and List of some rare British Plants. JM Soe 
The difficulty that has hitherto attended their discrimination 
will, I trust, be an apology for my giving such minute descrip- 
tions of plants so very common as the two last; and I have 
thought it necessary to accompany this with a drawing of the 
shoot and leaf of suberectus. Tab. XVI. 3 | 
e ADU nn 
I shall conclude these remarks by subjoining a list of the 
places of growth hitherto unrecorded of a few British plants 
which I have fallen in with in my late excursions. It may prove 
not unacceptable to some of the members of the Society. 
Arabis hispida, var. hastulata, on the banks of the Dee, Aberdeen: 
shire. 
Meum athamanticum, do. 
Festuca bromoides, abundant about Aberdeen; and the banks of 
<j the diee. i - bati | 
Prunus Padus, all along the irks of the Dee, and very common 
in Yorkshire. 
Rosa rubiginosa, on the banks of the Dee, undoubtedly wild. 
cesia, on the banks of the Den of Lawers, Perthshire, and 
many. other parts of that county. 
—— mollis, E. Bot., on the banks of the Dee; on Strath Avon, 
Banffshire; and near Durness, Sutherland. When I found 
_ this and the preceding, I was not aware that they had been 
previously published ; and it is gratifying to find that, on. 
‘comparing my descriptions of them made upon the spot, 
under the conviction of their being non-descript species, 
— with those in English Botany, they correspond in almost - 
every particular. | 
cd ,a plant very common along the banks of Des; the 
Tilt, Tummel, Lochs Tay and Rannoch; allied to villosa, 
indeed 
