful red breasted starling ? twittering & chattering from bush to bush. The upland geese are pairing & though geese they have after 5 months experience learned to fly away instead of sitting to be shot at. The long creeks which run up from the bay have their banks covered with slimy confervoid algae & here the little Teal swim & whistle in flocks & the black & white oyster catchers keep poking their long red bills into the slime, & more busy than all the beautiful Chionis scarcely heeding you whilst the low water offers him a feeding time. The hills are all Quartz & as soon as that formation presents itself, it may be recognized by the turf containing patches of the Astelia, Caltha appendiculata, Oreobolus obtusangulus, Gaimarda australis & Myrtus nummularia. The final Stegania only grows near quartz rocks which though so dry & hard are rendered perfectly beautiful by the Usnea melaxantha forming a mimic forest & other foliaceous & crustaceous Lichens. Uranie bay is formed of sand with sand hills at the back like Yarmouth downs amongst which a fine grass grows with two beautiful Senecios. Large patches of a Tortula like ruralis form gold (if you remember that one on the Yarmouth sand hills)[.] Amongst these hills Freycient encamped his crew of which I have made the enclosed sketch copied from one done by one of the crew, an Englishman, who gave it to the Governor. (See Weddell's voyage). The sand is pure & snow white on which the sea appears of a brilliant blue. Large beds of kelp cover the rocks outside & have hidden the Uranie of which no visible sign remains but some copper & a few iron water casks on the beach. At the back of the sand hills are some pools of water in which I gathered you Gaudichard's Limosella & Myriophyllum but could find no Azolla which I have not ceased looking for since arriving here. On the beach are huge trunks of seaweed perhaps the D'Urvillea[,] branching like a tree sometimes a foot in diameter & often 12 & 14 long, a horizontal section of the stem presents oval concentric rings perhaps answering to successive periods of growth these rings seem formed of cells containing a viscid fluid[,] the trunks in drying shrink excessively & become harder than horn. It is singular that in the Usnea perhaps the largest form amongst Lichens there is a more striking analogy to exogenous vegetation, so remarkable that I think it must be noticed somewhere -- a horizontal section of its stem or larger branches shows a distinct cortical layer of a yellow color & crustaceous consistence attached to an inner corky layer which sends medullary rays through a hard red horny axis to meet a central corky pith, except that these layers are all separate forms of cellular tissue they are in every respect analogous to the Bark wood & pith of a tree. I think that the red horny tissue expands over the excipulus of the thallus & gives the Peridia. Now that I think of it you may tell Mr Berkeley that in v.4 p. 292 of the Annals he describes 2 Fungi as having been brought home by Darwin who found them under timber on the Falklands. Now there is no timber here but
what is imported & that is far too scarce to allow Fungi to sprout on it so that there may be some mistake. A few nights ago I landed at the Governors & put into the charge of his Secretary Mr Robinson 3 cases & a cask for you to be sent home by the first opportunity[,] they are all directed to you at the R[oya]l. Gardens, Kew nr. London. The smaller cases contains amongst my own birds 5 or 6 of Oakeley's which you will please to let alone till we get home. One of the large cases is also full of birds with one [?] the other contains one bundle New Zealand plants & one N.Z. mosses, besides some shells for Maria, an N.Z. skull, some kaurigum, & the picture of a gale of wind in the Pack done by Davis & sent with his comp[liment]s. it is by far the best he has done & I can vouch for its accuracy. Your thanking him with two lines by your own hand would please both him & me very much. There are also some veneering from the '"Terror" rudder to frame it with should you think it worth the while. The cask contains one parcel Auck[land] Isld. plants, one Auek[?] Campbell Isld. Phenog. & Musci -- one V.D.L. gum trees[,] 2 boxes shells for Maria -- one Falkland Isld Lichens to shew[sic] you the Usnea, specimens of the large Lycopodium from Campbell's Isld. & a few very bad birds collected long ago. I do not wish too much being said about my sending any quantity of Birds home nor of Davis's picture, except to friends, for the order runs "all charts, drawings collections to be delivered up" &c &c. I have still on board for you one very large brown paper bundle of N.Z. duplicates Phenogam & 4 small Crypt. & Phenog; one good bundle of Auckl[an]d Isld Phenog. & one Crypt. smaller, one V.D.L. Cryptog & Orchid, one Sydney plants, one small Campbell's Isld Cryptog. besides a separate duplicate set of the whole & all the Falkl[and]. Isld plants. I shall leave a letter to go by the vessel which will take the specimens directed to you & which Robinson will kindly fill up with the ships name &c so that you may know where to send for them. So long a time has elapsed without any opportunity of sending letters having occurred, that I shall leave this letter to go by any vessel even to the W[est]. coast of S[outh]. America, for there is no use in leaving it in leaving it in such a man--trap as the Falklands for a passage home. In this I also enclose some seed of the Tussac for you to plant in a moist soil, it is now growing from seed in the Gov[ernmen]t. Garden planted in drills like turnips! It may not however do except near the sea & if you have an opportunity of sending any to Mr Edmonstone in Shetland it would be a grand thing to introduce there.-- Along with this letter others will go to Mr Lyell & Mr Ward, McLeay at Sydney, & Dayman in V.D.L.[.] I must also write to Gunn & Colenso. You must give my love to all at home of whom there are to receive it, I am surely very ignorant. If we stay here much longer (this is Sept[em]b[e]r 5th) I shall write you another letter, but I think we shall sail tomorrow or the day after in which case you will hear no more at present[.]
From your most affectionate son | Joseph Dalton Hooker[signature]
Sir Wm J. Hooker
Rl. Gardens Kew
nr London
1. Annotated in another hand as "(recd. Sat Feb 11 1843)"
Please note that work on this transcript is ongoing. Users are advised to study electronic image(s) of this document where possible.
Powered by Aetopia