Document information
Physical location:
ML MSS.562, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney. 87.03.18Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Edward Ramsay, 1887-03-18. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/87-03-18>, accessed September 11, 2025
18/3/87
The little slender weed, just sent by you, dear Doctor Ramsay, is Mollugo Cerviana;
your brother
has thus added a new locality to the few of this plant for Australia, and it shall
be recorded under his name. It is with delight that I learn of the new chances arising
though your brother's gardener for the botanic exploration of the remotest N.W. of
N.S.W. It is a most
important
region for the geography of plants indeed, as from this corner of N.S.W. doubtless
yet a large number of spec. will be added to the records of the Flora of your colonial
territory, as coming from the N. and the W. into your colony. Besides a search in
that region towards and at the boundary will yet add southern forms to the Flora of
QL. and Central Australia, particularly if the minute plants such as this Mollugo
are well looked after in the spring. Of course, shrubs of all sorts will be in
fruit
also in summer and autumn, so saltbushes, water-plants &c. We do not even yet know
the northern limits of the Quandong, the Mallee, Myall &c — Even of many Central Australian
Acacias also the
fruits
with
ripe
seeds are not known, so that I cannot give illustrations of them in the Decades yet.
The second will appear in a week or two, and you shall have a copy; for 4 more the
plates are lithographed, but not yet printed.
1
The collector was probably James Ramsay; see 'occurrence remarks' in the entry for this specimen,
MEL 2217125, filed under
Hypertelis cerviana
(AVH, accessed 15 November 2024).
2
B87.13.04.
Let your brother send small parcels either in flower or in fruit by successive mails.
I feel sure, many discoveries will be made as well on the plains as on the Barrier
& Grey Ran[ges]
I hope some members of the L.S.
of N.SW. will be able to explore Mt Seaview
during the Easter-Holidays, and that you be one of the party. It is scientifically
quite a new place, — not even yet the
exact
altitude of the mountain being ascertained, its height probably being much over-rated.
Autumn is an excellent season for the work, as much of animal life can also then be
observed, as fruiting specimens of plants are as valuable as flowering ones, as the
hypsometric observations could be made, the geologic features be noted, — all within close settlements, though perhaps for a few miles
a track may have to be cut.
3
NSW.
4
Linnean Society
;
see M to the Linnean Society of New South Wales, March 1887 (in this edition as 87-03-00c).
J. H. Maiden had in 1884 been encouraged by M to visit the area but did not do so
until November 1897; see notes to M to H. Deane 12 October 1888.
5
NSW.
Regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller.
If you will send me an account of the accident, I will submit it to Mr Wilkes, M.L.A.,
the President of the Royal Humane Society of Australia,
also to the Hon. Secr, who is a Capt R.N., and I will see that your
bravery
will be rewarded by the Society.
6
John Wilks, President of the Royal Humane Society of Australasia, was not a member
oif Parliament.
7
Incident not identified.
It will be a great prize, if you get the fruit of the Bennettian Alga, we shall then
see, whether it ought to go un[der] the genus Vanvorstia
or be separated as Sondera,
and you shall get full credit for this.
8
Vanvoorstia?
9
M was given as the author,
'in litter
.' ['in correspondence'], of
Sonderia
as a new genus to which he had transferred
Claudea bennettiana
, in
Agardh (1873-90), part 6
p. 117;
see the bibliographical comment in n. 2, T. Ware to M, 12 June 1874 (in this edition
as 74-06-12a).
Ramsay was not mentioned as the collector in Agardh's description.
Regardfully your
Ferd. von Mueller.
Mollugo Cerviana
Acacia
Sondera
Vanvorstia