Miller, P. (1760). [Figures of the most beautiful, useful, and uncommon plants described in the Gardeners dictionary: Exhibited on three hundred copper plates, accurately engraven after drawings taken from nature with the characters of their flowers and seed-vessels, drawn when they were in their greatest perfection ; to which are added, their descriptions, and an account of the classes to which they belong, according ro Ray's Tournefort's, and Linnaeus's method of classing them. [London: printed for the author.
Chicago Style CitationMiller, Philip. [Figures of the Most Beautiful, Useful, and Uncommon Plants Described in the Gardeners Dictionary: Exhibited On Three Hundred Copper Plates, Accurately Engraven After Drawings Taken From Nature With the Characters of Their Flowers and Seed-vessels, Drawn When They Were in Their Greatest Perfection ; to Which Are Added, Their Descriptions, and an Account of the Classes to Which They Belong, According Ro Ray's Tournefort's, and Linnaeus's Method of Classing Them. [London: printed for the author, 1760.
MLA CitationMiller, Philip. [Figures of the Most Beautiful, Useful, and Uncommon Plants Described in the Gardeners Dictionary: Exhibited On Three Hundred Copper Plates, Accurately Engraven After Drawings Taken From Nature With the Characters of Their Flowers and Seed-vessels, Drawn When They Were in Their Greatest Perfection ; to Which Are Added, Their Descriptions, and an Account of the Classes to Which They Belong, According Ro Ray's Tournefort's, and Linnaeus's Method of Classing Them. [London: printed for the author, 1760.