BRITISH SEA-THRIFTS AND SEA-LAVENDERS. 75 
Sands, Wigtownshire; Gullane Links, East Lothian; Ben 
Lawers (a broad-leaved form), Mid Perthshire; Ben Laiogh, 
Argyll; Little Culrannoch (a broad-leaved form), Forfar; shores 
of Loch Duich, West Ross-shire; Balta Sound, Shetland ; sum- 
mit of Carran Tual, Co. Kerry; top of Croghea mountain (Herb. 
Babington, 1840), Achil Island, Co. Mayo. 
The following localities yield the Holotrichous A. maritima, 
Willd., Statice maritima, Mill. :—~ 
St. Helier, Jersey (Herb. Babington, 1837); between North- 
fleet and Greenhithe, Folkestone (A. pubigera scotica, W. W. 
Newbould, 1848, and also named pubigera by Syme), Kent; 
Selsey Island (Herb. Dillenius), West Wittering (A. pubigera 
scotica, W. W. Newbould in Herb. Bab. 1843), Hastings, Shore- 
ham, Sussex; Southampton (A. pubigera scotica, Herb. Bab. 
1827), Hants; Brading, Isle of Wight; Chesil Beach, Dorset ; 
Slapton, Devon (Rev. H. J. Riddelsdell); The Lizard (Riddels- 
dell), St. Ives, Cornwall; Brean, and also 30 miles inland at 
300 feet, Somersetshire ; Tenby, Pembrokeshire; Borth, Cardi- 
ganshire; Barmouth, Merionethshire; Great Orme, Bangor, 
Carnarvonshire; Dulas Bay, Anglesey; Rhuddlan Bay, Flint- 
shire; Redcar, Worthall, Yorkshire; mud-banks by the Tees, 
Seaton Carew (Herb. Oxon.), Teesdale, Co. Durham; Firth of 
Forth; Kirkealdy ; coast of Elgin; Brodick, Isle of Arran ; 
coast of Inverness; Ben Heasgarvich (broad-leaved form), M. 
Perthshire; Flagga, Shetland; Bangor, Co. Down; Ashedon, 
Co. Antrim. 
Armeria vulgari-plantaginea. Under this name Syme, in Engl. 
Bot. vii. p. 159, describes and on plate 1155 figures a plant 
which he gathered on the slopes of St. Brelade’s Bay, Jersey, 
growing with both the supposed parents. There is a specimen In 
Babington’s Herbarium which shows that, as far as size goes, It 
is intermediate between the two species. The fruit is pleuro- 
trichous and the stems are glabrous, and I can see no trace of 
hybridity in the herbarium specimen ; but it would be advisable 
to see the plants growing before making a positive statement. 
For the present I should prefer to leave it under Statice planta- 
ginea var. bupleuroides | Armeria, Gren. & Godr.], which it 
appears to agree with. There is but little difference, size alone 
excepted, to distinguish it from plantaginea. In the peculiar 
and characteristic leaves of plantaginea there is a scarlous 
margin which is creaulated, but this is not present in the leaves 
